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labster commented on Large ancient Hawaiian petroglyphs uncovered by waves on Oahu   sfgate.com/hawaii/article... · Posted by u/c420
akshay_trikha · 5 months ago
> The shoreline is publicly accessible, but parking at the Army’s recreation center requires military ID.

There's something poetically sad about this.

labster · 5 months ago
Were used to it in Malibu. The publicly owned shoreline can be reached through the legally mandated passageways, if you can make it through the locked gates and avoid being seen by security.
labster commented on Windsurf employee #2: I was given a payout of only 1% what my shares where worth   twitter.com/premqnair/sta... · Posted by u/rfurmani
0x00000000 · 5 months ago
anything within 45 minutes of your office in palo alto (where you are mandated to show up 5 days a week). this will get you a 1300sqft piece of shit built in 1964 with asbestos and lead paint and lead pipes and a cracked foundation (also some dipshit realtor had them paint all the original wood beams and paneling inside gloss white and replace the original wood and slate floors with grey vinyl) from some baby boomer forklift driver or mailman who paid 40k for it (you will pay 40k per year in property taxes for it), all for the privilege of “only” spending an hour of your life a day commuting so you can sit in your assigned area of your open concept office with noise canceling headphones on zoom meetings for 4 hours a day surrounded by other people on zoom meetings who also just expended a collective 5000 man hours and countless CO2 emissions to be there.
labster · 5 months ago
You should have bought in when Prop 13 went into effect, you’d only be paying $3k in property taxes today instead of $40k.
labster commented on Scientists may have found a way to eliminate chromosome linked to Down syndrome   academic.oup.com/pnasnexu... · Posted by u/MattSayar
umanwizard · 5 months ago
The US government is not one person or a small set of people with a coherent strategy making decisions based on cost-benefit analysis. It’s an extremely complex emergent system whose properties can only be understood by studying them empirically, not by appealing to arguments about what a human would think is worth it or would make sense.
labster · 5 months ago
Another statement that I would have simply accepted as fact a year ago, but now I believe is false. The US government is now primarily one person, and occasionally a small set of people, making cost-benefit decisions on what will benefit themselves more. The complex system is mostly gone, soon to be washed away, in favor of layers of patronage and favoritism. Much simpler.
labster commented on Electric cars produce less brake dust pollution than combustion-engine cars   modernengineeringmarvels.... · Posted by u/tzs
reissbaker · 5 months ago
The article says that even including tire and road wear, EVs generate 38% less particulate pollution than ICE cars before considering the lack of tailpipe emissions.
labster · 5 months ago
But tires are black, and black carbon has additional climate effects — even once the aerosol lands, it can still have effects like black carbon on snow.
labster commented on Many lung cancers are now in nonsmokers   nytimes.com/2025/07/22/we... · Posted by u/alexcos
aorloff · 5 months ago
I might not be in as tight with the grizzlies, but $5k a year for a personal bear trainer seems a bit low. For a regular brown bear sure, but the grizzlies are expensive
labster · 5 months ago
Yeah but no matter what, you gotta pay for the bear necessities.
labster commented on The surprising geography of American left-handedness (2015)   washingtonpost.com/news/w... · Posted by u/roktonos
rob74 · 5 months ago
Yeah, if you think about it, this is a "discrimination" deeply enbedded in pretty much every language - or at least languages with European roots, not sure about others: "right" always has positive connotations (being right, human rights, words like "dexterity" etc.) while "left" has negative ones (not as often, but often enough, like the "sinister" mentioned by the other comment).
labster · 5 months ago
I often wonder if it would be best for English to lose grammatical gender entirely. Encoding assumptions about gender is leading to endless debates about pronouns which other languages avoid entirely.
labster commented on The surprising geography of American left-handedness (2015)   washingtonpost.com/news/w... · Posted by u/roktonos
bchris4 · 5 months ago
The areas with higher rates of left handedness on the map seem to correlate to the more progressive areas where you’d expect parents and teachers to not discourage it. Was kind of surprised they didn’t mention that, given they started with that anecdote.
labster · 5 months ago
Or in other words, educators in red states are more effective in suppressing sinister tendencies in children.
labster commented on Peep Show is the most realistic portrayal of evil I have seen (2020)   mattlakeman.org/2020/01/2... · Posted by u/Michelangelo11
disposablese · 5 months ago
I wish there were a somewhat acceptable, though controversial, way for us to distinguish between good and evil like how success is defined by disposable wealth. You can argue that society does not see it that, but there is no absolute way to denying it.
labster · 5 months ago
Did you miss the day they taught ethical calculus in maths class?
labster commented on Stone blocks from the Lighthouse of Alexandria recovered from seafloor   archaeologymag.com/2025/0... · Posted by u/gnabgib
m3kw9 · 5 months ago
Was the point of light houses to attract trade?
labster · 5 months ago
Lighthouses fulfill roughly the same purpose as hazard signs on freeways — everyone makes more money when ordered goods actually arrive. Rocks on the sea are more dangerous than falling rocks on the roads.

Monument lighthouses have an extra purpose: they project power and wealth. Merchants know this place is Important. Like modern day monuments, whether people need a giant expensive building/statue/obelisk to learn this or it’s just a vanity project for the ruler is a matter of opinion. People aren’t really all that different over the last 2000 years.

labster commented on Where's Firefox going next?   connect.mozilla.org/t5/di... · Posted by u/ReadCarlBarks
ocdtrekkie · 5 months ago
I really have to emphasize that browser extensions are a terrible security nightmare and generally speaking, should be avoided at all costs. I understand they're fun and convenient, but it's one of those things that really doesn't age well into our modern cybersecurity issues.
labster · 5 months ago
Running a browser without an adblock extension is an even worse cybersecurity issue, since tracking online is so extensive. I live in a country where the government routinely buys surveillance data from data collection companies to spy on us. But even if you don’t live in the US, it’s still a good thing to protect your privacy.

u/labster

KarmaCake day10388May 15, 2014
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Contributor to Raku compiler Rakudo (formerly Perl 6), and cofounder of the nonprofit All The Tropes wiki. Volunteer and former finance director for Miraheze, a free, customizable, no advertising wiki farm running Mediawiki.
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