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Comment Re:The Good News (Score 1) 162

The only reason I still have a windows machine is for the exceedingly rare game that doesn't work on proton/steam, and more importantly, Fusion 360, although browser-based OnShape apparently is pretty good if you have a computer/GPU that can make it run smoothly (they both use the same licensed "kernel" that almost all CAD software uses)

You may want to give Plasticity a try. Depending on your use cases it may not replace Fusion, but it's free to try so checking it out will only cost you some time. Its advantages are that a) it's not subscription software - you pay for a license and keep using the software however long you want, and b) it's available for Linux. If it meets your 3D needs then you can be an owner instead of a renter, and you'll still be able to use it when you ditch Windows and install a real operating system.

I haven't tried Plasticity yet - I'm new to 3D, and am in it primarily to print stuff, so OpenSCAD is easiest for me now. But I downloaded Plasticity and plan to try it out within the next few months.

For obvious reasons I consider Autodesk to be evil. And I don't use cloud-based stuff, so OnShape would be out even if it didn't have IP ownership issues. FreeCAD seems clunky and impenetrable, and Blender is an uncomfortable fit for 3D printing. So I'm hoping Plasticity is good.

Comment Re:Yeah no. (Score 4, Insightful) 162

I'm never going to be dumb enough to allow Microsoft to control MY access to MY computer.

Umm... if you have Windows then you have already allowed Microsoft to effectively own the computer you presumably paid for. And since they own it, when it comes to them controlling YOUR access to what is effectively THEIR computer, guess what?

Submission + - IMF sounds alarm on ballooning US national debt: 'Something will have to give

schwit1 writes:

Under current policies, public debt in the U.S. is projected to nearly double by 2053. The IMF identified “large fiscal slippages” in the U.S. in 2023, with government spending surpassing revenue by 8.8% of GDP – a 4.1% increase from the previous year, despite strong economic growth.

If this trend continues, the Congressional Budget Office anticipates the national debt will grow to an astonishing $54 trillion in the next decade. Higher interest rates are also compounding the pain of higher debt.

Should that debt materialize, it could risk America’s economic standing in the world.

The IMF is talking down to Washington like we’re a Third World country because that’s the direction Washington is taking us.

Interest payments alone on the current debt is $1.6T/year.

Submission + - British Columbia bans autonomous cars

Baloo Uriza writes: In a rare display of sanity in the automotive space, British Columbia has banned autonomous cars from its highways, after years of watching autonomous cars hamper emergency response efforts in California and outright kill a pedestrian in Arizona. Let's hope this regulatory trend continues, and moves into the human space by pulling licenses of drivers with a known history of poor driving.

Comment Re:Makes sense (Score 1) 86

I don't know how you are doing it, but it certainly works for me. I just tested with "how do you make a bookshelf" (minus quotes in the search). Quora was about the 5th result. I added -quora to the end (still no quotes) and that result disappeared completely.

For quite a while now I've seen a remarkable degree of inconsistency in Google results when I use modifiers such as "-" and "allintext:" Sometimes they're honoured, and other times they're ignored. So far though, the "site:" modifier still works consistently.

Comment Re:Isn't this old news by now? (Score 2) 116

Anyway, what else would state sponsored Chinese hackers do?

Also, what would ANY country's security apparatus say about what an 'unfriendly' nation's hackers are up to?

To be clear, I have no difficulty in believing that Chinese hackers are up to what TFA claims. But I also have no difficulty believing that many such claims might be exaggerated, or even fabricated, in order to secure more funding for, and promote the growth of, whatever security apparatus is making the claim.

Comment Should have been hard... (Score 1) 15

Another reads and interprets brain signals while the user scrolls through dating apps, presumably to provide better matches. ("'Listen to your heart' is not enough," the manufacturer says on its website.)

If you're using dating apps you want to be listening to your hard. Your heart only gets involved later in the process, if at all.

Also, if you need external analysis of your brain signals to recognize who's most attractive to you, you're probably beyond help of any kind.

Comment Wonderful! (Score 1) 49

Let's generate still more greenhouse gases, while simultaneously dumping more heat into our atmosphere, in the cause of corporations firing more people and wealth being concentrated further still. Then we can move faster toward the dystopia outlined in the film Elysium. Historians may look back on all of this and call it The Grand Cost Externalization - assuming that civilization survives long enough for said historians to be born.

Is it time yet to break out the torches and pitchforks?

Comment Re:Go fuck yourself, youtube (Score 1) 204

"WE" wouldn't have made anything if someone didn't offer a free platform to place things. That applies to social media as well as video hosting sites. "WE" would have never spent a penny of our own money to create any of the infrastructure involved. A lot of the WEs making the site what it is because they got PAID from ads and other means. e.g. Patreon. The larger WE are just eyeballs who don't know how good they have been having it.

I'm sorry you were modded down - you make an interesting counterpoint. And your note about not realizing "how good" we've been having it resonates with me. I often think about that, shielded behind the ad blocking technology that saves me from the junk that so many others put up with. And sometimes I'm thankful that they put up with it, because that actually makes it easier for ad avoiders like me to get lost in the crowd.

And then I think about ALL the people who have fully bought into Corporate World's vision: the people who allow themselves to be tracked without putting up a fight, who wear corporate-branded clothes as though they're cool, who buy into 'loyalty programs' that make it more expensive for me to not be tracked, who have helped make Facebook the slimy giant spyball that it is, and who bend over reflexively for the likes of Google. ALL those people make it ever and ever more difficult to have an umbrella big enough and strong enough against all the crap raining down from the sky. That's when I say "Fuck'em - I'm looking out for myself. I'm happy to escape the ads, and if there are enough of us ad avoiders that it results in the end of YouTube, that's probably for the best".

Comment Re:Moderation, heard of it? (Score 1) 204

That aside I was ok with photos in ads where they helped understand what was being offered. There would be very few cases video is needed, from the buyer's perspective, and is where the wheels fell off.

I get what you're saying, and I have fond memories of advertising pictures in print publications. Further to the point you made later regarding hobbies, I especially liked photos in electronics magazines. But that kind of response is why I included them in my thought experiment ban. Even still pictures can be powerfully propagandistic, promising kinds of emotional and spiritual fulfillment which the product either doesn't deliver or, worse, delivers for just long enough to instill a desire for more. An extreme example of this is pornographic photos and drawings.

TV advertising however annoyed me even as a child, because it was so intrusive.

That said, there were TV commercials which I looked forward to, and still remember six decades later. Thinking about this just now, it occurs to me that advertising might best be described as "weaponized culture". It uses elements of our culture which arose from our animal needs and desires, distills them, and delivers them as a needle delivers a drug.

One regional difference I have noticed in my world travels is bill boards, particularly those massive ones on the sides of motorways. Here in New Zealand they are practically non-existent, compared with parts of the USA and China, where they are a major eyesore.

Here in my part of Canada we have a new roadside phenomenon. They are electronic billboards which look something like an inverted golf club, with the handle in the ground and a giant video screen covering the face of the club. These things are very high, so if they catch a driver's attention then the driver is moving his eyes even farther off the road ahead. I wonder how many accidents these things will cause. More pain and death as sacrifices to the god of wealth concentration. Yay!

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