technology Technology Palworld maker vows to fight Nintendo lawsuit on behalf of fans and indie developers
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    57 minutes ago 100%

    Hard disagree. I really enjoy a lot of Nintendo's games, and will be buying Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom right around release. Some favorites:

    • Smash Brothers
    • Mario Kart
    • Zelda - didn't like BotW and didn't get TotK, but I loved the Switch ports of Skyward Sword and Link's Awakening
    • Kirby
    • Mario Party
    • Super Mario 3D World
    • Xenoblade Chronicles

    My kids like Pokemon and my SO like Ring Fit, but I think that series is pretty boring. And here are some I haven't played, but probably will:

    • Astral Chain
    • Switch Sports
    • Luigi's Mansion
    • Paper Mario
    • Metroid
    • Pikmin

    That said, I very much don't like Nintendo as a company, especially its opposition to emulation. But I do like their first party titles, and they're very polished at launch, unlike many other big studios.

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  • technology Technology Palworld maker vows to fight Nintendo lawsuit on behalf of fans and indie developers
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 hour ago 87%

    What's weird about it? AFAICT, Palworld doesn't violate Nintendo copyright in any meaningful sense, though it might violate Nintendo's patent claims.

    That said, this lawsuit seems really late, and I wonder if that'll factor into the decision at all (i.e. if it was close, the judge/jury might take the lack of action by Nintendo as evidence of them just looking for money).

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  • technology Technology Mozilla is shutting down their Mastodon instance.
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 hour ago 100%

    Right, and if it's not profitable, it should be scrapped, but if it pays for itself, I see no harm in keeping it.

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  • technology Technology Instagram makes all teen accounts private - npr
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 hour ago 100%

    I completely agree. I'm reading a book related to 1984, and all of the thought crime and whatnot it talks about is scarily on-point when it comes to social media censorship. For example, "sex crime" is strictly controlled, and in the same chapter that someone gets taken away for getting pregnant, the MC talks about sexual relationships she has and plans to have. Nobody can talk about love or relationships, yet everyone seems to engage in them, or at least one-night stands. In fact, the word used for "abortion" in that book is "unbirth," which is right there with the term "unalived."

    Blocking out a huge part of human culture doesn't help anyone, and it doesn't actually work, because people will find a way. What can work is giving users the tools to hide stuff they don't want to see.

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  • technology Technology US can’t ban TikTok for security reasons while ignoring Temu, other apps, TikTok argues
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    2 hours ago 100%

    National security interests are the interests of the people though.

    In a broad sense, sure, but "national security interests" are a huge excuse for bad policy.

    assuming I’m not leaking national security information

    That only applies if you are in a position that has access to classified information, or have reason to believe that a certain piece of information is classified. If you acquire information without access to classified information (i.e. if you see something on government property with binoculars or something), you are free to share that information.

    The US largely does not censor people using the power of the gov’t

    Not individuals, sure, but there are backroom threats for journalists that can significantly impact what the average person sees. If you get a big enough audience, you'll start to see these threats.

    Here's the press freedom index the RSF posts, and while the US is better than most, it's not at the top, and it's a big reason why I like to read news publications from other areas (Canada and UK).

    And yes, China is way worse, that goes without saying. But that doesn't mean we should completely block them, it means we should be taking an active role in pointing out the propaganda so the world can see through their BS.

    This isn’t a case of, “oh, both sides are the same”.

    Never claimed it was.

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  • bicycles Bicycles Nothing much but here's my bike after grocery shopping
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    2 hours ago 100%

    Check local classifieds. Even if your area isn't big into cycling, surely someone likes taking their kids on bike rides at a local park or whatever.

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  • selfhosted Selfhosted Low Cost Mini PCs
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    2 hours ago 100%

    Good point, I'll consider MOCA. The main problem is that we have three sets (OTA antenna, satellite, and internet), and I'm not sure which are which, but figuring that out should be quite a bit easier than running cable. :)

    I'm not planning on getting anything more than gigabit in the near future, though my city is rolling out fiber and claims to support up to 10gbit.

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  • technology Technology AI-Generated Code is Causing Outages and Security Issues in Businesses
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    2 hours ago 100%

    Your experience echoes my own with our team. That said, I think we got a pretty good set of devs on our team, and I think a big part of that is my boss being Indian and worked at the org we hired, so he understands the culture there and how to get a better deal. The net result is that the teams we hired are pretty reasonable and work alongside mine (we actually hired two teams and had them "compete," and we kept the better one).

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  • technology Technology US can’t ban TikTok for security reasons while ignoring Temu, other apps, TikTok argues
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    2 hours ago 100%

    The US constitution doesn’t guarantee Chinese citizens, living in China, the right to freedom of the press.

    True, but the US constitution guarantees Chinese citizens, living in or visiting the US or its territories, all the rights in the Constitution. So when TikTok operates in the US and provides services to US customers, it gets the protections of the US Constitution, as well as the obligations of US law.

    TikTok appears to be a tool of the Chinese gov’t

    And this is covered by freedom of the press. There's no legal requirement for press to be pro-US, and it doesn't necessarily need to be accurate, it just can't be fraudulent. If TikTok is being fraudulent, then they should be held accountable for that.

    As I stated, if TikTok is sold off so that they’re no longer connected to China, then they’re more than welcome to continue to operate.

    Yes, according to the law that they're contesting.

    I'm saying that I don't think this law is constitutional. I don't use TikTok, I believe TikTok is dangerous, and I don't think anyone should use it, but I'm also uncomfortable with the government picking and choosing which apps I can use, especially when the justification seems to be about the speech on that app. So even though I wish TikTok would disappear, I don't think that justifies using the law to accomplish that.

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  • bicycles Bicycles Nothing much but here's my bike after grocery shopping
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    2 hours ago 100%

    Yeah, if you're regularly doing heavy loads, getting a purpose-built trailer is a good idea. But if you're just getting groceries, you can probably get a kids trailer used for <$100.

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  • technology Technology US can’t ban TikTok for security reasons while ignoring Temu, other apps, TikTok argues
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    2 hours ago 100%

    I think it should be illegal, full stop.

    Then we're certainly not in agreement. And that's fine.

    I think sale of data should be 100% allowed, provided the customer consents (and gets fair compensation). The customer, however, needs to be aware of what data is being sold, to whom, and what they're getting in return. Burying that 20 pages deep in a TOS doesn't count, it needs to be in a format that an average person could reasonably be expected to fully understand. The service provider and the company receiving the data should have strict legal requirements to keep that data safe, so if there's a breach of any variety, the consequences would be a lot steeper than a few dollars per person affected.

    So essentially what I'm after here is transparency to the customer, and actual consequences for companies that fail to protect customer data.

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  • noncredibledefense NonCredibleDefense Best frenemies forever ❤️
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    2 hours ago 100%

    There seems to have been a set of informal assurances between the US/NATO and the USSR that NATO wouldn't expand eastward past Germany, though there were no legally binding agreements. Russia objected when NATO expanded in the 90s, and it continued objecting as more and more countries joined NATO. This isn't new, it's a clearly established pattern.

    So when we get to Putin, I think his argument that NATO is being too aggressive has merit, at least from the Russian perspective. If he allows NATO to continue expanding, the Russian people would justifiably be pretty upset, so he essentially is forced to take some kind of action to show that Russia has certain lines in the sand. If he lets Ukraine, their next-door neighbor, join NATO, who would trust that he actually has any kind of power to protect Russian interests? So it makes complete sense that Putin decided to invade Ukraine for the primary purpose of preserving a line of buffer states, as well as legally justify the taking of Crimea. That sends a message to other border states that Russia will not stand by while it's regional influence is further eroded.

    Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying he was justified in attacking Ukraine, I'm merely saying he was obligated to demonstrate a show of force to retain his position of power. If he was able to get a peace agreement from Ukraine to not join NATO and to formally recognize Russian control of Crimea, I think he would've withdrawn. That didn't happen, so now he's between a rock and a hard place and needs to get significant concessions from Ukraine to retain his power in Russia.

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  • technology Technology US can’t ban TikTok for security reasons while ignoring Temu, other apps, TikTok argues
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    3 hours ago 100%

    I disagree, especially because "other than necessary" is a pretty squishy concept (i.e. selling tailored ads could be considered "necessary to operate a website"). Instead of that, I think selling or providing any form of data collected without the customer's explicit consent (and to consent, the customer must know what data is being s hared) or without a warrant (and only the data in the warrant) should be illegal.

    That should be sufficient and actually enforceable, since it has very clear boundaries on what's included.

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  • noncredibledefense NonCredibleDefense Best frenemies forever ❤️
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    Idk, if he completely absorbs Ukraine, that puts him right next door to a very angry NATO. I really don't think he wants that, he wants a buffer, and he wants Europe to get over what he's done in Ukraine. I think he now sees that ship has sailed, and he can't really back down due to local political pressure, so he has to keep going.

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  • cybersecurity Cybersecurity TfL requires in-person password resets for 30,000 employees after hack
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    I guess that's possible, but then that user would be locked out of their account and they'd quickly figure out whose account was compromised when the employee can't access things anymore.

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  • technology Technology Amazon is making its employees come back to the office five days a week
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    Well, the day my boss says that is the day I submit my 2 weeks notice, and probably half of our dept. We were hired with the promise of always having 3 days at home most days, and my boss kept to that, even pushing back against company policy that tried to shift to 3 days in office.

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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    Awesome!

    Is there a way to throw money at you yet? Moral support is nice, but cold, hard cash is hopefully also appreciated. If that's a thing, point me in the right direction and you'll have a little pick-me-up this weekend.

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  • technology Technology Instagram makes all teen accounts private - npr
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    I'm 100% in the second camp. Facebook having my ID is a much bigger issue than having my kids' profile be public. I as a parent can ensure my kids' profiles are acceptable, or mark them as private myself. I can't ensure Facebook deletes my ID after verifying my identity.

    Yes, kids should be safer online, and that starts at home. Educate parents and kids about how to stay safe, that's as far as it should go.

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  • technology Technology Amazon is making its employees come back to the office five days a week
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    Exactly. We use a VPN to connect to anything somewhat important, and anything truly important requires manual access and approvals. I'm in a pretty senior dev position, and if I lost my laptop:

    1. they'd have to break my password or biometric login (disk is encrypted) - with this they get access to most of our code, but no secrets
    2. they'd need to hack my phone to access any internal documentation or test environments due to 2FA
    3. they'd need to hack my password manager to access anything non-documentation - code repos, prod logs, etc
    4. they'd need to hack someone else's machine to get access to actual prod data, which is probably what they really want

    And I'm not doing anything special here (and I'm certainly not a security professional), that's everyone's machines due to company policy. We also don't handle anything particularly sensitive, the most sensitive thing I have is proprietary algorithms, and we'd sue anyone if we suspected they stole our code.

