[HN Gopher] I wrote to the address in the GPLv2 license notice (...
       ___________________________________________________________________
        
       I wrote to the address in the GPLv2 license notice (2022)
        
       Author : ekiauhce
       Score  : 524 points
       Date   : 2025-04-24 12:26 UTC (10 hours ago)
        
 (HTM) web link (code.mendhak.com)
 (TXT) w3m dump (code.mendhak.com)
        
       | froh wrote:
       | (2022)
        
       | NoboruWataya wrote:
       | Not sure if it's being exaggerated for comedic purposes but it is
       | interesting to me how alien the act of sending a letter by post
       | is to the author. Granted I don't send them very often but I
       | wouldn't think much of it if I had to. But I guess younger people
       | and particularly those in tech may genuinely never need a reason
       | to send a letter (or, it seems, write an address by hand).
        
         | diggan wrote:
         | > But I guess younger people and particularly those in tech may
         | genuinely never need a reason
         | 
         | I don't think it's just a age/generation thing though. I'm one
         | year older than my wife, but I grew up in Sweden in the 90s,
         | she grew up in Peru. Somehow, sending/receiving letters was
         | something I've done multiple times growing up, but she never
         | did, and wasn't until we were living together in Spain in the
         | 2010s that she for the first time in her life sent a letter via
         | the street mailboxes. She's not in tech either, if that
         | matters, while I am.
        
           | rafaelm wrote:
           | Probably because in our countries (I'm also from S.America)
           | the reliability of the post office is questionable at best,
           | so it wasn't something I ever really used.
        
             | Symbiote wrote:
             | In most/all of Europe, letter volumes are reducing but
             | they're still used. Even where email is common, letters are
             | usually possible.
             | 
             | In your country,
             | 
             | - how do you get a new bank card, when the current one
             | expires?
             | 
             | - how are you informed about a change like a price increase
             | for electricity?
             | 
             | - how do you pay for electricity? (Knowing how much to pay,
             | when etc) What about an elderly person?
        
               | tranceylc wrote:
               | All of these examples are about receiving though.
        
               | Symbiote wrote:
               | Yes, but that's still dependent on the reliability of the
               | post office.
        
               | sdf4j wrote:
               | To answer your questions: receiving letters is easy,
               | companies know how to do it. Sending letters is not
               | common for the public.
        
               | johannes1234321 wrote:
               | Danish Post will soon terminate general mail delivery due
               | to low need.
               | 
               | https://apnews.com/article/postnord-denmark-postal-
               | service-m...
               | 
               | To our questions from Germany:
               | 
               | - by Post, but I can imagine this changing as payment via
               | phone/watch/... is spreading and I can imagine banks
               | willing to reduce cost, making physical cards an paid
               | extra.
               | 
               | - on my contract via e-mail and the energy company's
               | website. There are paper based contracts available,
               | though.
               | 
               | - In Germany/Europe SEPA wire transfers work well for
               | that and are being used for decades, even with online
               | banking being wide spread in the 90ies. (Pre Internet via
               | BTX https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bildschirmtext )
        
               | warp wrote:
               | You physically go to the bank.
               | 
               | The electricity company has their own employees to
               | deliver paper monthly statements to all their customers,
               | they can attach other communications if needed.
               | 
               | My bank has a connection to the electricity company, and
               | can look up in realtime what my open balance is, which
               | you can view and pay in the banking app. You can also pay
               | it in cash at various offices (e.g. Western Union) around
               | the city.
               | 
               | You can also just give the electricity company permission
               | to automatically take it out of your account every month
               | (ppl don't trust the electricity company to get the
               | amount correct, so folks don't usually do this. I do this
               | for the water bill though).
               | 
               | (this is my experience living in Ecuador for 10 years,
               | I'm from the Netherlands, most of this is weird to me :)
        
               | genewitch wrote:
               | Three weeks ago I was part of a comment thread on this
               | very site, where people were wondering why banks still
               | had buildings for people to go in to.
        
               | diggan wrote:
               | In some countries, it is somewhat of a question "why"
               | though. For example, banks in Sweden stopped carrying
               | cash, and AFAIK (at least when I lived there) you
               | interact with them either online or via the telephone,
               | even cards are sent your home address instead of being
               | picked up the branch and so on.
               | 
               | Contrast to where I live now (Spain) where I can still go
               | to the bank to deposit/withdraw money, so the use case
               | for the branch/building/office is kind of obvious.
        
