On 12/5/21, Stefan Claas <[email protected]> wrote: > On Sun, Dec 5, 2021 at 8:07 PM Karl <[email protected]> wrote: > >> >> On 12/5/21, Stefan Claas <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Man that's really crummy. I've done things like that a lot. I am >> happy to be your friend regardless of how we might disagree about >> network topology or whatnot, given you had this experience (for as >> long as I remember you had it). Psychoses are crazy. Note: I think >> my psychosis might have been a misdiagnosis for multiple dissociative >> disorders after finding >> https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7001344/ . > > Indeed they are (unfortunately) crazy. When I had mine, I was > completely knocked out, had to stay in psychiatry and lost > all my friends from the real worl.
Yeah :( sometimes I contact old friends and further alienate them with harmful expressions. It's sad. But psychotic behavior patterns are really interesting, I think they say so much about things that happen in our culture and the human condition. I think a lot of people have diverse opinions on this. >> The thing or someone like zeynep to do is to collaborate with your >> community to pay for a huge disk, and download all the books to the >> disk and share them offline with your friends. This way people >> without funds, or who are not yet targeted online, can read things. I >> don't remember the name for this but grarpamp would know. > > Yes, and for example, regarding a programming language one can do > the same, i.e. purchasing a book and code offline. > > When I was young you could buy programming languages with > their manual (in book form). :-) My early learning developed a lot with books from Waite Group with their CDs in the back. I think I'm younger than you. > My GitHub Golang[1] stuff has no licenses because my opinion is that > users at home, can do what they want to do with it, which I cannot > control and if companies would use it I do not give the slightest fuck > if their IoT stuff breaks, not my problem. No one is forced to use my > stuff. Should one come with a lawyer I would show them my middle > finger, because I am not bound by German law or by GitHub requirements > to provide one. If I had to provide one I would write my own. Sounds like public domain doesn't protect you if others misuse your work. > [1] What I like about Golang so much, I can cross-compile for 26 > different platforms, so when I use a Linux version I can cross-compile > for friends etc. a Windows .exe :-) I came down to this footnote to find your link to your github :) but I'm sure it's linked elsewhere on-list. > BTW. Golang folks are highly sought-after people. Me as an old fart, > not interested in making money with Golang, have already received > 5 well paid job offers (permanent) in different countries, early this year. Other languages include rust and haskell. I focus on python since huggingface is trying to use it to take over the world more communally than other corps are. I'm forgetting C++, which used to be my favorite language, kinda weird, should maybe do so more systems-style coding a little or something.
