I hate people who wear cold weather gear in warm/heated places

  • EnderMB@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    People that don’t have kids that park in parent and child spaces.

    It’s almost always Tesla’s and Audi’s. In my utopia, it would be legal to destroy any car caught parking in these spaces that doesn’t have a child or booster seat.

  • Altima NEO@lemmy.zip
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    11 days ago

    People who use their turn signal AS THEY’RE TURNING. You asshole! You’re supposed to do it a bit before you turn to let people know your intent. There’s no point in signaling as you’re turning because I CAN SEE YOU TURNING! Fuck!

    • undefined@lemmy.hogru.ch
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      11 days ago

      And usually all the cars around them had to wait six years because they weren’t aware of the upcoming turn (busy intersections).

    • dingus@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      So generally I use turn signals correctly. But there are a few times I don’t for particular reasons.

      If I am sitting at the rightmost lane at a busy intersection and intend to turn right, I honestly tend to not turn on my right turn signal. The ambiguity of whether or not I’m turning or going straight helps keep assholes behind me from honking at me. I’ve found that an unfortunately large amount of people get impatient when someone in front of them is turning right on red onto a busy road. They honk and act like assholes because they want you to dangerously jump into traffic and not wait for a clearing so they can go sooner.

      I know I could turn on my turn signal and just let an an asshole lay on their horn, but honestly I really truly prefer to avoid that.

  • smaaauuug@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    Audio messages, I hate them with a passion. Sometimes I just refuse to listen to them. Can’t search them for info, and why tf do you assume I can just stop my day to listen to this shit I don’t have my goddamn headphones connected all the time, and I’m not about to put the phone to my ear for a full 5 minutes and no talk looking like a goddamn weirdo.

    • undefined@lemmy.hogru.ch
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      11 days ago

      I just ignore them completely. They don’t exist for me. Depending who it is, I can say “I didn’t have time to listen to it but next time if you text/message I can probably get back to it faster.”

    • tychosmoose@lemm.ee
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      10 days ago

      put the phone to my ear

      Clearly you would look more normal if you blast it on the speaker while holding the phone in front of you, like everyone else. /s

    • Mothra@mander.xyz
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      11 days ago

      I’m not a hater but I understand the sentiment. I only exchange audio with very few people I feel comfortable with we both want to listen to our shit for that long, and I never expect a quick reply.

      Randoms or new acquaintances sending audios without asking permission first usually annoy me.

    • MajorasMaskForever@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      I had a boss who would send audio messages constantly. I’d be having a conversation with him, he’d get a text message on his phone, stop talking to me to mess with this phone, do a voice recording, mess it up cause he’d whisper it so others wouldn’t hear him (we still totally could), repeat it, rinse and repeat until he got it right, send it, then would ask me what we were talking about.

      I’m convinced people who use voice messages have no situational awareness and are potentially psychopaths

    • lemmyng@lemmy.ca
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      10 days ago

      I’ll make one exception for audio messages: the other person being in a situation where they cannot easily type the message, but it’s not an emergency. Hands full, driving, inclement weather, etc. I take it as an implicit “this message is important, but not drop-everything-else critical.”

    • The summer blues...@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      11 days ago

      If you’re sweating so much you smell bad and are working less because you’re overheated and you’re wearing a North Face™ mountain climber ahh jacket in a packed Amazon Delivery Station during peak time where there’s like 100k packages being delivered today, yeah, I’m offended as hell.

      And… My mother forced me to wear my jacket when shopping as a kid and I’d be overheated and nauseated, and she’d shop for at least six hours, and I wouldn’t be allowed to take the jacket off because “we’re leaving soon get over it” like you didn’t say “soon” three hours ago. I’m offended at people who do that on purpose.

  • scaramobo@lemmynsfw.com
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    10 days ago
    • TikTok.
    • Short form videos.
    • Tutorials in a 10 minute video format. Just give me a list of instructions I can skim to find the thing I’m looking for.
    • Influencers and “content creators”. Please get cancer and die.
    • YouTube after 2011 or so
    • Monetization of platforms
    • The way software development evolved from a highly praised skill to being regarded as nothing more than a fleshbased code printer for creating more shareholder value
    • How the art scene is now mostly relying on social media exposure and followers
    • so, Actually most of the modern internet.
    • The lie that you can become rich and succesful by working hard and putting in the hours

    I can go on for quite a while. Millenial disillusionment is real.