               | slightwinder wrote:
               | There are multiple ways to receive letters. Having a
               | mailman delivering it directly to your house is usually
               | the rich area's way to handle it. The lower version of
               | this is to let people check with the post office
               | themselves. If it's fancy, you have at least your
               | personal postbox there, or you will have to ask office-
               | workers which then depends on their working time. And
               | outside of this, there are other ways to use other
               | locations and people, not directly affiliated with the
               | postal service for delivering letters. Pubs and other
               | shops are often such locations, or in really poor areas
               | the village chief will receive them, and then handle
               | distribution.
               | 
               | But it should be noted, except the physical objects,
               | those letters can be also replaced with other means of
               | communication. Just calling people via phone is common,
               | or nowadays sending an email will also do the job. In my
               | country we have a working and reliable postal system, but
               | companies are still replacing letters with digital
               | communication as far as laws allow it. Payments are also
               | running automatically, so the bills are more informative
               | and for taxes.
        
               | longlonglonglon wrote:
               | > - how do you get a new bank card, when the current one
               | expires?
               | 
               | The bank sends it through mail but they warn you that if
               | it doesn't arrive within 2 weeks you should go in person
               | to the bank to retrieve it. Depending on where you live
               | there's a 50/50 chance that it never arrives through mail
               | so you just wait 2 weeks and go to the bank.
               | 
               | > - how are you informed about a change like a price
               | increase for electricity?
               | 
               | Email. Or the news channel for elderly people (if the
               | increase is too big). If the increase is small that's a
               | fact of life, everyone just expects it to increase a bit
               | every 2 or 3 months.
               | 
               | > - how do you pay for electricity? (Knowing how much to
               | pay, when etc) What about an elderly person?
               | 
               | Website or bank app. There are physical places that take
               | cash payments and do the online process for you, elderly
               | people generally use those.
        
               | homebrewer wrote:
               | I'm from a similar country and would never have thought
               | about using snail mail for anything you've mentioned.
               | 
               | For bank cards you go to their branch and get a new one
               | from a person who works there, or by interacting with a
               | terminal which prints your name on a blank card and spits
               | it out. Some banks deliver them to your home address by
               | courier service and hand them over in person, and they're
               | not "elite" or special by any means.
               | 
               | Utilities are paid through online/mobile banking, there
               | are many alternatives and it takes maybe 10 seconds. Even
               | my 70-something year old relatives use them. Some even
               | older ones rely on help from others, or to go physical
               | bank branches and pay there (which wastes a lot of time
               | of everyone waiting in line to be serviced -- I don't
               | personally know anyone who does that, but have seen it a
               | couple of times).
               | 
               | Price increases? Local news, or you can subscribe to
               | receive them by email. Or just check in the online
               | banking app when it's time to make another payment, it's
               | all there.
        
               | askonomm wrote:
               | Am Estonian, and from your list only the first one is
               | with physical mail, though more and more people use
               | virtual cards / Apple Pay instead of even owning a
               | physical card. We can also withdraw cash from an ATM
               | using Apple Pay, no need for a card.
               | 
               | As for price changes regarding utilities (or really,
               | anything) we get an e-mail from the service provider or
               | from the landlord (who then gets an e-mail from the
               | service provider). We also pay for utilities via an
               | online bank transfer or automated subscription to the
               | service provider or to the landlord via a bank transfer
               | (who then pays via an online bank transfer or has an
               | automated subscription).
               | 
               | Elderly people set up automatic subscription services in
               | their local bank branch or by calling the bank, I have
               | not heard of a single elderly person using mail to pay
               | for anything.
        
               | cameronh90 wrote:
               | I'm in the UK where we do have a generally very reliable
               | postal service, but of those three, it's only the bank
               | card that involves a physical letter for me - and even
               | then I have no idea where my bank cards even are because
               | I just use contactless via my phone/watch nowadays.
               | 
               | My electricity payment is direct debit - though I can pay
               | manually via the app if I wish. The app has the amount on
               | it, and they notify of service changes via the app and
               | email. I suppose that if I ignored the electronic
               | notifications they'd eventually send me a letter.
               | 
               | Even if you do get your statements by post, basically
               | nobody here would pay for it by mail. If you really hate
               | computers, you can pay over the phone, or set up a direct
               | debit by phone/letter, or use a "PayPoint" - which
               | includes most corner shops, supermarkets and post
               | offices. It's also quite common for elderly people to
               | just have one of their younger relatives manage it all
               | for them.
        
         | remram wrote:
         | The paper size and foreign stamps make sense, but I must say
         | the inability to use a pen surprised me a little more.
        
