SeikoAlpinist 12h ago • 100%
No, I didn't want a dark Section 31 series based on the Discovery/Picard "Dark Trek" writing style.
Michelle Yeoh winning the Oscar was an easy cop out. Now she's in another league in terms of salary, and Paramount can't afford to pay her for a streaming series. Both sides go their separate ways and the idea is dropped.
Fortunately for us, she loves the character and wanted to do at least one final act. So I guess the compromise is the movie instead of the series.
And that is cause for optimism because it likely means the script was good enough to draw her back, and concise enough that the Section 31 thing won't be dragged out.
Hey, we're finally getting a new Trek movie, and it has a big name actress behind it.
SeikoAlpinist 19h ago • 100%
I was kind of hoping that after 2023, she would decide to not do this. I think Michelle Yeoh is fantastic, generational actress; but I'm highly skeptical of recent Star Trek works. She is by far the biggest name to return to the franchise.
Hopefully, they have an excellent story to match.
SeikoAlpinist 19h ago • 100%
I'm surprised that she decided to do this.
She is by far the most decorated person to ever come back to Star Trek.
SeikoAlpinist 1d ago • 100%
I don't disagree. It comes fast. Take care of yourself my friend.
SeikoAlpinist 1d ago • 100%
I bought the OP12 and OP12R specifically because of the high frequency PWM (one for me, one for spouse). We have had issues with iPhone and Pixel pwm, where the text is unreadable because it wobbles on the screen at lower brightness, and eyestrain that comes with it.
I have not had any issues with the pwm flicker on the 12 and 12R. It's the only OLED phone that I've been able to use.
SeikoAlpinist 1d ago • 100%
We used Linux a long time ago so it's not that big of a deal. Linux made the throw away computer that I had (486) usable. We could not afford newer hardware, so my mom and siblings got used to the "penguin." That was when I was in middle school.
So I have always been able to just use older hardware that I know works with Linux.
When my father was getting older and I was early in my career, I thanked him by building for him a new computer, a dual core i3 with 8GB of RAM. I put Kubuntu on it, but it was still in the KDE 4.x days and it ended up being unusable. Somehow he always found a way to crash the panel, or drag things to make the panel unusable. It was the worst thing ever, and I had to switch him from KDE because even when I locked the plasmoids in place, he would find a way to inadvertently drag something wrong and make it unusable. I ended up being tech support for him and it was as bad as fixing malware Windows ME installs back at the turn of the century. Even after KDE 5.x it was the devil and so I stopped supporting it and moved to something simpler.
I installed Xubuntu and later Ubuntu MATE and both were fine for him for the few years before he faded.
The kids have grown up on Gnome on Debian and understand it well. The only extension is Caffeine. It's very simple and consistent and clean. Having the super key as a consistent way to get around is convenient for them. They started with Bam Bam and then moved to Tux Paint and GCompris. Now they are getting older and play Steam games. They have never used a Windows or Mac. They started with buster.
I put my mom on Fedora Silverblue for her touchscreen laptop because the out of box Pinyin support was great and works everywhere (such a chore to set up in Debian). She also has an iPhone and that is what she uses mostly. I also put my youngest son on Silverblue because of the Pinyin support.
My wife uses Pop!_OS because she likes tiling and hates dark mode that everything has trended towards. But Pop!_OS finds unique ways to break itself on updates and I'm finding I need to intervene more often than I like, so we are exploring a shift to Debian and a tiling plugin maybe next year when Trixie comes out with the newest Gnome.
SeikoAlpinist 6d ago • 100%
I haven't been paying attention, we voted weeks ago.
SeikoAlpinist 6d ago • 100%
Not specifically waiting on right to repair, but older electronics have four things going for them:
- Very well documented: or you can just ignore the pieces that aren't documented after so many years. This means they tend to work forever with Debian / Slackware / OpenBSD.
- Cheap / easy to find parts: the esoteric stuff falls by the wayside over time.
