sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: Why don't Europeans buy more American cars?
sporkydistance's comments
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: U.S. conditionally approves vaccine to protect poultry from avian flu
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: Sabine Hossenfelder: I was asked to keep this confidential
On the other hand, I agree with her, and it would be great if this didn't have to happen.
Should I be a purist or a realist?
I can't tell.
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: Men claiming to be from DOGE show up at San Francisco City Hall, demand records
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: If you ever stacked cups in gym class, blame my dad
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: LibreOffice still kicking at 40, now with browser tricks and real-time collab
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: Why blog if nobody reads it?
About 5 years later my site had been forgotten, and a company in the UK offered me US$10,000 for use of my schematics and source code.
I was floored. I did ZERO advertising. I was blogging because honestly: I wanted intellectual validation because everyone I admired was blogging and I wanted people to think I was smart, too (I had even joined MENSA that year). I had serious FOMO/esteem problems in my 30's.
Fortunately--somehow--Google connected me with this company through simple search. The company went under, but I got my check for real. My friend at the time was mad at me for not asking 10x that, but so what?
Before ~2010 I stopped blogging and took all my stuff down because I really don't like being known or exposed publicly (I'm still very hard to find on google because someone more famous than me with my name is a top hit!), and I outgrew the FOMO. It doesn't seem to matter anymore because I'm so old: at my level the contacts I developed over three decades matter more than blogs. But it was pretty cool to get an email out of the blue with money attached!
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: Avoiding outrage fatigue while staying informed
1. HN is centralized, but not for-profit.
2. HN does not drive engagement, AFAIK
3. HN is not surveillance capitalism.
You haven't demonstrated how Usenet differs from HN, but since my question had a typo and omitted HN, I can see how that is confusing.
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: Avoiding outrage fatigue while staying informed
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: Avoiding outrage fatigue while staying informed
Please back that statement up with some facts.
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: Avoiding outrage fatigue while staying informed
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: Avoiding outrage fatigue while staying informed
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: Avoiding outrage fatigue while staying informed
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: Anything threatening to be a subculture is commodified before it can walk (2014)
Arthurian dragons have largely been the same beasts for, oh, 1000 years.
3d internet chat rooms in Snow Crash have been tried and are ... lame.
I appreciate you thinking critically, but your arguments aren't very strong.
Also, I'm not gatekeeping, I suggesting why a person might not have liked something. There's a concept called "novelty", meaning "newness". The first time you encounter something it is exciting. If you spent the first 15 years of your life using an iPhone, then read an Asimov novel that introduced satellites, you'd be like "So what?" See? When Asimove wrote about satellite communication, IT DIDN'T EXIST yet. But when you read his book, it was old-hat to you, so you probably might not like his books.
That's all I'm saying. I'm not trying to tell you how to enjoy things. Chill dude, you'll live longer.
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: Anything threatening to be a subculture is commodified before it can walk (2014)
please actually read my comment next time.
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: Anything threatening to be a subculture is commodified before it can walk (2014)
That's the overstatement of the century. In group / out group always has gatekeepers by definition.
Not sure where you grew up, but I sold skateboards at a bike & ski store for a while in the early 80's and skaters were absolute dicks about their self-enforced hierarchy. Skater culture claims to be inclusive but holy fuck that's a lie if you accidentally buy equipment just a tiny bit above your skill level.
I got to see this first hand: as the point of retail sale for their replacement parts, they confided in me because they needed to buy things from me, so they would tell me who the posers were and rip on them mercilessly. Just like any other ingroup.
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: Anything threatening to be a subculture is commodified before it can walk (2014)
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: Anything threatening to be a subculture is commodified before it can walk (2014)
"It's not just commodification. If you were a punk in the 80s with a green mohawk, you might find it cute to put one on your kid in the 2000s. I have long hair, my son has long hair. This isn't a commodification of a culture, it's me, like every parent ever, using my culture to inform how I raise my kids. What am I going to do? Not dress and present my kid how I want to and how I identify?"
He is literally defending his decisions to "dress and present" his kid against my comment about commodification, as if I'm attacking his decisions. He didn't even understand my point: in the 1970's you would have been ostracized (or arrested) for having a green mohawk. In the 2010's, kindergarten teachers ooh-and-ahh over it.
That's the DIRECT result of the commodification: it became mainstream because people spend decades diffusing it into normality. He totally missed the point, and then got defensive.
Actually, in the context of today's internet discourse, the reply is defensively invoking both the "appropriation" and "not-all-men" tone in the same reply. Impressive.
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: El Salvador abandons Bitcoin as legal tender
Seriously, that's all I got.
sporkydistance | 1 year ago | on: El Salvador abandons Bitcoin as legal tender