Emotional_Series7814

joined 3 weeks ago
[–] Emotional_Series7814@piefed.zip 2 points 2 hours ago (1 children)

I use and like these, but that's my normal staple remover. Not so good at the heavy duty ones.

image

The one I have been using is more like the one on the left here.

 

We use heavy-duty staples for documents with many pages, where normal staples will not go all the way through because of how many pages there are. It seems I might be the first person doing something that requires removing those staples. Very difficult with normal staple removers. So we bought a heavy-duty staple remover and it's very useful! Very helpful.

So fascinating there is a whole field for this called ~cartography~

That looks so good!

!pokemon@sopuli.xyz would appreciate this.

[–] Emotional_Series7814@piefed.zip 1 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Delete whole thread specifically because I imagine that is two layers to check through, you both have to find the deleted post and then its edit history, instead of just edit history. The whole principle of "a determined thief could probably break into anywhere, but they'll probably pick the low-effort unlocked house and skip over the one with a security camera, two dogs, and a tall wire fence," just make it harder and more inconvenient to find the post content. (I do say this not being 100% aware of how the code behind the Fediverse works, nor if we have something similar to the Reddit undeleter sites yet. Also do not know if the Reddit undeleter sites recovered old versions of posts before edits.)

I usually do make the assumption anything on the internet is for forever, but I also think we're well aware that sometimes people make mistakes, and sometimes people realize only after they commit the mistake. I am not so sure just saying "well the internet is forever, just give up" is the smart decision here. I'd prefer losing an online discussion over someone self-doxxing and being unable to take it down.

In general, I also use deletion because sometimes I'll type out a reply I think is nice and measured, but then I think of if the other person is going to be okay with me trying to politely disagree or if I'll get a much more harshly-worded reply full of insults in return. I end up deleting to avoid the conflict and misery. I can understand why people would want to access the discussion, especially since I'm pretty sure I still stand by what I said in those but just took it back to save myself "fuck you!!!" in my inbox, or worse a lovely logical disagreeing response… with a bunch of namecalling surprise at the end. I'm not sure I'd be able to keep calm and report instead of sending back a whole thing on how that wasn't very nice and how heartbreaking it is that I was engaging in good faith (and not just pretending to and using that as a cover, not sealioning) and got responded to as if I was being much nastier, what happened to kindness and civility and educating people you think are wrong instead of hating on them immediately… (and then I delete it because I realize how bad it looks and that it'd only invite more vitriol.)

No, this has not happened to me yet, especially because most of my opinions fall in line with the Fediverse at large. I have not posted transphobia and rightfully gotten bashed for it and then end up crying about why people are so mean to me when I just said the T slur. But I have seen enough unkind replies like this to a person not being nasty or bigoted that I do fear it. Even now I kind of want to delete because I'm worried you'll say "well just then block em lol, grow up" (yes, I would, but obviously being told the nasty things meriting a block in the first place does not feel good) and a bunch of "toughen up you snowflake" type things to me. In real life, I have not really had people be nasty to me and I have continued expectations that people will continue to treat me in a way that does not involve hostility, so of course I do not have high defenses for that.

Funnily enough this only happens with typed words. In real life I think I only ever said something I wanted to take back once in elementary, but I have also encountered a much smaller number of belligerent people who I think would swear at me in real life than I have online.

Hey, thanks for explaining! Not new to the Fediverse, but new to PieFed. I agree with your philosophy: own your own content.

[–] Emotional_Series7814@piefed.zip 3 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (4 children)

I mean, if I accidentally wrote something that gives away my location (maybe a discussion topic about bars and I mention my local bar Barname is super great?) I want to be able to have that GONE instead of kept alive in the name of discussion and keeping content. I am sure you can think of multiple cases where actually getting rid of some content would be useful. Is there a solution that allows for both? Would editing over my comment, as a comment below mentions, work? Typical deletion allows recovery, but editing over lets me obscure my accidental self-dox?

[–] Emotional_Series7814@piefed.zip 2 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

I accidentally reacted with an emoji on Piefed while trying to close that feature and am trying to undo it. Curious if you got any notification.

EDIT: I don't think I can take it back.

[–] Emotional_Series7814@piefed.zip 4 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago) (2 children)

I use the Unhookd extension on YouTube so I do not get lost all day. Thankfully always turned my nose up at Shorts, but removing them still makes the real estate stuff I actually use instead of something that makes my sensitive self start thinking about how much I hate the short form content we-want-to-addict-you reduce-friction-to-keep-you-scrolling-for-days trend. No more suggested videos. No Live Chat. No Home Feed. Just me and the search bar, going directly for the video I need/want to see.

[–] Emotional_Series7814@piefed.zip 4 points 6 days ago (1 children)

We do at least have the advantage of editing titles.

 

Yesterday I took a shower. I thought I'd try a tip I read about brushing conditioner through my hair with a hairbrush during the shower. I meant to put a reasonable amount of conditioner in the brush, but accidentally put way too much. (Nearing the end of the bottle, at the point where just squeezing produces nothing unless I had the bottle upside down. So I'd been leaving the bottle upside down so I could get conditioner out, and forgot how fast it would come out in this instance.) I brushed anyways, figuring my hair would look all greasy when it dried from way too much product.

Nope. It looks normal. And now instead of smelling like nothing as is normal for me, it smells nice like the conditioner. Not too strong, I only just noticed this the day after the shower, as my hair came near my face and I caught a whiff of it (and immediately came to post the story on !dullsters@dullsters.net). I still have the negative consequence of wasted conditioner, but at least my hair smells nice now and it isn't greasy-looking as I feared.

Probably relevant that my hair is long, so still a decent length to distribute product throughout.

[–] Emotional_Series7814@piefed.zip 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

Yes! (This is still me, just decided to try another instance.)

view more: next ›