Because of the current social political climate, I’m learning so much about things I never thought I would. This little comic just made it click why the Nazi Germany party was a national socialist party.
Solano
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Solano@piefed.socialto
Global News@lemmy.zip•Trump blasts Ukraine for showing 'zero gratitude' for US supportEnglish
10·20 days agoI saw a funding graphic recently, and I’m here asking what support?
Solano@piefed.socialto
Global News@lemmy.zip•Trump calls Democrats who told US military to refuse illegal orders 'traitors' who should face death penaltyEnglish
5·23 days agoAs ridiculous as that sounds, yes, this is to be expected. They already weakened the military courts, but I don’t know the extent, just remember there were some articles about it earlier in the year. Also, I don’t know if history has an example of any large groups of military refusing an order, not counting coups.
Solano@piefed.socialto
Europe@feddit.org•EU 'Chat Control' Proposal Still Poses 'High Risks' Despite Removal of Mandatory Scanning, Experts WarnEnglish
10·25 days agoDemocracies need to be able to analyze proposals and punish malicious actors, otherwise they allow corruption to keep trying to tear down good things for the majority. I don’t think it’s a thing anywhere, and probably never going to be.
Solano@piefed.socialto
Privacy@programming.dev•Windows 11 to add an AI agent that runs in background with access to personal folders, warns of security riskEnglish
11·25 days agoThey are just doing their jobs, just like the masked brown shirts.
Solano@piefed.socialto
Europe@feddit.org•EU parliament votes to dilute landmark rules holding corporations accountableEnglish
7·29 days agoYes, they also have a form of lobbying, aka bribes, so corruption is legal.
Solano@piefed.socialto
Solarpunk@slrpnk.net•I am learning that people simply do not careEnglish
10·1 month agoOne of my favorite and best teacher was a biology teacher, and I remember being taught about population cycles of various living things. I like how that teacher showed us humanity’s population trends, and how it resembles boom and bust species. It was subtle, as if they knew it wouldn’t stick with many of the students.
I think most people can see the rat race they are in, but for whatever various reasons, cannot or will not notice the incoming cliff fall. But, some of us stand taller, and can see the cliff fall coming. Stopping in the middle of humanity’s stampede to warn everyone is going to be met with all sorts of problems, like being left behind, or being berated for slowing others down, or even violence if you create too much impact that impedes the flow of humanity. It’s really awful to deal with seeing a horrible thing happening, care about it, and are not able to make a difference to obvert a tragedy you see coming.
To me, it takes almost no effort to just think the correct way, to voice the correct thing in pertinent moments. It’s the holding of the tongue that takes effort when you realise the ears in the moment won’t listen. You can learn about people quickly by saying some off hand comments and seeing their reaction. Most of the time, people are oblivious or react negatively hearing about the cliff. Pardon my French: Most people only care about themselves and their own shits, sometimes so much that they actively shove their heads up their own asses, purposely so they cannot see anything else other than their own shit. Sometimes you might find someone aligning to your views, but be careful of circumstantial situations, like the rat race hitting a road bump and everyome complains about it. Lots of people only cared about covid when it knock on their door step and infected the nonbelievers.
I could go on, but have to stop atm, but know that you are not alone and it’s a struggle, like everything else in life, unfortunately.
Solano@piefed.socialto
Canada@lemmy.ca•The Conservative floor crosser actually reveals a lot about the Liberal budget (and it's not pretty)English
11·1 month agoI think that is the point. The establishment can force a person in when the other is straight up evil.
Solano@piefed.socialto
Climate - truthful information about climate, related activism and politics.@slrpnk.net•Five ways Joe Rogan misleads listeners about climate change | Rogan exposes millions to climate denial. Let’s break down his tactics.English4·1 month agoIsn’t his whole shtick is to mislead?
Solano@piefed.socialto
Fediverse memes@feddit.uk•Piefed has one built-in, Voyager has it client side, there are probably other apps too, feel free to share your list in the commentsEnglish
2·1 month agoGlad that I’m not the only one that wants that type of feature, but that thread makes some good counter points. I didn’t think about the possible abuse cases.
