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os2warpman commented on David Klein's TWA Posters (2018)   flashbak.com/david-kleins... · Posted by u/NaOH
os2warpman · 5 hours ago
>Klein's influential posters still look extraordinary to this day and "define the excitement and enthusiasm of the early years of post-war air travel."

I wish they were influential.

Modern corporate messaging is.... not influenced by these works.

os2warpman commented on The West is bored to death   newstatesman.com/ideas/20... · Posted by u/CharlesW
os2warpman · 5 hours ago
>American greatness has produced a society whose members know not what to do with the freedom and abundance that earlier generations secured.

There have been several posts on HN about this. I have commented every time I have seen one because I think the above quote is true. I also think it is one, of several, reasons things are going the way they are.

Many of my friends, coworkers, and relatives have fallen into the trap of being bored to death. They fill up their time with worthless empty "calories" of media consumption, ethanol, and doom scrolling. Almost all of them are unhappy. I think it is widespread to be like this.

But the problem is solvable.

There is no person, no person too busy, too tired, too poor, too disabled, too shy, too anything, who cannot find the time to do something that provides value to their life. They just have to, and this is the part that makes people mad, put down their phone and turn off the TV.

In every zip code in the entire United States of America, there is some group of people, somewhere, that is looking for someone to join them-- unless it is an isolated patch of remote wilderness where food and fuel need to be airlifted in or a remote island separated from the mainland by thousands of miles of sea there IS something.

You just have to get out, find them, and join them.

The last time something like this popped up I do what I usually do and listed non-work, non-social media things to do within an hour of my deceased grandparents' farm in central Southern Indiana. That's my benchmark-- if there are things to do here there are things to do everywhere because it is about as far from "the big city" you can get absent stretches of western desert or alaskan tundra.

Some quick searches found rod and gun clubs, knitting circles, small rural libraries with 3d printers going idle and anime clubs, three (yes, three) astronomy clubs, amateur radio clubs, gardening clubs, volunteer fire companies (who always, everywhere, need members), civic societies, book clubs, and even a small community performing arts center with a banging schedule of shows whose website was practically begging for people to come join them to be stage crew, performers, and set builders. Rural, barely-covered-by-a-cell-signal, southern Indiana, and those are just the things I found with online calendars full of events.

Being active in one's community outside of work, and deriving meaning not from work but your personal accomplishments and activities is a skill-- but it is a learnable skill.

os2warpman commented on The contrarian physics podcast subculture   timothynguyen.org/2025/08... · Posted by u/Emerson1
os2warpman · 2 days ago
I must, the same way the immune system must assume that anything an IgE antibody can attach to is a potential threat, assume that anyone who unironically uses the word "gaslight" as a verb is wrong.
os2warpman commented on 95% of Companies See 'Zero Return' on $30B Generative AI Spend   thedailyadda.com/95-of-co... · Posted by u/speckx
os2warpman · 3 days ago
TIL 5% of companies are lying about their financials. (or 5% of companies are selling the pickaxes to the unfortunate miners)
os2warpman commented on Show HN: OS X Mavericks Forever   mavericksforever.com/... · Posted by u/Wowfunhappy
os2warpman · 3 days ago
My favorite thing about MacOS is how it has never changed how it changes.

It's like the game Civilization.

Every new version is worse than the last. Every new version is more bloated. Every new version has changes that ruin it.

Every new version is "less snappy". Every new version ruins everything.

Not even with OS X, we're talking back to the System 6 days, almost 40 years ago, it has always been the same.

System 6 uses too much RAM I'm staying with System 5.

System 7 is bloated I'm staying with System 6.

System 8 is a disaster I'm staying with System 9.

System 9 is a buggy mess I'm staying with System 8.

System, err, OS X v10.0 has no apps I'm staying with System 9.

And then oh boy the OS X/macOS versions!

Every generation gets so much worse, buggier, and "less snappy" than the last that surely our computers must be traveling backwards through time by now!

Every Civ game past III, the one I spent the most time playing during college and am most used to and like the most for totally not arbitrary reasons, has just been the worst, amirite?

os2warpman commented on Home Depot sued for 'secretly' using facial recognition at self-checkouts   petapixel.com/2025/08/20/... · Posted by u/mikece
neuralRiot · 3 days ago
Awesome, what do you do with all the full 20secs saved? Jokes apart I’ve made the decision, after a near-death experience, to never rush anywhere for any reason, to live every minute and to enjoy even stupid moments like waiting in line, I might be wrong but I’m sure happier than before.
os2warpman · 3 days ago
Rushing leads to errors. I don't rush. I also don't anti-rush. Dawdle?

But to answer your question, after a year I use those 30 extra minutes to play Sonic the Hedgehog six or seven times, nibbling on an ice cream sandwich between acts and zones, a sandwich that eventually melts and makes a great mess of things including all over my Genesis controller, which I clean in the kitchen while looking out the window over the sink.

os2warpman commented on Is the A.I. Sell-Off the Start of Something Bigger?   nytimes.com/2025/08/20/bu... · Posted by u/voxadam
Der_Einzige · 3 days ago
GPT-5 being bad because of a model router does not justify market sell off. Scaling still works. The bitter lesson is still correct.

