Please do not perceive me.

  • 3 Posts
  • 350 Comments
Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 8th, 2023

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  • Yes. Don’t ask me why, I don’t have a fucking clue, but it is. If I had to guess, it’s because it’s a (quite good) game about rebuilding yourself from nothing. You start the game as an empty shell of a character who was just shot dead and lost all their memories, and the entire rest of the game is about creating yourself to be who you want to be, and about making change in the Wasteland and deciding on a new future of things to come. I can sort of understand why that might resonate for trans folks. I have no idea if this is an accurate assessment or not.

    But it’s a game that I love with an ongoing unholy fervor so I say, the more the merrier.


  • Right, that’s all good. Now you have to get a couple of low-ranking servicemen to carry out every step of that hundred page manual to the letter on each of their several dozen machines, daily, after they’ve been deployed for an ongoing 10 months because their superiors are morons, and are further scheduled to become the longest running carrier deployment of all time at over a year of deploy time, because their superiors are morons.

    I’d believe that some corners were cut in these servicemen’s duty, and it just happened to be one too many corners one too many times. The men are fatigued, they want to get off the ship. It’s possible these corners were even cut on purpose with exactly this result in mind in an attempt to get them off the ship.


  • Nah, if you do it right the wafers are thin enough that you won’t stick to things. You want them to be able to react to nearby EM fields, which means they need to be small and light so they can vibrate (? I don’t 100% recall the exact function they perform to give you this sense). Which in turn means the magnets are small and light enough that they aren’t likely to stick to objects, or wipe credit cards, or damage your phone.

    But probably don’t pick up powerful magnets with those fingers and probably don’t get an MRI on your hands.


  • I’ve wanted to do this from the very moment I learned it was possible, circa 2014.

    Unfortunately it’s kind of difficult to find a doctor who will do this sort of elective surgery for you. So my options are kind of just, do without, or do it myself. So far I’ve just done without. But I’d be lying if I said I didn’t give the occasional side eye to the kitchen knife whenever I’ve had a bit to drink.







  • Like, did everyone in the IT industry suddenly grow stupid and forget the most basic rule?

    Thing is, in any industry, you need a combination of new blood and old wisdom in order to successfully pass the torch to the next generation. Old wisdom is expensive to keep around, but the cheap new blood doesn’t know what they need to in order to succeed.

    When you get rid of all your old wisdom and hire all new blood to cut costs, they’re going to come in with a series of footguns that old wisdom knows how to avoid. If you’re lucky, the new blood is going to learn about those footguns primarily by shooting themselves with them and then scrambling to fix the big problem that follows. If you aren’t lucky, said footgun blows the entire leg off your corporation and you implode, do not pass Go, do not collect $200.

    All this to say, no, they probably don’t know. A million companies elected to excise all of their knowledge and replace it with fresh-faced, eager, noticeably cheaper juniors.

    Now there’s nothing wrong with hiring juniors, but you can’t just put 30 of them in a room and say “alright, monkeys, get to writing Shakespeare” - they lack 30+ years of practical knowledge, and as mentioned, juniors all ship with footguns pre-installed. You need someone who is able to steer the ship properly. A good senior dev is worth his weight in gold. However, most companies don’t want to pay a senior dev his weight in gold. Observe the consequences.