    Oh, and if they try to run something sus, it'll send a report to our IT dept. I actually got contacted by our IT dept because I ran something unfamiliar (I really like my CLI tools), so they added an exception after personally verifying with me that it's not a hack.

    We have teams across the globe, both inside the org and outside, and we haven't had any issues with security, and we do regular audits. Our security team isn't particularly special either, I'm sure many other companies have much tighter security than we do.

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  • technology Technology Amazon is making its employees come back to the office five days a week
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    pretty trivial to do so

    Yup. We have to "badge in" to our office, but the secretary will buzz you in if you ask nicely. Also, if you walk in with confidence as someone is entering/leaving, they'll hold the door for you. Or go in around the EOD when the cleaning staff are there and they'll let you in. All it takes is a very small amount of social engineering and you could steal a ton of stuff from my company.

    But most people don't lose stuff like laptops at home or in their office, they lose them when traveling. Maybe you drop by a coffee shop on the way to work and someone filches your bag, or maybe you take a flight for work and someone swipes it while you're throwing something in the trash. They're not going to break into your home or your office, they'll snatch it while you're out in public and not paying particularly close attention.

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  • technology Technology Amazon is making its employees come back to the office five days a week
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    Cool, glad I didn't listen to my parents, who wanted me to work for Amazon. Yeah, I probably could've made a ton more, but I'm making plenty where I'm at.

    I work 2x in office, less if I have a somewhat passable reason to not go in. And I can WFH for a few weeks at a time if I need to travel for whatever reason. It's nice working for someone that somewhat respects me.

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  • bicycles Bicycles Nothing much but here's my bike after grocery shopping
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    Looks like Thule services Malaysia, and I would be surprised if they're the only one. Find one for two kids, they'll have higher weight limits and be big enough for larger runs.

    I use one from Trek, and I've carried:

    • car batteries
    • sacks of rice (like 20 kg)
    • bulk toilet paper
    • my kid's bike (SO picked them up w/ car, and I dropped by in the bike to get their bike)

    It's nothing special, just a kid trailer and some creativity.

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  • cybersecurity Cybersecurity TfL requires in-person password resets for 30,000 employees after hack
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    Eh, it's about validating credentials match the records of the user account, it's not about validating that the person using those credentials is who they say they are. In other words, it doesn't mean "the person logging in is John Smith," it means "the person logging in has John Smith's credentials." If you want to prove that the user is who they say they are, you'll need a lot more than a password (biometrics are a start).

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  • technology Technology US can’t ban TikTok for security reasons while ignoring Temu, other apps, TikTok argues
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    Sure, and we should absolutely indict Facebook. And ideally our government wouldn't be so corrupt that it could indict our own government agencies from buying information from them in violation of the 1st, 4th, 5th, 6th, and 9th amendments (and probably the 14th).

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  • technology Technology US can’t ban TikTok for security reasons while ignoring Temu, other apps, TikTok argues
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    technology Technology US can’t ban TikTok for security reasons while ignoring Temu, other apps, TikTok argues
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 46%

    Laws don't exist to protect the state, they exist to protect the people.

    Also, what another country decides to do shouldn't really impact what we decide to do. If China blocks our apps, fine, their loss I guess. But if we start blocking their apps in retribution, that doesn't make us any better than them. We should be fighting disinformation with information. This means better education and transparent government-funded research and information. But when the US government is secretive and frequently caught spreading its own disinformation, it makes it hard for me to agree to block other countries doing the same.

    TikTok should be allowed to offer its services here, but US companies shouldn't be obligated to host them on their services, and the government should publicize the negative information it has about them so journalists can help the public digest it.

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  • technology Technology US can’t ban TikTok for security reasons while ignoring Temu, other apps, TikTok argues
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 89%

    Cool, let's ban Temu then. Nothing of value will be lost.

    In all honesty though, I disagree with banning software, and that includes TikTok. I think it's a terrible platform and I refuse to use it, but I think we need to solve the underlying problem another way, otherwise we're just picking and choosing what speech is allowed in this country. The Constitution doesn't only protect American citizens, it protects everyone.

    That said, if we're going to ban one, let's ban them all. These apps haven't provided any tangible value IMO and they've arguably caused a fair amount of harm, so I'm not going to die on a hill defending them.

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  • technology Technology [rant] I want computers to become personal again
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    Eh, I think it's totally feasible to quarantine the problematic parts of tech and retain control. For example:

    • GrapheneOS - I have a profile for my personal stuff w/o any Google services running, and then I have a "work" profile for things like Slack
    • Linux - no software company or hardware company is going to restrict me from maintaining my own machine; I've replaced parts, uninstalled default software, etc; I currently use a Lenovo laptop and a DIY desktop, and I'll probably replace my laptop w/ a Framework

    "impossible to go without these services"

    Have you tried? I stopped using Facebook over a decade ago, and I refuse to use anything else Meta has touched. I still keep in contact with those I care about. It turns out that if people value a relationship with you, they'll work with what you're comfortable with, provided you're willing to compromise a bit too. For me, that means SMS and email is my main form of communication, though I'd prefer more private alternatives like Matrix and Signal. Maybe I'll push my loved ones to switch eventually, idk.

    No one uses fax

    Nor should they, it's absolutely insecure and shouldn't be used by anyone. Period.

    Mail is great, many of my friends have old-school watches, and while I don't understand it, I have friends who watch live TV. None of that really interests me (though I'll watch the Olympics OTA sometimes).

    take back computers

    What's stopping you? Do it one step at a time, and make adjustments as you go. I switched to Linux full-time something like 15 years ago, and it's all I use today. Since then, I have:

    • switched from gmail to my own domain (hosted w/ Tuta)
    • ripped all our DVDs and Blurays to a local Jellyfin server and cancelled most of our streaming services (SO convinced me to keep Netflix)
    • switched to GrapheneOS after a few years of slowly cutting out Google crap
    • self-host all kinds of stuff (I'm really close to eliminating Google Drive)
    • eliminated all commercial social media, and only Lemmy is left

    Do the easiest stuff first, and keep going until you feel like you're in control. Your direction will probably look different than mine, and that's great! But waiting for someone else to solve your problems is what got us into this mess, so do something, and ideally do it today.

    24
  • greentext Greentext Anon explains the 2nd amendment
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    Eh, Americans spend something like $10-20B per year on guns and ammo. That's nowhere near the military budget, but it's still a lot of guns and ammo, so the US would put up a pretty good guerrilla resistance.

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  • greentext Greentext Anon starts asking questions
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    It's a lot easier if you get a balance bike first. They'll naturally try coasting because that's fun, so all they need to figure out is pedaling to move on to a real bike.

    I did that with two kids, and it worked well both times.

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  • technology Technology The internet is worse than it used to be. How did we get here, and can we go back?
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    technology Technology Thankfully, Trump Is Still Alive. Unfortunately, So Is His Misguided Crypto Project
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 58%

    Exactly. I dislike Trump as much as the next person, but I also absolutely respect the office and think the Secret Service should be doing a much better job of protecting those who hold, held, or are seeking to hold public office. A functional democracy requires protecting those who the people elect, even if we disagree with their policies.

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  • technology Technology Mozilla is shutting down their Mastodon instance.
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    Exactly. They should be dropping anything that isn't revenue positive or isn't furthering the goals of browser. Rust is a great project because it's being used directly in the browser. Mastodon isn't, because it has no relationship to their browser efforts. I'm on the fence about the VPN, but if it's revenue positive, it should probably stick around, and it sort of benefits the browser as well.

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  • technology Technology Mozilla is shutting down their Mastodon instance.
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 90%

    Yeah, something like 50k users is a drop in the bucket. It's a nice size for a community, but not big enough to warrant a browser feature.

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  • bicycles Bicycles Nothing much but here's my bike after grocery shopping
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    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    Nice! That's a lot of accessories you've got there, it's definitely a work bike and not a recreation bike.

    You don't need a cargo bike (those are expensive), consider a kid's bike trailer. They typically carry around 100lbs (45kgs?), which is plenty for larger trips (I've done some Costco runs w/ my bike trailer).

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  • technology Technology No One Is Buying AMD Zen 5 CPUs, So What's Going On?
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  • "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearSU
    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    Exactly, and my 5600 is still doing a great job. Give me a good deal and I'll upgrade, but I don't have a compelling reason right now to upgrade. Oh, and if I do need more performance, I can look at the AM4 X3D chip, which would be cheaper than getting AM5 and rebuilding my PC.

    4
  • technology Technology The internet is worse than it used to be. How did we get here, and can we go back?
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  • "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearSU
    sugar_in_your_tea
    1 day ago 100%

    Exactly.

    I'm interested in distributed applications (think BitTorrent, not ActivityPub), and my primary concern here is filtering. I want to be able to only see content from people I trust and people they trust (and so on), and if I do that well, I won't have to see a ton of crap. That's how regular relationships work, and I'd like to try my hand at it with anonymous relationships. Think something like Web of Trust, but adjusted for larger networks of people.

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  • selfhosted
    Selfhosted sugar_in_your_tea 2 months ago 100%
    Looking for HW recommendations for DIY NAS/Homelab

    Here's what I currently have: - Ryzen 1700 w/ 16GB RAM - GTX 750 ti - 1x SATA SSD - 120GB, currently use <50GB - 2x 8TB SATA HDD - runs openSUSE Leap, considering switch to microOS And main services I run (total disk usage for OS+services - data is : - NextCloud - possibly switch to ownCloud infinite scale - Jellyfin - transcoding is nice to have, but not required - samba - various small services (Unifi Controller, vaultwarden, etc) And services I plan to run: - CI/CD for Rust projects - infrequent builds - HomeAssistant - maybe speech to text? I'm looking to build an Alexa replacement - Minecraft server - small scale, only like 2-3 players, very few mods HW wishlist: - 16GB RAM - 8GB may be a little low longer term - 4x SATA - may add 2 more HDDs - m.2 - replace my SATA SSD; ideally 2x for RAID, but I can do backups; performance isn't the concern here (1x sata + PCIe would work) - dual NIC - not required, but would simplify router config for private network; could use USB to Eth dongle, this is just for security cameras and whatnot - very small - mini-ITX at the largest; I want to shove this under my bed - very quiet - very low power - my Ryzen 1700 is overkill, this is mostly for the "quiet" req, but also paying less is nice I've heard good things about N100 devices, but I haven't seen anything w/ 4x SATA or an accessible PCIe for a SATA adapter. The closest I've seen is a ZimaBlade, but I'm worried about: - performance, especially as a CI server - power supply - why couldn't they just do regular USB-C? - access to extra USB ports - its hidden in the case I don't need x86 for anything, ARM would be fine, but I'm having trouble finding anything with >8GB RAM and SATA/PCIe options are a bit... limited. Anyway, thoughts?

