It can be bad, but it doesn’t have to be. It’s not bad if you’re just using it as a tool and understand that it’s not your only tool. Heavy equipment operators use their machines like extensions of their body. It doesn’t mean it’s bad or that they forget how to use their arms and legs or that they don’t still exercise their arms and legs sometimes. Use tools when it’s appropriate to and don’t when it isn’t, and always make sure you can use a variety of different tools including the ones you were born with and you’ll be fine.
cecilkorik
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Joined 9 months ago
Cake day: June 7th, 2025
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cecilkorik@piefed.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•NVIDIA could enter the desktop CPU market with performance equal to AMD and IntelEnglish
101·4 days agoMaybe they should start making RAM /s
cecilkorik@piefed.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Forced age verification is comming sooner than we thought.English
341·5 days agoWhen they make it law to have age verification in your operating system, only outlaws will have operating systems without age verification.
I guess I’m an outlaw then. Enjoy your visit to the wild west, we will always have illegal operating systems aplenty.
cecilkorik@piefed.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Investigators wrangled video from Nancy Guthrie’s Google Nest camera out of ‘backend systems’English
1·27 days ago“It’s a miracle!”
It’s the old-school term for the “Reddit hug of death”. In other words, huge popular site links to tiny unpopular site, and tiny unpopular site is overwhelmed by extreme levels of traffic it never expected to see and is completely unprepared for, server hosting it melts into a puddle of goo and website becomes inaccessible. (Realistically, server hosting it goes to 100% CPU or memory or both and the website just crashes and doesn’t restart or only functions intermittently and extremely slowly)
Server admin, seeing their server turning to a puddle of molten goo, decides to quickly throw emergency barricades in front of it to try to block enough of the traffic that the server can continue to function, often in vain.
Slashdot.org was the precursor to Reddit for old techies. It still kind of is, but it’s a shadow of what it once was.