Their Twitter profile has links to their Mangadex and Pixiv accounts. https://x.com/Nhim_Art
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They’re also on Pixiv. https://www.pixiv.net/en/users/24207001
I’m somewhat glad I’m not the only one getting phantom notifications. I got one last week for a deleted event. It took me a minute to figure out what was going on.
I’ve been debating leaving Tuta and switching to mailbox.org. I’m annoyed by the lack of support for standard protocols like S/MIME and SMTP. As far as I understand with encryption, I can only send encrypted emails to other Tuta users in practice. Yes, I can send emails encrypted with a password. But it kind of defeats the point if the password has to be sent unprotected where an attacker could just use the password to unencrypt the email themselves. The lack of SMTP support also means none of my self-hosted services can send emails.
Robert7301201@slrpnk.netto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•True story that might have happened today
1·3 months agoThere were a couple times it helped me figure out something I was struggling with if I remember. Either that or I mixed it up with something else entirely. I think it was either when I was learning to use Quickshell to make widgets, or it was something with NixOS. For Nix it wouldn’t surprise me since the documentation lives in ten different places.
The more I used it, the more I realized that it actually wasn’t that good. Realizing that it was AI made my experience make more sense. Since there’s an element of randomness to AI output, once in a while it actually does a decent job just by chance. The more you use it, the more you realize that the average is much worse than those few lucky times. I guess I got lucky with the first couple pages I read.
Robert7301201@slrpnk.netto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•True story that might have happened today
12·3 months agoThis is how I felt discovering that DeepWiki is AI generated. I just thought some group was just working towards improving the state of more niche software documentation.
Robert7301201@slrpnk.netOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•In China, AI is no longer optional for some kids. It's part of the curriculumEnglish
3·3 months agoI didn’t even think about it until you mentioned it, but I’ve had several college assignments where I’m tasked with asking an LLM a question regarding the course, and then I have to write about what I learned from it. I still have to find sources supporting or refuting the output, so we’re not expected to take the output as truth at least. And these aren’t CompSci courses either. It’s common core cultural intelligence stuff.
When they talk about AI taking over the world, it’s always about taking over the Internet and connected industrial machines. No one told me that AI was going to take over the collective consciousness first.
Robert7301201@slrpnk.nettoPersonal Finance@lemmy.ml•[US] Lock your Fidelity and Vanguard accounts from outbound ACATS transfersEnglish
1·3 months agoThat’s still an option, thankfully. Providing your password is just the new default that they recommend as the fastest.
It’s even better because instead of using the password themselves directly, they use a third party for verification. Yodlee is the example I found for PayPal, so if they ever got breached the financial sector would be in for a fun time. Hopefully they wouldn’t be storing the credentials long term, but again, it’s the financial sector, and they don’t have a good track record with security.
Robert7301201@slrpnk.nettoPersonal Finance@lemmy.ml•[US] Lock your Fidelity and Vanguard accounts from outbound ACATS transfersEnglish
3·3 months agoI get that working with legacy systems often makes it hard to implement newer security measures, but at the same time I wonder if the finance sector just doesn’t understand or care about cybersecurity.
The last couple of times I’ve had to link accounts between different institutions, the fast recommended way is to provide my username and password to the external account to verify my account. You know, the thing that almost any decent site will tell you to never ever do under ANY circumstances when signing up.
The incompetence is infuriating.
Robert7301201@slrpnk.netto
Explain Like I'm Five@lemmy.world•Please someone explain how there could be a gov shutdown when republicans control the senate and the house? But are blaming the Dems who are way in the minority???English
8·7 months agoThis is excellent satire. I’m surprised people are missing it. To anyone thinking it’s real, look at how self reflective it is. No Republican is justifying that brown people are bad because “grainy video footage” told them so. The choice to include the word grainy is hinting that the people with that mindset are often poor. Those people are typically too busy trying to survive to consider that their media sources may be misleading them. Same thing with the radio told me when I was young example. They’re calling out that this story has been told their whole lives, and we typically just accept what we learn in our youth as true.
Honestly, I could write an essay on how many things this satire is alluding to and how well it does it, but my lunch break is over.
Refresh until you get guitar cat.
I had to rely on NickwithaC’s helpful comment.
https://slrpnk.net/comment/18112686
Start at the black food truck and go toward the orange seating. It’s on the back of a guy’s T-shirt who’s sitting at the table one down from the couple who are bending down, one with his hand still on his beer.
(I haven’t linked a comment before, so I hope I did this right.)
Luckily you get more queens as you fail.
I only needed five to win. 😓
I feel so accomplished…

Robert7301201@slrpnk.netto
Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•And I thought it would be a happy ending for the kid
9·8 months agoWell, that too. The whole CEO personally delivering a cease and desist is a pretty big hint.
Heat pumps and air conditioners both work off of the refrigeration cycle. A heat pump is essentially an air conditioner that has a reversing valve to allow the refrigerant to flow the opposite way.
It’s indeed not neutral. It always takes work to move heat from a cold area to a hotter area, so there’s always energy (and therefore heat) being added every cycle. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_pump_and_refrigeration_cycle
Robert7301201@slrpnk.netto
Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•And I thought it would be a happy ending for the kid
27·8 months agoI just assumed it was fake based on the community.
Robert7301201@slrpnk.netto
Crazy Fucking Videos@lemmy.world•Chinese vessels collide while pursuing Philippine boat in South China SeaEnglish
51·8 months agoTrue, usually the front only falls off if a wave hits it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3m5qxZm_JqM
Robert7301201@slrpnk.netto
Games@lemmy.world•What I'm playing 🐭📖 Moss: Book II | You can high-five the mouse!English
3·8 months agoI had no idea Moss 2 was out, and it came out in 2022. Instant purchase for sure, but now I have to decide if I’m going to replay the first one. Thanks for the PSA.
Robert7301201@slrpnk.netto
Green Energy@slrpnk.net•Duffy to announce nuclear reactor on the moon
6·9 months agoThe previous 40kW proposal linked in the article mentions it would allow operation where solar panels aren’t feasible, like permanently shadowed areas where water might be. There’s also the dust problem to solve with solar panels, although this would also be a problem for nuclear reactors since their radiators could become less efficient from dust buildup.
There’s a lot of extra costs associated with making solar panels space worthy. No atmosphere also means no radiation shielding and no cooling. I actually managed to find satellite solar panels for sale: https://www.cubesatshop.com/product/solar-panels/. They have front and back panels but if we assume they didn’t have a back and all panels faced towards the sun it would be ~120W. That gives us $133/W, which means 100kW would be $13.3 million. Unfortunately the mass isn’t listed, so we can’t estimate the launch costs. I don’t have a way to estimate the cost of a fission nuclear reactor on the moon since we don’t know how it would work yet, so this calculation is mostly for fun. That math would change significantly if we are able to manufacture solar cells from lunar regolith.
In nuclear’s defense, we’ve been sending plutonium-238 into space since 1961. There’s been a few accidents, but the fuel casing has been improved so that the later accidents resulted in no leakage. That was in the early days, so we know a lot more about safety now. Do you think the risks are too high for any nuclear fuels in space, or does uranium pose unique risks?


I hate that fable. I’m glad to see someone retold it in a better way.