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    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearBU
    Business sugar_in_your_tea 2 months ago 87%
    Calm inflation reading keeps the door open at Fed for September rate cut finance.yahoo.com

    Looks like inflation is around 2.6% and holding steady/falling slowly. This is good news for the stock market and could impact elections in November since we'll likely see a rally if rates do get cut in Sept.

    6
    2
    libertarian
    What does the Libertarian candidate really believe? | Chase Oliver | Just Asking Questions, Ep. 25 m.youtube.com

    This interview mostly goes over social policy, so I hope there's a follow-up with fiscal policy as well. [Here's an AI-generated transcript](https://youtubetranscript.com/?v=usmh1DSzwdc), which has some mistakes but hopefully is helpful. I tried copying it here, but it was too long. Some interesting tidbits I liked: - Liz challenged Chase on gender affirming care - his response was "no to surgery before 18, yes to medication if parents and doctors agree" - open borders - wants an "Ellis Island"-style system where you register and then get to work, while still maintaining a strong police presence to keep out criminals - courting those on the right of the LP - wants to work together on common causes, but will disagree on social issues - vaccine mandates - no mandates from the government, but private businesses absolutely can; he thinks businesses requiring masks/vaccines is stupid because it limits customers The whole discussion was pretty interesting, and I think it's interesting that Liz Wolfe came out as more conservative than Zach (apparently, Zach rarely discusses personal opinions). So far I'm pretty happy with Chase as the candidate because: - he's pretty well-spoken - reminds me a bit of Gary Johnson with less "aloof"-ness - he appears confident and seems to do a good job justifying his positions on core libertarian principles - very different from both Trump and Biden, so he should contrast well - going after young voters - he's young, and he's highlighting issues that young people seem to care about, so I'm hopeful that'll resonate with young voters I certainly disagree with him on some issues, but I think he'll be a good voice for the party. I would like to see more discussion on economic policy though. Anyway, what are your thoughts? Are you excited for a Chase Oliver campaign, or do you think the Libertarian Party should have made a different choice?

    2
    6
    fire
    IRS opening free online tax filing program to all states https://www.axios.com/2024/05/30/irs-taxes-direct-file-free-program

    This is exciting for me because: - I model ny taxes in my spreadsheet anyway, so I'm likely to notice a mistake - I usually use FreeTaxUSA to file for free, and this means there's one less party to share my personal information with - my state's taxes are pretty simple, so I don't need state-specific tax software I hope this helps simplify things for some people and save a bit of money as well. I'm going to try it out next year. Do any of you estimate your taxes? Are you interested in trying out this service?

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    1
    opensuse
    openSUSE sugar_in_your_tea 4 months ago 93%
    Aeon Desktop Brings New Features in RC2 Release news.opensuse.org

    Looks like most of the improvements have nothing to do with GNOME, so they should also probably impact Kalpa (the KDE MicroOS distro). I'm particularly interested in these developments because I'm going to upgrade the CPU on my NAS (old Phenom II -> Ryzen 1700), and I'm considering reinstalling w/ MicroOS. It's currently running on an old SATA SSD, but NVMe drives are getting so cheap that it's probably worth an upgrade.

    13
    6
    libertarian
    Chase Oliver Is the Libertarian Party's Presidential Pick Chase Oliver is the Libertarian Party's Presidential pick reason.com

    > Oliver's victory on Sunday night was a blow to the Mises Caucus, the right-leaning faction that took control of the Libertarian Party at the 2022 convention and that had orchestrated Trump's appearance at the convention. That faction's preferred candidate was Rectenwald. I'm not a fan of the Mises Caucus, so I think this is hilarious. > There was widespread media attention in recent weeks fixated on whether the Libertarian Party would nominate a prominent non-Libertarian like Kennedy or even Trump. > > Neither got anywhere close to winning. Kennedy was eliminated after the first round of balloting, while Trump did not even qualify for the first round and received just six write-in votes. Good on you LP. Now, I know next to nothing about Chase Oliver, but being gay and young will certainly set him apart from the old men he's competing against. I hope he'll get a good amount of media attention to spread the libertarian message. Anyway, what are your thoughts? Did the convention make the right call? Would one of the other candidates have been better? Would you prefer no candidate?

    3
    4
    fire
    Bill Perkins - Memory Dividends, Time Buckets, and Maximizing Net Fulfillment www.madfientist.com

    I haven't finished listening to this, and unfortunately there isn't a transcript. According to the comments, the transcript exists on Spotify (I don't have a subscription, sorry), so that can be an option. Anyway, I'm well on my way to my number, so I've been thinking about maximizing my time while I wait for the market to do its thing. I've been listening to a lot of The Money Guy show recently, which has a lot of overlap with the FI mentality, and the recording theme is to optimize for enjoyment. I think that's something I've been forgetting recently, so I'm glad I found this podcast to help keep me grounded. Anyway, thoughts? How are you spending you time now? How to you expect that to change when you're FI? Are there changes you'd like to make to optimize things today?

    -1
    0
    opensuse
    openSUSE sugar_in_your_tea 4 months ago 83%
    OpenVINO Arrives in openSUSE Releases news.opensuse.org

    [From the website](https://docs.openvino.ai/2024/home.html): > OpenVINO is an open-source toolkit for optimizing and deploying deep learning models from cloud to edge. It accelerates deep learning inference across various use cases, such as generative AI, video, audio, and language with models from popular frameworks like PyTorch, TensorFlow, ONNX, and more. Convert and optimize models, and deploy across a mix of Intel® hardware and environments, on-premises and on-device, in the browser or in the cloud.

    4
    0
    fire
    Average Retirement Savings Balance by Age https://money.usnews.com/money/retirement/articles/average-retirement-savings-balance-by-age

    Here are just the number for all of you degenerates who just want some milestones for your spreadsheets. Average total retirement savings by age: - <35 - $49,130 - 35-44 - $141,520 - 45-54 - $313,220 - 55-64 - $537,560 - 65-74 - $609,230 - >=75 - $462,410 Average 401k balance by age: - <25 - $5,236 - 25-34 - $30,017 - 35-44 - $76,354 - 45-54 - $142,069 - 55-64 - $207,874 - 65 and older - $232,710 And retirement savings targets from various advisors: Fidelity: - 1x by 30 - 3x by 40 - 6x by 50 - 8x by 60 - 10x by 67 Rowley: - 1x by 35 - 5x by 50 - 7x by 70 Anyway, do you like metrics like these?

    12
    9
    opensuse
    openSUSE sugar_in_your_tea 4 months ago 77%
    openSUSE Asia Summit Set for Tokyo news.opensuse.org

    Important dates: - expected summit date is Nov. 2 and 3 soon after Open Source Summit Japan - call for speakers is going to end around the end of July There will be another announcement in a couple weeks.

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    0
    thefarside
    The Far Side sugar_in_your_tea 4 months ago 73%
    May 10 2024 (text in body)

    > Horse styles of the ’50s

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    11
    thefarside
    The Far Side sugar_in_your_tea 4 months ago 59%
    May 10, 2024 (text in body)

    > For crying out loud, Jonah! Three days late, covered with slime, and smelling like fish! … And what story have I got to swallow this time?

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    thefarside
    The Far Side sugar_in_your_tea 4 months ago 50%
    May 10 2024 (text in body)

    > You know what I’m sayin’? … Me, for example. I couldn’t work in some stuffy little office. … The outdoors just calls to me.

    0
    3
    thefarside
    The Far Side sugar_in_your_tea 4 months ago 53%
    May 10 2024 (text in body)

    > Look! Look, gentlemen! Purple mountains! Spacious skies! Fruited plains! … Is someone writing this down?

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    9
    thefarside
    The Far Side sugar_in_your_tea 4 months ago 51%
    May 10 2024 (text in body)

    > Sure, I’m a creature—and I can accept that … but lately it seems I’ve been turning into a miserable creature.

    3
    2
    opensuse
    openSUSE sugar_in_your_tea 5 months ago 66%
    Try Cockpit in Leap Release Candidate news.opensuse.org

    Looks like Leap 15.6 will ship with Cockpit, which looks pretty cool. I just set up a new VPS w/ Leap 15.5, so I'm thinking about giving this a try. I'm not a fan of YaST on the CLI, and I'm not going to install a GUI on my VPS, so being able to just SSH tunnel to the admin panel sounds _really_ nice. Has anyone tried Cockpit ([project link for the lazy](https://cockpit-project.org/))? It seems like it can manage most popular distros, so that's a pretty big value prop over YaST, which is pretty much only for SUSE. It looks like it's a RedHat project, but it's cool that openSUSE is pulling it in for 15.6.

    3
    0
    patientgamers
    Patient Gamers sugar_in_your_tea 5 months ago 95%
    Monthly Recommendations Thread: What are you playing?

    It has been a while since the last one. So... Tell us what game you are currently, or recently played, greater than 6+ months old. If the game happens to be on sale, a link would be a plus.

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    decentralized
    decentralized sugar_in_your_tea 5 months ago 75%
    I'm working on a P2P Reddit/Lemmy alternative using Iroh. Any interest? Thoughts? https://lemmy.world/post/14060592

    The link goes to a related post on another community so I don't have to duplicate it here. Basically, I'd like to discuss tech options for a Reddit/Lemmy alternative. Here's what I've found: - [Iroh](https://iroh.computer) - early days alternative to IPFS promising improved performance and application control - [Appleseed](https://github.com/cblgh/appleseed-metric) - old-ish proposal for a distributed trust system - I'm thinking of using it for moderation (i.e. if you block/report similarly to someone else, that will get automated; you could also explicitly trust someone else [e.g. a CP-detector bot]) - [TrustNet](https://github.com/cblgh/trustnet) - builds on Appleseed - still reading through the paper to know what it adds over Appleseed, if anything Goals: - distributed storage - worried the fediverse will scale poorly (become too expensive) - distributed moderation - power-hungry mods suck - local-first - cache/host stuff you care about, reserve some space for preservation Non-goals: - make money - it's a hobby for now, everything would be FOSS - image/video hosting - legal issues if you get random CP or something - preserve all data - I'd rather sacrifice older/less popular content than lose users - community can run caching servers - fediverse compat - P2P makes that difficult, but a bridge should be feasible Thoughts? What am I missing? Also, would anyone like me to post updates? It'll mostly be stuff from my research, if I post code, it won't be for a while (I have limited time).

