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Finding life in unexpected places. It looks like someone was instructed to refresh the yellow paint on this concrete lamp base, and they just sprayed over the mosses and lichens, which have managed to continue growing anyway.
#mosstodon

Fascinatedly watching some of the crowd management for Danse Macabre's opening day: youtube.com/watch?v=6T1XEU-bX6

@freakazoid Although Kape is sketchy as hell, do mind that the source of that article doesn't seem to have a very good track record of trustworthiness

shoutout to all the autistic ppl who got maliciously misunderstood as a kid and thought they could fix it by learning to speak with well-researched precision but ended up getting hated even more as a result because now people think you’re just using big words to try to show off

If an employer ever asks you to resign, tell them "no".

There is no benefit to resigning unless you have another job lined up already.

Make them fire you. Get your unemployment benefits. Make sure you are legally protected in case of malfeasance. Resigning undermines all of that.

This message brought to you by AWS telling workers to return to office 5-days-a-week by commuting or relocating, or they should resign.

Again, the answer is "no, you'll have to fire me."

EDIT: To clarify, in most areas "fired" and "let go" are not legally meaningful terms and can be used interchangeably. The important term is "for cause" or not. So don't commit misconduct to get fired. Poor job performance is typically not a "for cause" reason, nor is failure to accept changes like RTO

@sinbad the main thing you would have missed is an increasingly heavy-handed series of lessons on the topic of how much it's appropriate to trust software companies

@sinbad I care about doing good work, and have told customers so as a freelancer (sometimes in the context of "I will do it right or I will not do it at all"), and that usually results in really strong expressions of appreciation.

In the back of my mind, I cannot help but think "if you are so thankful for me giving a shit, then what the hell has everyone else been shipping for you?"

Honestly if you left the tech industry a decade ago and sat out all the “big trends” (blockchain, NFTs, metaverse, AI) you could come back in a few years time and have missed precisely nothing of substance

@eniko @bean Hm. To me it feels more like exception handling, at least when using the question mark operator.

But with the benefit that there are compact, inline ways of (selectively) intercepting those errors, and that they have a value representation (which is particularly useful when you need to represent an operation that *partly* failed, like a batch operation). That's something I miss in eg. JS.

(Also I think a lot of the hate for exceptions is bandwagoning and only a very small part of it is based in the genuine criticisms, tbh.)

Na een volle week met twee begrafenissen blijkt dat mijn ouders nu covid-19 hebben. Ik ben echt ontzettend blij dat zij iedere booster en/of vaccin halen die er te geven is.

Mijn vader is in de 80 en hartpatiënt, mijn moeder is iets jonger en heeft zes jaar geleden een nier gedoneerd.

Het gaat goed met ze, wel veel hoesten, maar de huisarts (heel attent) houdt ze goed in de gaten.

Net kippensoep en wat dropsnoepjes gebracht, dus ik maak me zo iets minder zorgen om hen.

Mijn buurtjes (stukken jonger dan mijn ouders) testten vandaag ook positief, maar die hebben de afgelopen twee jaar geen booster meer gehaald, want het zal zo'n vaart niet lopen. Die liggen nu met flinke koorts uitgeput op bed.

#BlijfDiePrikHalen #Covid19 #BoosterDeBoostBoost

nickelodeon should host a presidential debate and every time a candidate lies they get slimed
wish noise cancelling headphones had a setting that inverts their noise cancellation priorities

most of them will filter out everything except speech

we want…kinda the opposite. get rid of the background chatter of people talking, get rid of cars and stuff. leave the birds and the wind and the rustle of leaves.

Something I've been saying for a while now. If you know how to program and are willing to dig in, you don't need permission to create the online world that you want. But that's not sufficient. Very few people have both the skills and fortitude to do something meaningful on their own. I would go further and say that's not even what we want.

Creating the world we want is always a social problem. Because we need to find like-minded people to join us.

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You and your coworkers should talk about how much you get paid. It is not some secret, that is only giving power to the bosses. They want you to be isolated, solidarity is the enemy of the capitalists.

Maybe I should make an autistic news channel where I just read whatever bullshit that's coming out, and translate it to "this person thinks they'll make money if you believe what they're saying"

politics 

This Halloween remember: Damage to property matters only so far as it harms actual people.

@pascaline Hmm. Ik heb er mijn twijfels bij of dat wel echt non-profit is, als ik zo eens naar en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomorrow kijk en dan vooral de aanzienlijke funding daarachter - dit lijkt mij meer op een "non-profit dochter van for-profit bedrijf"-constructie zoals je die wel vaker in de VS ziet, vaak om belastingredenen (en dan is het uiteindelijk wel degelijk for-profit want er is een afhankelijkheidsrelatie).

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