Bro I’m still hot and bothered from that other onion post. Didn’t even get to 2.
TragicNotCute
- 46 Posts
- 1.84K Comments
I never understood either. To me, gas was always about convenience. It’s faster and easier than charcoal, but does it taste better?
TragicNotCuteto
egg_irl — Memes about being trans people in denial and other eggy topics@lemmy.blahaj.zone•egg😦irlEnglish
3·7 小时前Can a dumb cis guy ask what “coding” is? Have I reached step 2 of this diagrams without even realizing it? Shit, I do love head pats tho…
Yes, thank you. The OP offended my delicate sensibilities. The bar really saved me here.
Dogecoin is getting back to $0.60. I just know it. Any day now.
I think you might be overlooking human error in configuration.
TragicNotCuteto
World News•North Korean infiltrator caught working in Amazon IT department thanks to lag — 110ms keystroke input raises red flags over true locationEnglish
6·2 天前It’s more a list of warnings signs.
- blurred/virtual background (we make them turn it off during interviewing)
- refusal to do gestures or follow specific instructions (wave your hand in front of your face)
- not familiar with local knowledge like weather
- appearing to read from the screen or phone
There’s more than that, but those are the highlights.
TragicNotCuteto
World News•North Korean infiltrator caught working in Amazon IT department thanks to lag — 110ms keystroke input raises red flags over true locationEnglish
1·2 天前It not practical at a remote first company to fly people out to where we happen to have offices when they could be working from anywhere.
It’s cheap-ish for a flight, but at scale, the starts to become an expensive hiring pipeline.
TragicNotCuteto
World News•North Korean infiltrator caught working in Amazon IT department thanks to lag — 110ms keystroke input raises red flags over true locationEnglish
19·3 天前It’s not that, it’s that they are incredibly sophisticated in their techniques. I just had to sit through 90 minutes of training about how to spot fake applicants.
TragicNotCuteto
Privacy@programming.dev•No AI* Here - A Response to Mozilla's Next Chapter - Waterfox BlogEnglish
1·4 天前I wish Waterfox worked on mobile.
TragicNotCuteto
Today I Learned•TIL 95% of Americans don't get the minimum recommended amount of fiberEnglish
7·6 天前I’ve been eating “fiber one” breakfast bars for years as an easy way to boost my fiber. The gas never stops for me. It doesn’t even smell, but there’s a lot of it.
I definitely feel the difference in my body when I stop. The gas is unfortunate, but it’s preferable to no fiber.
TragicNotCuteto
Technology@piefed.social•20 Years of Digital Life, Gone in an Instant, thanks to AppleEnglish
15·8 天前My first move would be emailing Tim himself. It will almost certainly get some attention from his executive team. Be kind and make a clear ask for what you’re wanting.
If that doesn’t work, I’d go to the media.
1,800 comments and counting! One of them might even be valuable to the conversation.
TragicNotCuteto
Europe@feddit.org•Will it even be possible to enter the USA as a European without breaking privacy laws?English
8·10 天前I suspect if you incur a fine due to your refusal to provide data, they might deny your entry next time you try to visit. Just a guess though.
TragicNotCuteto
Unofficial Tor Community@infosec.pub•🪦(📧→🌐) Please bring this back from the 1990s: email→web gatewayEnglish
1·12 天前That makes sense. I just don’t think the economics work for anyone to spend time developing this. It would take work to get to the point where it’s functional (which is potentially quite expensive). Beyond that, a domain name is $10-$15 a year and hosting would be $5-$7 a month. For $0.65 per request, it’s just not worth it.
I’d need a little over a hundred requests a year to break even on just mandatory external costs (development costs are harder to estimate and would almost certainly be 10x, 20x or more of the other costs).
TragicNotCuteto
Unofficial Tor Community@infosec.pub•🪦(📧→🌐) Please bring this back from the 1990s: email→web gatewayEnglish
3·12 天前I think the issue here is that someone has to pay to run that, and while I don’t want to discount your use case, I think this is already solved in a variety of (cheaper) ways.
Would you pay for a service like this, and if so, how much?
















That is what I suspected, I’m definitely already in box 3 :P