    • Meltrax@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      You’re talking about Gen Z trends.

      Millennials are pretty well aware that they are fucked unless they were born lucky, we’re all just wallowing silently in our depression while wishing we could afford a house.

  • lime!@feddit.nu
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    11 days ago

    buildings with upward-facing spotlights, especially single-family homes with façade lights. it’s like nobody cares about light pollution.

    • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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      10 days ago

      I’ve been considering reporting streetlights that don’t point straight down because they technically violate city codes.

    • SHOW_ME_YOUR_ASSHOLE@lemm.ee
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      10 days ago

      Oh shit I’ve always liked the way those looked. I thought they made the house look fancy but I never considered the light pollution.

  • dovahking@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    The concernedly rising sightings of “could of” and “should of”. And it’s always the native English speakers. It irks me every time I see it. Why are you making such an obvious mistake? The sentence doesn’t even sound coherent. How about you speak the sentence aloud and see how wrong it sounds?

    • Blackmist
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      10 days ago

      But spoken it’s fine. It’s could’ve.

      It’s when that gets written as “could of” that it becomes an abomination…

        • dingus@lemmy.world
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          10 days ago

          What do you mean you’ve heard “could of”? Of course you would have heard that. That’s literally how it’s pronounced. It’s just not spelled out that way, as the above person noted. People end up erroneously writing it like that because that’s how you say it out loud.

          Do you pronounce “could’ve” in a way that doesn’t sound like “could of”??? Curious to know what that would sound like.

  • davidgro@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    Biweekly and bimonthly each also meaning their respective reciprocals.

    (Every two periods, or twice a period.)

    If a technical term such as a frequency specifier has multiple incompatible meanings then it has no value and needs to stop being used entirely. Or one of the meanings chosen as correct and the others rejected forcefully (good luck with that)

    • JackGreenEarth@lemm.ee
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      11 days ago

      Fortnightly is every two weeks, bimonthly in every two months. Biannual is twice a year, and biennial is every two yeara.

      • davidgro@lemmy.world
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        11 days ago

        Fortnightly is fine, so is biennial.

        All of the other bi-timeperiod words are worthless because they mean both twice each time and every two times.

    • tychosmoose@lemm.ee
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      10 days ago

      It’s funny that there are two unambiguous alternatives to bimonthly, but they both mean 2x/month: fortnightly and semimonthly.

      Both German and Dutch distinguish their equivalent words with clear prefixes meaning half- and two-. The English word was unclear after 1066 since the French word bimensuel would have been used by the new bosses. And that means 2x/month. English used bimensual for a while before developing a new, worse word with the Latin origin bi- and the Germanic origin -monthly. And it seems to have been ambiguous from the start. So this has probably been messed up for almost 1050 years.

      Maybe we should resurrect the Old English prefix twi- to make a new(old) 1x/2months word twimonthly or more intuitively, twomonthly that we can use in opposition with halfmonthly.

    • RBWells@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      Eh? Semi-monthly is twice a month. Bimonthly is every two months.

      Semi-weekly is twice a week, biweekly is fortnightly, every two weeks.

      They work the same.

        • RBWells@lemmy.world
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          10 days ago

          I’m paid twice a month and they call it semi-monthly here though, husband is paid every two weeks and his company calls that biweekly.

          I would never use bimonthly to mean twice a month, and haven’t heard anyone use it that way in real life; but the only thing that happens twice a month for me is payroll, so it hasn’t come up in conversation outside of that.

          I guess I share in your outrage then.

  • antlion@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 days ago

    I really hate that California dropped all new shower heads down to 1.8 gpm. I feel very alone in this outrage. People are flying around in private fucking jets, and you want us all to take one for the team and suffer a shitty dribble of a shower every day. A generous hot shower is one of the few things that makes our lives far better than our great great grandparents. Taking out the flow restrictor is like having sex without a condom. A whole generation of suckers won’t even know what they’re missing.

