How have you related pseudonymous online work/activity when applying for jobs?
  • RotaryKeyboard RotaryKeyboard Now 86%

    I hear you, and that’s great if it’s something the applicant wants to share. But none of the development work they’ve done at previous companies is work that they’ll be able to share. We take their word on that work. Not taking their word in the same way on other projects seems like a bit of a double standard to me.

    11
  • How have you related pseudonymous online work/activity when applying for jobs?
  • RotaryKeyboard RotaryKeyboard Now 100%

    Let's say you are applying for an engineering position and you want to mention that you contribute to an open source project. Mention the software stack used, maybe the number of downloads, and your focus on the project. Explain it in general terms. If it gets asked about in the interview, just answer questions without providing the name of the project.

    22
  • For Leftists: What happens when a content creator has a questionable guest on?
  • RotaryKeyboard RotaryKeyboard Now 75%

    You are describing Real Time with Bill Maher. People continue to watch his show. At least, I think you are, because I'm not sure what a "questionable guest" even is.

    2
  • *Permanently Deleted*
  • RotaryKeyboard RotaryKeyboard Now 100%

    My (red) state is one of those that changed the law to make it illegal for pornographic websites to be seen by children. To view them, you'd have to have some kind of central ID to prove that you are over 18. This is absolutely a precursor to having to have an ID to use the internet at all. Every bad thing that has ever happened on the internet will be used to convince legislators to enact a law like this. It's only a matter of time.

    13
  • Small Unraid PC with 2 HDDs. Silverstone SG13 case with Asrock N100DC-ITX, the SATA power cable was too short so I had to improvise.
  • RotaryKeyboard RotaryKeyboard Now 100%

    I like the choice of SIlverstone for the case. I got one of those for my proxmox server. It was compact, but not so compact that I left a lot of skin and blood behind after mounting components. I will say that other manufacturers (like Fractal Design just seem to understand how to design an interior a lot better, though.

    1
  • AI-Infused iOS 18 Lauded as 'Ambitious and Compelling' by Apple Execs
  • RotaryKeyboard RotaryKeyboard Now 80%

    I have never been so glad that I talked myself out of buying the new iPhone this year! Siri is the primary input method I use for my iPhone. I would say I make around 20-30 vocal requests a day. It will be so nice to be able to do things like create a meeting on a calendar with a conversation instead of having to frame the request in a single sentence! I hope they do this rollout well.

    3
  • AI-Infused iOS 18 Lauded as 'Ambitious and Compelling' by Apple Execs
  • RotaryKeyboard RotaryKeyboard Now 100%

    In 2005 or so, I got a tip about an application called LaunchBar, which would later be copied by Apple to replace the Sherlock search tool, and later by Microsoft in its PowerToys suite. The machine learning LaunchBar used to tailor its responses based on my previous behavior was life-changing. Instead of configuring an application, I just had to use it to change how it behaved.

    This is how language models and AI are going to improve your products. Subtly. Behind the scenes. Slightly improving a thousand different use cases, only a fraction of which your regular usage patterns are going to intersect with.

    10
  • Can't login to lemmy.sdf.org
  • RotaryKeyboard RotaryKeyboard Now 100%

    Thank you for posting this! I thought I had been banned.

    1
  • Can we roll back to server 0.18.x please?
  • RotaryKeyboard RotaryKeyboard Now 100%

    I thought it was just me! I woke up one day to find that I was logged out, and I couldn’t log in via my apps or even via the Lemmy UI. I thought I had been banned!

    10
  • Novo Nordisk says Wegovy heart benefits due to more than weight loss
  • RotaryKeyboard RotaryKeyboard Now 88%

    Full results from the study, presented at the American Heart Association annual scientific meeting in Philadelphia and published in the New England Journal of Medicine, suggest the drug has other beneficial effects beyond the known health benefits from losing weight.

    The heart risk difference between patients who received Wegovy, known chemically as semaglutide, and those on placebo began to appear almost immediately after starting treatment, researchers said.

    So it’s not just from losing weight!

    The associated risk factors include inflammation, blood pressure and blood sugar control, all of which can impact heart health.

    Patients on Wegovy experienced decreases in C-reactive proteins, an indication of inflammation, similar to those reported with cholesterol lowering statins, which are known to significantly lower heart risks, researchers reported.

    That is really promising!

    7
  • Axelrod suggests Biden drop out of 2024 presidential race
  • RotaryKeyboard RotaryKeyboard Now 81%

    Biden can be an instant king-maker. All he has to do is hold a press conference where he endorses another Democratic candidate, along with an announcement that he is bowing out of the race to protect the country from Donald Trump. It would be the most potent endorsement ever made.

