misterchief117

joined 1 year ago
[–] misterchief117@kbin.social 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

@blazera

An oath or legal affirmation can be made if what you're saying is true and accurate to the best of your own ability and perceptions.

If you say something under oath with the intent to deceive or omit key information or evidence for any reason really, then this could be considered perjury, which is a crime under most legal systems.

If you truly believe you saw an alien and were completely convinced of that and testified that you saw one, yet your claim was found to be factually incorrect, you most likely would not be liable for perjury nor did you do anything illegal (in many modern legal systems). You would simply be wrong.

This could cause you to become an "unreliable witness" which might mean anything else you say or claim is taken with less weight, even in areas you might specialize in. For example, how much would you trust a cardiac surgeon who claimed they had frequent encounters with aliens from outer space?

[–] misterchief117@kbin.social 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

How are they measuring the costs here? Even fast-food burgers have significantly shot up in price.

If we go by raw ingredients, then healthy food can be considerably cheaper than pre-made garbage and fast food.

If we add the time cost of traveling to a grocery store, shopping, and then preparing the healthier food, then it could become more expensive.

There's also the fact that most of the USA has absolute shit public transportation which increases the burden for people who can't afford cars to get groceries in the first place. That and the time costs can be reduced with grocery deliveries, however. this might not be a viable option in all areas or work schedules; You want to be home when the groceries are delivered.

Then there is the fact that there are a lot of food deserts , especially in low-income areas. This can make it harder, if not impossible for people to even get healthier food.

Not sure where I'm going with my train of thought here...

[–] misterchief117@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@0101010001110100

Yes and it's over 100 years old and back when flash powder was used for photography.
https://time.com/5241498/how-you-think-you-look-meme/

[–] misterchief117@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

@Brunbrun6766

spez is the landed gentry 🤣

[–] misterchief117@kbin.social 10 points 1 year ago (1 children)

new rule: triangles are the most sexy shape.

[–] misterchief117@kbin.social 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I play with the brightness/contrast/gamma until I can see everything.

It seems like video editors forget that not everyone is using a multi-thousand dollar display specifically tuned for video editing and most people are probably watching whatever on a cheapo Walmart special TV or monitor.

[–] misterchief117@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

@TheCrispyDud

I looked through their post history and they're a troll. I just reported a few of their posts.

[–] misterchief117@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

The article indicates the cracks are forming at the PCIe connector and suggests it's due to GPU sag. The issue was predominantly seen in pre-built PC's, but was also happening to separately bought cards. It's unclear if the pre-built desktops were from Gigabyte or some other vendor. Regardless, not only did Gigabyte refuse to RMA them, they charged the customer return shipping and stuck a sticker with an arrow pointing to the crack on the GPU.

Absolutely infuriating. Depending on the scope, I see either a class-action lawsuit or Gigabyte changing their stance and start to cover these under RMA. Gigabyte would also likely be violating European and Australian consumer protection laws here.

In the US, they're also likely violating some laws but the laws in the US rarely have teeth. In the USA, Gigabyte might as well mail the broken GPU back to the user along with a dildo and a note that says, "Go fuck yourself. You have zero recourse."

Regardless of Gigabyte being total douche bags about this, a take-away here (aside from not buying Gigabyte stuff anymore) is this:
If you're not supporting your GPU then you're wrong. Either your PCIe connector will eventually rip off your mobo, or the GPU's connector will crack, or both.

[–] misterchief117@kbin.social 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I'm curious how many of these POS (Point-of-Sale, not Piece of Shit) systems have the default settings to ask for tips. If so, I wonder how many of these places are committing wage theft by not actually paying tips out to the employees.

[–] misterchief117@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Is this the new Celebrity Deathmatch reboot we've been waiting for?

[–] misterchief117@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

@printerjammed Simply put, this is bad for so many reasons. Since you're likely going to reject any direct reasons why this is bad, I'll give you an analogy.

I'm going to take "and never update it" almost literally and assume you guys haven't installed security patches since you first installed it, or stopped at some point long ago.

You're essentially driving a 15 year old car that hasn't had an oil change, brakes changed, or tires changed. There are known MAJOR safety recalls on the seat belts, airbags, and seats. You have refused to take your car in for free servicing under the recall and basically said, "It's working fine now. It's not worth the hassle scheduling an appointment at the mechanic. I'll take my chances."

But hey, "The car still gets me around and fits in my garage" you smugly think to yourself. "Why should I do anything different? It's MY car and I'm only endangering myself here."

Nope. Your car is endangering everyone else on the road. Bad brakes and tires are major risks for everyone around you. You can easily lose control and hurt or kill others on the road.

Bad seats, seat belts, and airbags means that occupants of your vehicle (your companies clients) can be injured or killed if they fail. Even if only YOURS fails, well...you're the driver. Also, if you do crash and your seat belt fails, you're now a projectile in the car and can injure or kill other passengers. I've seen this happen too many times as a firefighter and an EMT. Unseatbelted occupants are an enormous hazard.

Suffice to say your company is a vector for major attacks and vulnerabilities that not only will affect you, but your clients and potentially countless others who have nothing to do with your company since your server could be part of a botnet for all you know.

"bUt We HaVe OtHeR sEcUrItY cOnTrOlS aNd PrOpEr PrOtOcOlS fOr...." I'm going to cut you off here and straight up say: No. You don't. The fact you still have Windows Server 2008 installed and refuse to even update it tells me enough about your entire IT department and policies.

@snixyz

[–] misterchief117@kbin.social 20 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

@imaqtpie "What term would you use to describe their users?"
Nazis, probably.

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