Not ideologically pure.

  • 13 Posts
  • 431 Comments
Joined 10 months ago
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Cake day: January 8th, 2024

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  • I’m gonna say yes, for the exercise.

    Four assumptions:

    1. Reddit will keep getting worse, due to the nature of enshittification and venture capital. Eventually enshittification reaches a breaking point where people leave or stop arriving.
    2. Lemmy (in a broad sense - et al!) will keep getting better, due to.the nature of open source software.
    3. Non-free alternatives to Reddit will eventually enshittify, law of enshittification.
    4. Free alternatives will use ActivityPub for the obvious advantages.

    If these assumptions are met, given infinite rounds of enshittification and unhappy users, eventually a federated and free alternative will be the most lucrative option for the majority of users. Eventually Reddit will Digg itself a hole. Maybe Lemmy won’t take over then, but it’ll stick around.

    The most unrealistic assumption is of course that the federated solutions will keep getting better indefinitely. Maybe they won’t. But as long as people keep developing and contributing to the Fediverse, it’s alive and improving in a way commercial alternatives cannot in the long run compete with.






  • I find this to be incredibly interesting. It’s like 2016 saw online polarization, but it happened on the same platforms. Today, there’s a polarizations of platforms - we exist in different realities online.

    I wonder if this split would have happened anyway, or if it was motivated by American politics. And I wonder what the consequences are.

    It seems like a pretty fundamental development in how our information channels work, and I haven’t seen it been discussed much by commentators.

    Maybe my question cannot be answered because ‘online’ today just means something completely different than it did in 2016.




  • I don’t think that’s the question I try to ask, though I probably struggle to formulate myself well. It’s not really about comparing to Harris.

    It seemed that Trump engaged a lot of people who would not usually bother with politics in 2016. He ran a campaign that completely dominated the Internet. People seemed to have nothing better to do than to create right wing memes in half serious, half joking support of him.

    I don’t see that any more. What I see is a more normal campaign ran by a guy frequently making fascist talking points. He could still win, and maybe it’s still a successful campaign, but it feels very different to me from the 2016 one.

    But then again, I have changed my Internet habits so that I wouldn’t see it anyway. Maybe there’s still hordes of 20-something incels posting frog memes for the masses to be offended by, it’s just off my radar.


  • I can’t even enter Truth Social from Europe. I see Wikipedia estimates 600 000 monthly active users, which is of course a lot. But I struggle to wrap my head around how important it can be. Isn’t it potentially a bit self defeating for them to close themselves off in a closed forum?

    The Trump subreddit in 2016 seemed to have a cultural impact. Truth Social seems to be more of a footnote?

    In a way Twitter is bad enough, but my impression there before deleting my account was that most of the Trump spam was Musk posts that appeared on my profile for no good reason.






  • Generally you don’t need to worry much about pots. If you have a problem of things sticking in them while cooking I guess it would work though. I have a coated cast iron pot for proper cooking, so I rarely use my stainless steel one for other things than boiling stuff. No need to season them for that.

    It needs to be done to stainless steel frying pans. If you go for a stainless steel frying pan you probably want to get a five-ply one, which means that there are two layers of (usually) aluminium inside the pan helping with heat distribution. Once you have that it’s a great alternative to cast iron - I find it easier to deglaze because the surface is shiny. But in its own right heat distribution in stainless steel is not good enough to make for a good pan, and a good stainless steel frying pan comes with a bit of a learning curve.

    I guess it’s the same thing with carbon steel as well, but I have no experience with that.


  • Do yourself a favour and start using proper cast iron or stainless steel frying pans as well. You gotta learn how to use them, but it’s a whole different level. I’m never going back to non-stick.

    To get started with a new pan:

    1. Pour a bit of oil in it
    2. Dry it ALL up with a paper towel
    3. Heat up to high temperature, let cool.
    4. Repeat three times or so. This creates a coating of hardened oil.

    Never, ever, wash with soap. If you do by accident, repeat the above process to coat the pan again. (just don’t scrub too violently with soap - I’m being outdated with my advice here)

    When cooking:

    1. Heat up pan
    2. Add oil
    3. Add things into pan only when hot
    4. Use water or wine to deglaze when things get a little stuck. That’s where you get deliciousness from - it’s a feature, not a bug.

    I use an old cast iron that’s a bit rugged in the bottom for pancakes. It’s the most amazing thing ever. I found it in the trash one day. The cast iron allows me to use a steel spatula when it needs to be thin, otherwise I use wood.




  • I had no idea about this. I have friends who lived in Europe their entire life who can vote in this election - but if you’re born and raised in Texas but move to PR you lose your right to vote?

    Puerto Rico has more people living in it than both the Dakotas, Montana, and Wyoming combined. It would have been the 30th biggest state.

    An it’s being treated like absolute shit, with Americans in this very thread not understanding that they’re even part of the US.

    At last if Trump wins the election they will be able to just leave this sinking shipwreck of a country, and the idiots in charge won’t even know they were ever part of the US.