Qzr

joined 1 year ago
[–] Qzr@programming.dev 2 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

Nice wallpaper. Do you mind to share?

[–] Qzr@programming.dev 3 points 4 days ago

Exactly. Thank you for mentioning it explicitly, I shoved into the "politics" remark.

[–] Qzr@programming.dev 11 points 5 days ago (2 children)

Because eduction and prosperity reduce the brith rate. You don't need that many children to care for you when you're old, if you can expect to get healthcare. You ~~don't~~ shouldn't get accidental children if you're educated about sex and protection. In an educated society you will have fewer children later in your life, because perhaps after school you will also go to university, delaying the moment where you feel stable and settled enough to start a family. The more educated you are, the higher the chance that having children is a deliberate, careful choice, and not just something that happens. And last but not least, politics play a huge role in what incentives you have. Especially for this point, I recommend the Kurzgesagt videos about South Korea and Germany.

[–] Qzr@programming.dev 2 points 5 days ago

Yeah, I think I know what you mean. I read 1984 before Animal Farm, and it also didn't turn out how I expected (still good though). So I was more open about what to expect for Animal Farm I think.

[–] Qzr@programming.dev 20 points 5 days ago (5 children)

Has been a while, but IMO the animals work well because they abstract the history lesson away from any specific people. It shows how universal these patterns are. I didn't like Animal Farm because it was so well written or had such an intriguing story arc. I liked it because draws a picture of behavior in societies and holds up a mirror to us humans.

[–] Qzr@programming.dev 2 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

They can try to force me adding that for my single user instance, but I don't think they can:

  • Force the developers of GoToSocial to add this feature
  • And force me to add that to my instance (I don't live in the EU no US)

Do do this, they need to enforce cryptographically verifiable age verification everywhere. It would require forcing big instances to only cooperate with small instances that poof they do age verification and if you're selfhosting then the hoster needed to verify you? Not really possible.

Of course big applications and servers could choose to add age-verification freely to avoid scrutiny. Won't be cheered on in the Fedi I'm sure.

I'm more worried about the proposed OS-level verification, which will be harder to circumvent if you're not using a FOSS OS. Especially since I can imagine a global effort on this by US, EU, China.

Edit: hypotecially, if we ask how could it be added, a zero-knowledge proof that you're >18, without revealing anything else, would be the way to go.

[–] Qzr@programming.dev 3 points 3 weeks ago

Not commonly used in daily interactions, so would draw a lot more scrutiny. Security features are usually checked more carefully for 200 CHF and 1000 CHF bills. Swiss francs are also harder to forge than other bills.

From Wikipedia:

According to the 2008 edition of Guinness World Records, the eighth series of Swiss franc notes is the most secure in the world with up to 18 security features including a tilting digit, which can only be seen from an unusual angle, a UV digit that can only be seen under ultraviolet light and micro text. According to their respective central banks, the rate of counterfeited banknotes as of 2011 was about 1 in 100,000 for the Swiss franc, 1 in 20,000 for the euro, 1 in 10,000 for the United States dollar and 1 in 3,333 for the pound sterling.

This was about the eighth series, we're currently using the ninth, which likely has even better security features.

Also US-Dollars obviously can be used in many, many more places around the world. CHF is only really used in Switzerland and Liechtenstein.

[–] Qzr@programming.dev 3 points 4 weeks ago

Looks like the weather there...

[–] Qzr@programming.dev 1 points 1 month ago

ha! Don't be mistaken, we do that too in Switzerland. Gastronomy is one of the lowest paying fields in Switzerland as well I think.

[–] Qzr@programming.dev 19 points 1 month ago (3 children)

Don't even mention restaurant prices, it's ridiculous that buying from the supermarket is cheaper.

Funny, I'm from Switzerland and for me it's surprising that in some places in the world it's cheaper to eat in a restaurant than to buy groceries and cook them yourself. How does this even work? And shouldn't you save money if you put in more effort yourself?

Anyway, I digress. It's a pretty country, especially the mountains and nature. It is very expensive, especially restaurants as you mentioned. It's hard for me to judge from your perspective, but I went to Denver last summer and I was surprised how expensive everything was in the US. For instance Starbucks didn't feel exactly cheap to me. So perhaps Switzerland is not that much more expensive.

In the end it really depends on your budget and what you want to do. Fine dining in St. Moritz requires a bigger wallet than just grabbing a backpack and going for a hike.

Here some random reference points (from a citizen, not a tourist):

  • Just had lunch in a restaurant for 30 CHF (causal, not fancy)
  • Bern-Zürich (1h) by train costs 53 CHF without any recuded fare.
  • The coffee I grab at the train station in the morning is 4.10 CHF.
  • 1 day ski pass (just the pass) in Zermatt is around 100 CHF, 7 days are around 500 CHF.
  • The ~8000 CHF from your PPP example would last me 3-4 months, living in a shared apartment and not consuming a lot^ (obviously vacation will be more expensive).

^ for instance NOT buying 100 CHF liquor bottels.

[–] Qzr@programming.dev 10 points 1 month ago

Hello from Switzerland 👋

Agree with all the other comments, that's just manipulative. I guess he's also hurt, but that doesn't excuse his behavior. I've also been hurt in the past and I understand the impulse to lash out, but it doesn't lead anywhere if you do, so... better keep your distance.

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