m_f

joined 1 year ago
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[–] m_f@midwest.social 18 points 9 hours ago

“We have heard from employees with strong points of view in support of remote work, as well as others who miss the innovation, creativity and working relationships that we believe happen best in-person,” CEO Bill Brown wrote in a note to employees on Monday. “To get the best of both, we are evolving our Work Your Way policy in a way that brings people together more often, maintains our focus on results and continues to empower our people with flexibility.”

The change first affects HQ employees who live within a commutable distance from the office and will be phased out globally over time, Brown wrote.

So you don't care about the employees that want remote work, you're just smart enough to boil the frogs slowly 🖕 They should maybe focus on not giving everyone in Oakdale cancer instead of shoving office work down people's throats.

[–] m_f@midwest.social 6 points 9 hours ago

“This building is going to be more than just a physical space, it’s about creating generational wealth, building careers and leaving behind an enduring legacy,” said Mariam Omari, a co-founder of K’s Revolutionary Catering in north Minneapolis.

There's some interesting reading over at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_capitalism about intergenerational wealth, including critiques.

Of course, it's not much help to build intergenerational wealth if it gets forcibly taken away when you do too well.

[–] m_f@midwest.social 1 points 9 hours ago

I hate that this sort of thing works better than just saying "Here's why we're fucking ourselves over", but stories are often the best way to get people to care.

[–] m_f@midwest.social 2 points 9 hours ago

Data suggests cannabis quality testers are fudging mold levels

I very much appreciate that we've legalized THC and all that, but there does need to be proper quality control.

I was talking to someone involved in a local brewery that also does THC drinks, and they said that dosages are all over the place, even for things that are nominally the same level. As in, they wanted something that was 2 mg per unit from a manufacturer, and they tested it at 12 mg per unit. Some manufacturers are better than others, but this place had to keep testing even places that got it right, because the quality can drift over time. They also had to put a lot of work into making sure that everything was mixed super well, because the THC oil is fairly heavy and can sink to the bottom.

[–] m_f@midwest.social 1 points 9 hours ago

The drop is partly a response to the flurry of new housing construction in the previous five years, which stabilized rents here even as they soared in other major metros. Developers say they’re slowing things down while they wait for existing apartments to be filled.

I don't like rent control, because I think this is the better answer, and it seems to be working. I'm sympathetic to someone I know's take though that's NIMBY in the sense of "Sure, build more housing, but let's start with the parking lots instead of destroying more nature"

[–] m_f@midwest.social 3 points 9 hours ago

Record number of charter schools failing, with more possibly ahead

Charter schools shouldn't be a thing, we should just invest in public education. They're often just weird Libertarian places like https://www.eagleridgeacademy.org/ anyways

 

Welcome to The Topline, a weekly roundup of the big numbers driving the Minnesota news cycle, as well as the smaller ones that you might have missed. This week: A record breaking year for charter school failures; Twin Cities apartment construction plummets; early voting returns; cannabis testing shenanigans; and Minnesotans’ electoral power.

Record number of charter schools failing, with more possibly ahead

The Star Tribune reports that nine of the state’s 181 charter schools have shut down this year, with another one facing the imminent revocation of its authorization over financial and management difficulties.

The story focuses on the STEP Academy in St. Paul and Burnsville, which serves a student body that’s 99% Black and predominantly immigrant. The school overextended itself with a recent expansion followed by enrollment projections that failed to materialize. It also had to repay $800,000 to the Department of Education for overstating its enrollment last year.

vCharter schools, when run well, can be a bridge to success for students from disadvantaged communities who have challenges in traditional schools. But the overwhelming majority of Minnesota’s charter schools lag traditional public schools on standard measures of student achievement, and some experts argue that by catering to specific minority communities, many charters are bringing about a new era of school segregation.

Minnesota taxpayers spent over $1 billion on charter school funding last year.

Apartment construction projected to drop sharply

Axios reports that apartment construction is projected to drop 43% in the Twin Cities over the next five years, the sharpest decline in the nation. The drop is partly a response to the flurry of new housing construction in the previous five years, which stabilized rents here even as they soared in other major metros. Developers say they’re slowing things down while they wait for existing apartments to be filled.

Places like Wichita, Kansas and Bozeman, Montana, meanwhile, are projected to see new apartment construction explode by close to 250%.

One general word of caution, however: All forecasts are based on assumptions about how people will behave and how events will unfold in the coming months and years, and they often turn out to be off the mark or simply wrong.

Early voting: down from 2020, up from 2022

Minnesota election expert and occasional Reformer contributor Max Hailperin has been keeping tabs on early voting returns. So far, this year, the pattern is mainly what you’d expect: Early voting to date is down from the comparable point in the 2020 election cycle, when we were in the middle of a global pandemic and a massive push to vote by mail.

