Wes_Dev

joined 1 year ago
[–] Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml 5 points 7 months ago

For-profit prisons.....

Evil

[–] Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml 3 points 7 months ago (4 children)

I'm familiar with the others, but what the heck did Kellog's do?

[–] Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml 3 points 7 months ago (1 children)

It's such a disappointment. We try to build a system with people to entrust our well-being to and help those in need, but it always goes wrong.

From ancient times and the king's guard, to modern cops in some town. It always becomes corrupted.

[–] Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml 1 points 7 months ago

That's how it always starts though.

People use any device or service they want. It's a mix of crooks, tinkerers, journalists, etc.

A company or government makes some moral panic and pushes some privacy or civil rights erosion in the name of "security". The actual security benefit may or may not exist.

Then other companies do the same to keep up.

Then there's only a handful of companies not doing the thing, so anyone who doesn't want their privacy or civil rights eroded uses that, including crooks.

Then politicians and the other companies point to the holdouts as "PROOF!" their changes were good, because look how many crooks use that stuff! (The number of crooks hasn't changed, they've just been concentrated to a single location.) The moral panic deepens.

The non-criminal population that cares about their privacy or civil rights speak out, but get accused of secretly being criminals, or some other crap that can be used to dismiss their concerns. "If you have nothing to hide, why are you so upset?" and all that.

Now laws get passed to force all companies to do the same thing, to stop the criminals! But let's not worry about anyone else. The tinkerers, journalists, privacy-advocates, etc. They don't matter.

The law gets passed, and now all toasters are legally required to record your breakfast conversations, for a silly example.

[–] Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml 0 points 7 months ago (2 children)

Unfortunately, some areas have standardized on Tesla charging stations for all electric cars, so you're giving him money no matter what.

[–] Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml 5 points 7 months ago (1 children)

Nice. What'd'ya get?

[–] Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml 71 points 7 months ago (11 children)

To this day, you can still find conservative media that shits on anyone with electric vehicles, for some reason.

Now Musk opened his mouth and said stupid shit, and the other side doesn't want his cars either. All he's got left are the people who don't care, already bought one, or fall over themselves to kiss his feet.

[–] Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml 6 points 7 months ago

Debranded? Nice. I dislike that modern cars are covered in logos and tacky chrome symbols and words. Give me a nice plain car with nothing but paint on the outside.

[–] Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml 1 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

I did, but then the company got bought out, all the people who worked there fired, and I had to move back to a different state with family to avoid being homeless. Kill me...

[–] Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml 3 points 7 months ago (1 children)

I think that's a fair point.

A lot of my favorite games are indie titles or from small dev teams.

[–] Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml 29 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (4 children)

You didn't have to deal with random re-balancing changing your gameplay, spying and tracking embedded in everything, hackers ruining the game or targeting you, invasive DRM (consoles), being forced to update your system for an hour before you can play, being forced to sign up for bullshit accounts in order to play the game you just bought, games that have required updates the day they come out, your games disappearing forever because the publisher changed their mind and removed it from the store, game content being removed to sell as DLC instead, being pressured to link social media accounts, bigger companies buying the game and forcing you to use their services to play it, companies monitoring and recording player interactions, companies going under making it impossible to play the game you already bought...

Holy shit. I never realized how bad modern gaming has gotten.

[–] Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml 4 points 7 months ago

Show off. I have 12 GB of DDR3, and a swap partition on spinning rust.

(save me)

 

Hey all,

Just curious about something. I'm in my 30s and it took me until my early to mid 20s to realize that the cartoon thought bubbles or echoy voiceover thinking in shows and movies was kind of a real thing.

I almost never can visualize, and when I do it's not something I can control. I can't just summon the image of an apple in my head, but apparently everyone else around me can. Even when I can visualize, it's like a thin mist that's hard to pinpoint details and easily blown away.

Similarly, I almost never have an internal monologue. The times I do are short-lived and conversational, like "Wow, you should really wake up, it's past noon". or something.

However, I'm pretty good at playing songs in my head and quietly jamming out to sounds that don't exist.

When I have a puzzle or something I need to think about, my subconscious handles it and just tells me the answer most of the time, without me having to do anything but look at the problem and wait. That's super helpful for most day-to-day stuff, and people think I'm smart. But it means I'm terrible at doing math in my head, and can't think through any kind of complicated issue in my head.

It also doesn't help that my short term and long term memory are both terrible. Any memories older than a couple of weeks are just gone, or they are emotionless fuzzy snapshots with no before or after. If I know something, it comes to mind without effort. If I don't know something, it's probably just gone forever unless I have some kind of visual reminder and get lucky.

Basically, I can't do anything in my head. I have to write it down, or have some other way to externalize the information in order to go over it. This make people think I'm stupid.

Add in the classic "bad at social-anything" and every interaction feels like a disaster.

And don't get me started on how often I forget what I'm doing or how badly I fail to multitask. Makes finding a job I can live on very hard, and the one time I had a decent job, I felt like I constantly had to prove myself. I was always making seemingly basic mistakes and letting everyone down.

Anyway, that's neither here nor there. I wanted to give kind of an overview of how my head works. I was wondering what kinds of brains everyone else is dealing with.

Does anyone else deal with things like visualization, or poor memory, or anything like that? How do you cope with the day-to-day?

 

Hey all,

I wasn't quite sure what to title this, so I gave up and just asked the question. I'll be a bit vague, as the point is not the specific bit of code I'm stuck on, but moreso the general issue of an uncooperative brain.

How do you make any real progress learning if you deal with frequent brain fog and have terrible short term and long term memory?

For example, I finally learned how something works after months of trying to wrap my head around it. Didn't end up using it for a few months more, and now I forgot it again. I'm back to square one, trying to relearn things I already learned. And that's assuming I wake up and can actually focus on anything. Some days, brain fog rolls into the harbor and I just stare dumbly at the screen, barely able to concentrate on the task, much less think about the code or complexities. It's impossible to make progress on days where I forget what I was doing before I even start.

Other days, my brain seems to be running on all cylinders, and I can storm through my work almost effortlessly, learning as I go and making more progress in a day than I did the week or two prior.

It seems like the only things I truly retain are mechanical. The basic nuts and bolts, the simple concepts like how variables work. It took me longer than I'd like to admit understanding calling and writing functions. Things that are more abstract or high level are easily forgotten. It's a nightmare.

So, what do I do? How an I work around this problem-child brain of mine and actually LEARN?

I'd be interested to hear from anyone who dealt with something similar. I'm also eager to hear from any fellow neurodivergent folk, who might have a similar problem wrangling their grey and white matter into shape.

UPDATE: Thanks for the ideas and encouragement, everyone. I'm a bit busy, but I'll get around to some individual replies soon. As a general note, seeing a doctor would be a good idea, but without insurance and a well paying job, I couldn't afford to see any kind of specialist, or even make frequent appointments with a GP. I appreciate the well wishes though.

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