    7
  • Dems Planning To Unseat Swing-District Republicans Who Back Jim Jordan
  • RotaryKeyboard RotaryKeyboard Now 100%

    What they’re doing is publicly signaling that they’re going to spend a lot of money in those districts if these reps vote for Jim Jordan. They’re already swing districts, so anyone who wants to keep his seat is going to have to raise and spend even more money. The Dems are betting that the pressure of having to fundraise and fight a contested election is more of a problem than just making up an excuse to not vote for Jordan.

    12
  • What was a profound moment that a video game caused you to experience, and why?
  • RotaryKeyboard RotaryKeyboard Now 98%

    For me it was playing Life is Strange for the first time. I bought it because it had been listed on Steam as “Overwhelmingly Positive” for ages, and at the time I was really enjoying the story-based games that companies like Telltale were producing. So, knowing nothing about the game, I picked it up and started playing it.

    The first act was slow. What I didn’t realize at the time was that the writers were establishing Arcadia Bay, a city in the Pacific Northwest, as a character. All the people in it needed to be recognizable, so it took time for them to teach the player about who they were, what mattered to them, how they fit in to the city, and what their flaws were. I actually stopped playing for a while after the first act. But, luckily, I picked it back up over the holiday season.

    I still remember playing it in my living room. I was so thoroughly absorbed into the story that when something tense happened in the second act and I couldn’t stop it the way I normally could, I was literally crushing the controller as if I could make things work by pulling the triggers harder.

    I am decidedly not the demographic that Life is Strange was written to appeal to, but they did such a good job writing a compelling story that it didn’t matter. I got sucked in, the characters became important to me, and I could not. put. it. down. I played straight through a night until I finished it.

    (If you’ve played it and you’re wondering, I chose the town the first time I played it.)

    I’ll never forget that game. I’ll also never forget the communities that spawned around it. I read the accounts of people who had just played it for the first time for about a year because it helped me relive the experience I had when I played it. It was incredible.

    77
  • How is genetic engineering wrong, but cyborgs are okay?
  • RotaryKeyboard RotaryKeyboard Now 100%

    Star Trek celebrates the diversity of humanity. The extremes of genetic engineering and (on the other side of the spectrum, perhaps) the Borg are symbolic of the corruption of that diversity.

    For an in-universe explanation, I suppose you could just look at the degree to which cybernetics are tolerated. Rutherford-level cybernetics? No problem! Borg Queen-level cybernetics? Helm, warp nine, full reverse!

    20
  • Style guide for txt file documents?
  • RotaryKeyboard RotaryKeyboard Now 100%

    This is a great resource! Thanks!

    1
  • Style guide for txt file documents?
  • RotaryKeyboard RotaryKeyboard Now 100%

    Wow, the world is a small place! I recently faced this challenge when I was writing a script that needed to store rich text in a CSV. It just so happens that I was a technical writing student at the right time to have learned the conventions that were used before word processors. (This was a weird fluke, since word processors were had been in wide use for many years before I got to college.)

    What you need are the style rules that were used when typewriters were in use. If you find one, let me know! Below is an excerpt from ChatGPT that I vetted based on what I remember.

    1. Headers and Titles: Typically rendered in all caps to distinguish them from the rest of the text.

    2. Spacing:

      • Two carriage returns after a paragraph or section to visually separate content.
      • Double-spacing between lines was often used to make manuscripts easier to edit by hand.

    [I was taught to write papers with two carriage returns between paragraphs so that there’s an empty line space between every paragraph. The exception was the end of a section before a header, where we were taught to use three carriage returns for a double linespace. Headers had a linespace between them and the first paragraph of their section.]

    1. Emphasis: Since typewriters couldn't italicize or bold text, underlining was the main method for emphasizing text.

    [I never learned an alternative for emphasis. It was used all the time for citations, so I always used underlining. Since I’ve never seen a text file that supports this, I don’t know what you should do here.]

    1. Indentation: A standard of five spaces (or one tab on some typewriters) was common for the start of new paragraphs. [Indentation depended heavily on what style your document called for. I almost always used block style or modified block style, so I never bothered with indentation.]

    2. Page Numbers: Often manually typed, either centered at the bottom of the page or in the top right corner.

    3. Footnotes and Endnotes: Numbered manually and typically indicated by a superscript numeral. The actual note would appear either at the bottom of the page (for footnotes) or at the end of the document/chapter (for endnotes).

    4. Tables and Columns: Creating tables was tedious. Writers had to carefully count spaces to align columns. Some typewriters had a tab setting feature to help with this.

    5. Citations: Followed standard style guidelines of the era (like APA, MLA, or Chicago), but were manually typed and often double-spaced.