They’re up, however, from 2022, which is expected given that turnout is always higher in presidential election years.

So far, the decline from 2020 is slightly less steep in greater Minnesota, where many people had been accustomed to voting by mail well before the pandemic.

Data suggests cannabis quality testers are fudging mold levels

An investigation from the Wall Street Journal finds that labs in many cannabis-legal states are four times more likely to report mold levels just under the legal limit than just over. They also found that lab test results were directly tied to their future revenues: Labs detecting less mold got more business in the following year, while those detecting more saw their business drop.

“The improbable pattern suggests tainted samples are being cleared for sale,” the Journal’s authors write, with potentially harmful health consequences for users who assume that legal cannabis products are safe.

Minnesotans’ voting power

Cartography website maps.com recently ran an analysis of each state’s electoral power in presidential elections. Because states are guaranteed at least three electors, regardless of population, smaller states tend to be over-represented in the Electoral College while larger states are disadvantaged.

A vote in Wyoming, for instance, carries about three times as much electoral power as one from California, Texas or New York. Sparsely-populated places like Vermont and the Dakotas have similar advantages.

As with so many other things, Minnesota sits squarely in the middle of the pack. But that could change following the next census, however, as the state is projected to lose a seat in the House of Representatives, which means we’ll have one less electoral vote as well.

 

“People live by their stories—how can we use them to accelerate action on climate change?”

That’s the question Anna Farro Henderson sets out to answer in Core Samples: A Climate Scientist's Experiments in Politics and Motherhood (University of Minnesota Press, 208 pages). As a U of M scientist and policy expert who’s worked in Washington, D.C., but also been on field visits to nuclear test sites in New Mexico and the Juneau Icefield in Alaska, Henderson authored a book that's full of funny, poetic essays on politics, science, and motherhood, and the surprising places where those things intersect.

There will be a Core Samples launch event this Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. in the Open Book Performance Hall (1011 Washington Ave S., Minneapolis), which'll feature Henderson in conversation with Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman. Books will be available for purchase from Magers & Quinn Booksellers, with live music preceding the talk and a book signing, interactive public art, and more music following it. (Free, but registration is required.)

 

Construction on a new $22 million shared commercial kitchen in north Minneapolis began on Wednesday.

Collective Kitchens is a food incubator project created by the North Economic Opportunity Network, or NEON. The organization helps underserved and low-income entrepreneurs start businesses to build wealth within the community.

“This building is going to be more than just a physical space, it’s about creating generational wealth, building careers and leaving behind an enduring legacy,” said Mariam Omari, a co-founder of K’s Revolutionary Catering in north Minneapolis.

Omari has been a NEON client for several years. She says her business is celebrating its 10th anniversary this year and has found success with the support received from NEON.

“They help to build an ecosystem to support entrepreneurs, entrepreneurs like us, an ecosystem that's going to be able to weather any storm that we have coming,” Omari said.

Collective Kitchens has gained support from elected city and state officials.

Sen. Tina Smith attended Wednesday's groundbreaking ceremony. She said Minneapolis’ northside has had deficits of resources and opportunity to grow and thrive. Parts of north Minneapolis are food deserts, regions where people have limited access to healthy, affordable foods.

“This kitchen is going to be a place where new businesses are generated, where people get training, where there’s new economic activity and there's more opportunity,” Smith said.

State Senate President Bobby Joe Champion, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey and NEON President Warren McLean also spoke on behalf of Collective Kitchens.

Many community members and NEON clients hold much anticipation and enthusiasm for the project.

Michael Feng owns BianDang, a Taiwanese pop-up food truck. He said the new kitchen will help him to grow his business.

“Being able to just kind of house our trailer here on site and with their incubator ... providing guidance for whether it’s wholesale or just any avenue that we decided to go on, this would be, a great opportunity,” Feng said.

The kitchen will be located on West Broadway Avenue next to the Capri Theater.

[–] m_f@midwest.social 9 points 10 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago) (1 children)

Transcript for anyone that doesn't do video:

"Conspiracy theory" is a term that's used whenever anybody ascribes conscious intent to people with power. So I can say to you that school teachers are concerned about their salaries and they're organizing and they're threatening a strike and they're pressuring. I can say to you that farmers are doing this and looking for subsidies and and facing certain policies. But the minute I say to you that the very people at the top of the plutocracy the very rich and powerful the ones who own most of America, that they are consciously pursuing power and wealth someone will come along and say "what do you have a conspiracy theory?" or they'll say "oh you're cynical" or "you're paranoid". Their view is that stuff just happens. Things just happen. Unintended consequences or our leaders are stupid and they're jerks or they're confused and they don't know any better and of course the critic knows much better than everybody.

