Show newer

Who do you trust more with your health: You (with your own research), Doctors (the scientific community counts) or the Government (would their recommendations be more credible to you than that of doctors)?

One of the immediately visible economic effects of the lockdowns for me was that delivery app drivers are now sometimes young white kids now.
There's rumours that Hillary Clinton is "preparing to step in" it Biden drops out.

Can we not, like for real.

The White House won't let Dr. Anthony Fauci, a key member of the coronavirus task force, testify on Capitol Hill, a committee spokesperson says cnn.it/2zHZ7HQ 

2020-05-01, 22:20:41
twitter.com/CNN/status/1256347

Potentially NSFW 

@realcaseyrollins Only way you can download the Brave browser and use Tor on that we probably agree. But in the Devs code is that instances can't/don't brand their instances so everything screams "Mastodon".

perfect week for me, pleroma dev wise. let's see if i can do a perfect month.

Potentially NSFW 

I think I'm following you

fuck you fuck you fuck you die in traffic have a mild but nice buzz to it

I've started diving into the Mastodon --> Pleroma database migration. First roadblock: making the git repo easy to commit on.

We're writing Rake tasks in Ruby (for Mastodon exporting) and Mix tasks in Elixir (for Pleroma importing).

.rake files need to be in `/mastodon/lib/tasks`, and .ex files need to be in `/pleroma/lib/mix/tasks`. Symlinks don't work. What now? Copy the files over? I want to commit often, and I don't want to copy them manually every time.

We also can't easily run the tasks from within the repo. We need some commands, ideally like `masto migrator:export:users` and `pleroma migrator:import:users`. Rake has some CLI options like --libdir to set the taskfiles directory, but Mix doesn't.

I'm seriously considering adding JavaScript to this project, just so I can load user config and automate some stuff like copying files. That would of doing things is fragile, but to be fair the whole project is about transforming two moving targets, so it's inherently fragile.

Adding JS would mean I'll have to write code in 3 different languages to make this work, so I want to make sure I'm really making the right choice. The reason for JS is that it has automation libraries like Grunt and Gulp that are designed to transform files.

So to JS or not to JS? Or is there a fundamentally better way than the way I'm doing it?

You know guys, when I think about what a great employee I am, it brings a tear to my eye.

Here I am, enjoying a nice mid-afternoon nap and the phone rings. Its my pal from the old country. Well, pass because I’m sleepy.

Then as soon as I nod off again, the phone rings again — this time its work.

SIGH

Ok, I pick up and apparently every single fucker working the night shift at our larger yard called in sick or some shit and no there are no shunters in the whole yard.

Well, shit. Literally the day before my company gave my a t-shirt that said “I keep the world moving #thankadriver”.

Ooookay, fine. I guess the world needs me.

Show older