- More reliable: by virtue of the stuff that was going to die due to defects, dying in the first 18 months of use; and
- Generally easier to work on.
So all of my laptops all cost well over $1000 new (EDIT: I've never purchased a laptop new in 25 years of using laptops exclusively). But wait a couple of years and suddenly they're the price of a couple nice meals. Wait a bit longer and you can do a curbside pickup. And when something breaks, I can fix it myself with cheap replacement parts instead of waiting on warranty repairs. Also, going back to the documented thing -- used MacBooks used to be great for Linux, but then the butterfly keyboard and T2 chip became a thing and I know to avoid them because that keyboard was never solved and ended up being replaced after multiple class-action lawsuits.
Time works to our advantage in many ways.
“I think it's mostly the culture of just kind of being second-class, almost like and we kind of feel like we don't have a voice...”
SeikoAlpinist 1w ago • 100%
Hah! Beat me to it by a couple of minutes!
Looking forward to the next decade of Luanti and playing with my kids.
SeikoAlpinist 1w ago • 100%
There is an ongoing drought in the high Andes. Quito and other areas are reliant on hydroelectric power.
They have to balance between hydroelectric power and drinking water.
This is affecting Bogota to the north as well.
Quito is generally ideal for solar power solutions but it hasn't happened at scale for whatever reason.
SeikoAlpinist 1w ago • 100%
I stopped distro hopping and started hopping around Mastodon instances instead.
I currently have two active accounts. One is more established but the server goes down for days at a time.
The other is pretty robust but I'm still establishing myself there.
I echo the sentiment that there aren't a lot of Asian people on Mastodon. Although it seems that vivaldi.net is mostly Japanese people.
SeikoAlpinist 1w ago • 100%
Monitors are starting to move in this direction. Samsung has a notorious 5k Apple Studio competitor that wants to connect to the Internet and uses the same interface as their Galaxy smartphones.
Standby. Winter is coming for monitors as well.
SeikoAlpinist 1w ago • 100%
The movie Hackers.
SeikoAlpinist 1w ago • 100%
Meatless nuggets
Got me excited, (I gave up McDonald's in my 30's) but this is only McDonald's in France.
1,560 McDonald’s locations in France,
My god. (I had to do a double-take; I would have thought 1560 McDonald's locations in the entire USA but I'm off by almost an order of magnitude)
SeikoAlpinist 1w ago • 96%
SeikoAlpinist 1w ago • 100%
I just don't understand it. I see some people with $1000 car payments and nothing toward retirement. What ever happened to looking for good deals? We had a kind of "rugged ingenuity" thing growing up where you respected people who took care of their older stuff, and I guess that still holds true today. $1000 car payments, I would have paid off my car in under a year.
Honestly, I'm scared to spend. Which I guess is okay because I'm comfortable with how we live and sometimes you have to spend on life events out of your control.
SeikoAlpinist 1w ago • 100%
Yeah, thanks. Between ThinkPads and system76 and Fairphone, it's pretty easy to maintain. Monitor is a Dell U3014. It was over a thousand dollars new but these days it's under $200 used and I've replaced the mainboard in it twice for about $145 each time. Everything was purchased slightly used so that saves a lot.
SeikoAlpinist 1w ago • 100%
I kind of don't really drive much. Between biking and living close to a lot of things, I've put about 40,000 miles on the car in 7 years. Car is in its third decade and has about 70k miles on it.
Two brothers in town for their sisters' wedding were killed while riding bikes last night. One is an NHL hockey star. Fuck cars. Also, sorry for linking TMZ, it's more detailed than the SI article.
**Phnom Penh AP** — The return to Cambodia this week of 14 sculptures looted from the country during a period of war and unrest is like welcoming home the souls of ancestors, Cambodia’s culture minister, Phoeurng Sackona, said Thursday. The items repatriated from New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art arrived Wednesday and were displayed to journalists and VIPs