nile_istic

joined 2 months ago
[–] nile_istic@lemmy.world 20 points 3 days ago (6 children)

Not a lawyer, but if you've already paid for something (i.e. "bought" an eBook on Amazon), then you've done your part to ensure the creator eats tonight. Pirating a digital copy of it that you can read/move/engage with wherever you want is no longer even slightly morally questionable at that point.

[–] nile_istic@lemmy.world 3 points 4 days ago

I live on kinda the outskirts of the ghetto, drive through it everyday to get to town, and there's this one house, dilapidated af, looks like it should be condemned, busted ass Ford Explorer non-opped on the dogshit-encrusted gravel path—and it's had Trump signs all over the front fence for ten damn years now.

Idk how to make people like this understand that Donny John literally would not piss on you if you were on fire. He'd just call you white trash, then rape your daughter on his way out.

Glad yours took their signs down, but damn. Lotta people have decided to die on this garbage ass hill.

[–] nile_istic@lemmy.world 22 points 4 days ago (5 children)

It's because we were a nation founded by violence and oppression and built on the backs of a slave race, none of which are practices we ever truly abandoned.

You have healthcare, affordable schooling, and labor unions because, wherever you are, your populace is considered a workforce, not a slave race. When your society relies on a workforce, you want them healthy so they can work longer, you want them educated so they can work smarter, and you want them comfortable enough with their salaries and their hours to feel they can afford to have kids, who will one day join the workforce.

Governing bodies in the US don't need us healthy, smart, or comfortable. They just need us to 1) work (hence tying our healthcare to our work hours), and 2) breed (hence minimal sex education, poor access to contraception, abortion bans, etc).

They don't need to give us healthcare (or education, or basic human necessities or rights), because as long as we're breeding, it's cheaper if we just die. And if that ever bothers us enough to take to the streets (which it has, many times), our local police forces are highly militarized and have no qualms about doing to us what their white ancestors did to my native and black ones (which they have, many times).

And to be clear, this isn't meant to be a woe-is-America spiel. These are problems that we've had many opportunities to address over the years, but let hubris, bigotry, and plain old stupidity get in the way. This is very much a mess of our own making, so I'm not trying to throw a pity party, just addressing your confusion.

TL;DR: Violence, oppression, and slavery. The tried and true American way.

[–] nile_istic@lemmy.world 1 points 4 days ago (2 children)

I did not know that. But I'm also an American, so...

[–] nile_istic@lemmy.world 15 points 4 days ago (4 children)

"But isn't Albany in New York?" - Average American

[–] nile_istic@lemmy.world 5 points 4 days ago

This part. I live in a rural area near a city; lots of people commute into town, and the main road there is flat, wide, straight, not residential, not even any livestock near the road, just open fields. The limit is 35, and half the people I know have gotten at least one $375 ticket for doing 40. It's literally just a cash grab designed to take money from poor people trying to get to work.

[–] nile_istic@lemmy.world 2 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Hate to tell you this, but seems like less a gender issue and more a you issue.

[–] nile_istic@lemmy.world 11 points 5 days ago

My dumb optimistic ass scrolling to the comments under this post thinking "maybe this time iT wOn'T bE sO bAd" lmao

[–] nile_istic@lemmy.world 3 points 5 days ago (3 children)

... You good buddy?

[–] nile_istic@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago (2 children)

If you thought USians were stupid already, give it a few more years of AI usage! You can just see people's eyes glassing over when you try to discuss anything of import.

Yuuuup. I'm an American, and I'm particularly scared for Gen Alpha. The amount of times I've seen my nieces and nephews stop mid-sentence, pull out their phone and have ChatGPT complete their thought is... Idk man. I'm a millennial, and a significant part of this is my generation's fault, cuz we're the "hand them an iPad so they'll leave you alone" parents (though not me personally because I have zero interest in bearing any crotchfruit). But damn, it's scary. And sad.

[–] nile_istic@lemmy.world 3 points 1 week ago

I do like videogames, including ones with NPCs, but the difference there is that an NPC isn't pretending to be a person, it's pretending to be a character in a fiction that was definitively written by a person. And even so, I very much don't like hyper-realism in games, much prefer stylized and/or cartoony.