Yeah people who operate in this world operate with intent. There's no such thing as imperialism without imperialists. There's no such thing as capitalism without capitalists. There's no such thing as rulers who are some somnambulers, who walk around in their sleep. You watch out for your interests. You watch out and you make calculations. What makes you think that David Rockefeller doesn't - what makes you think that the people at the top don't do it, and what makes you think they don't collude and organize, or what do you think, you have a group of people who sit around in a room and they plan this? And I always say "oh no god they don't sit around in a room they meet on carousels they go up and down merry-go-rounds or they meet skydiving they hold hands and they argue". Of course they sit in rooms, where the hell else are they going to meet?

I think the biggest issue with this argument is that he's arguing about an overloaded term. "Conspiracy theory" in terms of stuff like MKUltra? 100% a thing. "Conspiracy theory" in terms of "The democrats made the hurricane to kill god-fearing republicans!"? Not so much.

[–] m_f@midwest.social 3 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

IMO copying communities from Reddit as-is was a mistake long-term, but was maybe necessary short-term so that people wouldn't be confused. If I had my druthers, I'd make a new system where communities are uniquely identified purely as [!UUID@lemmy.instance](/c/UUID@lemmy.instance) (though still with a human-friendly display name). You don't get to create a community that namesquats something like [!gaming@lemmy.world](/c/gaming@lemmy.world). All posts would be made with hashtags like Mastodon, and then each community would just configure "Include all posts with this tag in our community". The big issue then is who moderates tags? I think a system like Bluesky has would work well, as you mention. People can moderate tags and other people can follow their work, or not.

If that was combined with seamless account/community migration, that would solve a lot of moderation issues. If you mod a community and the admins suck, just move it to a new instance. If the mods of a particular community suck, start your own. They won't be able to monopolize a common name, so it's much easier to get traction.

On the long-ago internet, there were many, many different software options that supported the same protocols, and they were also a lot more configurable generally speaking

Lemmy is pretty good about that, actually. It's interoperable with Mastodon via ActivityPub, and there's other projects like MBin that work nicely with Lemmy.

 

Shermy gets back at Patty for being a gold digger

[–] m_f@midwest.social 16 points 12 hours ago (3 children)

I was also curious, here's a good answer:

https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/670199/how-is-dev-null-implemented

The implementation is:

static ssize_t write_null(struct file *file, const char __user *buf,
              size_t count, loff_t *ppos)
{
    return count;
}
 

I've created a few new communities to post comics to daily, and I'm starting to hit rate limits pretty consistently now when uploading images. Would it be possible to increase those?

17
2002-09-20 (midwest.social)
submitted 12 hours ago* (last edited 12 hours ago) by m_f@midwest.social to c/smbc@midwest.social
 

https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/2002-09-20

Alt textFifteen years after writing this cartoon, I realize this isn't how Russian Roulette works.

Bonus panel

11
2002-09-17 (midwest.social)
submitted 13 hours ago* (last edited 12 hours ago) by m_f@midwest.social to c/smbc@midwest.social
 

https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/2002-09-17

Alt textTom was so disconnected from his own feelings that he offered gold and jewels whenever expressing himself. By the time he and Sally had been together for five years, he had begun to understand that his emotional weaknesses should be shared with the woman he loved most. But, it was too late. With the millions of dollars in rings, she had escaped to Argentina, and love.

Bonus panel

65
They (2024-10-21) (midwest.social)
submitted 13 hours ago* (last edited 12 hours ago) by m_f@midwest.social to c/smbc@midwest.social
 

https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/they-2

Alt textIf you'd like one of the badges in the bonus panel, please just attend one of the yacht meetings.

Bonus panelThey

 
[–] m_f@midwest.social 9 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (2 children)

Neat! Do you pick one instance to load comments from? I notice that this comment isn't showing up immediately, so wondering if there's federation delay or the like.

 

There's been a few minor updates, but it's largely unchanged since 2009. If you want to see a horror show, view page source for a taste of how bad web dev used to be. Bunch of autogenerated garbage from Microsoft Publisher 11 like this:

<b:OhMorphingContext priv="140E">290</b:OhMorphingContext>

MS Publisher also screwed up the title into this 🤦:

MayDayBooks

Modern web dev has its downsides but it's still streets ahead of when it was under the iron grip of Microsoft (or M$ as you used to say back in the day if you were cool on /.)

13
2002-09-16 (midwest.social)
submitted 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) by m_f@midwest.social to c/smbc@midwest.social
 

https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/2002-09-16

Alt textReally? All that and you still want hovertext? Go read a book.

Bonus panel

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