RidgeRoad

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] RidgeRoad@midwest.social 4 points 3 months ago

I'm from the school that says Harris' is settled law and it's Walz' vs. Walz's that needs litigated.

[–] RidgeRoad@midwest.social 2 points 3 months ago

It’s not like there was a Warren-level progressive in the running.

And if there were, we know from 2020 there'd still be cosplay communists insisting she wasn't progressive enough.

[–] RidgeRoad@midwest.social 2 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

She isn't on the Republicans for Ukraine report card because (duh!) she isn't a Republican, but the only criteria that would get her mildly dinged there would be that she didn't sign Discharge Petition 9 or 10. Republicans with identical records as Omar get an A - Excellent rating.

Early into the 2022 invasion, she was among fifteen Progressive Democrats to vote against the Consolidated Appropriations Act, receiving some press attention on that. Around the same time, she voted against the Asset Seizure for Ukraine Reconstruction Act, criticizing it as a symbolic gesture substituted for practical assistance. Neither count on the above report card, but are examples Samuels might cite to impugn her record.

If I were in MN-5 voting singularly pro-Ukraine, there's little for Samuels to genuinely improve upon, and the pretense that he could suggests disingenuousness on the issue I wouldn't consider preferable.

[–] RidgeRoad@midwest.social 3 points 1 year ago

iFixit noted yesterday, "Though the bill is strong and should make repairs more available for everyone, it allows manufacturers to continue to engage in parts pairing, a practice by which they limit repairs with software blocks. They can also combine parts into expensive assemblies, which makes repairs more expensive."

Similarly doubt there's any way to legislate against the dismal engineering that tempts a failure avalanche like the Ford F150 taillight horrorshow I posted a few days ago.

 

Water gets into 2018 Ford truck tail light assembly, corrodes connectors, disables vehicle, $5600 repair.

[–] RidgeRoad@midwest.social 3 points 1 year ago

Odd. I wondered why friends from Chicago always order tuna salad whenever they visit.

 

And now to meteorologist Louis Rossmann with expected impacts of the forecasted snowstorm in Hell.

 

Initial commit was June 11. Documentation is here.

 

See also PIRG's statement NHTSA Walks Back Anti-Repair Letter, but Questions Remain, including link to the NHTSA's letter.

 

Holly Borgmann, vice president of government affairs for ADT, Boca Raton, Fla., said that while these types of laws may make sense for some industries, tools and manuals that could enable someone to disarm an alarm or reroute an emergency signal should remain proprietary. Borgmann is an SIA board member and vice chair of the SIA government affairs committee.

A security system that can be repaired without notifying the monitoring service, nor sending any suspicious signals, is a security system that can be defeated independent of right to repair legislation. Likewise, if the monitoring service can't verify repairs to be authorized by the customer, they can't handle response to an ordinary alarm.

The site specific data of an alarm panel is generally uploaded remotely by the monitoring service using the communication system through which the panel is monitored. That data is retained by the monitoring service in the event it needs restored, or for use as a template should it need modified. This is a trivial operation if there are any doubts regarding the integrity of the programming.

[–] RidgeRoad@midwest.social 8 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Iowa Driver's License Manual, page 10, § 2.8 Traffic Signals.

ibid., page 15, § 2.21 Intersections.

[–] RidgeRoad@midwest.social 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I flunked Sunday school, so I'll take the item description on its word that it's a "great way to give witness to God's truth in the Holy Bible."

[–] RidgeRoad@midwest.social 1 points 1 year ago

Recommend also the seminal TMRC dictionary for several terms absent here, plus some memorably elegant definitions:

Kludge: A crock that works.
Crock: A kludge that doesn't work.

Same again true of Peter Samson's original 1959 and 1960 editions.

[–] RidgeRoad@midwest.social 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Ah, just picked up a T480s Thinkpad earlier this week, installed Manjaro Cinnamon. Writing this reply on it now.

[–] RidgeRoad@midwest.social 1 points 1 year ago

As I write this reply, three buttons appear below the text dialog, "Reply," "Cancel" and "Preview." Not having deleted the text from dialog, nor committed to "Reply" or "Cancel," if I now decide to view your profile on this page by clicking your user name, it has no effect. This appears true of all links except !main and those to off-site URLs, for example, the donation heart you mentioned.

I also observe the "Cancel" button is not offered when typing a reply to your initial post.

[–] RidgeRoad@midwest.social 3 points 1 year ago

i really miss the (relative) locality of the old BBS days

I was recalling BBS days with @TurtleTourParty's "99.9999% uptime is overrated" remark. We really have become spoiled in little better than a quarter century. The typical BBS had one phone line. Once you got past a busy signal, you had to economize your time online to give other users a chance. You'd install an offline reader to download new mail, disconnect, reply at leisure, and upload when you got back in.

Aside from the local quality (enforced by a forgotten fact-of-life called "long distance charges," defined as "not far outside city limits"), you never posted anything to discover someone else had replied simultaneously, because you were preventing them from doing so. I have fond memories of message boards that were games designed around this fact.

Have not tried it yet, but this promises to recapture some feel of the "good ol' days." I wish it included a sound effect of that satisfying "connected" modem squawk when you fired it up.

[–] RidgeRoad@midwest.social 5 points 1 year ago

I found it curious, back in December, that Twitter suppressed tweets notifying followers of a Mastodon address, acknowledging no such threat from links to other social media companies, including a few that have in shorter work surpassed Twitter's user base.

Similar behavior from Reddit briefly banning r/KbinMigration. There's been a r/RedditAlternatives sub for over eleven years. Awkward if they suddenly decided that to be spam. For nearly as long, there's been r/Facebook providing unofficial tech support for its users. Upon resolving their issue, one easily supposes they return to looking at ads on that hellhole rather than those on Reddit. That one, I'm confident, was subject to no interruption at all.

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