Comment Re:Good idea. (Score 1) 182
The right-wing ones too.
The right-wing ones too.
That is a profoundly weird way to look at it that has sadly been popularized I by what I would suggest is secular media.
Christians don't believe the return of Christ is the end of the world, but more the end of the world as we know it. Christ is to return to rule and effectively eliminate sin, in a final battle, how literal or figurative the visions in Revelation are is something a debate; but doubtless we are talking great upheaval here. It isn't as if the heart hardened wicked leaders of current nations are just going to step aside let alone the serpent.
It is also worth remembering that God keeps his word, the faithful are promised resurrection and that includes in body. Those that have gone to sleep will walk. If you look at that from a worldly perspective that creates a lot of challenges, so I personally think we have to expect natural law/physics as we know it is going to be largely suspended or altered. This I think is why the visions/prophesy in Revelation are so very wild. They just nearest way present events that will otherwise be entirely foreign to any human experience to date.
But does it have a Yoda mode?
This has already happened with KVM-over-IP devices. The device was perfectly usable until a hack for the old version of Java it used kept attacking it, and thus it had to be turned off.
And thus all the content out there that is running on perfectly acceptable hardware will now be lost media unless you visit it via archive.org
The chrome developers have done so much damage to the public web with the "Everything SSL" approach. Sites that work perfectly fine, especially in Japan, never bothered to upgrade to HTTPS.
It's 2025. We've known for a couple of decades that Win32/Win64 and Windows and its main ecosystem only work because various hacks into the kernel to make it all run more smoothly. Even the video driver architecture basically has built in restarts when buffers blow up.
It's a shitty proprietary operating system which somehow, every time they try to clean it up, it gets worse under and on top of the hood. I stopped using Windows for my own personal devices four years ago, and will not go back. Ubuntu, Debian and MacOS offer cleaner UIs, and even if the software libraries are a bit smaller, at least I'm not a prisoner to endless ads.
Christ I had to set up a Win11 laptop yesterday, and between setting up the OS and Edge I had to turn down "offers" and additional tracking functionality around seven or eight times. Actually more, because then I set up a non-privileged user profile, and had to do it all again. And that was Win11 Pro. I can only imagine how much worse the Home editions are.
On the bright side, most Chinese people, including those in the governing party, believe in some form of reincarnation. If that exists, here's to hope all supporters of such practices may enjoy being reborn in their future-proof schizophrenic autistic sleep-deprived blood-clotting-prone monkey-dog chimeras as those scream in agony while wandering the ruins of now extinct humanity.
I would call bullshit on "something that ~100% of the American public agree with (ending time changes)". The closer to Mexico they are the more likely people will agree with you, but those closer to Canada are ones that actually benefit from daylights saving and would disagree with you. Basically I call bullshit because you are effectively claim "~100% of the American public" live in the southern states.
Close to 100% want it to stop changing. Different states have different opinions about which way.
Just in case you don't understand the core issue, if you are close to the equator daylights saving is pointless and a hassle, but the closer to the poles you are the more extreme the number of daylight hours changes from summer to winter, 6 hours where I live. For people like me daylight savings makes the most of those hours by bringing the light hours closer in sync with when I need them.
Does it really, though? Where I am, it gets dark before I get home from work. Permanent DST seems like a big benefit from my POV, because those early morning hours are wasted indoors getting ready for work anyway, but evening hours can be used outdoors.
The right law to pass is one that gives the states the right to choose permanent DST, and then phases out the changes at the next time change.
Nope. We don't have POSIX timezones defined per-state at this time.
Pacific time will go away entirely in the U.S. All three states in that time zone adopted laws enacting permanent daylight saving time if Congress authorizes it.
And in general, if the time doesn't change, people can just choose the next zone to the right. No big deal.
1 + 1 = 3, for large values of 1.