I feel called out xD (though in my defence, English is my 2nd language)
I’m also here:
- https://www.reddit.com/user/kazerniel
- Discord: kazerniel
- https://steamcommunity.com/id/kazerniel
- 2 Posts
- 140 Comments
not sure what OP meant, but it reminded me of the forced assimilation of peoples in a colonial setting, where a potential scenario is that
- the grandparents speak their native language fluently, and the dominating language almost not at all
- the parents speak both the native and the dominating language, but badly
- the kids speak the dominating language fluently, and the native language almost not at all
So in that case the parents can be seen as not having a proper native language, because they have two languages they can sorta make work, but can’t fully express nuance and complex thought in either.
kazerniel@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Digg launches its new Reddit rival to the publicEnglish
1·2 days agoI have a link to my Lemmy profile on my Reddit profile and not even shadowbanned 🤷
kazerniel@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Digg launches its new Reddit rival to the publicEnglish
1·2 days agoThis, I follow a single Reddit sub on RSS because it just doesn’t exist on Lemmy 🤷 And in general, communities for many niche topics or smaller countries are nonexistent. But the conversations are much better here, so I hang out more on Lemmy nowadays :)
kazerniel@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Digg launches its new Reddit rival to the publicEnglish
1·2 days agoInteresting, I had my 9GAG phase around 2011-12. Never really used Digg, just saw the front page a couple times, then started dabbling in Reddit in 2015, then Lemmy in 2023 with the blackout protests. (I almost said those achieved nothing, but I think that’s probably when most current Lemmy users joined, so 🤷)
kazerniel@lemmy.worldto
Fuck AI@lemmy.world•Google is taking over your Gmail inbox with AIEnglish
2·8 days agothanks :) yes it was in light mode
kazerniel@lemmy.worldto
Fuck AI@lemmy.world•Google is taking over your Gmail inbox with AIEnglish
3·8 days agoThanks, I’ll look into it!
From a quick glance I wanted to flag up that this form is very hard to read with black on dark grey:

kazerniel@lemmy.worldto
Fuck AI@lemmy.world•Google is taking over your Gmail inbox with AIEnglish
28·9 days agodamn, I should really leave Gmail, but I’ve used it for everything for almost 20 years 😫
kazerniel@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Stack Overflow in freefall: 78 percent drop in number of questionsEnglish
21·9 days agohaha I ran into this too, someone changed the title of my question on one of their non-programming boards - I was so pissed, I never went back to that particular board (it was especially annoying because it was a quite personal question)
kazerniel@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Stack Overflow in freefall: 78 percent drop in number of questionsEnglish
5·9 days agoI’m happy to see a bit of a renaissance of forums in the last few years. Quite a few open source projects now run forums built on the Discourse engine (open-source, can be self-hosted for free). I was kinda sceptical at first, they look so different from the BBCode forums I was used to, but over time came to appreciate the features that drag the forum format into the 21st century.
I hope an increasing number of projects come to realise the drawbacks of Discord, namely that you keep years’ worth of information on someone else’s centralised platform, and it’s very difficult to find past information even for members of the server, and impossible from the outside. I look at a handful of Discord channels daily, but had to mute some because users keep asking the same questions every two days…
kazerniel@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Stack Overflow in freefall: 78 percent drop in number of questionsEnglish
8·9 days agoHear hear, it was the hostile atmosphere that pushed me away from Stack Exchange years before LLMs were a thing. That very clear impression that the site does not exist to help specific people, but a vague public audience, and the treatment of every question and answer is subjugated to that. Since then I just ask/answer questions on platforms like Lemmy, Reddit, Discord, or the Discourse forums ran by various organisations, it’s a much more pleasant experience.
yeah, I sometimes thank past me when I don’t have to deal with hassle avoided by my past actions (even if it’s mundane stuff like washing the dishes yesterday xd)
and “adult” clearly means porn, and “ends” clearly refers to murder or suicide 🙃
kazerniel@lemmy.worldto
politics @lemmy.world•Is there any legal justification for the US attack on Venezuela?English
5·13 days agoIf only you read as far as the 4th paragraph of the article…
The experts the Guardian spoke to agreed that the US is likely to have violated the terms of the UN charter, which was signed in October 1945 and designed to prevent another conflict on the scale of the second world war. A central provision of this agreement – known as article 2(4) – rules that states must refrain from using military force against other countries and must respect their sovereignty.
Geoffrey Robertson KC, a founding head of Doughty Street Chambers and a former president of the UN war crimes court in Sierra Leone, said the attack on Venezuela was contrary to article 2(4) of the charter. “The reality is that America is in breach of the United Nations charter,” he added. “It has committed the crime of aggression, which the court at Nuremberg described as the supreme crime, it’s the worst crime of all.”
