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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 26th, 2022

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  • La notizia non è per nulla positiva, ma (senza offesa) trovo cringe la maggior parte dei commenti finora visti in questo thread; mi ricordano il tipico atteggiamento dell’adolescente arrogante e pretenzioso che crede di essere super intelligente, considerando gli altri tutti degli idioti e co—oni. Dalle serie, usando un detto, “sono tutte pu—ne, tranne mia sorella, mia madre e mia figlia”; non mi sembra il migliore degli atteggiamenti.

    @[email protected] @[email protected] anziché considere tutti gli altri come un “cancro” (semicit.) e credere che siano tutti utOnti, non sarà la tematica un pelino più articolata? Personalmente penso che da un lato ci siano aziende che stanno sfruttando i punti di debolezza di molti utenti in questa nuova economia dell’attenzione, dall’altro c’è effettivamente una fetta di utenti senza una adeguata “tech literacy”, ma non necessariamente perché scemi; semplicemente forse sono stati risucchiati nel mondo digitale troppo velocemente, senza aver attraversato questo mondo “per stadi” e senza avere il tempo di informarsi di volta in volta sulle novità e nuove tech. Penso a chi ha scoperto Facebook senza prima essersi fatto le ossa sui forum in phpbb o su blog vari e MySpace, alle nuove gen che magari non sanno che oltre al semplice “mi connetto al wifi”, esiste una distinzione fra modem, router e switch.

    Sia chiaro che non voglio dire che la mia analisi sia QUELLA giusta, vi voglio semplicemente suggerire un modo di pensare che non colpevolizza e non offende il 90% della popolazione, cosa che fra l’altro vi renderebbe più ostico comunicare con questa popolazione senza risultare antipatici e saccenti.




  • “Why not? You and I are eccentrics. We’re certainly not typical of the people living on Terminus. As for criminals, that’s a matter of definition. And if criminals are the price we must pay for rebels, heretics, and geniuses, I’m willing to pay it. I demand the price be paid. […] You can’t have geniuses and saints without having people far outside the norm, and I don’t see how you can have on only one side of the norm. There is bound to be a certain symmetry.” - Foundation and Earth by Isaac Asimov







  • I’m using PocketCasts and I paid a one-time fee before it became subscription based (but there’s still a free tier), in order to be able to listen to podcast using the web app on PC. Thus I now have lifetime premium access.

    I’m very satisfied with their service, I did not find any problems with both the Android app and the web app, moreover it has almost every feature I need, except voice to text conversion in order to be able to share slices of audio in text format (but there are dedicated apps for that).




  • My first Internet connection was based on GPRS and I remember images taking ages to load and loading in chunks. Moreover the connection kept interfering with the surround audio system and sometimes I would hear noises similar to the dial up modems.

    I also remember the first times I tried using eMule (is it still up and running?): I was searching for the video song “Elevation” by U2 but I was unaware of rule 34; you can imagine what I actually downloaded.




  • Thanks a lot for the welcome! :)

    Science and self-help are becoming a little tricky though, because lots of popular books, especially in social and behavioural sciences and pop science, are affected by the replication crisis.

    I also have discovered a podcast where they debunk some parts of some books (or the whole book if it is very controversial): it is called “If Books Could Kill” (if you are interested, you may find it wherever you listen to podcast; I personally use PocketCasts). They already have done an episode on “Freakonomics” (which I read a year ago) and on the 15th of June they have released an episode on “Atomic Habits” (also read a year ago); I will definitely listen to what they have to say about it, hoping that they will not “destroy” the whole book ahahahah



  • Hi, I’m a full stack dev at work who likes to read nonfiction (but also scifi and fantasy, although that’s offtopic here) as one of the many hobbies. I don’t have a specific nonfiction genre I’m interested in, I usually read stuff that I find interesting in a particular moment, although I tend towards science, politics and a little bit of self-help.

    Some of my favourites nonfiction books are “Atomic habits” by James Clear, “The Dictator’s Handbook” by Bruce Bueno de Mesquita and “Thinking, Fast and Slow” by Daniel Kahneman.