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    experimentalsoftware
    Anyone interested in discussing a Lemmy/Reddit alternative?

    This is still very much early-days, but I'm thinking about building a distributed link aggregator. Some notes: - no servers (all P2P) except to connect peers - no "instances" so everything is in one namespace (so like reddit /r/community, not lemmy instance/c/community) - everyone is a moderator - moderation based on a web of trust type system - desktop first, mobile/web later - web would require servers, mobile may have platform-specific issues - no plans to integrate with fediverse, but could be possible - initial intent is to be text-only - file storage _could_ be supported later in an opt-in basis (for now, just link to an external img host), but I'm worried about disk storage since there's no central data lake and everyone needs to chip in some storage space Some technical details: - written in Rust and ReactJS - Tauri-based - uses [Iroh](https://iroh.computer/) for data synchronization - looking into [Appleseed](https://github.com/cblgh/appleseed-metric) and maybe [TrustNet](https://github.com/cblgh/trustnet) for moderation Current status: - rewrote Appleseed and part of TrustNet to Rust for perf testing last weekend (Rust is _waaay_ faster) - will probably rewrite again once I finish reading the paper (current code is a direct port) - have basic Tauri+Iroh app, but it's a glorified chat app w/ no syncing between peers (a peer can _join_ a chat, but will lose access if the host goes down) - reading source code for [SimpleX](https://simplex.chat/) (re-learning Haskell too) - could be interesting for DMs or something I'm not sure how long I'll work on this, but I'll probably release some libraries under a relatively liberal license, so something like LGPL at the most stringent, but probably Apache/MIT (depends on if I need to clean-room the appleseed implementation). So, if there's interest here, I'm happy to post updates for discussion periodically.

    0
    0
    libertarian
    Should there be a right to digital privacy?

    I'm thinking something along the lines of the GDPR where companies must get consent to track you, and must delete your data upon request. I see a few arguments here: - yes, websites are like stores and have the obligations of a store to protect user data (IP address, HTTP headers, etc) - no because the internet is "the commons," so no expectation of privacy (no expectation that the website follows your local laws) - no because you're voluntarily providing the data, but you're well within your rights to block tracking attempts So, some questions to spark discussion: - does data collection violate the NAP? - does sale of personal data (without a TOS in place) violate the NAP? - if no to each of the above, is it worth violating the NAP to enforce a right to digital privacy?

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    networking
    networking sugar_in_your_tea 6 months ago 40%
    Review request: home network setup

    I'm going to be overhauling my network over the next few months as I get ready for my new municipal fiber installation. I have a general idea of how to set things up, but I'm not an expert and would appreciate a few extra pairs of eyes in case I'm missing something obvious. Hardware available: - Microtik Routerboard - 5 ports - Ubiquiti AP - AC-Lite; plan to add U6+ or U6 Lite once I get faster service - some dumb switches Devices (by logical category; VLANs?): - main - computers and phones (Wi-Fi for now, I plan to run cable) - media - TVs, gaming consoles, etc - DMZ - wired security cameras, Wi-Fi printer (2.4GHz wireless g only) - guest - guests, kids computers Goals: - main - outgoing traffic goes through a VPN - media - outgoing traffic limited to certain trusted sites; probably no VPN - untrusted - cannot access internet, can be accessed from main - guest - can only access internet, potentially through a separate VPN from main Special devices: - NAS (Linux box) - can access main, media, and DMZ - printer - accessible from main, rest of devices on untrusted don't need to be (I can tunnel through the NAS if needed); can potentially configure a CUPS server on the NAS to route print jobs if needed ## Plan: Router ports: 1. Internet 2. WiFi APs 3. main VLAN 4. untrusted (VLAN) 5. unused (or maybe media VLAN) WiFi SSIDs (currently have a 2.4Ghz and 5Ghz SSIDs): 1. main VLAN 2. guest VLAN 3. untrusted - hidden SSID (mostly for printer) - 2.4GHz only If the VPN causes issues, I would like the ability to move individual MACs to another VLAN (say, to media, or a separate, usually unused backup VLAN). Not required, just a backup plan in case the VPN causes issues. This is my first time configuring VLANs, so I'm not really sure what my options are. Also, I'm not super familiar with Mikrotik routers (I'm not a sysadmin or anything, just a hobbyist), I just got fed up with crappy consumer hardware and wanted something a bit more reliable. Does that sound like a reasonable plan? Is there something I could improve or suggestions you have? Edit: DMZ is the wrong term, so I replaced it with "untrusted". By that I meant a local-only network, so no Internet access. Ideally I could access these devices from my main network, but they can't initiate connections outside their VLAN. However, that's not necessary, since I can tunnel through my NAS if needed.

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    opensuse
    openSUSE sugar_in_your_tea 6 months ago 72%
    Plasma 6 Landed in openSUSE Tumbleweed linuxiac.com

    I installed it over the weekend and so far it's working great! I'm using Wayland with my AMD GPU, and the only hiccup I had was I needed to change my shell to bash (I use fish), which is fine since I have Konsole set to use fish as well. Have you used KDE Plasma 6 yet? Thoughts?

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    3
    libertarian
    Soho Debate : Should government fund basic science research? reason.com

    Here's the [YouTube video on Reason's channel](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K069g3AursM) (event starts about 10 min in), or you can download it at the link for this post. There's no text transcription AFAIK, so I'll try my best to represent both sides fairly. I do have my own opinions here, so I recommend you watch the video (at least the opening remarks, which is ~35 min long, just after introductions). Here's the prompt: > Government must play a role in fostering scientific and technological progress by funding basic research. The definition of "basic research" is a bit squishy, but the definition they seem to be going with is science without a specific goal, such as studying chemistry not to solve a given program, but to see where the research goes. The opposite is "mission science," which is research in a given area to achieve some specific goal important to the government, like weapons. They both agreed that the latter should be funded as needed (e.g. COVID-19 vaccine). For the affirmative (Dr. Mills): - private companies have little interest in basic research - government funded basic research has produced immense value (example given: ammonia composition, which wasn't economically useful for 100 years so likely wouldn't have happened as quickly) - government funded research is often economically viable, but more importantly, it has non economic value that private research doesn't provide (e.g. man on the moon) For the negative (Dr. Kealey): - publicly funded research "crowds out" private research (i.e. public research doesn't add more scientists, it just moves them from private to public sector) - private research is more economically viable - private companies need to fund research or they'll lose to their competition And some prompts for discussion: - What is your opinion on the prompt, should the government be funding basic research? - Who do you think won? Do you agree with the voting? Why? - If you're against the resolution, would you go further and prefer to not fund "mission science" as well? Why or why not? - Should your government increase or decrease the amount it's spending on basic science research? And a final question: do you want to see more of this kind of post?

    0
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    libertarian
    Meta: what would you like moderation to look like

    I'm generally in favor of "hands off" moderation, as in allowing the community to decide which content to promote and which to discourage. I prefer to only step in if someone is violating the rules, either of the instance or of this community. That said, this community has seen a lot of recent activity, and I'm worried that people who want to discuss libertarian concepts are being overrun. For example, [this recent post](https://sh.itjust.works/post/13100625) has more downvotes than the most popular post has upvotes (by a large margin), yet I think this type of post is quite relevant to libertarians. So I think we're getting a lot of non-libertarian (by pretty much any definition of the word) users in this community, and I'm worried they're not here in good faith. So, I'd like to know what kind of moderation we'd like to see. I'll be reviewing voting records for posts to try to sus out who I subjectively think are here in bad faith (not planning on any bans though, just getting an idea) since I don't think votes will be particularly relevant for this post. Some questions: - should moderators (so far just me) ban serial downvoters? - should moderators ban low effort posts, regardless of applicability to libertarianism? (e.g. the recent memes and whatnot)? - should moderators *pin* subjectively higher effort and relevant posts to promote similar content? So far I've done no moderating because everyone seems to at least be civil, but I don't want this to become a "bash on libertarians" community or I'll just close it. I created the community to discuss libertarian concepts because the rest of Lemmy seemed very leftist. I basically want something like a mix of /r/libertarian and /r/neutral_news, where citations are encouraged (if not required) and content generally focuses on how to solve problems with less government rather than more. That doesn't seem to be happening, so either we need strict rules or to just close the community down.

    -1
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    fire
    We're All Millionaires! (on average) - Early Retirement Now earlyretirementnow.com

    I like looking at ERN's articles from time to time because they cover so much that I'm all but guaranteed to learn something. This article is about how, despite the wealth inequality figures, the US is still doing okay when it comes to wealth accumulation. Here are some of my personal highlights from the article: > If I want to put a positive spin on the unpleasant wealth inequality stats in the U.S., I would again point to the net worth chart by age group: Some of our inequality is due to the natural wealth accumulation lifecycle. For example, within my age group (45-49), the wealth Gini coefficient is lower: 0.769. Americans are very good at building assets, thanks to their entrepreneurial spirit and generous tax incentives, like tax-advantaged retirement plans and capital gains deferral. And later: > It’s also worth pointing out that the Gini coefficient decreased in 2022 and now stands at the lowest level since 2007, though still far above the Gini in the 1990s. And this is an interesting alternative to some of the rhetoric I'm seeing about the eroding middle class: > If we compare the wealth distribution in 1989 with 2022, most percentiles gained ground. True, the 1%, 5%, and 10% lowest percentile had negative to zero net worth figures. The 1% poorest got deeper into debt. But the middle class is getting richer, albeit modestly slower. There's a lot here, and my takeaway is that FIRE should continue to be a possibility to the middle class and above. It's not a weird phenomenon that only a lucky few were positioned correctly to achieve, but conditions remain good if you want to put in the work to love below your means and invest consistently. Anyway, I like looking at graphs and deep analysis like this. Please share your thoughts.

