InquisitiveFactotum

joined 1 year ago

My mom liked that movie a lot. I also ran across it on Disney+ a while back and watched it with my kids. I watched a lot of those 60s and 70s Disney movies as a kid in the 80s.. Herbie, etc.

Oh, man. Idea: When watching a vintage movie on a steaming service they should run ads from the same time period.

Watch an 80s movie with 80s McDonald's and Folgers commercials.

[–] InquisitiveFactotum@midwest.social 2 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

I suggested it last year for my family. No one (wife nor kids) wants to watch it this year.

I've seen a lot of nods to Flight of the Navigator in here, but this is the first mention of The Last Starfighter. I saw that probably a dozen times because my best friend was obsessed for a while and we'd watch it every time I want over. I have very fond memories of that.

Agree with your take on Caillou. I also always thought Dora was yelling. My daughter never seemed to mind either though. 😕

Same. For me it was Robocop 2 in about 2nd or 3rd grade at a birthday party sleepover.

[–] InquisitiveFactotum@midwest.social 3 points 9 months ago (1 children)

I steal only what I can't afford ...

[–] InquisitiveFactotum@midwest.social 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Thanks, this makes sense. So, the last thing I'm wondering about is the redundancy/exclusivity of communities. For example, could there be a community called 'gardening' on the "Works" instance and also an independent community by the same name on "World" (before anyone is mutuallt subscribed)? Seems like it could... And if so, what happens when someone cross subscribes to 'gardening'.

Specifically, (from a user experience standpoint) do these redundant communities coelesce into one? Because some of the benefit of these communities (particularly the more niche) is pulling together the experts into one community.

[–] InquisitiveFactotum@midwest.social 4 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Forgive what is probably a silly naive question...

Can someone point me to an explanation of the federated architecture of lemmy? I haven't found one yet that has helped me build a good mental model. I either get a step-by-step startup guide, or discussions on the merrits/demerits of a distributed system.

I think I've pieced together that it's basically independent "instances" of the machine each with their own communities within. Sort of like if there were multiple instances of reddit, each with its own r/aww or whatever. I don't yet understand, however how these interact/relate/ovelap/collaborate...which I think is the basis for this thread.

To me it was helpful in trying to understand the perspective from which a group derive their actions. Much like you said. Usually a good first step in dealing with interpersonal conflict is to make an attempt to understand the other perspective. The end does seem to wander a bit, but I think there's some truth in the general premise that a large group of people feel left behind (in various ways for various reasons).

[–] InquisitiveFactotum@midwest.social -1 points 1 year ago (6 children)

David Brooks wrote a good article in the New York Times today that tries to help shift perspectives a bit to understand this. I'd highly recommend reading it.

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/02/opinion/trump-meritocracy-educated.html

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