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@neural_meduza Это с чего же, позвольте поинтересоваться? 🤔

@neural_meduza Глубинноуважаемый народ.

@neural_meduza А после того, как выпивали водку, изобретать переставали🥴

@james
BTW it has a weird sounding "skip" at 26:28, I've been listening to this mix and even wrote that down, but I have never told
@dorkbsd that 😅
He has just introduced it then and now it's probably too late to fix. Anyway, everything else's top notch.

@Mek101 My disk isn't so hard nowadays… More like solid 😄

@m0xEE
CC @DotardTed @PawelK @kravietz
Were there any noteworthy news concerning this depleted uranium stuff? I must have missed something. I remember reading about Ukrainian munition storage being hit, but not much about DU.

m0xEE boosted
@meowski @kirby
I think that's an appropriate reaction to the thread you have linked to :marseylaughwith:
No, don't get me wrong, it's mostly neutral, except for a few parts that made me suspicious, like this here:
> given the experience of Yugoslavia and Iraq, could lead to an outbreak of cancer in the medium term
There is no given experience of Yugoslavia — connection of use of depleted uranium munitions to increase in amount cancer cases was never an undisputed fact, look here:
https://www.rferl.org/a/moscow-serbian-media-appear-mislead-claims-cancer-fight-nato-bombings-/30320663.html
Of course you might not consider Radio Liberty a trustworthy source a it might be biased, but they cite a lot of sources, including Serbian politician who claimed that there is such connection, but never presented any proof. They also refer to Serbian medical institutions that claim there is no such connections and even that there was no growth in cancer cases.
Back to depleted uranium shells themselves, take a look at what those are: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depleted_uranium
Uranium isn't used in some powdered form so it could contaminate the air, it's very dense and that is precisely why it's used for penetrator part of an armor piercing round — it's the sturdiest part, I can't imagine how, even if it gets split by an adjacent explosion, can make it into someone's body kilometers away from explosion.
One more thing worth noting, take a look at the date that article on Radio Liberty's website was published — it's 2019, long before it had anything with Ukraine, Russia was always trying to give the depleted uranium scare a proper spin to use it against NATO. And now Russia is a side of the conflict — that's no proof of course, but whole thing could be a part of psyop.
Radiation spikes still look scary, but there are things to consider other than DU shells — there is Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant not far from there, right in the zone of armed conflict.

@kirby
I was joking about traditional leisure of course, but this sort of thing happens all the time.
There was one particularly noteworthy case about five years ago when over 50 people died over the weekend drinking "body lotions" — usually those had ethanol, but someone decided to make it cheaper and used methanol or isopropyl even — I don't remember which exactly.

@lina @D00B

@kirby
What's wrong? It's traditional Russian leisure 😏

@lina

@johnbessa
What part of what did I not get?
Your statement that old phones could "go for months", implying that modern phones can't do that, is misleading, most old phones couldn't live for months off a single charge, a week sounds more realistic and modern ones can do that too if you have the same usage scenario — mine sure can. And it's not magic, usage patterns got different, devices didn't get inferior. Do we agee on that?
@samuelnorbury

@sos
Wow, these look cool! I've been using a machine like that 386 handy thing, only, it was in a form factor that occupied half my desk and it had less RAM, so I had to use Windows 95 because it could use swapfile 😂 It was horribly slow, but it worked!
@vk2gpu

@neural_meduza Пожарский уже собирает вещи и планирует переезд? 😅

@theorytoe Here is your new ringtone.
Actually I have used it for incoming messages for 5 years or even longer. I don't know why Akaza Akari theme in particular, but I think it signifies incoming bullshit quite well 😂

@mjdxp More people are coming to Fedi to check out quality of your posts going up 🤪

@gemlog Russian is like that too, people bring a lot of words in from professional slang — even if there is a good native word for that, professional community often communicates in English and use the word they are used to, and then the word makes it into everyday language.
It's sad when this happens and I always try to use native word if there is one and it doesn't sound too old-fashioned 😄
I think in the age of Internet every language is like that.

@gemlog Vodka, matrioshka, balalaika and pelmeni are there. Looks legit 🤣

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