• 0 Posts
  • 126 Comments
Joined 1 month ago
cake
Cake day: August 18th, 2025

help-circle

  • I haven’t watched anime in a while but I recall these as being solid and not porno. They should all be about the same level of maturity as Attack on Titan and JoJo. Also just in case you didn’t know. Naruto has two sequels. Naruto Shippuden which follows Naruto still after a time skip, and then Boruto which follows his son.

    1. Little Witch Academia
    2. k-on
    3. mushishi (slower but gorgeous animation)
    4. Spy x Family (I’ve not seen but heard it’s good and no fan service)
    5. literally any Studio Ghibli film (good for the whole family. Basically Japan’s Disney)
    6. Full Metal Alchemist (I would suggest Brotherhood. Not the original)
    7. Cowboy bebop
    8. Last Exile
    9. Oban Star Racers
    10. Avatar the Last Airbender (not technically anime but very similar feel and great show)

    If you need more I can go poke my friend and see if we can come up with more.













  • I was born in the US to a family who’s been here for generations. I have three years in debate. I have spent years developing data interface tools for customers and working with user feedback. I understand English.

    Saying I must not understand because I don’t understand English is a prime example of an Ad Hominem. You commented on me instead of what I’m saying.

    I understand fully you stated “Lemmy is not enshitified”. I also understand fully that the rest of your post reads like you disagree with your own statement.

    Your post effectively reads like this:

    The effects of enshitification are becoming apparent. Here’s issues I have with Lemmy. I think all bad software these days is the result of enshitification and thus the term should apply to modern software issues. This means Lemmy is enshitified by transitive property. Enshitification is modifying what we accept as the norm.






  • What you’re describing is a different problem that does exist but isn’t what’s going on here in the US. The layoffs have been so broad and across so many different industries with almost no rhyme or reason.

    Several of my friends who have been in the industry for years, and quite good at what they do, have been laid off. Many of the companies fired people simply based on who was hired last (even if they’d been there 3 years and a high contributor). Others fired just based on which team made the least money back (without regard for if they were a support team or some other important group like an infrastructure team not directly developing a product but developing for all the other teams). The steel processing company one of my friends worked for developing their inventory system and such, they told each manager to lay off 20% of their team and didn’t give any more guidance.

    The article focuses on the big companies like Google and Microsoft but country wide from the companies with only a few people on up have been laying off developers. This was a safe choice field a few years ago but more is flooded with competing applicants for job listings.