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Brunswick
Brunswick@stacker.news
npub1c856...6lkc
GM☕ since [759233](https://mempool.space/block/000000000000000000023ab241141d6cd0d0ea2f41295a830a6724407d450211) [Free Chauvin](https://alphanews.org/exclusive-5-years-later-justice-after-george-floyd-the-dismissed-lawsuit-revealing-the-truth-and-derek-chauvins-response-2/)
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brunswick 2 days ago
AI slop is a good source of marketing material
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brunswick 2 days ago
I'm cutting a 1/4 mile path through the brambles and weeds so the kids can run around in the woods
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brunswick 2 days ago
online adjective, adverb /ˈɔnˌlaɪn/ Definition Connected to a remote computer system or network through a communication line, originally a telephone line used by a modem to access bulletin board systems (BBSs), commercial online services, or the Internet. --- Historical Origin and Usage The term online emerged during the era of dial-up modem communications in the late 1970s through the 1990s. At that time, most homes had a single analog telephone line shared among all telephones in the house. Personal computers connected to external systems by dialing over that same voice line using an acoustic or direct-connect modem. When a computer established a modem connection, the household telephone line became occupied or “tied up.” Any attempt to use another extension telephone could interrupt the connection, inject electrical noise, or terminate the data transfer entirely. Likewise, incoming calls often produced a busy signal, or later interrupted transfers through call waiting tones. Because the telephone line itself was physically engaged by the computer connection, users commonly described the state as being “on the line.” This phrase evolved into “online,” specifically referring to a computer actively occupying the telephone line for data communication. Typical conversational usage included: “I tried calling, but he was on the line.” “Sorry, I was online.” “Don’t pick up the phone; I’m online.” In this context, the “line” referred literally to the household telephone line. --- Semantic Evolution Originally, online specifically implied: > “A computer is actively connected over a telephone line.” As permanent broadband and packet-switched networking replaced dial-up telephony, the phrase lost its direct association with telephone lines and evolved into its modern generalized meaning: > “Connected to the Internet or accessible through a network.” The original physical meaning of “line” — the occupied telephone circuit — is now largely historical, though preserved linguistically in the word online itself. --- Etymological Note The expression derives from: on — actively using or attached to line — the telephone line or communication circuit Thus: > online = on the telephone communication line for computer-mediated data exchange.
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brunswick 3 days ago
Sabine's transition to her sponsor at the end is absolutely hilarious, and completely archetypical
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brunswick 3 days ago
The recent meeting between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping appears less like a reversal of U.S.-China decoupling and more like a transition toward a managed hierarchy of interdependence. Rather than attempting complete economic separation, the emerging strategy suggests that the United States is repositioning itself to preserve dominance over the highest-order layers of global production: artificial intelligence, semiconductors, aerospace, software, finance, robotics, and military infrastructure. China, meanwhile, remains deeply integrated into industrial transformation and manufacturing capacity, but retains structural vulnerabilities tied to imported energy, maritime chokepoints, and export dependence. Viewed through a Hayekian “order of production” framework, current U.S. trade and geopolitical behavior increasingly resembles an implicit order-indexed tariff and security regime. Lower-order goods such as petroleum, minerals, agricultural commodities, and industrial feedstocks remain globally traded and strategically tolerated, while higher-order technological sectors face tightening restrictions, export controls, sanctions, and reshoring efforts. The objective is not autarky, but preservation of upper-order productive sovereignty. Energy sits at the center of this system. Control over maritime oil transport through the Strait of Hormuz, the South China Sea, and other global chokepoints effectively grants leverage over the metabolic substrate of industrial civilization itself. China’s reliance on imported oil from Iran, Russia, and Venezuela creates strategic exposure that intersects directly with U.S. sanctions, naval power, and regional conflicts. In this context, disputes involving Iran, Russia, and global shipping lanes are not isolated wars, but components of a broader contest over energy flow, currency settlement, and industrial supremacy. Artificial intelligence and robotics may ultimately determine whether the United States can successfully reduce dependence on foreign labor-based manufacturing. If automation collapses labor arbitrage advantages, industrial production may shift back toward countries with energy abundance, advanced compute infrastructure, and secure political systems. The Trump-Xi meeting therefore likely represents neither peace nor surrender, but a negotiated stabilization phase within a deeper long-term struggle over energy, production hierarchy, maritime control, and technological dominance.