           | int_19h wrote:
           | I'm not an American and I did write letters in my country of
           | origin as a kid, but one thing that annoys me about US-style
           | envelopes to this day is that they have no lines for address
           | - you're just expected to line text up on your own correctly.
           | If you're used to writing on lined paper because that's the
           | standard in your country (including envelopes!), it can be
           | frustrating.
           | 
           | The envelopes I'm used to look like this: https://ru.wikipedi
           | a.org/wiki/%D0%9A%D0%BE%D0%BD%D0%B2%D0%B5...
        
             | cormorant wrote:
             | Do they still say Ministerstvo sviazi SSSR ?
        
               | int_19h wrote:
               | They did for a few years after USSR was gone, as they
               | were still going through old supplies.
               | 
               | AFAIK modern Russian ones just say "Pochta Rossii", but
               | the overall design is retained, including pre-labelled
               | lines for various parts of address.
        
             | rascul wrote:
             | > one thing that annoys me about US-style envelopes to this
             | day is that they have no lines for address
             | 
             | I'm an American and I've used envelopes that have lines to
             | write addresses on. I used to see them every now and then.
             | In fact, I have about half a box sitting in my filing
             | cabinet next to me that I probably haven't used for years.
             | 
             | Many envelopes don't have the lines, though.
        
             | thesuitonym wrote:
             | We have envelopes like that, too, but they're not all that
             | common.
        
             | globular-toast wrote:
             | In the UK at school in the 90s we were taught how to write
             | a letter including addressing and stamping the envelope.
             | It's quite strange to see it done "wrong" like in the OP.
             | You're supposed to have the first line of the address
             | centred vertically, leaving the top half for stamps. At
             | least they got the stamps on the correct (right) side,
             | though. I've seen a lot worse.
        
               | seabass-labrax wrote:
               | I wouldn't say it's that different from how the Royal
               | Mail currently recommend one write the address:
               | 
               | https://help.royalmail.com/personal/s/article/How-to-
               | address...
               | 
               | My father writes the address staggered; that is, each
               | subsequent line being indented a centimetre or so
               | relative to the previous line. Were you taught to stagger
               | the address at your school in the 90s?
        
               | globular-toast wrote:
               | Yes, I was taught to do it staggered, but I think this
               | was dying out at the time and I believe that by the time
               | I wrote any letters of my own I didn't do the staggering.
               | My theory is it's because of the prevalence of printed
               | labels. I haven't seen it for a long time now.
               | 
               | Now that I'm reminiscing a bit, it was also fairly common
               | at the time for people to order a batch of sender labels
               | that they could affix to the envelope. My grandparents
               | had particularly distinctive golden metallic labels which
               | meant you could instantly tell who it was from (if you
               | didn't already recognise the handwriting).
        
             | Suppafly wrote:
             | >you're just expected to line text up on your own
             | correctly.
             | 
             | It only has to be lined up well enough to be read by a
             | human, they don't reject them just because it's sloppy or
             | not lined up correctly.
        
           | loloquwowndueo wrote:
           | Being unaware of paper sizes is baffling to me - where I
           | live, letter and legal paper are common but I'm entirely
           | aware of ISO216 paper sizes.
        
             | Symbiote wrote:
             | In a country using ISO paper, national paper sizes of one
             | of the few places not using this standard are obscure.
             | 
             | I've never seen it in any office or stationary shop in
             | Europe. It's available online, at a premium.
        
             | n3storm wrote:
             | True, any page oriented software like LibreOffice,
             | Inkscape, Gimp, will show you US Letter sizes and US Letter
             | Envelope sizes and you may have messed up with printing on
             | wrong size... but as other posters say, maybe this days
             | nobody prints on real paper anymore...
        
               | btasker wrote:
               | They all default to ISO sizes for me.
               | 
               | If I format the page size, Libreoffice does offer
               | "Letter" and "Legal". GIMP shows them as "US Letter" and
               | "US Legal" but again they're not the default.
               | 
               | It wouldn't surprise me if most non-US users hadn't seen
               | them at all, and certainly not that they don't realise
               | the US uses a different size.
        
             | remram wrote:
             | Odd take. It seems perfectly natural that the country using
             | different sizes from everybody else would be aware of that
             | fact, but that a country using the same size as 95% of the
             | world might not know about the weirdo sizes used by those
             | 5%.
        
               | loloquwowndueo wrote:
               | Fair but if you're going to diss, at least be aware it's
               | not just one country :) (I've never lived in the country
               | you're thinking of, and all the countries I've lived in
               | use non-ISO216 paper sizes).
        