Solano@piefed.socialto
Fediverse memes@feddit.uk•Piefed has one built-in, Voyager has it client side, there are probably other apps too, feel free to share your list in the commentsEnglish
82·1 month agoI would like to have the ability to change words or phrases into other words, like “Trump” into “Dementia Don Diddler”. It’s like filtering, but more fun and amusing to me. Also, I realise I might be the only one that would like that functionality.
Solano@piefed.socialtoUnited States | News & Politics@midwest.social•'So Much for America First': Trump Admin Says Argentina Bailout Doubling to $40 BillionEnglish
9·2 months agoWhen I read about this, all I think about is the Nazis fleeing to Argentina after WW2. Idk if this is related or not, but makes me wonder.
Remember kids, never entangle your p00p.
Solano@piefed.socialtoUnited States | News & Politics@midwest.social•Oklahoma Threatens Public Schools' Accreditation Unless They Set Up Turning Point USA ChaptersEnglish
34·3 months agoThis means accreditation cannot be used as a reliable metric depending on the state.
Solano@piefed.socialtoUnited States | News & Politics@midwest.social•The Justice Department is basically Trump's personal law firm nowEnglish
5·3 months agoAll of the departments that he appointed a new head to are under his command. There is no separation of powers or duties.
Solano@piefed.socialtoUnited States | News & Politics@midwest.social•War With Venezuela?English
3·3 months agohttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oil_reserves_in_Venezuela
This situation is probably about oil, and probably bipartisan.
Solano@piefed.socialto
Linux@lemmy.world•Announcing the Alpha release of KDE LinuxEnglish
1·3 months agoI’m still new to Linux, but your problem sounds like you installed a system package of the application that requires dependencies that are not installed in with the container, and wasn’t installed along side the application. Every single system application I installed with Mint, through the Mint package manager, would always install extra dependencies that the main app needed to run. I would try to use a flatpak version of the application, either in the Bazaar app itself, or in the Debian container. I haven’t messed with distroshelf/box yet, though.
Solano@piefed.socialto
Linux@lemmy.world•Announcing the Alpha release of KDE LinuxEnglish
8·3 months agoI recently installed it on a new SSD I bought. The installation was very easy compared to the Linux Mint installation I did, Mint sharing a SSD drive with Windows.
The KDE environment is very nice, sleek, better than Mint Cinnamon IMO, but I still encountered technical problems, like I did with Mint. Linux handles desktops differently and seems to always mess up on my PC configuration. I was able to fix things on both Mint and Bazzite, but Bazzite has more functionality. The sticky edges are very nice, the desktop widgets have tremendous potential, and I can configure slideshow backgrounds separately for each monitor, with separate folder(s). The moving and adjusting window sizes is so much better too in Bazzite over Mint. I don’t like how Linux can only have one desktop, and other monitors have a weird ‘shared’ folder to represent other desktops. Moving items from one monitor to another is weird, creating copies instead. You cannot do the same things on all monitor desktops, options are literally not there if it’s not the main desktop.
It seems none of the Linux distributions are compatible with NTFS file system that Windows uses. This is because NTFS is proprietary, and that makes it really hard to support, forcing Linux devs to reverse engineer it. Bazzite recommends btrfs file system, which you can setup in the installation if you are doing the whole SSD (not dual installing.) Bazzite recommends physically removing any drives that have WIndows on it before the installation, but I saw some tutorials ignoring it, and I did as well, and it installed just fine without touching the Windows/Mint drive. I wish the documentation was a little more thorough in explaining the ‘why’ so that learning is easier. Instead it tells you to do stuff blindly, and you might know if it applies to you or not, a common problem I found with Linux documentation. In Mint, I could setup mounting other internal drives automatically without much trouble. Bazzite does not support this at all unless they are using a Linux format like ext4 or btrfs. I have to manually mount NTFS drives on every single logon to the PC, which is quite unacceptable for me. I’m not willing to ditch my current windows setup until I am comfortable with Linux, which I am not at this time.
I was able to get some games up and running very quickly in Bazzite, faster than Linux Mint, and installing other programs through the Bazaar app was a breeze. Factorio was a bit of a problem, because the Heroic app installs only one version of the game, and Factorio has experimental builds I played on. I learned a bit about Linux through that, like how permissions are tied with executables, not extensions like Windows does. I was able to create a shortcut, as well, that linked to the game and the icon pic. The process was pretty easy once I knew how things worked.
