half-finished thoughts
@zkat I feel like a lot of the real-world problems with "flat" organizations don't come from the attempt at having a flat structure, but rather from the assumption that it can reliably be made flat *by decree*, and that there is a lot more mileage in non-hierarchical structures if you treat hierarchies as a constant danger to monitor for and design against, rather than as something that you disavow and then assume is gone.
On the other hand, I don't see that much mileage in even well-defined hierarchical constructions, because they are fundamentally prone to the problem that hierarchical complexity always hampers good-faith actors more than it hampers bad-faith actors (who generally operate outside the rules), and so any attempt at building extra safeguards is likely to increase that (dis)advantage as an unintentional side-effect.
So I don't know that the solution lies in more rigidly-defined structures and procedures. What the solution *does* lie in is a more complex question, and something I can't formulate useful thoughts about right now
@skippingmoonrocks Not exactly a self-test, and not authoritative/exhaustive (notably: it cannot prove a negative!) but empirically I found asking people "do you identify with this experience?" to have a lot of accurate hits on this article: https://gekk.info/articles/adhd.html
Relatedly, this store has exactly one branch that is plausibly reachable by public transport
@ginny Further receipts on that person from an account on another instance: https://mastodon.radio/@KQ4NGH/111772619952957300 (they were explicitly warned for harassing other people there before)
I feel like free software advocates don't talk about the painful switching cost of moving from proprietary software.
I feel like it's important to be honest about how much work it is to switch to free software.
I also feel it's important to give people hope. That yes, some parts will be hard, but there is also joy in discovery and finding new community.
I think I need to write a meta blog post on "How to support people trying free software."
The first comments I usually get when explaining my negative user experience is:
- "I think they fixed that, have you tried it again recently?"
- "really? I've never seen that before"
- "here's why they made that design decision" followed by long technical details
UGGH! This does not acknowledge my negative experiences, my feelings, or my usage constraints. It immediately jumps into troubleshooting, problem solving, or software architecture.
Please for the love of your fellow human beings, validate people's negative experiences with free software!
Even a simple, "I'm sorry that you experienced that, it sounds really frustrating," would help.
reddit, software development
@wmd@chaos.social I think there's another lesson to draw from that, too: how misguided it is to complain about webapps and that things need to be 'native' apps (which really just means "runs on a single OS").
It's the widespread availability of webapps that is making Linux accessible to many people, not the native Linux apps (which still frequently can't compete for one reason or another).
@MikeBon That is called a 'forced work scheme', it's how several countries have tried to implement their welfare system, and it has overall been a disaster. This is absolutely not 'better than a basic income', it just fits better into a very specific (and regressive) ideological view about work.
Did you know that in terms of sorting, the letter 'ö' is treated as a modified 'o' in French, but as a letter completely independent from 'o' (and sorting after 'z') in Swedish?
You can learn this and tons of other random facts about text in "The Character Model for the World Wide Web"
From yesterday;
“The clean-up operation following Monday night’s farmers’ protests in several parts of the Netherlands continued on Tuesday morning as council officials cleared rubble and other waste from several roads.
According to the Telegraaf, several people were injured in traffic accidents caused by the protests and two were taken to hospital.”
Everything they claimed about the XR protests, where a thousand people were arrested this past weekend, is only true for these tractor terrorists setting fire to asbestos and such.
So far, they have arrested … *checks notes* ... two?
https://www.dutchnews.nl/2024/02/farmers-dump-rubbish-on-roads-and-set-fires-as-protests-continue/
https://www.bnnvara.nl/joop/artikelen/boerenprotesten-levensgevaarlijk-automobilisten-raken-gewond
In the process of moving to @joepie91. This account will stay active for the foreseeable future! But please also follow the other one.
Technical debt collector and general hype-hater. Early 30s, non-binary, ND, poly, relationship anarchist, generally queer.
- No alt text (request) = no boost.
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- Flirting welcome, but be explicit if you want something out of it!
- The devil doesn't need an advocate; no combative arguing in my mentions.
Sometimes horny on main (behind CW), very much into kink (bondage, freeuse, CNC, and other stuff), and believe it or not, very much a submissive bottom :p
My spoons are limited, so I may not always have the energy to respond to messages.
Strong views about abolishing oppression, hierarchy, agency, and self-governance - but I also trust people by default and give them room to grow, unless they give me reason not to. That all also applies to technology and how it's built.