             | reddalo wrote:
             | I live in Italy and I've never seen a normal "office" paper
             | sheet which is not A4.
        
             | cjs_ac wrote:
             | It's one thing to know that the US, Canada and the
             | Philippines don't use the same paper sizes as the other 190
             | countries in the world; it's quite another to be given a
             | physical example for the first time in your life.
        
               | loloquwowndueo wrote:
               | You missed at least one other country that uses "US"
               | paper sizes.
        
             | OJFord wrote:
             | They're not just uncommon, they're not used at all. You
             | will only see US legal in the UK if an American
             | company/person sends it to you, how often do you think that
             | happens? I've had it maybe once or twice, but you could
             | easily never see it, especially people born ~this century
             | growing up with less paper of any size anyway.
        
             | globular-toast wrote:
             | It's exceedingly rare to encounter US paper sizes in the UK
             | and I expect the rest of Europe too. I've only received
             | these from two places: the FSF and Donald Knuth.
        
             | oxguy3 wrote:
             | One time at my old job I was trying to load the printer,
             | and I said something like "Oh shoot, these are oversized
             | sheets; I need the 8.5x11."
             | 
             | My coworker looked at me like I was crazy. "The what?"
             | 
             | "The normal printer paper, the 8.5 by 11 inch paper"
             | 
             | "Why do you know the exact size of printer paper??"
             | 
             | I did not know how to respond to this question.
        
               | loloquwowndueo wrote:
               | Whenever someone questions what you know, the correct
               | answer is "why don't you?" - I will not be trivia-shamed!
        
               | pavon wrote:
               | Ha, I'm trying to remember where I learned that as well.
               | I know we covered it in drafting where we learned an
               | 8.5x11 A paper is half a sheet of 11x17 B paper which is
               | half a sheet of 17x22 C paper, and so on. But I thought I
               | knew the size of A paper long before that, and that it
               | was common knowledge, though I can't think of where or
               | why I would have needed to know. Then again I also know
               | that legal paper is 8.5x14 even though I have never had
               | to use it.
        
               | omegaham wrote:
               | Grade school for me - teachers would say "8.5x11" instead
               | of "letter size" or even just "printer paper." I don't
               | know why they did it, and I assume it's for the same
               | reason that I say it too. It's probably what their
               | teachers said to them!
        
             | rswail wrote:
             | The problem is that the rest of the world is not aware of
             | US sizes.
             | 
             | Thus HP printers continually displaying "PC LOAD LETTER" on
             | printers outside the US dealing with documents generated by
             | people in the US.
        
               | loloquwowndueo wrote:
               | On don't worry, they also show PC LOAD LETTER in the US
               | even when the correct paper size is loaded :)
        
               | Suppafly wrote:
               | >On don't worry, they also show PC LOAD LETTER in the US
               | even when the correct paper size is loaded :)
               | 
               | Only if there is an issue with the rollers or something
               | and it can't feed the paper from the paper cassette. No
               | one ever wants to read the manuals or do basic
               | troubleshooting though. Hell newer ones have a menu on
               | them that will walk you through each of the
               | troubleshooting steps, but people would rather put a
               | post-it on it saying it's broken.
        
               | loloquwowndueo wrote:
               | I was joking :)
        
               | BalinKing wrote:
               | I never realized that "LETTER" in that error referred to
               | paper size--no printer I've had has actually given that
               | error, so I only ever heard about it through oblique
               | references to Office Space and such. It makes so much
               | more sense now...
        
               | Suppafly wrote:
               | The 'PC' part is paper cassette, it's the printer
               | literally telling you to load letter sized paper into the
               | paper cassette, but everyone acts like it's some
               | mysterious message that's impossible to figure out.
        
               | nullhole wrote:
               | Well, PC also means Personal Computer, and letter also
               | means element of alphabet, so it's not like there isn't
               | room for confusion
        
               | immibis wrote:
               | Sounds impossible if you didn't read the manual. Who
               | reads manuals?
        
               | toast0 wrote:
               | Could be PC LOAD LEGAL if your document is really weird.
        
           | 01HNNWZ0MV43FF wrote:
           | Yeah that's crazy. I use pens to doodle designs or write
           | little recipes or Kanban cards or index cards for what's
           | inside a box... The author maybe does all that by typewriter?
        
             | slightwinder wrote:
             | Or they do it all digital, or don't even do it at all.
             | Label printers and note-apps are very popular with IT-
             | people.
        
