ctry21

joined 2 months ago
[–] ctry21@sh.itjust.works 65 points 2 days ago (2 children)

"We and our 2,565 advertising partners respect your privacy" is always a good laugh before hitting decline on the ones uBlock doesn't catch automatically

[–] ctry21@sh.itjust.works 5 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

I'm really angry with the British government right now. In some ways they're worse than the Tories, because at least with them you knew where you stood. With Starmer he keeps trying to outdo the far right, which leads to them adopting even further right policies, and him adopting them and so on. The cracking down on freedom of speech is genuinely scary, whether it be through the online safety act or abusing terrorism legislation to proscribe direct action groups. They need to fix the housing and healthcare crises urgently, but they're tinkering at the seams while the far right are on the cusp of taking power in 2029.

On the local level, I don't like our elected assembly much either, and I feel like all they do is pose for photoshoots and blame all their mistakes on the government in London.

[–] ctry21@sh.itjust.works 4 points 2 weeks ago

When I was 5, then I seemingly got better as a teenager and didn't need an inhaler for about ten years. I got covid in my early twenties and got re-diagnosed after it ruined my lungs. And I do mean re-diagnosed, they wouldn't prescribe me new inhalers from my original diagnosis after ten years of not taking them and I had to get a peak flow prescribed and do the tests over the phone since we couldn't do it in person thanks to the pandemic.

[–] ctry21@sh.itjust.works 53 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

They did pay for the "shit your pants" spell, and that does happen shortly after death...so in a roundabout monkey's paw sort of way I guess that one worked

[–] ctry21@sh.itjust.works 4 points 4 weeks ago (1 children)

I did it so much in a retail job that the supervisor told me to stop saying sorry all the time and of course I immediately replied "sorry." Being autistic and socially anxious will do that unfortunately. It's taken time and I've gotten a bit better at not apologising for things that aren't my fault, but it's still an annoying habit.

[–] ctry21@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

For photos, immich is great if you're willing to self-host. It's pretty much a drop-in replacement for Google photos, and lets you tweak the machine learning and stuff like that if you want automated identification of your photos. A raspberry pi is enough to get going, maybe something fancier if you want the machine learning. Google Drive can be replaced with Nextcloud as well if you go down the self-hosting rabbit hole.

Ente is probably your best bet if you don't want to host anything yourself. I used proton drive for photos before but thought it wasn't particularly suitable as if you're looking for a particular photo it takes ages for it to load from their servers.

[–] ctry21@sh.itjust.works 4 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Also an autistic vegan here! I'd wager that the % of autistic people in the vegan community is higher than in the general population. I didn't do it for any health reasons, but going vegan was a nice way to find out I'm lactose intolerant and food isn't supposed to hurt.

[–] ctry21@sh.itjust.works 7 points 1 month ago

The Dark Hedges. Not our number one tourist destination, but probably the most overrated one. It's some trees that appeared in Game of Thrones and the over-tourism + the increase in stormy weather thanks to climate change is killing them.

We've more popular places like the Giant's Causeway and the Derry walls, but those places are worth visiting at least.

[–] ctry21@sh.itjust.works 3 points 1 month ago

I graduated university a couple years ago and I felt in the same boat coming up to final exams. Like others have said, you almost certainly know more than you think. You're at the start of the final year as well so you have a lot of time to get ready.

Most IT/programming jobs will train you on the job and I haven't heard of anyone coming into a role who's expected to know everything, so I wouldn't worry about that too much. Getting the job will be the harder part, and the best thing I did was to consider my past experience and apply to jobs tightly related to that. I'll not dox myself so these will be fake details but that meant if I'd done a work experience position doing tech support for an accountancy firm, I'd have focused my applications on those companies. If you have a final year project to complete for a dissertation, see if you can tailor that to what you think are your best chances of a job. E.g. you did work experience doing IT support for a law firm, and your final year project has to be related to improving human rights, so you could develop a CRUD application to connect defendants to good pro bono lawyers. If there are law firms near you hiring for IT, that sort of thing that will help you stand out in an interview with them. I think I did only two interviews before getting a job offer with that tactic and I know others with the same degree who graduated the same day as me that still haven't found anything.

And outside of uni/college, is there anything in IT and computer science that interests you? I found that university killed my joy for it and I've only rediscovered it since graduating. Building a JavaScript web app for my final year project, led me to wanting to program some discord bots, from there onto using a raspberry pi to host them, and then into doing some self hosting and networking with the likes of Docker and WireGuard. Some of that has come in handy in work, especially when using linux servers, but it's stuff I do cause I just enjoy it and it so happens to give me some experience. There are tons of open-source projects you can work on to get experience with different parts of IT, and you're on a good website for it since most of us on here are Linux nerds.

[–] ctry21@sh.itjust.works 6 points 1 month ago

You can use gadgetbridge to run a lot of wearables locally without them connecting to their manufacturer's servers. They support the CMF Watch Pro 2, nothing on the Pro 3 yet but I believe the way it's developed is to get owners of a watch to test it out and update the wiki if it works or make a request if it doesn't. The app doesn't have the internet permission so nothing leaves your devices. I've got a PineTime coming in the post this week but for now I've got a £10 Xiaomi band running through Gadgetbridge and it works very well.

[–] ctry21@sh.itjust.works 9 points 1 month ago

That's a fair point. I suppose like any movement there's a wide spectrum of people and one end of the spectrum would be those who are as strict as that. I don't think it's very productive to be that strict though, certainly where I live and with the health conditions I have it would be impossible to live life so strictly compared to someone in top health living in a major city.

[–] ctry21@sh.itjust.works 15 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (6 children)

There is a surprising amount of debate over that in vegan circles. Beyond Meat taste test their burgers against cow burgers to compare the flavour and some vegans will say you can't consider those burgers vegan while others would say it's a very small amount of animal consumption to allow for a vegan burger that might help convert more people and so the benefit outweights the harm massively. I'm vegan and I don't really know what side to lean towards, but there's debate over everything from honey to almonds, and debate on whether it's acceptable to order vegan food from non-vegan restaurants, just as examples.

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