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    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearPE
    Personal Finance sugar_in_your_tea 9 months ago 85%
    Buy and hold works - Meet the 'unluckiest' stock market investor of modern times www.marketwatch.com

    [Here's an archived version of the page](http://web.archive.org/web/20221015032407/https://www.marketwatch.com/story/meet-the-unluckiest-stock-market-investor-of-modern-times-11655830851). What follows is largely a reaction to analysts predicting a recession and giving advice on how to adjust your investing strategy. The TL;DR here is: don't, they get it wrong more than they get it right. Among PF enthusiasts, there's a saying that goes something like this: analysts have predicted 20 of the last three recessions. [Here's a chart for the S and P 500 long term after inflation](https://www.macrotrends.net/2324/sp-500-historical-chart-data). As you'll notice, long downward trends are quite rare, and the general trend is upward. In general, you can expect 6.5-7% long term after taking out inflation (~10% before inflation) if you buy and hold a broad stock market index fund. It seems almost every year someone calls for a recession, and this year is no exception. People were calling for recessions staring in 2015 or so, and look how that turned out. Finance pundits and blogs like saying outlandish things like "recession will happen this year, liquidate stocks and buy X, Y, and Z," and if you're lucky, they'll throw some fancy charts up to make you think they know what they're talking about. But just know that all of this is for attention, they make money through ads or airtime, and some will try to sell you a book or something. The worst ones do a pump and dump scheme where they'll invest in security X, hype it up, and then sell when there's a bump in prices and average investors are left holding the bag. Everyone seems to think they have some system for beating the market, but [few professional fund managers manage to beat the index they benchmark their fund with, and even fewer can do it consistently](https://www.businessinsider.com/personal-finance/investment-pros-cant-beat-the-stock-market-2020-7?op=1): > Across all domestic actively managed equity funds, 88.4% underperformed their respective benchmark over the last 15 years, according to an analysis of the S&amp;P SPIVA report. > > ... > > More than 80% of large-cap funds underperformed the S&amp;P 500 over the last five years. In 2019, 79.98% of large-cap funds underperformed compared to the S&amp;P 500, which was just a hair better than the five-year average. So if you buy a large cap index fund, you'll do better than 80% of professional fund managers over 5 years, and you'll outperform nearly 90% of them over 15 years. So don't listen to their nonsense about changing allocation during a recession (or even whether there will be a recession) because you're statistically better off ignoring it. To really drive it home, let's look at the linked article about Betty, the world's most unlucky investor, who invested only at the worst possible times (just before every major recession) since the 1980s: > Even though she picked the worst six moments since the 1980s in which to invest, she made an average profit over the next five years of 20% and an average profit over 10 years of 100%. She doubled her money. Despite her disastrous, terrible timing, she was in the black after five years on four occasions out of six, and in the black after 10 years 10 times out of 10. > > Today, even though her total cash costs from those six investments totaled just $3,500, her portfolio is worth $17,500. That’s more than five times her investment. And that’s even factoring in losses this year, which have seen the global stock market — and Betty’s portfolio — fall 22%. Just think of how much better she could've done if she had invested consistently, which means she would've bought at the lows and middles instead of just the highs. If you instead listen to the pundits, you're likely to buy high (you'll miss the bottom, I guarantee it) and sell low (you'll sell early or late). Do what has worked well historically and buy and hold a diversified portfolio. I don't know if a recession is coming, but I do know it'll change nothing about my investing strategy, other than perhaps how much I can invest. If you're nervous about the economy, make sure your emergency fund is funded and stay the course with your investing strategy, whatever your desired asset allocation is.

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    fire
    The Earth Awaits - a site for checking affordability of various areas www.theearthawaits.com

    I was doing a little EOY accounting, and I wanted to see where I could afford to retire to with my current amount of investments. I searched a bit, but couldn't find anything good, and then I remembered the old /r/financialindependence sidebar. Since I happen to be a mod, I went ahead and abused my mod powers and added it to the community info here. My wife is from another country, and we're not yet to the point where we could retire there, but we're surprisingly close, so I now have a new milestone to shoot for. I don't know the methodology they use here, or how often it's updated, but I think it's fun to look around at options. I remember another site that simply gave a list of countries in order from cheapest to most expensive and you'd enter your current assets and figure out where you could go. I thought it was a lot of fun to see what "upgrades" an extra year or two of working would get me, but I didn't bookmark it. If anyone can find something like that, please post it. Anyone considering going expat? If so, does this resource seem accurate? Do you have others you like better?

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    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearPE
    Personal Finance sugar_in_your_tea 10 months ago 71%
    [US] End of year PF tasks www.kiplinger.com

    I like to review my financial situation near the end of the year to prep for tax season, give to charity, etc. For any who cannot access the article or are too lazy, here are the things they recommend: 1. Tax loss harvesting 2. Contribute to retirement accounts 3. Convert IRA to Roth 4. Reassess risk tolerance 5. Review RMDs - only for 73+ 6. Charitable contributions 7. Fund accounts for dependents I check most of these, but more importantly I [look at the new limits for 401k and IRA](https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/401k-limit-increases-to-23000-for-2024-ira-limit-rises-to-7000), as well at [HSA limits for the upcoming year](https://www.fidelity.com/learning-center/smart-money/hsa-contribution-limits). Is there something you like to do financially at the end of the year?

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    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearPE
    Personal Finance sugar_in_your_tea 10 months ago 91%
    [US] Intro to investing - stocks, bonds, asset allocation, and account types