And yeah the fake person at a drive thru thing started up where I am in California sometime last year (or at least that I first noticed). The irritatingly realistic voice is bad enough, but it's really the obsequious responses that bug me there. A lot of, "great choice! The orange chicken is really tasty", like bitch you literally don't have a mouth, please stop.

[–] nile_istic@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Yeah but see that freaks me tf out too. A few nights ago, the moon was shining through the leaves of the oak tree in my backyard in such a way that it vaguely looked like a little kid's face, and I literally said out loud "absolutely not" and went back inside.

 

I have a lot of issues with AI in general, but frankly the biggest, most immediate one is that I reeeally hate when tech pretends to be human. Like search engines giving me a seventh grader's essay before the actual one-word answer I was looking for. Or the uncanny valley voice at the drive-thru speaker saying "great choice!" to everything I order. Or the AI on shopping websites saying "I'd recommend this model..." Etc etc.

There's just something so strange and uncomfortable to me about a thing that we all know is not a person pretending to be one; feels like someone telling a lie directly to my face, and I know they're lying, and they know they're lying, but I'm supposed to.. appreciate it? For some reason?

But a lot of people I know actually prefer it. They'll ask ChatGPT something—even something that has a simple, definitive answer that doesn't really need further explanation—rather than just looking it up on a search engine. I'm just curious what the difference in psychology is between us. And I'm wondering if maybe it's actually just a me problem; I mean, I hated Jeeves too, and he seemed pretty well-liked back in the day.

 

Full disclosure: I'm very new and very dumb. So. Bear that in mind.

I'm running Docker on Ubuntu Server 24.04 LTS. I installed it according to the official directions provided by Docker. The container example I'll refer to here is Beets, but same happens on Calibre Web Automated and a couple other containers I tried.

Basically, from within the container I can't ping google. This:

docker exec -it beets ping -c 3 google.com

returns:

PING google.com (142.250.113.138): 56 data bytes google.com ping statistics: 3 packets transmitted, 0 packets received, 100% packet loss

So, in Beets case, it can't access musicbrainz to do.. well, anything it's built to do, because it (and any other container I run) doesn't seem to be able to access the internet? Idk.

I've tried a whole bunch of stuff at this point (not really knowing what any of it means, mind you) and nothing has worked. I've checked /etc/resolved.conf, which just lists 127.0.0.53, which is apparently some sort of systemd DNS cache? Ngl, I don't really know what that means, but a potential solution I read was to override it by editing /etc/docker/daemon.json to include something like dns: [8.8.4.4, 8.8.8.8] (I don't recall the exact syntax, sorry). Anyway, that was even worse, because running the ping from inside the container then didn't resolve an IP for google at all and just said "bad address". I tried making a user-defined bridge, which output the exact same as above: 100% packet loss. I tried rebuilding the iptables, nothing. Directing containers to a network in the compose yml, restarting containers, restarting docker, rebooting. Idk.

Only thing that seems to work is adding network_mode: "host" to the container's compose yml, which... I mean, if that's the solution that works, that's what I'll do. But I'm wondering what exactly is going wrong otherwise, and if I can fix it.

Any help greatly appreciated.

 

I'm pretty new to self-hosting in general, so I'm sorry if I'm not using correct terminology or if this is a dumb question.

I did a big archival project last year, and ripped all 700 or so DVDs/Blu-rays I own. Ngl, I had originally planned on just having them all in a big media folder and picking out whatever I wanted to watch that way. Fortunately, I discovered Jellyfin, and went with that instead.

So I bought a mini pc to run Ubuntu server on, and I just installed Jellyfin directly there. Eventually I decided to try hosting a few other services (like Home Assistant and BookLore (R.I.P.)), which I did through Docker.

So I'm wondering, should I be running Jellyfin through Docker as well? Are there advantages to running Jellyfin through Docker as opposed to installed directly on the server? Would transitioning my Jellyfin instance to Docker be a complicated process (bearing in mind that I'm new and dumb)?

Thanks for any assistance.

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