Nath

joined 1 year ago
[–] Nath@aussie.zone 3 points 1 month ago

This works for us:
Step one: Keep your instance civil. No tolerance for horrible people (racists/bigots etc).
Step two: Maintain a vibrant local set of communities free from nastiness.
Step three: Let your users engage with the noise of the fediverse as much or as little as they desire.

We don't bother with telling our users who or what they can access, and don't immediately ban visitors based on their home instance. Will that scale to millions of users? Probably not. But that's a problem for future Nath - maybe.

[–] Nath@aussie.zone 1 points 1 month ago

And in the end it was all a bit for naught - since they now top the table using a normal measure anyway.

[–] Nath@aussie.zone 7 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Two spaces at the end of a line__
followed by hitting the enter key__
Will give you the formatting you were looking for. 👍

[–] Nath@aussie.zone 14 points 1 month ago (2 children)

It's interesting how the article is all about struggling retail businesses in the CBD and how this is about that. The closest the announcement comes to being about productivity is: "The more our experience of work is shared, the more united we become. This means being physically present in our organisations".

The case hasn't been made that experience of work is improved by being in the office, however.

This is all very fascinating, sitting in WA. We never really had the months of lockdowns you all had, and we never had the normalisation of everyone working from home. A bit of it, yes - but 100% remote work is relatively rare compared to other places on this side of the country.

For the record, the pandemic also devastated loads of businesses over here also. Some previously vibrant places like the cappuccino strip in Fremantle are sad shadows of what they once were. I don't know that this is going to be a magic bullet to somehow save retail.

[–] Nath@aussie.zone 4 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I see where you're coming from and understand why you're dubious. Thing is: Your Virginian house probably has a basement. Maybe even a boiler or floor heating?

We have none of those things. We have no frost line, so we don't ever need to dig below it. Hardly any of our homes have basements or any sort of central heating. So, people from colder climates come here and are amazed at how cold our homes are, even when the temperature is above freezing outside, because our homes are simply not built for even mild cold.

[–] Nath@aussie.zone 12 points 1 month ago

Nobody celebrates killing Turkish people. Quite the opposite, in fact. Australians have immense respect for the Turks. We recognise that neither the Anzacs nor the Turks had any direct quarrel with one another. We had no desire to conquer what is now Turkey, and the Turks weren't really defending their homes. It was a stupid conflict that neither of us wanted to be at. Anzacs were there because they were sent there by the British. The Turks were there because they were sent by the Ottomans. The British were just trying to get through the Dardanelles and Bosporus so they could reach the Black Sea. The Ottomans were on the German side of WWI and wanted to stop that from happening. At the end of the day, that sums up the whole reason everyone was on that peninsular.

If you want to look into it, you'll find that Mustafa Atatürk holds a very special place in Australia's history. He has a personal memorial right next to the Australian War Memorial in Canberra, looking down Anzac avenue of war memorials that point to Parliament House. Depending on the direction you take of the memorials, he is either the first or last memorial. Either way, you are sure to remember him. Short of putting him on our money, we couldn't really honour him closer. I know that over the last decade, President Erdoğan has been shifting Turkish perspective on Atatürk and the Gallipoli campaign, but no shifts are happening in Australia.

All the celebration of Anzac spirit you see is because this war in particular changed our nation. Until this point, our ancestors thought of themselves as British. Afterwards, they were Australians and New Zealanders. The cultural shift took a few decades, and didn't really finish until WWII (some would argue it is still shifting). The Anzac story has never been about killing Turks.

[–] Nath@aussie.zone 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

We had a period when I was a kid where the ANZAC stuff really started to wane as the WWI veterans were dying out. Somewhere along the line there was a movement to rekindle the ANZAC stuff and really stress that while it had its roots in WWI, it was about soldiers who died in all conflicts for their country.

Any town that was around in 1918 is going to have a war memorial. I've worked at a place that was over 100 years old and they had a shield on a wall remembering the staff who went to WWI. If you really want to find a town that doesn't have a war memorial, you'll be looking for a new settlement, Probably some place that didn't exist before the 1950's. I honestly can't think of any.

That said, it's really easy to avoid all the military stuff if it doesn't work for you. Most town's war memorials will only really come into relevance once a year and then go back to just being a feature of the place the other 364 days. A landmark maybe near a kids play ground. Just because every place has one, doesn't mean you are under any obligation to pay it any attention.

[–] Nath@aussie.zone 5 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I played with something like "medals per capita" once during the London Olympics. When you put them into that metric, Australia definitely punches above its weight, but I think New Zealand did even better.

[–] Nath@aussie.zone 8 points 2 months ago

Ha! I love it!
Ok, so maybe not all medals are equal after all.

[–] Nath@aussie.zone 12 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Don't get too excited, the water events will finish soon and our medal tally will slow right down. Happens every time. 😁

[–] Nath@aussie.zone 18 points 2 months ago (1 children)

They only have two sports in India. Cricket and not-cricket. Of the two, cricket gets most of the money and almost all of the attention.

[–] Nath@aussie.zone 2 points 2 months ago

Elle McPherson, obviously.

 

It sounds like he already has the world record, he just needs to prove it.

 

Imagine being the engineers in the middle of this. It's one thing that your incident is so bad it makes the news, it's another entirely when it is so bad the CEO resigns.

 

So it turns out that the cause was indeed a rogue change they couldn't roll back as we had been speculating.

Weird that whatever this issue is didn't occur in their test environment before they deployed into Production. I wonder why that is.

 

I hope it isn't anything too serious. Get well soon, Woz.

 

They literally had the chance to make a 'Man bites Croc' headline, but somehow resisted.

 

I think this is likely the first time it has happened anywhere in Australia.

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