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MerryJaneDoe@beehaw.orgto
Do It Yourself@beehaw.org•just spent 2 days descaling the urinestone off my toilet bowls. wtf. Do hippies know better?
1·17 days agoCould you maybe just put the water softener salt pellets in the upper tank? Not all at once, of course, but a few pellets per week?
MerryJaneDoe@beehaw.orgto
Technology@beehaw.org•‘The era of invincibility is over’: the week big tech was brought to heel
1·18 days agoWtf is up with the Guardian lately and these headlines?
I was just thinking the same thing! Might be filler articles used for shitposts, maybe by someone in their organization.
I just read one about a “possible” UK shortage in certain prescription medicines. The actual meat of the article was a guy saying “The supply chain is disrupted and we need alternate means of delivery.” Yes, thank you Captain Obvious. It’s is the same for basically EVERY imported product that comes by sea right now. They could write the same article for dozens of different industries. They’re all impacted the same way. Hush, Guardian, hush.
MerryJaneDoe@beehaw.orgto
Science@beehaw.org•First ever 3D mapping of clitoris leads to new knowledge
4·18 days agoThe actual 3D model is not shown in the above article.
It can be found here: https://www.theguardian.com/society/2026/mar/29/full-network-clitoral-nerves-mapped-out-first-time-women-pelvic-surgery
Be prepared to be unimpressed, lol. I was hoping to unlock secret mysteries of the likes not seen since Kama Sutra was published.
I was not prepared to see an upside-down stoner ashtray.
“Week”?
More like “WHEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEK!!!”
So, yeah, things are pretty good here! I’m moving out of Texas next week and going overseas for the first time in my life. (Sorry, @Powderhorn@beehaw.org , beat ya to it!)
MerryJaneDoe@beehaw.orgto
Chat@beehaw.org•To understand anything about me, you have to understand how I ended up in journalism.English
4·21 days agoElementary school in the '80s, eh? Me too. BASIC, perhaps? On an Apple IIe, maybe?
There’s no shame in NOT liking computer science. I have a CS degree and I failed miserably as a professional. I hated it. But it seems like you just hated the structure of your classes, not so much the material. You might have felt differently if you started in a more advanced programming class.
But your comments seem more like “I studied French in grade school, I dunno why they’re making me start over for Chinese 101.”
MerryJaneDoe@beehaw.orgto
Chat@beehaw.org•To understand anything about me, you have to understand how I ended up in journalism.English
5·21 days agoThe issue with CSE142 was it was stupid. Yay! Writing Hello World in C! I had a specific disinterest in wheel reinvention, and holy shit did the CS department want that.
For the sake of any CS students who stumble into your thread:
Learning “Hello World” isn’t reinventing the wheel. Learning “Hello World” is more like practicing the ABCs and reading Dick & Jane. You are learning an entirely new language, and all the strange new rules that come with it.
Pretty much any and all 100-level science classes are going to feel like reinventing the wheel because it’s just building blocks for the hard stuff.
MerryJaneDoe@beehaw.orgto
Technology@beehaw.org•here's a challenge in the tech sphere: implementing nudges toward healthy phone usage.
1·1 month agoMy thoughts: If you have the motivation and willpower to implement this system, then you’ve got MORE than enough willpower and motivation to cut down on your screentime without using a customized software solution.
In other words, just do it.
Set an alarm or timer on the phone. When it goes off, you pick a task from your to-do list and accomplish it. Maybe clean the house, go for a walk, attend to an errand. Be in the moment, listen to music, pause to ask how people are doing. Find a dog to pet.
Reconnect.
Then, go back to doom scrolling. But this time, instead of diving right in, make it a point to watch a video or read an article about something that interests you, something that you might enjoy doing yourself. Maybe it’s 3d printing, or flying drones, or welding. Something that is achievable, that you always wanted to do. You don’t have to take up this hobby - but maybe your new hobby is researching hobbies. Seeing what other things, besides staring at a screen, might capture your attention.
And, oops, there’s your alarm again! Has it been four hours already?! Time to do some stretching and pushups. Text a loved one. Hug a tree.
Etc, etc.
Your screentime is a lifestyle choice, and an addictive one. The solution is getting your brain’s pleasure center rewired.
Everyone takes turns bringing in an old console and a game. Or a new console. Or a PC. Whatever.
Show and tell. Pick a save point, walk people through the narrative/gameplay, explain why you feel it’s such a compelling game.
I think this works better than actually handing off a game to a newbie and letting them dive in. I’ve quit so many games (looking at you Fallout and Skyrim) because they just didn’t spark my imagination. They started with slow grind and I didn’t see an end to the grind. But for a passionate voice of guidance, I might have finished those games.