    I hate ordering a beer in a restaurant and it comes in a shaker pint (conical pint), which is usually a 13 oz pour. How can we have a government who verifies the measurement of fuel pumps, but not beer, when beer costs like 15x more than fuel. Fill lines are a simple, cheap, and good solution.

    I hate metering lights. For those who don’t know they’re stoplights on the on-ramp to an interstate highway. Waste of fuel, don’t help with traffic.

    I really hate advertisements. It seems the more I block them, the more offensive they are when one gets through.

      • antlion@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        10 days ago

        I just measured my showers. I was thinking it would be over 3 gpm but my downstairs is 2.6, and upstairs is 2.25. Pretty modest actually. My guess is that they’re designed for the national standard of 2.5 gpm without a restrictor. It just makes me so mad to squeeze simple pleasures from the poor through regulation. People are miserable enough for fucks sake, if they can afford a $0.50 shower let them enjoy 10 minutes of the day.

    • The summer blues...@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      10 days ago

      I really hate advertisements. It seems the more I block them, the more offensive they are when one gets through.

      Bruh YouTube ads feel like I was called every slur ever made and pissed on by Hitler when my premium expired. Before then, an ad was just another ad.

      • Classy@sh.itjust.works
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        10 days ago

        YouTube ads start playing on mobile YouTube and I recoil in disgust, “like fucking hell you do!”, and swiftly retreat to ReVanced

      • antlion@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        10 days ago

        YouTube is pretty bad. If I’m watching a video at 1.5x, it remembers this setting for the next video, so the same courtesy should apply to the ads. Avoidable in a web browser for now, eventually I’ll just have to youtube-dl anything I want to watch.

    • isolatedscotch@discuss.tchncs.de
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      9 days ago

      I really hate that California dropped all new shower heads down to 1.8 gpm

      never heard of this, but wow I’ll definitely keep it in mind next time I buy a shower head (which is probably never because of how much those things last, but good to know anyways)

  • Hegar@fedia.io
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    11 days ago

    I hate people who wear cold weather gear in warm/heated places

    Schizophrenic people are very likely to do this. I work in mental health and this was mentioned in our training. At my location maybe 1/3-1/2 of folks wore one or more puffy jackets all summer long.

    • beerclue@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      Interesting, is that a comfort thing? Like wearing headphones everywhere with nothing playing in them?

    • Hegar@fedia.io
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      9 days ago

      It’s not clear why. It could be an issue with being able to accurately perceive your own temperature, it could be a comfort thing, it could be that they’re more likely to want important possessions to be harder to steal.

      So either medical, emotional or social. 🤷

      @th3dogcow@lemmy.world @beerclue@lemmy.world

    • 🖖USS-Ethernet@startrek.website
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      9 days ago

      Had a lot of teens walking around with the puffy jackets or hoodies on and ski masks over this past summer. Don’t think we have that many schizophrenic people around here.

    • FourPacketsOfPeanuts@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      Maybe it’s my age, but I’m more and more painfully aware of how many ways adverts pretend to be your friend. It’sv one of the most insipid and disingenuous things about modern society. The sheer ubiquity of charming voices trying to act like the common man, a chatty friend, a hapless discoverer of product X that offers you “up to” a benefit of… whatever.

      The whole damn thing is just horrible and crap and predatory and wears down the soul, because my soul was programmed to be surrounded by a ‘clan’ motivated by my wellbeing (and I theirs in a meaningful way)

      Actually… quite specifically it’s the “up to” thing that happens in adverts. “Up to 100% effective” the advert says. “Well what the hell does that mean?!” I yell at the telly. “Sometimes it’s 1% effective?? Why are you even talking to me about this thing?”. It’s ghoulish.

      /rant

      • whotookkarl@lemmy.world
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        10 days ago

        Capitalist propaganda has had decades to hone and refine their techniques for manipulation and deception, the only way to win is to not play their rigged game, but if you’re forced to because they’ve captured all of the resources under a government backed judiciary that’s purpose is to centralize wealth and power under a minority ownership class i think you’d be justified to take more drastic measures to subvert or remove their propaganda.