    In this post, I'll provide a lot of basic information about investing, with links to additional reading for various concepts. Most of these concepts are not US-centric, though I will be mentioning US-specific details, such as tax-advantaged account types. # What's the difference between a mutual fund, etf, and index fund? [A mutual fund is a financial vehicle where assets from a large number of investors are pooled to be invested as one entity](https://www.investopedia.com/terms/m/mutualfund.asp). Mutual funds have strategies, and investors invest based on how well the fund executes that strategy. For example, you may compare two large cap funds, and they have similar returns but one has a much lower expense ratio (the fees for running the fund), so you may choose the cheaper fund. Mutual funds generally can only be purchased after market hours, and only through a brokerage that has an agreement with the fund. If you buy a fund through a brokerage that doesn't sponsor the fund (e.g. if you buy a Vanguard fund from E-trade), you'll pay a fee for each transaction, whereas you'll pay nothing if you buy it from the brokerage the mutual fund is associated with (e.g. a Vanguard fund from Vanguard). With a mutual fund, you generally invest a certain amount of money, and the amount of shares really isn't that important. An ETF is very similar to a mutual fund, except it is traded like a stock. So if you want to buy a share of an ETF, you'll just pay whatever commission your brokerage charges (often $0), just like you would with any other stock. However, since it trades like a stock, you can generally only trade in whole shares, unless your brokerage allows fractional share trades. So an ETF is essentially a mutual fund that is traded like a stock. An index fund is a specific kind of mutual fund/etf, where the strategy is based on an index. This means the fund manager has a lot less input on how the strategy is executed, since they're trying to match a specific asset allocation instead of buying winners. For example, one popular index is the S&amp;P 500, which is defined as the top 500 companies in terms of market cap (what the market thinks they're worth), and index funds tracking the S&amp;P 500 will by based on the percentage of market cap a given stock has. For example, let's say Microsoft is 10% of the S&amp;P and Apple is 15%, the fund would buy 10% Microsoft shares and 15% Apple shares, and the rest would go to the rest of the companies in the index in the same fashion. Since there's less analysis of individual companies, index funds can operate on very low expenses. When comparing funds, focus more on the expenses and strategy instead of past performance, because past performance does not guarantee or even indicate expected future results. So in short: - mutual fund - you invest money, and the manager buys stocks/bonds according to a defined strategy - etf - you buy shares, and the manager buys stocks/bonds according to a defined strategy - index fund - restricts the manager to a very specific strategy, where purchased stocks/bonds must match a defined index [The vast majority of active fund managers fall behind the S&amp;P 500](https://www.cnbc.com/2022/03/27/new-report-finds-almost-80percent-of-active-fund-managers-are-falling-behind.html). So in general, you'll probably be better off with an index fund instead of an actively managed mutual fund. # What is a stock? A stock represents marketable pieces (shares) of ownership in a company. When a company is incorporated, the owner splits the company into some number of shares, and those shares can be sold individually to raise money to grow the company. The owner of the company is one with more than half of the shares (otherwise called a controlling stake), and if nobody owns a majority of the shares, it becomes a democratic system where each share represents a vote. In practice, only very large shareholders end up voting for board members, and the board hires a CEO that ends up making the rest of the day-to-day decisions. This is true for both public and private companies, though purchasing shares in a private company cannot typically be done on the market and needs to be done through existing shareholders. When a company "goes public," private shares are converted to public shares and can then be sold on the open market. If your company offers an employee stock purchase plan, make sure you know how you can liquidate those since shares in a private company can be very difficult to sell. # What is a bond? At a high level, a bond represents a unit of debt for some organization. Basically, you're lending that org money, in exchange for them paying you back at some rate over some period. Some bonds pay dividends (i.e. you'll get the interest at regular intervals), and others instead are paid off at the end of the bond period in a lump sum. ## Bond Ratings [Bond ratings](https://www.investopedia.com/terms/b/bondrating.asp) represent the rating issuer's confidence that the organization will repay its debts as agreed. These ratings vary a little by rating org, so I'll be using S&amp;P's rating system here. Each rating consists of a letter in the range A-D with a + or - sign or number (e.g. A+, A-1, etc), and it works similar to letter grades in schools. The higher the grade, the lower the risk. In general: - A-1/AAA+ - investment grade; top possible score - A-2/AA - investment grade, strong score - A-3/A - investment grade, adequate risk - B - speculative, currently meeting commitments - C - speculative, vulnerable to default/non-payment - D - speculative, in default Money market funds will stick to investment grade bonds, and "junk" bonds are the bottom two groups (C and D). The main rating groups are S&amp;P, Fitch, and Moody, and they can use different rating systems, especially for different types of bonds (e.g. a short-term vs long-term bonds can use different systems from the same org, as shown above with A-1 vs AAA). In general, the higher the rating, the lower the return, but also the higher the probability that you'll actually get the return promised. ## Tax implications There are several types of bonds, like corporate, government, and municipal, and each have different tax implications. What follows is very high-level, there's a lot of nuance in the bond market wrt taxes: - corporate - [taxable at state and federal level](https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/052715/how-corporate-bond-taxed.asp) - government - [Treasury bonds are taxable at the federal level only](https://www.investopedia.com/articles/investing/073113/introduction-treasury-securities.asp#toc-tax-treatment-of-treasury-securities) - municipal - [not taxed at state or federal level](https://www.investopedia.com/terms/m/municipalbondfund.asp#toc-municipal-bond-fund-taxes) - there are exceptions, and some states require municipal bonds to be from the local state to be exempt from taxation (e.g. NY and CA are particularly strict) There is a lot of nuance, so look into your local and state tax laws to ensure you understand. # Asset allocation Your asset allocation refers to how your investments are distributed across different asset classes. The most popular asset classes are stocks and bonds, though there are other asset classes investors may be interested in, such as: - real estate - precious metals - futures - e.g. purchase contracts for commodities (e.g. you could trade barrels of oil) Asset classes can be broken down further, such as for stocks: - market sector - tech vs utilities vs manufacturing, etc - growth vs value - value means companies that are likely undervalued, growth means companies that have shown strong returns vs competitors; there's also dividend strategies (i.e. companies that tend to return profits to shareholders instead of investing in the core business) - market cap - large cap (massive companies like Microsoft and Apple), mid cap, and small cap (smaller companies, like Jack in the Box, Polaris, etc) Choosing an asset allocation can be an overwhelming process, and there are a lot of strategies that people claim works. The more important thing is to understand your strategy and stick with it instead of shifting with the trends (if you always buy what recently performed well, you'll be essentially buying high and selling low). [Here are some popular asset allocations](https://www.wallstreetzen.com/blog/example-stock-portfolios/) (I've listed what I think is interesting below): - Bogleheads strategy - buy stocks according to market cap, bonds according to age; [three fund portfolio](https://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/Three-fund_portfolio), [two fund portfolios](https://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/Two-fund_portfolio); the global market cap is ~55-60% US stocks, 40-45% international stocks; bond percent should be `100 - your age` (quite conservative) - 60/40 - 60% stocks, 40% bonds - generally recommended for retirees and those close to retirement, though some do it throughout their investment career - "Permanent portfolio" - 25% gold, 25% cash (or Treasuries), 25% stocks, 25% bonds - intended for asset preservation and ends up being quite conservative - dividend portfolio - buy almost entirely stocks with high dividends (one strategy is [Dogs of the Dow](https://www.dogsofthedow.com/), and then plan to live off dividends in retirement There are a ton of exotic ones as well, such as [Hedgefundies Excellent Adventure](https://www.bogleheads.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=272007) (lots of leverage in a portfolio intended to match risk of non-leveraged portfolios). Don't do anything like that without fully understanding how all of the pieces work, and even then, I recommend one of the above over anything that uses leverage. # Account types Most countries offer tax-advantages to encourage residents to at least partially fund their own retirement. This will cover US-specific tax-advantaged account types, though similar structures exist in many other countries, and searching for " " will probably yield articles with information for resources for your region. Here are the main account types, you may have access to some but not all: - [401k](https://www.investopedia.com/terms/1/401kplan.asp) - employer-sponsored retirement plan - [IRA](https://www.investopedia.com/retirement/roth-vs-traditional-ira-which-is-right-for-you/) - individual retirement account - available to everyone - [HSA](https://www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hsa.asp) - health savings account, must have a high-deductible health plan; essentially becomes an IRA once you hit 65 - [457](https://www.investopedia.com/terms/1/457plan.asp) - employer sponsored plan offered at many state and local government agencies, and some non-profits - [403(b)](https://www.investopedia.com/articles/personal-finance/111615/457-plans-and-403b-plans-comparison.asp#toc-the-403b-plan) - similar to 401k, but offered to teachers, private non-profit employees, and some others There are others, but these are the ones you're likely to run into that are relevant for retirees. There are two main types of tax advantages these offer, referred to as traditional and Roth, though there are nuances for each account type. In general: - traditional - get a tax deduction on contributions, no taxes on growth while it's in the account, pay taxes when you withdraw - Roth - no deduction on contributions, no taxes on growth, no taxes when you withdraw If your tax bracket is the same when you contribute and when you withdraw, Roth and traditional accounts are equivalent. As a quick demonstration, let's say you have a 10% tax rate, you invest $10k, your investments double, and you withdraw everything all at once: - Roth (post-tax) - invest $9k ($10k - $1k taxes), grows to $18k, withdraw $18k - traditional (pre-tax) - invest $10k, grows to $20k, withdraw $18k ($20k - $2k taxes) There are limits to how much you can invest in tax-advantaged accounts, and traditional accounts sometimes have income limits to receive a deduction. There are strategies to maximize your tax-advantaged, so if you think you don't qualify, please ask since you may have options (e.g. a backdoor Roth IRA if you're over the income limit for Roth IRA contributions). ## Long term capital gains vs income tax brackets Regular brokerage accounts have no tax advantages, but they do have the advantage that gains are taxed as capital gains instead of income, whereas a traditional IRA/401k/etc is taxed upon withdrawal as income. Long-term capital gains brackets are lower across the board for the same income level vs income tax, and there's a 0% long-term capital gains bracket that corresponds to most of the 12% income tax bracket, then 15% up to the middle of the 32%/35% brackets, and then 20% thereafter. Short-term capital gains are taxed as income, so be careful to only sell assets that qualify as long-term capital gains. There are situations where a regular brokerage account can be advantageous over taking a tax deduction for a traditional account. [Here's an article about why you may want to use a traditional account and invest the tax savings in a brokerage vs a Roth account](https://www.gocurrycracker.com/roth-sucks/) (target audience is early retirees, but it's applicable to traditional retirees as well). It's a fairly niche case, but applicable to surprisingly many people. ## Tax-efficient fund placement Let's assume you have a mix of assets in the following: - Roth account - traditional account - taxable brokerage account In general, you'll want to do the following: - Roth account - highest growth since it's 100% tax free - traditional account - capital gains generating investments with relatively low growth, e.g. bonds and dividend heavy stocks - taxable brokerage account - international stocks because of the Foreign Tax Credit (e.g. you get a part of the taxes you paid back), assets with low capital gains distributions, and low need for rebalancing However, the benefits here are _far_ less than the benefits for using the right account types for you. For example, the Foreign Tax Credit is something like 0.23%/year of your taxable investments if you're invested in something like VTIAX, and you'll be paying taxes on something like 2.8% of that same investment. So use your tax advantaged space first, and then optimize from there. # Conclusion Investing can feel overwhelming, and there's so much conflicting information available out there. My personal advice is to keep it simple using tried-and-true methods that have consistently had good results in the past. Here's what I do: - max my tax advantaged accounts - 70% US stocks, 30% international stocks asset allocation - I think the US will continue to outperform, but I want to hedge my bets some - buy low-cost index funds, one fund per account to keep it simple; in my case, this gets me close: - 401k - 100% US stocks - IRA - 100% US stocks - HSA - 100% international stocks - taxable brokerage - 100% international stocks - I don't have any bonds because I'm not retiring anytime soon and I have a high risk tolerance (I didn't panic sell in 2008); I _do_ count my emergency fund as my "bond" portion though, so there's that - check on my investments about 1-2x/year to make sure everything is close to my target (if I'm over in US stocks, I'll swap some IRA space to international; if I'm over in international stocks, I'll swap some HSA space to US) My IRA and taxable brokerage is at Vanguard, and my HSA is at Fidelity. When I switch jobs, I roll my 401k -> my IRA. This got pretty long and I probably should've broken it up into multiple posts, so please let me know if there's an area you'd like more detail on and I'll consider making a post about it.

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    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearPE
    Personal Finance sugar_in_your_tea 10 months ago 92%
    [US] Consider a brokerage account for your main bank

    Most people take a simple view of cash: they have a checking account for spending and a savings account for savings, and if they get fancy, they'll have a CD for longer term savings goals. Power users will change to an online bank with better returns, and that's about as far as it goes. That certainly works, but we can do a lot better with few downsides and a lot of extra benefits. I'd like to start with explaining how traditional banks work and then look at alternatives. Basically, banks make most of their money by lending it, either for mortgages, auto loans, credit cards, etc. Federal regulations require they keep a certain percentage of their assets in "cash," so they pay interest on checking and savings accounts to attract deposits. The larger the bank, the less they need to work for deposits since they have brand recognition. That's why you'll see higher interest rates at online only banks (e.g. SoFi, Ally, etc) than at huge brick and mortar banks (Wells Fargo, Chase, etc), they need to pay more to attract customers since they don't have branches to do so. However, they'll never pay more than a certain percentage of loan rates, otherwise they'll lose money. Switching banks is time consuming, so customers rarely do that, which means banks only need to have periodic promos to encourage people to move their money to them. Let's compare that to a brokerage. Brokerages offer a variety of features, and most of their money is made on commissions from trades (or for free brokerages, bid/ask spreads) or from fees on funds they run. The friction in changing funds is pretty low, so funds often compete for low fees to attract investors, and the more investors they have, the lower their fees can be (managing $1B isn't that different from managing $10B in terms of costs). They sometimes offer loans (e.g. margin loans), but that isn't the core of their business, and those loans are backed by the debtor's own assets, not the brokerage's funds, so risk is much lower and not related to deposits by other customers. So now that the high level differences between banks and brokerages are out of the way, let's look at products brokerages have and how they line up with traditional banking products: - Money Market Funds - basically savings/checking accounts, but run by a fund manager instead of a bank; you can select from any number of money market funds, from funds that look to reduce taxes (e.g. buy mostly Treasuries) to funds that seek to maximize returns; interest is generally accrued daily and paid monthly; banks sometimes offer money market accounts, which are similar, but they operate a bit differently, and you only get the one they offer - brokered CDs - similar to regular bank CDs, but you're buying them on the open market instead of from your bank; these CDs cannot be broken early like bank CDs, but they can be sold on the market like any stock for the current fair market value; this means they can reduce in value if you sell before maturity, but since you're able to shop for the best price, you usually get a much better return if you hold to maturity - t-bills/notes/bonds - similar to brokered CDs, but issued by the federal government in increments of $1000; these are not subject to state and local taxes, and some brokerages allow them to be auto-rolled (when they mature, the same denomination will be purchased); there's no early redemption, but they can be sold at any time for fair market value - municipal bonds - buy bonds directly from cities and whatnot; these are usually not subject to state, local, or federal taxes, but also have higher risk due to cities generally being less credible debtors than state or federal governments; I don't bother with these, but maybe they're worthwhile in states with higher taxes (mine is &lt;5%, so not that high) Generally speaking, the brokerage options over a greater return than traditional banking products because it's trivial for investors to switch products without changing brokerages. Here's what I do: - checking/savings - invested at Fidelity in SPAXX, which currently yields ~5%, and I think it's ~30% state tax exempt; if my state had higher taxes, I'd probably opt for a Treasury-only fund; switching takes like 30s to enter a trade; Ally Bank savings is 4.25% and money market fund is 4.4%, and I use my brokerage as checking, so I'm getting 5% on all money held there (Ally checking is 0.10%) - CD - I had a no penalty CD @ 4.75% @ Ally, which was a fantastic rate when I got it; Fidelity offers non-callable CDs @ >5% for periods from 3 months to 5 years, and Ally only offers those rates for 6-18 months (and they're still lower than Fidelity); I don't buy any because I buy... - Treasuries - no equivalent at banks, but they're close enough to CDs; current rates are 5.2-5.4% depending on term (4 weeks to 52 weeks), and even notes (2-10 year terms) are 4.5-5%; my efund is invested in a t-bill ladder; I bought 13-week (3-month) t-bills every other week and set them to autofill, and my gains live in my money market fund (SPAXX @ 5%); this is half of my efund, with the other half in ibonds; if I need money, I either cancel the autoroll, or I sell the t-bill on the market Here's my list of pros: - significantly higher interest in checking (5% vs ~0.10%); no difference between "checking" and "savings," they're all just brokerage accounts - more options for investment - I now feel comfortable keeping my efund, checking, and regular savings in the same place without having to sacrifice returns - debit card rocks - Fidelity and Schwab both have worldwide ATM fee reimbursement and low/no foreign transaction fees (Fidelity is 1%, Schwab is 0%) - can have cash savings and investments in the same place - Fidelity also has my HSA, and I may eventually move my IRA as well - paycheck comes a day earlier - lots of banks offer this, but often only on their checking accounts And some cons: - SIPC instead of FDIC insurance - coverage is about the same, but FDIC is automatic, whereas SIPC requires me to make a claim; I doubt I'll ever need either - a lot more options means the UI is a bit more complex; once familiar, it's not an issue - some services don't play nice with brokerages - I keep an Ally account around just in case, and I honestly haven't noticed any real issues (sometimes I can only link accounts one way, but that's not an issue) I switched from Ally to Fidelity last year for my primary bank and I'm loving it, and I highly recommend others give it a shot. If Fidelity isn't your speed, Schwab works well too. Vanguard doesn't offer a debit card, otherwise I'd recommend them as well (their money market funds are even better than Fidelity's). I used to shop around for better savings rates, and now I don't bother because Fidelity beats all of them on features and average returns (e.g. a better savings rate still loses if checking is near 0%). Feel free to ask questions.

