incogtino

joined 2 years ago
[–] incogtino 4 points 5 days ago

Sure I'm only a small bourgeoisie for now

[–] incogtino 9 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago) (1 children)

Jeff Bezos is a smaug

Jeff Bezos hoarding gold meme

[–] incogtino 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Are you using Voyager?

[–] incogtino 2 points 2 weeks ago

Linux Mint on desktop, laptop, and home server. Doesn't hurt to have the full install on the server, and I have a monitor hooked up anyway - but makes maintenance easier with everything the same distro. Batocera on the retro gaming pc.

Android on phone, but if there was a distro for my phone I would use Linux there too. F-droid for apps where possible, but Play store for some essentials.

 
[–] incogtino 2 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

I used to live in an apartment block where the common door locks would get bad, so I put some graphite on my key every time I went in or out for a week, and that made them good as new for the next year at least

[–] incogtino 6 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (2 children)
  • Die Hard
  • Mean Girls
  • Elf
  • Grinch (Jim Carrey version)
  • Klaus
[–] incogtino 3 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

I wasn't thinking in detail, just addressing an assumption I think a lot of age verification discussions include, which is that the verifier would have to be trusted to maintain some sort of account for you, retaining your data etc.

I have no idea what the legislation says, but I'd be a happier privacy-conscious user if the verification platforms were independent (i.e. not in any other data business) and regulated, with a requirement they don't retain my personal data at all (like the liquor store example)

So the verifier gathers data from you, matches it with a request from the platform, provides confirmation that some standard has been met, and deletes almost all personal information - I acknowledge that this may not rise to the double-blind standard of the original request

Edited to add:

  • you don't have to 'buy' a token, the platform needs to pay verifiers as a cost of business

  • some other comments are asking how you prevent the verifier knowing the platform - to my mind you don't, instead the verifier retains a request id record from the platform, but forgets entirely who you are

[–] incogtino 21 points 3 weeks ago (6 children)

A joke answer, but with the kernel of truth - IRL age verification often requires a trusted verifier (working under threat of substantial penalty) but often doesn't require that verifier to maintain any documentation on individual verification actions

https://chinwag.au/verification/

[–] incogtino 7 points 3 weeks ago (5 children)

So many people I know have no concept of maintenance - if something is not working correctly they'll just keep using it, and when it breaks put it outside to rust (doors that don't open, gates that don't close, bikes that don't shift well, mowers that won't start...)

I was given a leather ottoman last weekend which came from a $10k plus sofa set, which had sat in a sunny room for 8 years without any maintenance. Almost a full tub of conditioner and about 2 hours of labor went into that piece and now it looks and feels amazing

A few years ago I read Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, and while I understand the mental health journey of the protagonist, I really liked the basic conception of Quality which has at least some alignment with Zen - whatever you are doing, that's what you are doing, so do it with focus and care

[–] incogtino 2 points 3 weeks ago

I use the Video Background Play Fix extension in Firefox for Android

[–] incogtino 2 points 3 weeks ago

Tuna Mornay loaded with veggies. I've got sweet potato in the air fryer already, going to add corn peas onion and mushies

https://www.recipetineats.com/tuna-mornay-casserole-pasta-bake/

[–] incogtino 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I found the same about engagement - every post had 5000 comments but only the top 100 could generate actual conversation, everyone else might as well be talking to themselves

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submitted 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) by incogtino to c/[email protected]
 

There are about 6 pages.dev domains spamming lemmy.world communities

The volume is definitely inorganic, and is across a wide range of communities

pages.dev is Cloudflare's site hosting which can be used for free - there are likely many legitimate sites that use that domain, but the current flood is suspicious

chronicleresolve.pages.dev

thefreedomproject.pages.dev

versarch.pages.dev

dailypulse.pages.dev

newssphere-6fu.pages.dev

iniko.pages.dev

miniza.pages.dev

orino.pages.dev

 

I want to set up a 'home phone' network for the kids in a couple of different households. The kids are too young to have their own phones, but are currently dependent on parents to contact each other in the way we did when we were kids

My idea at the moment is to set up an old Android phone on the wifi in each house with messenger or similar, then uninstall all other internet apps and lock down the play store

Does this sound like the best option? If there a better tool that is still cheap/free and will be relatively safe for the kids to use unattended?

 

An unimportant mystery

 

I recently travelled to Vietnam and was looking at exchange rates for some leftover cash.

I noticed a huge swing last week (June 26) where the value of the VND basically doubled for a couple of hours (see the chart in the link). This change is reflected across multiple currencies, so it appears to have been a real event.

I looked at the 10 year chart and this is not a regular occurrence. Does anyone know what happened or how I would find out?

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