        • FourPacketsOfPeanuts@lemmy.world
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          10 days ago

          True, though I don’t think it’s just capitalism that causes this dishonesty. I think it’s any time there’s a depersonalised entity motivated to coerse people. And certainly that happens under capitalism. But you could point to centrally planned communist states peddling bullshit to people too.

          I think the antidote (so far as practical ones go) - and speaking of the West - is to ‘shop local’. People find it harder to lie and be disingenuous when’s there’s a genuine relationship there besides the trade.

          That’s the most egregious part about adverts (to me), things pretending to be my friend when there’s nothing there of the sort. It would be different if it’s an actual friend of mine suggesting this or that because they thought it would actually benefit me (and holding their tongue when they knew it wouldn’t)

      • BruceTwarzen@lemm.ee
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        10 days ago

        I always hated ads with a passion. I don’t really know why, even back in the 90’s when these was like 2 commercials per movie or something. It never felt right. So much so that i went out of my way to cut out all the ads in the movies i vcr’d. I ditched TV pretty early, because i just wouldn’t have it.

        But here is my question. These days, every youtuber and podcaster is basically a door to door salesman who just wan to sell sometimes quite literally shit to you. How do you continue to like people like that. I have my favourite podcasts, and i never want to hear any of their ads, because as much as i like them, they just spend 10min of their podcast lying to me and trying to sell me shit that they know is garbage. I’m not a parasocial guy, i know they are not my friends, but it still feels soooo dirty.

        • FourPacketsOfPeanuts@lemmy.world
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          10 days ago

          At least when they make the ad part of their show it’s easier to just skip forward past it (eg YouTube keyboard shortcut to skip forward ten seconds) It depends what you’re listening to really. A lot of content producers have made their peace with the fact that people are not going to pay for their content so some sort of spoken ad means they get some sort of return. I generally only listen to research / academic based shows where they have a separate patreon for ad-free episodes and discussions. I don’t mind paying for that where I think their content is worth it. That feels like a more honest exchange.

    • TheFunkyMonk@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      Birthdays make me so uncomfortable. Even when they’re mentioned in work chat and it’s flooded with gifs/“happy birthday!”s, I just don’t get it.

      • howrar@lemmy.ca
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        11 days ago

        Same. I still don’t know the social script in these scenarios. Do I individually thank everyone for their birthday wishes? Do I thank everyone with one message after it seems like everyone’s done? How long do I wait? What if someone jumps in after I do that with a belated happy birthday?

        • beerclue@lemmy.world
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          10 days ago

          It’s uncomfortable for me too. I asked HR to keep mine private at work, but before this I would just react with a like to the wishes and write a short thatnk you all at the end of the day… The late wishes I would just ignore…

        • bitcrafter@programming.dev
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          9 days ago

          I think a simple “Thanks, everyone!” message posted sometime during the day at your convenience is sufficient; individual replies or replies to subsequent messages are not necessary.

    • triptrapper@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      For many people it’s the one day of the year they feel special. I think we all deserve that, and it costs me nothing to wish someone a happy birthday. That’s not to say I’m required to spend time or money on them, but it doesn’t bother me when all they want is a bit of recognition.

  • Python@programming.dev
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    11 days ago

    the way yoga instructors speak, for some reason. I don’t hate Yoga itself, just that fake calm voice makes me pretty mad. I could relax much better if the instructor just shouted like a drill sergeant all the time

    • The summer blues...@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      11 days ago

      Same. I hate how TikTok popularized it for things that have NOTHING to do with yoga or relaxing and so many youtubers copy TikTok either ironically or unironically, and it’s hard to escape.

  • undefined@lemmy.hogru.ch
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    11 days ago

    I used to work in an email heavy industry, so people who don’t use email or more specifically what I call “threading” right.

    Changing the topic (so that the discussion no longer relates to the subject line), replying to add someone in without reattaching the relevant attached files, not using redirect email functionality, including screenshots that either lack relevant information due to poor cropping or forces the recipient into retyping its contents by hand all make email super annoying to deal with. And what’s with being expected to confirm you received each and every email? Ever heard of read receipts?

    Also, people who don’t read error messages. As a web developer (or more broadly “computer person”) I cannot count how many times someone has sent me a picture of an error asking me what to do. 90% of the time the error itself tells you exactly what to do. Why do I need to read it for you?