Then I tried to import my Windows Firefox profile into Bazzite with little success. I don’t want to use Firefox Sync because it seems to always choose the wrong browser to copy over, erasing the one I want to keep. Manually moving files seemed the best option, but finding the installation folder is impossible for a newbie to the file system like me, and the Firefox button to open the folder didn’t work. I managed to make a new profile in a local folder, in my user folder, and then transfer the profile over. It seemed to work until I logged on the next day. Firefox wouldn’t launch, giving me an error, not finding location of the profile folder. It seems that the atomic nature of the OS is making things like this very difficult, as I suspect it’s a permission issue or a persistent configuration issue, but I’m not sure. I also installed Vivaldi through the Bazaar, and installed ublock origin extension manually (because google doesn’t allow it anymore through their store). I noticed the extension wasn’t installed the next day too, probably a similar problem with Firefox. I know Firefox has a way to launch by selecting a profile first, through a profile manager, but haven’t looked into how to do that on Linux. It’s the “-P” launch instruction on Windows, which was easy to find, but not sure if it works on Linux or has a different method. The profile manager would only be a temporary fix, but I instead jumped back to Windows. I still haven’t found a way to make it work, mostly because of time and effort for a new person to Linux. Maybe eventually I will find the answer, because I really do want to ditch Windows eventually.
Bazzite updates can uninstall programs you have without any notice, mostly the programs that it comes with innately, which upset some people I saw on some forums. They liked using some of the programs, and didn’t like how they couldn’t opt out of those changes. It hasn’t affected me, but it could in the future. I mention it as a concern for those looking into Bazzite. But I think Bazzite does allows you to install almost anything you want, in different ways, mostly in container like apps, even Android and Windows apps. But it’s still kinda a pain switching files to new locations especially if it’s anything like the Firefox profile folder transferring problem.
After rebooting Bazzite for the first time, I noticed Grub didn’t seem to show up anymore upon booting, loading into Bazzite immediately. This made me go back into the bios and rearrange the booting drives, setting Mint to load first, like I had before installing Bazzite, and turned off a backwards compatible option of the booting options (forget the name of it), reducing the total booting options listed. I’m not sure what happened in the background, but Grub now saw all of my installed OSes, having Bazzite 0 as the top option, which I was perfectly fine with, and felt lucky with the order it made. (Bazzite has two booting options: 0 being the most recent update, 1 being the previous update). But now my Grub timeout was set for 3 seconds instead of the 10 seconds before. That was way too quick for me. Eventually I found out how to modify the grub configuration in Bazzite and find the command to update the grub. I almost used the wrong technique used on Debian Linux installations, but the atomic nature of Bazzite stopped me from making new scripts in the “src” folder. I’m not sure if there were other precautions even if I managed to place that script. I only tried to make the script because the Debian command to update the grub didn’t work, another newbie blunder.
I found the documentation of Bazzite very sparse, and not really suited for someone that only knows Windows wanting to move to Linux. Mint has better forums and documentation. Bazzite gets the main stuff okay, but not full documentation, and almost no links to pertinent sources, like KDE documentation that could have been useful. Some of the documentation is also buried in Bazzite’s github repository as well. Some forums suggest looking at other similar distributions for technical information and help. Bazzite is based on Fedora, specifically atomic versions, like Fedora Silverblue. Fedora’s forum is much more active and has more information, even a dedicated tips and tutorial section.
Despite the problems, Bazzite is still the best Linux distribution I have tried (also tried Ubuntu a decade ago), and I hope to over come the problems, but it can seem like an inscalable wall when new to Linux, but probably looks like a little hill or road bump to experienced Linux users. I’m not sure of how much experience you have with Linux, but wanted to share my foray for others as well on the fediverse wanting to try Linux. Thanks for reading. Cheers.
So DOGE goes in and messes everything up, allowing Russia to easily get in, and then they blame it on FEMA employees as a good excuse to remove actual professionals that weren’t hired by the regime, aka non-sycophants?



I was not expecting this because they mentioned their next game is going to be scifi. Idk if that was a red herring or what.