Just an ordinary myopic internet enjoyer.
Can also be found at lemm.ee, lemmy.dbzer0, and Kbin.social.
My oldest account is at 9 years 10 months at the moment. Was a lurker for a time before that too. I haven’t deleted my accounts out of concern of my comments reappearing, but I’ve kept any interaction with that site at a minimum.
Most of the time, I just check to see if any comments resurfaced, or if I’ve got a love letter from the admins. Neither has happened so far, but I’m not sure it won’t happen. Until then, I will keep scrubbing my accounts.
I don’t see myself returning there. I’ve lost any desire to do so, and my old, yet scrubbed accounts will serve as a reminder never to interact with that site ever again. Peek, if I must, but never interact.
Low salary, with great state of mental well-being. So long as my finances can still maintain that “great state of mental well-being.”
But you know, there’s a case to be made for enduring that high-salary, low-happiness lifestyle just for enough time to save up, and then switch to the low-salary, high-happiness life. I am not sure I can endure that though.
Ah, kaya pala di ko rin siya makita kahit na mag-search ako by post sa lemm.ee.
I was unaware of the flooding that Ondoy caused during its peak. Electricity wasn’t cut off in our area either, internet connection was doing fine as well. It was only when I attempted to go out of the house to buy some food that I realized the damage it caused. No floods in our area, thankfully, but we’re almost literally an island that day.
I should have been aware of the near-constant torrential rain all night and all throughout that morning though.
On a more practical sense, someone once told me that discipline and habit is far more important than motivation once things are properly rolling. Motivation might be the spark that gotten things rolling, but it’s discipline and habit that keeps it going. (And that I ought to listen to that advice myself.)
However, in a more philosophical sense, I think accepting that you’ve lost your own spark and facing that very question “how does one be alive?” with the intent of reigniting that lost spark is pretty much facing the absurd. That facing that question every waking day of one’s life, answering that question for every moment, is pretty much the point. Whether or not the answer makes sense (in the moment or otherwise) or not is irrelevant, because the value is not in the answer, but in the way we face it.
It could be that for today, I could face it by making a slight detour in my daily commute and allowing myself to get lost on the way home, for example. It could be that for some other day, just as an example, I could choose to face it by not wearing any underwear during a work zoom meeting, relishing on that danger of being exposed. Or it could be as trivial as making pancit by using spaghetti. Or making spaghetti by using pancit bihon. All trivial things in the big picture, but if it makes my day any little more tolerable, then so be it.
And is that a bad thing? The womb is a dark, warm, and comforting place. A place for us to get ready for the bright wide world outside.
Lemm.ee seems to be down right now.
That’s my Subscriptions feed, sorted by hot. This is the only post that’s about that orangered site.
PS: Oh, if you’re wondering, yeah, that’s from Lemm.ee I am using my lemmy.world account right now to make this comment though.
Personally, I find Anki reviews to be torturous and has always been the worst part of my routine, to the point of putting me off learning entirely.
I do agree that it is not for everyone, and is, frankly, an acquired taste. In my own experience, however, once you’ve made it a habit, it becomes a lot lighter, eventually becoming routine.
What I use it for is a bit different though: I don’t use it for drilling. I find that learning stuff through Anki to be terrible, even though it is certainly possible. Rather, once I’ve already learned stuff, Anki would then come in to keep that information fresh, and refresh it if I happen to forget it. It doesn’t mean that I won’t forget what’s in my cards–that’s up to me to make sure that I do my reviews honestly, and even that’s no guarantee. However, I think that with all that, I’d be able to retain most of what I’ve learned.
Anyways, yeah~ Thanks!
No problem. I’m also glad I am able to clear that up.
Yeah, that’s also an option–and that’s what I’m going to do by default. This thread is just me trying to ask around if anyone’s interested.
Reddit has /r/Anki and /r/medicalschoolanki, the former of which has more general questions, and the latter is more specific to those who use Anki for their medical studies. I was thinking of at least replicating /r/Anki here but I’d love it for there to be a community here for those who use Anki for language-learning purposes. That community would form as a means to exchange information about best practices on how to use Anki for the purposes of language learning, sharing decks, etc.
Wouldn’t that end up as porn?
If you’ve got a way to access your user profile via a browser (mobile works too), you can see your saved posts there.