Investors are stupid. Recall their reaction to Deepseek V3 and how much of a nothing burger it ended up being. Recall that it took the market weeks to realize that "5.5 million" training cost was the literaly final run at the end, and didn't account for the 300 million+ spent to get there.

Investors don't understand AI.

os2warpman · 3 days ago
>Investors don't understand AI.

Investors have a deep understanding of their desire to make money.

AI, thus far, has proved itself to be very bad at making them money.

os2warpman commented on Tiny, removable "mini SSD" could eventually be a big deal for gaming handhelds   arstechnica.com/gadgets/2... · Posted by u/quantummagic
numpad0 · 3 days ago
There used to be phones with a secondary display, full QWERTY keyboard, wireless split remote, whole Windows computer in the back, a completely square display, two displays of which one rotate, a plug-in dual display cover, dual SIM slot, a miniature video projector, fingerprint sensor in the back, TV tuner, FM radio, sleep-swappable battery, IP68 rating, laser barcode scanner, 1" equivalent image sensor, 42MP image sensor, actually mechanically zooming lenses, IrDA, strap holes, 3.5mm headphone jacks,

iPhone killed them all. Yeah I personally kind of want iMessage. Doesn't change the fact that iPhone killed them all.

os2warpman · 3 days ago
With the possible exception of IrDA, which in 2025 is like wanting a parallel port on a phone, pretty much all of that still exists.

Here's a phone with "a completely square display": https://www.walmart.com/ip/Rotatable-Phone-i19-Pro-Mini-Fold...

It even rotates but only the one screen.

I even found a phone with integrated barcode scanner, the UNIWA V9S.

os2warpman commented on Home Depot sued for 'secretly' using facial recognition at self-checkouts   petapixel.com/2025/08/20/... · Posted by u/mikece
bgwalter · 4 days ago
You scan faster than a trained cashier? Do the self-checkouts in the US use RFID? Here in the EU I have to scan, clumsily and slowly.
os2warpman · 3 days ago
I was a trained cashier many years ago because I didn't grow up privileged so I had to work retail (and dishwasher and waiter) jobs.

Not only do I have the muscle memory, still after 30 years, I also have the added incentive of knowing the value of my own time, not being fatigued from hours of work, the ability pre-position items in the cart at an optimal orientation for handling and scanning, and foreknowledge of what items I have and a plan for how best to bag them that was made prior to my arrival at self-checkout.

So, yeah, I scan faster.

Much faster.

edit: oh man this has brought up a bunch of frustrations. Why do customers just pile shit on the counter? When I interact with a cashier, like at a gas station on a long road trip, every item I place on the counter has the barcodes oriented towards the person, so they can just "zap zap zap zap" the items rapid-fire without handling them. My bag (I live in a civilized state that has banned plastic bags) is ready and waiting, items are organized and presented in an order that make sense for ease of bagging. My payment method is ready. The experience is efficient and quick.

It takes no mental effort to do any of this and yet I am constantly stuck behind people who act as though they are purchasing things for the first time in their entire lives and the process is as foreign to them as communicating in the language of an extraterrestrial intelligence is to me.

os2warpman commented on Home Depot sued for 'secretly' using facial recognition at self-checkouts   petapixel.com/2025/08/20/... · Posted by u/mikece
eth0up · 4 days ago
I frequent the Home Despot and Lowe Life's, until recently, traditionally favoring the Home Despot.

The last two visits revealed the complete elimination of checkout lines and the appearance of a new cluster of self service registers with a new orientation perpendicular to the old lines. As I stood before the register, looking at the large monitor, I watched my dehumanized face beleaguered by green lines. I realized it had no other purpose but to foist an impression of my dirty face toward me, conveying my position as a filthy, groveling consumer pestering them with my petty needs. The camera could easily do its work without the hostile display, but then the customer may get away with a sense of dignity, which to them would be a form of shoplifting, or squandered neuromarketing potential.

During each visit, I make it a point to express my contempt for this to any ostensibly human employees nearby. I do so respectfully, yet their pride as high priests of home improvement and the glorious providence of private equity that blesses their sacred mission always results in perceived offense. Despite prefacing my grievance as not directed personally at them, the allure of indignance prevails and I always walk away as the bad guy who dared piss on their holy gilded ground.

Their use of cameras bothers me for different reasons, but I'm glad to fan the flames.

os2warpman · 3 days ago
>I realized it had no other purpose but to foist an impression of my dirty face toward me, conveying my position as a filthy, groveling consumer pestering them with my petty needs.

I look at myself and go "damn that's one sexy dude I'm gonna jut out my chin and stand up straight so if anyone looks at this, they fall in love with me".

Also, the staff doesn't identify as anything except someone trying to make it through their day.

u/os2warpman

KarmaCake day817March 30, 2025View Original