I don’t really follow X, Bluesky, Instagram, TikTok, etc. so I basically live under a rock. Sometimes I ask dumb questions to try to understand people a little better. Apologies if my questions inadvertently offend anyone. I mean no harm.
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percent@infosec.pubto
Mildly Interesting@lemmy.world•Crows are intelligent birds and learn quickly – even from each other. In Sweden, they are used to collect cigarette butts and bring them to a machine that automatically rewards them with peanuts.
61·6 days agoUnless I missed something, it seems like the crows are doing it voluntarily. Is that not the case?
Yep, it’s “Estadounidenses” in Portuguese as well. The distinction (and occasional confusion/debate across languages/cultures) makes sense, considering how those cultures learn about continents.
In contrast, English-speaking countries teach the seven-continent model, in which there’s not really any place called “America.” So when we omit “The United States of” for brevity, native English speakers still understand where it’s referring to.
“USians” is an interesting shortcut. It may not be proper English, but it still seems understandable enough in text. Hopefully everyone who vocalizes it, pronounces it your way. If I ever hear “Oosian”, I’ll probably assume they meant “Asian”.
Neat buzzword ya got there. Anyway, I acknowledge that you’ll continue ignoring 9-9-6. Consider your attempts to dodge it a success. And congrats on your success :)
On a lighter topic: I’m still curious about “USian”. Appending a suffix like “ian” to an acronym is unusual in English, but this is the second time I’ve encountered it on Lemmy. How is it pronounced?
Wow, that looks like a lot of work to avoid the 9-9-6 thing. I like this first one though:
What about unpaid holiday in the USA?
Was that at the top of the list because it was meant to compare to 9-9-6, somehow? I mean sure, unpaid holidays suck, but that’s not even in the same ballpark as working 72 hours per week, every week. At that point, you’re just living to work (as a robot/zombie slave cursed with a depressed human brain and flesh body).
As for the rest of the list: I appreciate the effort, but would it have been much harder to use an unordered list? And do you think it’s not possible to gather a big list about China that isn’t just as bad or worse?
Just out of curiosity: When you say “USians” IRL, how do you pronounce it? “You-ess-ians”? “Yousians”? “Oosians”?
There are laws that limit it, and 72-hour work weeks are pretty extreme, even in the US. Do they happen? Sure. I’ve known people who have had to do hours like that for a week, maybe even two. But it’s not their normal schedule like 9-9-6 workers.
So you didn’t visit any factories with suicide nets. Great! I’ve also never witnessed a mass murder. Lucky us!
You chose the easier, less common example, but ignored the more common one that I mentioned. So whatabout 9-9-6? I’ve spoken to people in that 9-9-6 life, and exactly zero of them were happy about it.
9-9-6, suicide nets on some factories… Sounds like a happy place to be.
It’s interesting how much pro-China stuff seems to have flooded the Internet lately. They’ve even been inviting (maybe paying?) YouTubers to visit their country, despite not allowing YouTube to be accessed (legally) on their Internet. This campaign seems to be effective though.
I’m not even really anti-China. I used to conduct a lot of business with Chinese factories, and might do it again someday. But let’s not ignore reality and pretend it’s all sunshine and rainbows over there.
She was a child… But what does that have to do with spaghetti anyway?
percent@infosec.pubto
Today I Learned@lemmy.world•TIL: Young Men Ages 18–29 are Turning Right-Wing and Women of the Same Age Turning Left-WingEnglish
1·13 days agoWhy would it be implemented for those places, but not implemented in any of the other conflicts in the last 50 years?
percent@infosec.pubto
Today I Learned@lemmy.world•TIL: Young Men Ages 18–29 are Turning Right-Wing and Women of the Same Age Turning Left-WingEnglish
2·14 days ago🤔 I’m not sure that answers the question. So… You don’t know of any imminent plans to use the Selective Service to force people to invade those countries, correct?
percent@infosec.pubto
Today I Learned@lemmy.world•TIL: Young Men Ages 18–29 are Turning Right-Wing and Women of the Same Age Turning Left-WingEnglish
3·14 days agoAre there plans to force people to join the military and participate in those invasions? AFAIK, the US hasn’t drafted people since the Vietnam war (>50 years ago), so that seems like a pretty extreme move
It’s interesting how often I see memes here that require knowing so much non-obvious context to understand.
Anyway, that sounds like a really cool art installation. Anyone know the name of it?
This text doesn’t make sense, right?
People are still mining with GPUs? I’m kinda surprised that’s still profitable
percent@infosec.pubto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Fellow 'Fediversers,' what keeps you hanging on here despite the "FV" being a work-in-progress, with all its built-in, various bumps & difficulties to experience along the way?
3·1 month agoAnd eventually someone adds “our wife”
percent@infosec.pubto
Mildly Interesting@lemmy.world•Remote access home PC to test remote access to the work PC
1·1 month agoMaybe a few *arr services configured in a docker-compose file might be appealing to him 🙂
percent@infosec.pubto
Mildly Interesting@lemmy.world•Remote access home PC to test remote access to the work PC
1·1 month agoAhh you’re right. I totally overlooked that 🤦🏻♂️ KDE’s not my daily driver
percent@infosec.pubto
Mildly Interesting@lemmy.world•Remote access home PC to test remote access to the work PC
8·1 month agohome server
I acknowledge that this is a silly question, but what does a Windows home server do? I’m sure there are many possibilities, but most of my server experience has been Linux-based, so I’m just curious.
If I were to run Windows on my home server, I’d probably just end up running a lot of services in WSL out of habit 😆

I just realized something: When I search for something in Lemmy and get zero results, I sometimes go to Reddit and search there.
It would probably be better to make a new post in Lemmy about the thing I’m searching for. It would add content to Lemmy, and the content would be newer and fresher than the Reddit results that are sometimes 10+ years old.