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    Patient Gamers sugar_in_your_tea 11 months ago 72%
    RPGs for people who don't like RPGs

    I have tried a ton of RPGs, and most just don't click for me. Here are a few: - *Skyrim* - enjoyed *Morrowind* for the side content, *Skyrim* just felt empty - *Chrono Trigger* - enjoyed until about halfway through with the battle with Magus; felt very RNG dependent, or maybe I was under leveled; I bailed after 5 or so attempts that all ended the same way (healer got killed and everyone got picked off) - *Pillars of Eternity* - burned out somewhere in Act 2 (20-25 hours); combat system annoyed me, and I dislike picking new abilities - *Banner Saga* - story is great, but I hate the combat, so I bailed Some things about me: - I don't care about leveling up/character builds, it feels like a chore; abilities also don't interest me - I *hate* grinding - using items feels like cheating, so I tend to just use character abilities (I will heal if needed); I'd rather "git gud" than buy and use items - turn based combat (tactics) is generally boring, but I do like puzzles, so that can make it acceptable - I don't like the feeling of being OP, I want to struggle through the end - I don't like loot That said, here are a few that I've really enjoyed: - ARPGs like *Ys* and *Zelda* - items are rare or are tools in a puzzle-like system; favorites are *Ys 1*, *Ys Origin*, *Zelda: A Link to the Past*, and *Zelda: Skyward Sword* (probably because I played *Skyward Sword* recently); I dislike *BotW*, and *Memories of Celceta* has been dragging a bit (I'm near the end, but excited to finish) - interesting RPGs like *Undertale* - short and very unique experience - Souls-like games - challenge involving melee/dodging keeps me going - *Legend of Heroes: Trails in the Sky* - not a fan of the combat, but the story is interesting somewhat at least; I'm about 2/3 through I think (30 hours), but I've taken a multi-month break; likewise, *Xenoblade Chronicles* is interesting so far, but I'm not super excited about it (may bump down to story mode to get through it, the combat sucks imo) - *Nier: Replicant* - great story, leveling stayed out of the way, and I never felt like I needed to grind or upgrade gear I really like the storylines of RPGs, I just don't like actually playing them. Unfortunately, my preferred ARPG genre is filled with loot nonsense, and I've played most of the ones that don't really on that as a mechanic. Perhaps my favorite RPG-adjacent game not mentioned already is *Yakuza 0*, I'm not a fan of the combat, but he story is amazing and the side content is fun. Does anyone feel similarly? Do you have any suggestions for other games to try?

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    patientgamers
    Patient Gamers sugar_in_your_tea 11 months ago 90%
    Costume Quest 1 and 2 - looking for recs for similar games

    In *Costume Quest*, you play as one of two fraternal twins who go out to trick-or-treat, but then your sibling gets kidnapped by monsters and you go on a quest to rescue them. Along the way, you collect new costumes (which give you new abilities), get friends to join you on your quest, and collect power ups. In *Costume Quest 2*, you are transported to a world where Halloween has been outlawed, and you work to fix it. Gameplay is similar to the first where you collect costumes and power ups and fight monsters to catch the person responsible for outlawing Halloween. Gameplay is pretty basic. The core gameplay loop is: 1. Knock on a door 2. If a human answers it, you get candy and repeat from 1 3. If a monster answers, you get into a turn based fight like a simplified Final Fantasy battle; repeat from 1 The battle mechanics are simple enough my young kids (were 5&amp;8 at the time) could handle it with some help on strategy. The strategy gets more relevant later in the game (certain attacks do better on different kinds of monsters), but it's simple throughout. Both are fantastic, casual, Halloween-themed RPGs suitable for kids, and I really enjoyed playing both with my kids tag-teaming with me. [You can get both for $5 total](https://store.steampowered.com/sub/53813/) right now. The reason I bring it up is because my kids asked me to play them again with them, and I was trying to find something similar and came up empty (I don't like replaying games). Does anyone have any recommendations for games with a similar appeal? The mix of costumes with power ups and simple combat was the main draw for us, but I'm open to looking at anything with a Holloween theme that is suitable for younger kids, bonus points for couch co-op style of gameplay. The closest are probably LEGO games (which are great), but my kids seem a little tired of the formula.

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    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearPE
    Personal Finance sugar_in_your_tea 1 year ago 93%
    What does your cash flow process look like?

    I'm talking about types of accounts, automatic transfers, etc. Feel free to mention specifics, but I'm more interested in higher level information like does your paycheck go to savings or checking, do you use automatic transfers, do you use a traditional bank account or something different, etc. Basically, what happens to your paycheck? Do you like your process, or are you considering making changes? Here's mine: I have five main accounts: - Fidelity Bloom Save and Spend for savings and spending respectively; each is a brokerage account - Fidelity Cash Management Account - mostly fit the fantastic debit card - Ally Checking and Savings And here's the general flow of cash: 1. Biweekly paycheck -> Fidelity Save 2. Automatic transfer 2x/month from Fidelity Save -> Fidelity Spend 3. Automatic transfers from Fidelity Spend -> Ally savings and personal spending accounts 4. Automatic transfers from Ally savings to Ally checking; Ally checking is used for Target debit and automatic transfers to wife's IRA 5. Manual transfers as needed to Fidelity Cash Management - I try to keep this near $0, and only transfer for travel or if I need to withdraw from an ATM I have credit cards and other bills set to autopay in full from my Fidelity Spend account 2x/month (roughly even between the two halves of the month). I changed my credit card due dates to line everything up years ago, so now everything is pretty much automated. I like this setup because: - brokerage has higher yielding money market funds - pretty much everything is automated - can have investments living next to spending money (e.g. my efund is Treasury bills, which live in my "savings") - I keep more sketchy account linkages at a separate institution from my main savings - I need a brokerage anyway for my HSA, and I'm considering moving my other retirement savings to Fidelity as well to further reduce institutions - Fidelity has better 2FA options than pretty much any other bank I used to use Ally as my main account, but I switched to Fidelity late last year and I really like it so far. Some changes I'm planning to make: - get my hardware security token set up with Fidelity - I've been sitting on it for months, just need to make the call - move wife's autopay to pull from Fidelity directly; she's not on the account yet, so I need to fill out some forms

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    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearPE
    Personal Finance sugar_in_your_tea 1 year ago 94%
    How credit cards work, and how to use them properly