On any page, click/press the hamburger icon on the top-leftmost part of your screen. It’d open up a menu (or an area) where you can see your profile picture and username at the very bottom. There’s a triangle next to your username, click/press that.
Another menu/area opens up that has options “Profile”, “Settings”, and “Logout”. Click/press “Profile” to see your user profile.
You’re then taken to a different page (which you can directly go to via https://your.lemmy.instance/u/your_username
, for example: https://lemmy.world/u/AllGoesUpMustGoDown). There, you can choose between “Overview”, “Comments”, “Posts” and “Saved.” That last link (to your saved posts/comments) won’t be visible to others (I tried).
PS: I tried looking for the same in wefwef, but I can’t find it as well.
PPS: Weirdly enough, it might be faster to just go directly via the address bar of your (mobile) browser if you know what you’re doing, lol!
Edit: Typos and shit. Added PPS part.
I sometimes listen to music or watch videos in the shower. I double-bag it in clear plastic bags, and then put it in a safe location. When I change songs or videos, I can interact with the screen like normal. Maybe it’s just my phone or the plastic bags I use–maybe both?
I use something like below, minus the ziplock:
I suppose there are actual products meant for making phones more waterproof in these situations, but I didn’t bother looking for those.
“Reports revealed that the suspects were caught in the act of disrespecting the Philippine National Flag. They were observed pulling and damaging the flag before discarding it in a grassy area near the camp,” the PNP said in a statement.
The PNP said the incident occurred at 5:40 a.m. at Marine Base Gregorio Lim in Sitio Calumpang, Barangay Sapang 1 in Ternate, Cavite.
I’d understand if it’s done in some kind of protest. But without anything to go by, it just seems so lolwutrandom. Perhaps a result of a night full of alcohol and/or other substances.
But even then, so many questions still: are they tourists? How did they end up in the (marine) base? Did they sneak in? What were they thinking?
Having seen those volunteers pour so much time and effort into Duolingo courses (shoutout to the Duolingo Esperanto community), I don’t think any of this monetization shit has ever entered their minds. As far as I can discern, it’s a labor of love for the most ardent of volunteers.
For volunteers making and expounding Duolingo material in their languages, just being able to share their love of the language, and then seeing other people learn the language seems to be their main aim. Ditto for the Reddit moderators, I suppose, just being share their hobby to a community of people that has formed around their subreddit, and then seeing more people come to appreciate it, that’s the main thing that makes the hard work worth it.
This labor of love is what the capitalists have sought to monetize. They look at all of these people doing what they love, and see schmucks waiting to be exploited. And these “community managers” high up the corporate ladder seek to keep this exploitation going.
Duolingo, the language learning app that profited so much from volunteer input, only to kick them out once they outlived their usefulness.
Reddit, the content aggregator whose lifeblood is user-generated content and whose distinctive feature is its army of volunteer moderators.
Do I hear an ironic echo here? Or is it just me?
Coming from someone who was your age before you were born: you do you.
‘Age’ is mostly just a matter of experience and perspective anyways. I could be as old as earth itself but lack the experience to know any better. On the other hand, you could have a better perspective on things (compared to me) because you have been through a lot, or is more thoughtful and reflective about things.
Alternatively to keep on deleting my reddit posts every day ?
Late to the game here, but that’s the approach I’ve gone with. I got Shreddit, made a config file (containing the necessary detail for all my accounts), and made a shell script that I ran three times a day, likely until June 30.
Nowadays, my accounts look clean enough, and whenever some post or comment resurface, the next run of the script should take care of it.
And just on top of all that, I do check my accounts from a different browser I never use Reddit on. So far it’s clean-looking, no posts or replies showing on any of them. But whether or not Reddit actually deleted them, I’m not sure. I’m never sure.
I agree. I find it really useful for drilling vocabulary, but I struggle it suitable for learning grammar. Conjugation (and declension), sure, it helps a lot, but that’s basically just memorizing facts.
Basically, yeah, it’s great at memorizing bits of information. This makes it great for beginner language learners, as well as those who need to memorize lots of facts (medical students). Otherwise, once you have enough to have a go at your target language, you’re indeed better off doing that instead.
However I still think it’s fine to keep it on the side if you need to keep your vocab fresh–especially for those you rarely encounter in your target language. (Though if that’s the case, do you really need to keep that word in your memory?)