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alyaza, to humanities in Tuvalu preserves history online as rising seas threaten existence
@alyaza@beehaw.org avatar

in the long term, Tuvalu’s play seems to be to try and keep the country from sinking but, if it becomes uninhabitable, to guarantee its citizens rights and a place in Australia. this is one of the premises of the Australia-Tuvalu Falepili union which was signed last year, although it’s more comprehensive than just climate change

alyaza, to technology in Lemmy's Image Problem
@alyaza@beehaw.org avatar

I don’t follow the development super closely so I don’t know if those issues were resolved or not. I just remember a lot of discussion on it when I was first on Lemmy on a different instance.

not that i’m aware of, and fixing a database schema once it’s already in place tends to be a clusterfuck so i’m very skeptical it will get better any time soon

alyaza, to politics in Democrats are hemorrhaging support with voters of color
@alyaza@beehaw.org avatar

He’s essentially the pre-eminent expert on polling, polling errors, and best practices in that regard.

i would not call Silver this anymore; he’s an increasingly partisan libertarian with weird hangups and a stick up his ass about things he wishes he understood (like COVID-19), and it’s almost assuredly part of why he’s out of a job at 538. he’s also increasingly being lapped by people like G. Elliott Morris and an armada of Twitter-based election analysts and prognosticators. at the bare minimum he’s absolutely not the only guy in town on this, and some of the people i just described like Adam Carlson actively dispute he’s even using the data in this article correctly because they’re the ones who made it. he’s also being challenged on his points here by professors like Matt Blackwell, specific polls of Black voters and data about minority youth voters. in general: the case is not nearly as clear-cut as he makes it seem and deferring to him on this would be a bad case in which to do it, because he’s probably wrong.

alyaza, to askbeehaw in 🥧 PieFed seems like a nice place for 🐝 Beehaw to migrate to . . .
@alyaza@beehaw.org avatar

our most recent thoughts on it and tensions with continuing to use Lemmy can be found here

alyaza, to support in ANNOUNCEMENT: Beehaw's new fiscal host is Open Collective Europe Foundation—please renew your donations there
@alyaza@beehaw.org avatar

our previous fiscal host is dissolving at the end of the year–most of the details are over in our previous announcement post; all contributions go toward keeping the website up and paying for any labor associated with it outside of admin work

alyaza, to support in ANNOUNCEMENT: Beehaw's new fiscal host is Open Collective Europe Foundation—please renew your donations there
@alyaza@beehaw.org avatar

to be honest with you i have no clue what the logistics are for donations themselves. my intuition is… no, having managed our finances for the reports? but Chris almost certainly has a better idea of this than me.

alyaza, to support in ANNOUNCEMENT: Beehaw's new fiscal host is Open Collective Europe Foundation—please renew your donations there
@alyaza@beehaw.org avatar

no, everything is still in USD (although i think the switch means we’re losing slightly more to payment processing)

alyaza, to chat in how's your week going, Beehaw
@alyaza@beehaw.org avatar

pretty quiet week so far, i think it’s supposed to snow later which will be moderately annoying because i’ll have to shut my window for awhile if so

alyaza, to support in Beehaw, Lemmy, and A Vision of the Fediverse - Ruminations on the past and visions of the future
@alyaza@beehaw.org avatar

it’s on the big list of possible alternatives that we’re investigating

alyaza, to gaming in Quality Assurance Workers at Activision Establish Largest Certified Union in the U.S. Video Game Industry with Communications Workers of America
@alyaza@beehaw.org avatar

With approximately 600 members, Activision Quality Assurance United-CWA is the largest group of union-represented workers at any U.S. game studio. Workers in the new unit are located in California, Texas, and Minnesota. Over 1,000 video game workers at Microsoft now have union representation with CWA.

this is very cool, and hopefully more workers leverage the Microsoft neutrality agreement.

alyaza, to news in Stop the Worsening Undercount of Palestinian Casualties in Gaza
@alyaza@beehaw.org avatar

Hamas lied about 500 dying in al Ahli hospital blast and blaming the IDF. They didn’t even try to offer evidence.

even granting this, this seems like the obvious exception to the rule. as the commenter you’re replying to noted, the UN and WHO have generally supported (with a handful of discrepancies that are unsurprising given the circumstances) the Gaza Health Ministry’s death tolls. Israel’s counts have also not historically diverged strongly from the ones the Gaza Health Ministry gives. take the 2014 war where the Gaza Health Ministry said 2,310 killed, the UN HRC said 2,251 killed, and Israel said 2,125 killed. that’s only a 10% difference which, if we’re being honest, is not really much of one in the context of an armed conflict.

mostly, where the Ministry and Israel meaningfully differ is in who they consider civilians and on what bases–the Ministry claimed about 70% civilians killed in 2014, but Israel claimed 36%. and that’s a much harder question to parse out than whether or not the Gaza Health Ministry is lying about casualty numbers–which by all accounts we have it does not seem to be.

alyaza, to usnews in Latest rideshare ordinance approved by Minneapolis City Council as Uber, Lyft renew threats to leave city
@alyaza@beehaw.org avatar

this was vetoed last year after it only passed 7-5 (majority to override a veto is 9); but this year it seems almost certain to pass. it has 9 votes this time and it seems even one of the four members in opposition might waver if it’s actually vetoed.

alyaza, to technology in The Anti-Ownership Ebook Economy
@alyaza@beehaw.org avatar

The right choices are generally more expensive (in terms of up-front costs, even if they’re less expensive in the long run) and/or require more time investment, both of which are lacking for the poor.

or just the non-technologically savvy. a lot of the issue here is a technological hurdle, fundamentally—it takes a certain level of technological knowledge for someone to, say, pirate ebooks versus just buying them legitimately and that’s a big point of friction for people in making the “right choice”. we have to keep in mind that for a lot of internet-using people nowadays, knowing the ins-and-outs of Facebook or how to download a browser add-on is probably a legitimate technical skill and on the upper bounds of what they’d know navigating spaces like this. and we don’t make it easy necessarily for people to acquire and advance the technological knowledge we’re talking about here either.

alyaza, to fediverse in My Love-Hate Relationship With Lemmy – Gavi's Blog
@alyaza@beehaw.org avatar

i don’t care about debating this with you. i will, as a concluding remark, just note incredible irony in lecturing about entitlement while simultaneously demanding gratitude for your work from people you literally just told to fuck off from this service three replies ago. in very blunt terms: i think you are getting the exact level of gratitude you deserve from us after this exchange, which is none. my experiences with you have been thoroughly unpleasant, unkind, and paint you as a toxic person and it is my view that your “years of work put into this software” are meaningless in the face of the blatant disrespect you show members of your community.

alyaza, (edited ) to news in Medellín’s Green Corridors Are a Breath of Fresh, Cool Air
@alyaza@beehaw.org avatar

How could less leaves lead to less carbon sequestration? I would love to read more about methods to maximize this.

my understanding–which is admittedly limited–is it’s a complicated issue but that the two biggest variables for the purposes of conversation are health of the things that you plant and what kinds of things you plant (since not all are made equal for carbon sequestration). the second point is mostly a function of location obviously, but on the first point this article seems to cover a lot of the basic principles (even though it’s about forestry and not exactly what Medellin is doing)—in short a well managed greenery project can probably sequester more carbon than one left to its own devices, because you can effectively “speed up” natural processes of sequestration and (in the very long term) turn over the carbon more easily when the plants start losing their capture efficacy. (and obviously, healthy plants with proper maintenance would be in a better position to thrive and sequester carbon than improperly tended to plants)

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