    # Intro Some people use credit cards a ton, and others avoid it like the plague. There's a ton of conflicting advice in personal finance circles, from people like Dave Ramsey who advise to _never_ use credit cards, others like The Money Guy recommends using credit cards responsibly, and then there's the churning community who tend to use credit cards a _ton_. This post will go over how credit cards work, commmon benefits, and will conclude with general advice on what "use credit cards responsibly" means. # Statement cycles, grace period, and interest Bank accounts usually operate on a monchly schedule, where you'll earn interest on the average balance throughout the month. Credit cards operate on a statement cycle. Most credit cards use a month-long statement cycle, so your statements will close on about the same day each month, whereas some use a fixed number of days in the statement, so your statement cycle can "drift" month to month since months aren't the same length. The larger issuers tend to use a month duration, so your statement will usually close on the same day each month. Credit card payments are usually due a fixed number of days after the statement closes. A statement cycle contains all of the transactions that happened during that time. The sum of all of these transactions is your _statement balance_, and after your statement cycle closes, your total balance (the number reported on the website) will include any transactions you made after the statement cycle closes. ## Grace period The time from the purchase to the due date after the next statement close is called the "grace period," which is the period where interest does not accrue. Here's a simple example: - statement opens on the 10th and closes on the 9th of the following month - payment is due 16 days after the statement close, so the 25th of the following month Anything you buy from the 10th to 9th of the next month will be part of the same statement, and those purchases will not accrue _any_ interest until after the payment due date, the 25th of the next month. So if you buy something on the 10th, you'll have 45 days to pay that back before that purchase starts accruing interest. ## Minimum payment Credit card companies require making at _least_ the minimum payment every month in order to be on time. Usually this is the larger of a fixed amount (e.g. $50) and a percentage of the amount owed on the card (e.g. 1% + interest). If you make at least the minimum payment each month, your card will report to the credit bureaus that you paid your bill on time, which will help your credit score. However, if you pay less than your statement balance, the remainder will start to accrue interest daily, and that interest will be added to the total for the next month's minimum payment. ## Interest calculation Let's say you have a credit card with these figures: - $50 minimum payment, or 1% of total balance + interest accrued, whichever is greater - 20% interest rate - $10k balance Let's say you make the minimum payment. In this case, 1% of $10k is $100, so your minimum payment would be $100. Since no interest has accrued yet, all $100 of that payment would go toward the balance, and you'd start accruing interest immediately. The first day after your payment due date, you would accrue: $9,900 * (20% / 365) = $5.42 The next day we add that interest to calculate the next day's interest, which is: $9,905.42 * (20% / 365) = $5.43 And so on. If there are 30 days in the month, that's going to be $165.70 in interest added on to your balance, which is _greater_ than your initial 1% minimum payment. Your next month's minimum payment will be even higher because you'll be required to pay the interest _plus_ that 1% toward the debt, so the new payment will be ~$265.70. Different credit cards have different rules for the minimum payment, but in most areas, credit card companies are required to have the minimum be high enough that if you stop making _any_ more purchases, you'll eventually pay off the debt by making that minimum payment. ## Avoiding interest As long as you pay your complete statement balance by the due date every month, you will never pay any interest. Most credit card companies offer autopay that lets you choose between the minimum payment, your statement balance, and your total balance. The total balance includes transactions in the next statement cycle, and you do _not_ need to pay those until the next statement closes. Setting autopay to pay the statement balance is sufficient to avoid paying interest indefinitely, provided you always have enough money in the account used for autopay. # Common benefits/card features ## Foreign transaction fees Both debit and credit cards charge a fee for making purchases outside of your economic zone. In the US, that means any other country, whereas in Europe, purchases within the EU probably don't incur a foreign transaction fee. Most travel cards have no foreign transaction fee, whereas most no-annual fee cards _do_ charge that foreign transaction fee. Just note that this depends on where the payment was processed, not where the purchaser is, so purchasing from some websites can incur a foreign transaction fee (i.e. I get charged one for purchases at Fanatical.com, despite prices being listed in USD). These fees are usually a separate line item in your statement, so you can check if a fee was charged. ## Extended warranty Many cards will offer to extend the manufacturer's warranty if you make the purchase with the credit card. For example, the Costco Visa credit card extends any warranty by 1 year, so if the device within a year after the manufacturer's warranty expires, you can submit a claim and the credit card company will reimburse you for the cost of the purchase according to their terms. ## Rental insurance If you book a rental car with the credit card, the credit card can serve as auto insurance, meaning you can avoid getting the insurance through the rental company. This benefit seems to be disappearing, and the terms can be a bit nuanced, so definitely read up on the details if you are considering relying on your credit card's rental insurance. ## Price protection If the price of a product drops within some window of time after purchase, your credit card company may reimburse you the difference. They usually require you to go through the merchant first if the merchant also offers similar protection. ## Fraud protection All credit card companies offer robust fraud protection where you are not liable for any unauthorized purchases. Some fraud department can be more difficult to work with than others, but in general, credit card fraud departments resolve cases faster than checking/savings accounts. # Impact on credit score This certainly can vary by country and perhaps credit bureau, but in general, only the following impact your credit score: - on-time, late, and missed payments - age of accounts - number of accounts (more is better) - percentage of credit limit used Whether you pay interest does _not_ impact your credit score in any way. Getting a new credit card will hurt in two ways: - adds an inquiry to your credit; hit is small until you have multiple (i.e. >2 and you'll get bigger hits) - adds a new, young account, which reduces the average age of your accounts Those impacts usually go away in 6-24 months, depending on the rest of your credit profile. ## General advice Assuming you're responsible, in rough order of importance: - never spend more than you have available in your bank account (i.e. treat it like a debit card) - pay statement balance on time every month - keep your oldest card open - have at _least_ two credit cards - increase credit limit until your regular spending is a small percent of total limit I shoot for keeping my credit utilization under 30% for any individual card, and under 10% across all cards. This seems to If you have a history of being irresponsible with credit, or you think you may misuse it, it's not worth getting a credit card. You can instead use a secured card, or perhaps a charge card, since both will prevent your from getting into trouble with carrying a balance, while still reporting to the credit bureaus. # Conclusion Credit cards can be an incredibly useful tool, provided you're responsible with them. Read up on the benefits for cards you have, and consider choosing new cards based on benefits you want and need.

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    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearPE
    Personal Finance sugar_in_your_tea 1 year ago 92%
    Debt Repayment Methods - Avalanche vs Snowball

    # Intro When it comes to paying off debt, the most important thing is to get your budget in order to free up cash to actually make the payments. So if you're not there yet, stop here and work on getting your budget in order. In this post, I'll go through the two major debt repayment strategies with their associated pros and cons, and at the end I'll discuss one potentially surprising case where it's not so cut and dry which is better. In general, these strategies attempt to optimize how quickly you pay off your debts. ## How does interest work In general, your interest rate is a yearly rate, but interest usually accrues monthly (or daily for credit cards; more on that later). So let's say your interest rate is 12%, this means your monthly rate is ~1%, so every month you'd pay 1% of whatever money you owe in interest (so $10 for every $1000). It's a little more complicated than that (i.e. APR vs APY), but that's close enough for our purposes. For this post, I'm going to be using the following for illustration purposes: - credit card A: $1000 @ 24% - credit card B: $500 @ 12% - debt repayment of $200/month - minimum repayment: 1% or $50, whichever is greater So in the first month, here's how much interest we'll be paying: - credit card A: `$1000 * (24%/12) = $20` - credit card B: `$500 * (12%/12) = $5` Since we have a minimum payment of $50 for each card, the rest will go toward reducing the debt. So after the first month, if we only make minimum payments, the debts will be: - credit card A: `$1000 - $30 = $970` - credit card B: `$500 - 45 = $455` For the examples below, I'll be making extra payments with the payment, after interest accrues. I'll also assume interest accrues as of the balance at the end of the month, not daily. ## Grace period The most common type of higher interest debt is credit card debt, and usually these rates (in my area) are between 10-30%, usually >20%. Credit cards are a bit special in that they usually (but not always!) have a grace period where you won't pay any interest if you always pay your balance on time, but as soon as you fail to pay your statement balance even once, you start accruing daily interest on _all_ balances (including new purchases) until the entire debt is repaid. So credit card interest is especially insidious because whether you pay interest can change each billing cycle. This grace period can be violated in a number of ways, and each card may be a little different there. In general, cash advances start accruing daily interest immediately, balance transfers have a separate rate from normal purchases, and payments usually go toward the highest interest portion first (so usually toward new purchase). The grace period will be relevant later, but I'll be ignoring it for now. # Avalanche Method In short: highest interest first. Assuming your debt repayment stays constant, this is the mathematically optimal repayment strategy and will save you the most interest. One way of conceptualizing this is to find the average interest rate. We do this by adding up all the debts, divide each debt by the total debt, multiply that by the interest rate, and then sum that. That's a little complicated in text, so here's a walk through of how that works: 1. `$1000 + $500 = $1500` - $1500 total debt 2. for debt A: `$1000 / 1500 * 24% = 16%` 3. for debt B: `$500 / 1500 * 12% = 4%` 4. average debt: `16% + 0.04 = 20%` If you don't trust my math, [here's an online calculator](https://www.moneymanagement.org/tools/average-interest-rate-calculator). So on average, we're paying 20% interest on our debts. If I paid down half of debt A, I'd instead be paying 18% average interest. If I paid down all of debt B, I'd be paying 24% average interest. Let's walk through our example, every extra penny goes toward the highest interest debt. 1. interest paid: `$1000*(24%/12) + 500*(12%/12) = $25`; card A balance: `$1000*(1 + 24%/12) - $150 = $870`; card B balance = `$500*(1 + 12%/12) - 50 = $455` 2. interest paid: $21.95, card A balance: $737.40; card B balance: $410.31 3. interest paid: $18.85, card A balance: $602.15, card B balance: $365.10 Total payoff time: 7 months Total interest: $110.70 # Snowball Method In short: lowest balance first. The goal here is to eliminate as many debts/minimum payments as possible to reduce the number of debt payments. This can be a huge psychological boost which can encourage people to cut more from the budget to accelerate debt repayment. Let's walk through our example: 1. interest paid: $25, card A balance: $970.00, card B balance: $355.00 2. interest paid: $22.95, card A balance: $939.40, card B balance: $208.55 3. interest paid: $20.87, card A balance: $868.82, card B balance: $60.64qq` Total payoff time: 7 months Total interest: $113.85 # Spreadsheet [Here is a spreadsheet I've made that details the simple case above](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vTyWYVO42_-6qwppP0dAaACNzYPR30jEzUr_hh2NG0wQpA2-YDo-b90mx-nKb8YQ0zIcz2MoJihpQLh/pubhtml), as well as a more complicated case. Both cases are intended for illustrative purposes only, I don't recommend using this sheet for anything more than a high-level understanding of snowball vs avalanche debt repayment strategies. ## Corner case - unexpected expense The second tab in that spreadsheet goes through a corner case where snowball could actually be more advantageous. Here are the assumptions: - one high interest, high balance card - multiple lower interest, low balance cards - unexpected expense higher than cash flow can handle happens 3 months after debt repayment starts - cards have a grace period on new purchases In this scenario, snowball is actually _superior_ mathematically for a few months after that unexpected expense happens, and then falls behind over the longer term. The takeaway here is that if you have less predictable expenses, you may be better off with the debt snowball method and/or having a larger emergency fund. The general advice when doing debt repayment is to not make additional purchases on existing credit cards so as to not add to the problem, but life happens. # Conclusion If you'll look at both of my examples, the total interest paid isn't that different. If you want to play with the numbers yourself with a better designed tool, check out [unbury.me](https://unbury.me/) and enter all of your debts, interest rates, and minimum payments. I ran my above example through that website, and the total interest paid is &lt;$100 different between the two methods, and both would be finished around the same time. In general, debt avalanche is usually the optimal strategy, but use what works for you. For me, debt avalanche is the way to go because I hate leaving money on the table more than I like seeing monthly payments disappear, but the opposite is also completely sensible. That said, the more debt you have, the higher the difference between avalanche and snowball, so run the numbers before deciding. If you'd like more posts like this, please let me know. I'd like to get more active in this community, but I don't know how technical people here would like me to get.

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    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearFE
    Lemmur discontinued for "political differences" github.com

    This was a mobile app that stalled out last year and was officially archived in February. The only reason given is "political differences" and I'm not really sure what that means. I'm interested in building a cross platform app (Android and Linux Mobile, maybe iOS), and am deciding on tech stack. However, before I get too deep in the weeds, I'd like a bit more information about the reasons this app was discontinued since I'd really rather not run into the same problem. If anyone has any input, please let me know. Thanks!

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    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearLE
    Lemmy Support sugar_in_your_tea 1 year ago 100%
    Is this the right place for discussion about 0.18 testing?

    I've been messing with testing on the 0.18 instance, and I had an error uploading images. The first error said it wasn't valid JSON, and now I see an error saying the request failed (service seems to not be running internally). I didn't see a dev matrix chat or anything, and I'd prefer to avoid raising a bug if I'm not sure where it goes. One other minor thing is that the BE version still reports 0.17.1 (other instances report 0.17.4), though I'm pretty sure it's running 0.18.

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