    6. Bullet Points: Since typewriters didn't have a bullet point function, a dash (-), asterisk (*), or number might be used to indicate list items.

    —— —— ——

    Numbered lists: I solved this by using this numbering format:

    1. One

    1.1. One sub one

    1.2. One sub two

    1.2.1. One, sub two, sub one.

    etc.

    For some modern things like links and tables, just borrow from Markdown.

    1
  • A trans woman joined a sorority. Then her new sisters turned on her.
  • RotaryKeyboard RotaryKeyboard Now 100%

    This is Wyoming we're talking about. Wyoming is where Matthew Shepherd was brutally tortured and murdered. I wouldn't stop, either.

    41
  • www.graphsaboutreligion.com

    Ignore the article's over-sensational headline. This is actually a great look at how and why opinions on sensitive cultural issues have changed over time.

    23
    9
    www.techspot.com

    Reddit user chain-77 discovered that a $95 Ryzen 5 4600G APU can do respectable AI work by telling Linux to see it as a 16GB GPU. Although the processor doesn't compare to dedicated cards in traditional graphics rendering, AI relies heavily on memory, where an APU's ability to allocate shared memory freely becomes an advantage.

    24
    1
    www.pcgamer.com

    >Interpretation one says that high-end GPUs are irrelevant to 99 percent of gamers and that AMD focussing on affordable graphics cards is actually a good thing. Give us 75 percent of the performance of a high-end Nvidia GPU for half the money, AMD, and everything looks pretty sweet. >

    6
    1
    www.inverse.com

    The title comes from the article, but I agree with some of these changes. It's making for an engaging show that also feels modern.

    78
    64
    www.wired.com

    They knew when to hold em. Knew when to fold 'em. Just not when to walk away and when to run.

    71
    23
    lemmy.dbzer0.com

    You'd have to be living under a rock to be unaware of the profusion of AI-generated images on the internet. Some are [beautiful](https://weirdwonderfulai.art/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/Stable-Diffusion-011.jpg), some are unsettling, but most of the ones people take the time to post are interesting. If you like the occasional artistic image to flow across your timeline, [Stable Diffusion Art](https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/c/stable_diffusion_art) will make a great subscription for you. Now, this is not to be confused with [Stable Diffusion](https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/c/stable_diffusion@lemmy.dbzer0.com), also at dbzer0.com. Stable Diffusion Art is the showcase community, whereas Stable Diffusion is a discussion community about the generative program. What I like the best about Stable Diffusion Art is that it has themed contests. Someone will post a theme (such as "zombie apocalypse"), and everyone is free to submit comments with the art they generated along that theme. Go give it a look. We can all use a bit more art in our lives!

    3
    0
    www.youtube.com

    This isn’t terribly long — maybe 6.5 minutes. It compares and contrasts traits of fascists and authoritarians to see where Donald Trump fits best. I’m curious to know if you agree with Reich’s conclusions.

    34
    4
    https://stirante.github.io/lemmy-discover/

    Searching through communities can be a daunting task. At latest count, there are over 15,000 communities to choose from. In addition, it’s common to pick communities that you are already interested in. This forms a bit of a bubble, where the content you are exposed to is the content you already agree with and like. So how do you push those boundaries and find new and diverse communities? One way is to visit a random community. [Lemmy-Discover](https://stirante.github.io/lemmy-discover/) makes this easy by giving you an interface that will show you exactly one community. You’ll see its statistics as well as a few posts and their associated comments. If the community isn’t for you, you can press the big red skip button and see another random community. (Those of us who are of a certain age will recognize this immediately — it’s just flipping through the channels on the TV to see what’s on. How many great shows did you discover this way?) It looks like Lemmy-Discover is designed to be an alternative front-end for Lemmy communities. It provides a “Follow” button that, if you create an account, is like subscribing to a community. But for our purposes, it makes a great Community discovery tool.

    4
    0
    https://lemmy.ml/c/datahoarder

    What do you get when you mix corporate abuses of data, a shift from ownership to renting of software, and dozens of high-profile security breaches? You get a healthy distrust of putting your data on someone else’s computer (also known as “the cloud”). You also get [Data Hoarder](https://lemmy.ml/c/datahoarder), a community dedicated to the practice of storing your data on machines that you control. Free from monthly subscriptions and free from prying eyes. Even if you aren’t a self-hoster, there are a lot of things you can learn from this community. Do you own a PC? Saving money on new storage is a constant topic of discussion. For example, did you know that you can often find great deals on 3.5” hard drives by buying external enclosures with the drive already included? Manufacturers will often put very high quality drives in these enclosures because that’s the model they have the most unsold units of. When you buy the external enclosure, it can cost much less than buying the drive you find inside on its own. Buying the enclosure to take the drive out is called “shucking,” and it can save you a lot of money. (But watch out. It’s a lottery — you might get a different model of drive than you expect.) If some of these topics sound interesting to you, give Data Hoarder a subscribe and hang out for a while. Until next time!

