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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 24th, 2023

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  • Australia: carrying out elections.

    Voting is compulsory and you will be fined if you don’t vote without an acceptable reason.

    But because voting is compulsory, it’s extremely easy and accessible. Waiting in line for more than 15 minutes is a long wait. Even in the suburbs you’re not usually more than a five minute drive from a polling place.

    If you think you’ll have trouble getting to a polling place on election day (a Saturday), you can request a postal ballot or vote early at a different polling place.

    We have an independent electoral commission federally and in each state/territory to organise elections (depending on which level of government you’re voting for). They also handle district boundaries to remove gerrymandering.

    All ballots are marked and counted by hand. The counting process is open and transparent: any candidate can send people to inspect the counting process and ensure there are no irregularities.



  • I think this is a really interesting question. To me, if I hear a claim, I might say I accept it as knowledge or believe it as a worldview.

    For example, I get irked by people asking if I “believe” in climate change. To me, it’s not a matter of belief: there is a body of knowledge being scrutinised by extraordinarily smart and talented people. I accept the existence of and need to mitigate climate change.

    On the other hand, do I believe we’re not alone in the universe? I can’t rely on knowledge, it’s a lot of intuition.




  • Exercising. When I hit 30, my metabolism wasn’t what it used to be and my appetite didn’t slow down to match. To stay a good weight, I decided either I’d have to eat less or exercise more. I chose the latter.

    I formed the habit through the pandemic, but in the time since I’ve strengthened it further. I run, swim, and ride.

    I’m in the best shape I’ve ever been and exercising during the week is just part of my routine. I think I’ve baked it into my life enough now that it’s here to stay.







  • This is slightly unrelated, but I’ve been slowly moving to Linux from windows for a while. I haven’t made the full plunge yet, but here’s my biggest strategy:

    Use as many apps on windows as you can on Linux.

    I’m using Okular, Ghostwriter, Libreoffice, Cider, etc. every month or so, another app is moved across.

    Then, I make the switch and all my apps are there as I’m used to them.






  • Railison@aussie.zonetoAsklemmy@lemmy.mlCrowdstrike Cockup
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    4 months ago

    Could a solution to this be any of the following:

    • Windows performing automatic driver rollback in the event of it reaching an unbootable state
    • Software vendors pushing out updates to a smaller pool of endpoints and monitor for heartbeat for 30 mins or so before releasing for all endpoints
    • A way for windows to expose the relevant data to trusted software without the software needing to operate in kernel space