Elvira Domínguez-Redondo, a professor of international law at Kingston University, described the operation as a “crime of aggression and unlawful use of force against another country”. Susan Breau, a professor of international law and a senior associate research fellow at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, agreed that the attack could have only been considered lawful if the US had a resolution from the UN security council or was acting in self-defence. “There is just no evidence whatsoever on either of those fronts,” Breau said.
kazerniel@lemmy.worldtoMicroblog Memes@lemmy.world•It's probably not reasonable to expect this to improve in 2026. English
3·15 days agoIMO we should just have settings menus alongside commands for most things any normal user might have to encounter, since that’s just a more user-friendly interface in terms of preventing accidental bad command execution and also just letting people find things on their own without having to look up a command every time if they don’t want to learn a short book’s worth of terminal commands.
THIS. As a lifelong Windows user I’d rather deal with layers of shitty GUI, than having to memorise terminal commands and always pay attention not to mistype them lest I fuck my system up.
I can’t switch to Linux yet due to lack of support from my essential programs, but even if it wasn’t for those, I’d still be annoyed if I had to use a terminal to change settings in my system.
In the UK the default full-time workday is 7 hours, 9-5 with an unpaid hour of lunch.
I don’t even have ADHD, just strongly introverted, and my brain would just get fried in the first day of 8 hours of meetings.
kazerniel@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Made in space? Start-up brings factory in orbit one step closer to realityEnglish
2·16 days agoOtoh according to Iain Banks’s speculation, space colonisation might be the thing that finally lets humanity toss off the chains of capitalism:
The thought processes of a tribe, a clan, a country or a nation-state are essentially two-dimensional, and the nature of their power depends on the same flatness. Territory is all-important; resources, living-space, lines of communication; all are determined by the nature of the plane (that the plane is in fact a sphere is irrelevant here); that surface, and the fact the species concerned are bound to it during their evolution, determines the mind-set of a ground-living species. The mind-set of an aquatic or avian species is, of course, rather different.
Essentially, the contention is that our currently dominant power systems cannot long survive in space; beyond a certain technological level a degree of anarchy is arguably inevitable and anyway preferable.
To survive in space, ships/habitats must be self-sufficient, or very nearly so; the hold of the state (or the corporation) over them therefore becomes tenuous if the desires of the inhabitants conflict significantly with the requirements of the controlling body. On a planet, enclaves can be surrounded, besieged, attacked; the superior forces of a state or corporation - hereafter referred to as hegemonies - will tend to prevail. In space, a break-away movement will be far more difficult to control, especially if significant parts of it are based on ships or mobile habitats. The hostile nature of the vacuum and the technological complexity of life support mechanisms will make such systems vulnerable to outright attack, but that, of course, would risk the total destruction of the ship/habitat, so denying its future economic contribution to whatever entity was attempting to control it.
Outright destruction of rebellious ships or habitats - pour encouragez les autres - of course remains an option for the controlling power, but all the usual rules of uprising realpolitik still apply, especially that concerning the peculiar dialectic of dissent which - simply stated - dictates that in all but the most dedicatedly repressive hegemonies, if in a sizable population there are one hundred rebels, all of whom are then rounded up and killed, the number of rebels present at the end of the day is not zero, and not even one hundred, but two hundred or three hundred or more; an equation based on human nature which seems often to baffle the military and political mind. Rebellion, then (once space-going and space-living become commonplace), becomes easier than it might be on the surface of a planet.
Even so, this is certainly the most vulnerable point in the time-line of the Culture’s existence, the point at which it is easiest to argue for things turning out quite differently, as the extent and sophistication of the hegemony’s control mechanisms - and its ability and will to repress - battles against the ingenuity, skill, solidarity and bravery of the rebellious ships and habitats, and indeed the assumption here is that this point has been reached before and the hegemony has won… but it is also assumed that - for the reasons given above - that point is bound to come round again, and while the forces of repression need to win every time, the progressive elements need only triumph once.
Concomitant with this is the argument that the nature of life in space - that vulnerability, as mentioned above - would mean that while ships and habitats might more easily become independent from each other and from their legally progenitative hegemonies, their crew - or inhabitants - would always be aware of their reliance on each other, and on the technology which allowed them to live in space. The theory here is that the property and social relations of long-term space-dwelling (especially over generations) would be of a fundamentally different type compared to the norm on a planet; the mutuality of dependence involved in an environment which is inherently hostile would necessitate an internal social coherence which would contrast with the external casualness typifying the relations between such ships/habitats. Succinctly; socialism within, anarchy without. This broad result is - in the long run - independent of the initial social and economic conditions which give rise to it.



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