    2
    3
    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearLE
    Best Practices: Setting Time Zones for Lemmy on Docker

    I'm wondering: where does Lemmy UI get the timezone for the time stamp on posts? We are using Lemmy in docker. Two of the five containers in the stack have tzdata, and all of them are set to UTC right now. But when I hover over a post's relative time stamp to get the precise time it was posted, I was surprised to see UTC -6. I'm in UTC -6, and the host that the docker stack is running on is currently set to UTC -6. Basically, I can go to all the trouble to set the env in docker-compose to set the correct time zone for the containers, but I'm wondering if I need to bother. Any feedback would be helpful as far as best practices for setting time zones to make posts have the right time stamp and for making logs readable. Thanks in advance!

    12
    4
    lemmy.ml

    Yesterday's [community spotlight about the PC Master Race community](https://lemmy.ninja/post/228776) got me thinking: is there a similar community for deals on PC components? Anyone who has ever built a PC knows that component prices vary widely. Getting a good deal is probably half the work of building or upgrading a PC. Luckily for us Lemmings, there is [buildapcsales](https://lemmy.ml/c/buildapcsales) over at lemmy.ml! Each post in the community showcases a single deal. The titles of the post are strictly regulated to make it easy to find the component type you're looking for and to see its brand and price. So are the deals any good? Well, that, my friends, is beyond the scope of this article. But at least it's an extra arrow in your quiver to help you keep costs down! One additional note: PC sales are region-specific. If you're not in the US, you may want to check out these related communities for component deals: - **Canada**: [BAPC Sales Canada](https://lemmy.ca/c/bapcsalescanada) (484 users) - **Australia**: [bapcsalesaustralia](https://aussie.zone/c/bapcsalesaustralia) (137 users) - **UK**: [Build A PC Sales UK](https://feddit.uk/c/buildapcsalesuk) (123 users) And for laptop shoppers, you may benefit from [Laptop Deals](https://lemmy.world/c/laptopdeals) over at lemmy.world. Happy hunting!

    1
    1
    www.cnn.com

    >“He was trying to tell them that he was a doctor and probably trying to tell him who he was, to be honest. And they were screaming that they did not effing care who he was,” she said. “And the next thing I knew, they had him on the ground, grabbed him by the shirt, threw him on the ground, face first into the concrete and had him in cuffs.” >

    77
    21
    lemmy.ninja

    Deep in the warren of Lemmy communities lies a place that focuses on the venerable personal computer and everything around it: the technology, the process of building one, or even just celebrating what it looks like when it's all done. It's [PC Master Race](https://lemmy.ninja/c/pcmasterrace@lemmy.world). Longtime Reddit users may recognize that community name. It was a staple of Reddit whose posts rose to the popular feed on a regular basis. With over 10,000 subscribers already, lemmy.world's version is similarly popular. I've used PC Master Race to get support, help others with similar builds fix their problems, find good peripherals for my own upgrade projects, and just to see what's possible with PC gaming. Let's help this community with some posts! Go take a picture of your battlestation and share it, or post your build specs and ask the group how you can improve them. You'll be surprised what you can learn from the discussion!

    4
    0

    When I first learned how to put my media into Plex, I did it by using Handbrake, compressing the content down to .mp4, and doing my best to use “audio passthrough” for the highest quality audio tracks I could find. But nowadays a lot more discs are coming with TrueHD, which apparently isn’t supported by the .mp4 container. I’m wondering what I should do for these audio tracks. I don’t really want to keep my media in .mkv format because of the challenge of getting subtitles to work and because the .mkv files are enormous. I’m assuming that hevc isn’t the answer, since I believe that still uses the .mp4 container. Any advice?

    7
    4
    startrek.website

    What’s more fun than a trip to Bozeman, MT on First Contact Day? What’s more satisfying than a plate of salmon on Federation Day? What’s deeper than self-reflection on the sands of Vulcan? That’s right, it’s the [Star Trek](https://startrek.website/c/startrek) community over at startrek.website! If you are a Star Trek fan, this is the community for you. It’s very active and full of high-quality content. Here you can read about the behind-the-scenes details of any show in the franchise. The sidebar helpfully lists the shows that are in development, production, and release. Really, anything that is Star Trek-related is talked about here. So go refill your Romulan ale and drop by for a visit!

    7
    0
    RotaryKeyboard Now
    105 246

    RotaryKeyboard

    lemmy.ninja