Dumpster Bitch 🚮

@YexingTudou@kolektiva.social
29 Followers
191 Following
526 Posts

trans • geek • jokester • Ⓐ

a better world is possible and necessary

Pronounsshe/her
CodingJava, JS, Node, CSS, HTML, PHP, SQL, Python, C++, plz hire me I'll learn w/e
LanguagesEnglish, 有的中文
Let's eat grandma

The reason you should pay attention to transphobia (even if you and everyone you know are cis):

They're the canary in the cultural coal mine: when the social atmosphere turns poisonous, it hits them first—and shortly thereafter, it'll poison you too, one way or another.

Because socially accepted bigotry *always* gets worse, if we don't stop it in its tracks immediately.

In case you're wondering about the issues of my city's public transit: it took me an hour and half to get to class this morning, and only half an hour to do the return trip. Usually not that bad but all it took was one broken bus (not even the bus I would've caught!) to triple my commute
The problem with work from home is that sometimes I don't realize it's a nice day and I should open the windows for some fresh air until I happen to check my weather app at 4 in the afternoon

A trillion dollars disappeared in a day because someone made a garbage generator that uses fewer irreplaceable natural resources than the current garbage generators, and that makes me think about cobblestones.

Remember cobblestones? You could hook your computer up to a big distributed science project, there were tons to choose from, you could fold human proteomes, you could search for extraterrestrial intelligence, you could map cancer markers, develop better solar cell materials, all sorts of stuff. It took the form of a screensaver - whenever you weren't using your computer your CPU fans would spin up and you'd be folding. Move your mouse and it pauses. Great stuff. Something useful for your computer to do when you step away for a minute.

Anyway, you'd get credit for the work your computer had done. Cobblestones, they were called. They were never used as currency, they were just to show off. A cobblestone was a kind of receipt to show that your computer had done something useful.

We never used cobblestones as currency, but we could've. Instead we got bitcoin, which is a receipt that shows that your computer made a bitcoin. What's the bitcoin for? Being a receipt that your computer made a bitcoin.

It served as proof that you'd wasted some electricity.

Proof of waste.

There's other cryptocurrencies as well, some of which work differently to the proof of waste system, and those are worthless, because they're not proof of waste.

The waste is the point.

Now we get this market crash today, money disappeared, because the new AI thing is roughly as pointless as the old one but nowhere near as wasteful.

The waste, is the point. We saw it with cryptocurrencies and we saw it with NFTs and we see it with AI.

The waste has to be the point, because to some people, waste equals scarcity equals wealth equals power. The waste has to be the point because the machines that process the pointlessness have to be expensive, have to be owned by someone, have to be inaccessible to the average person, have to be manufactured and sold and rented out, the means of production of the pointlessness has to be in the right hands. The waste has to be the point, because otherwise we would've decided years ago that a cobblestone was worth a twentieth of a nice sandwich.

The waste is the point.

I manage my money through what I call "vibes based accounting". It does not work well 🩷
Just got my work ID photo retaken. Finally, a photo showing the REAL me (tired and dead inside)

I just had a lovely conversation with a stranger. She was talking to me about some birch trees that were recently cut down that she had planted herself years ago.

I think while we need to be cautious to an extent, we need to engage with others more. The best apartments I've lived in were the ones where I knew my neighbors and create community with them.

This woman and I chatted a little, and then both happened to be grabbing coffee, so we ended up chatting some more, she was going through rough times and a little lonely, but we traded stories and had such a nice time even if it was only 20 minutes or so. I'm so glad she sparked a conversation with me, and she gave me a bright spot in an otherwise bad day.

Say hi to a neighbor or a stranger. Many people are actually very nice.

I get that this is headlinese, but an “is” (“is asked”) would go a long way here Protos
Trump's tariff on the penguin island is an attack on the linux community.