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a dev from ZH would've added a blockchain, mobile app and hosted it on an over-allocated kubernetes cluster. 97% uptime and you need a macbook pro so the website doesn't stutter.

A south-of-the-Limmat Migros shopper would use React and Vercel, but still use raw JS Date.

i for one deleted discord a couple of months ago when news about age verification and palantir collaboration dropped. got too yucky for my taste. used it since 2016, now i just don't anymore.

event went so far as to try to delete all of my messages with an extension, took like 2-3 days to delete my account. even then, i don't trust them enough to think that they don't keep copies of deleted messages.

regret writing a lot of personal details and feelings in 1:1 chats, sometimes also in servers.

i yearn for a new-age of decentralized communities and fora...


i've always felt like going to Burning Man, something just attracts me to it. but i'm a eurodude, going to the US just for a festival sounds idiotic and i currently don't want to visit the US anyways.

are there similar events in europe? you sound like an experienced oldhead :)


Look up whatever regional burns[1] exist in your country or neighboring countries, and attend one of those. Ideally, join whatever online community exists around it first, and then reach out to some of the camps that interest you about joining and helping with whatever it is they like to do. I love Burning Man, but I can honestly say that I've had a lot more fun at my local regional burns than I've had at the big burn.

[1] https://burnerguides.com/europe-burner-events


oh wow, there's one in my country in a region which i've never visited but always wanted to go to, maybe that's a sign :D thanks!


> blitzscaling

what a tone-deaf way to name a business. yuck.


i really feel like trying this out as a quasi-firefox user, but i've really started to love and appreciate Zen for its UI :( wonder if there's a Waterfox X Zen alternative.

EDIT: whoops, should've scrolled down a bit on the website, looks like Waterfox has vertical tabs as well. damn, probably going to try to migrate to it sometime soon...

EDIT2: of course supports firefox extensions as well, perfect.


Firefox has vertical tabs as well, and it is a lot less bloated that the extension one I was using.

same! in the last couple of years i've seen these movies in a cinema: The Big Lebowski, Fargo, La Heine, Apocalypse Now, HEAT. and i already bought tickets for Run Lola Run, Clerks and Fear And Loathing In Las Vegas.

it's especially cool as someone who's young and wasn't even born when some of these movies initially came to cinemas.

at the same time it's unbelievably sad that in recent years about 70% of the movies i saw at a cinema were multiple decades old.


I love Lola rennt so much. Really a one-of-a-kind movie.

When you grow up it's not only nostalgia, but the feeling that most of the ideas are really not new. I remember watching 'You Were Never Really Here', that had a huge hype behind it, and thinking "I have seen this same exact movie a hundred of times".


> I love Lola rennt so much. Really a one-of-a-kind movie.

+1, yes! watched it for the first time a couple of years ago after hearing about it and deciding to ethically download it, since then i've watched it a couple of times and at the start of this year even bought a Blu-Ray Player and a 4k Ultra HD copy* just because I wanted a physical copy to put on a shelf and watch it in an optimal quality. and as mentioned i'll go watch it in a cinema in a couple of months.

i also created a letterboxd account this year to log every movie i've ever seen. what's weird is that i've logged over 400 movies, but if i look at a graph of the years they were realeased in it's almost a perfect bell curve with the top being between 2006 - 2010.

*in these last couple months i started buying used blu-rays and DVDs and now got about 70 movies. guess this is my form of nostalgia. others got vynils, i got movies. physical media just feels different than downloaded movies. cover art, bonus material, DVD menues with soundtracks. love it...


> at the same time it's unbelievably sad that in recent years about 70% of the movies i saw at a cinema were multiple decades old.

There are literally thousands of good movies released between ~1890 and last year.

It’s improbable more than a hundred or so will come out this year that’re worth your time, and they’ll be harder to sort from the junk this close to release.

If anything, it’s amazing new movies have as large an audience as they do.


good point i guess, time allows for the good stuff to be remembered and stay relevant.

kind of how some movies like The Big Lebowski were considered flops but nowadays are cherished cult classics.


MST3K is definitive proof that "not all the old movies were good" - there were some stinkers, and they only picked out the ones that were "so bad they're good" - there's much worse.

Most movies are decently budgeted and so at least meet some minimum bar for quality - so cult classics can arise time and time again. There are movies in theaters right now that will be the cult classics of the 2050s.


previous post about this from 8 days ago with over 600 points and comments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47687248


at the same time, how can you judge something so harshly if you've never experienced it yourself.


Because I had "pleasure" watching others doing it. One does not have to step into shit personally


> a little better; the humans

em-dash instead of semicolon and your comment would give off AI vibes as well :D


i mean the Shinkansen has two classes as well :)


three, now!


As do some European high speed trains. I make it a point to book first class (or equivalent) tickets as that often comes with lounge access at the stations - which lets you mostly avoid the rampant pickpocketing and other petty crime that absolutely infests many European train stations.


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