           | Gnuke wrote:
           | I wrote a letter to a friend last year. It was the first time
           | in probably well over a decade I had used a pen for more than
           | just scribbled notes or doodling. I made a ton of mistakes
           | and I wasted at least a dozen sheets of paper rewriting it.
           | Seems it's one of those skills that deteriorates without
           | frequent practice, at least for me.
        
             | Suppafly wrote:
             | > I made a ton of mistakes and I wasted at least a dozen
             | sheets of paper rewriting it. Seems it's one of those
             | skills that deteriorates without frequent practice, at
             | least for me.
             | 
             | Back in the old days when people still wrote by hand, they
             | also made mistakes, but just scribbled them out and kept
             | going. Starting over was only necessary with doing
             | something special.
        
         | 3np wrote:
         | Sending physical mail is one thing. I no longer consider myself
         | "digital native" after reading this:
         | 
         | > Writing the address on the envelope was awkward, as I haven't
         | used a pen in several years; it took a few attempts and some
         | wasted envelopes, printing the address would have taken less
         | time
        
           | alabastervlog wrote:
           | I grew up pre-smartphone (pre-Web, partially, even) and even
           | through college probably half my total output for school was
           | hand written (friggin' blue book exams, LOL)
           | 
           | Some time last year, when trying to write something by hand
           | and finding it alien and awkward, it occurred to me that for
           | probably something like 15 years, and maybe more, I've
           | perhaps not written more than a hundred words (signatures
           | aside) by hand per year.
           | 
           | I have kids, so nearly all those words are on the stupid
           | forms they constantly make you re-fill-out from scratch for
           | no apparent reason at doctor's offices. If not for that, it'd
           | be even lower. Some years I bet I was under 50. I go _months_
           | without writing more than two or three words, total.
        
           | slightwinder wrote:
           | Even digital natives are using pens with their smartphones
           | and tablets these days. It's just a choice now whether you
           | use them. Though, not sure whether kids these days are still
           | learning it in school.
        
         | 0xTJ wrote:
         | Sending mail being a challenging or difficult thing does come
         | across as odd to me, being in Canada and born in the late 90s.
         | Sure I haven't mailed a letter in a couple years, but when I do
         | the main hassle is just finding where I put my stamps. I can
         | however understand that finding return postage would be a
         | hassle; I'm not sure why the UK and Canada (amongst others)
         | don't do IRCs anymore.
         | 
         | It's also much easier these days to find out how to correctly
         | format an address for a given destination. (At least for
         | alphabet-based languages; I recently tried to decipher a Korean
         | address in a business park and got nowhere fast.)
        
         | palata wrote:
         | Agreed. I am a millennial, so most likely older than the
         | author.
         | 
         | Not having envelopes at the ready is one thing, but ordering
         | stamps... on eBay??? And then wasting a few envelopes because
         | writing down the address is unusual? That kind of blew my mind.
         | 
         | I am a software engineer, and I always have a paper notebook
         | and a pen next to my keyboard to write down stuff.
         | 
         | I guess this all tells me I'm getting old :-).
        
           | alias_neo wrote:
           | > but ordering stamps... on eBay
           | 
           | OP was ordering US stamps to include _in_ the letter, on an
           | SAE (self-addressed envelope) they were sending _from_ the
           | UK, so that the FSF could reply (from the US) using said
           | stamps.
           | 
           | As a millennial myself, I have no idea where else I'd look
           | for <recipient country> stamps should I want to include them
           | on a SAE I was sending to said country, so that they
           | recipient wouldn't incur the cost of replying to me.
           | 
           | I don't find looking on eBay particularly strange, though I'd
           | do a quick search for alternatives first.
        
             | mytailorisrich wrote:
             | Sure but, on the other hand, this was overly kind of him.
             | In general, unless it is explicitely requested that you
             | must provide a stamped envelope for the reply the
             | assumption of snail mail is that each side pays for its own
             | envelopes and stamps.
        
               | palata wrote:
               | And you could also put a dollars bill in the envelope?
        
               | FeepingCreature wrote:
               | From the UK...?
        
               | pansa2 wrote:
               | The Post Office will sell you US currency, but AFAIK not
               | US stamps.
        
               | dmurray wrote:
               | Perhaps a couple of grams of silver?
        
               | wongarsu wrote:
               | How to get accountants to hate you in one easy step
        
             | mjevans wrote:
             | Offhand, I don't think I've ever mailed an International
             | letter or package.
             | 
             | Is return postage something that, normally, my local post
             | office would help me with? E.G. do they have some method of
             | marking or adding post to a package that would be accepted
             | globally (or at least within the destination country)?
        
               | Symbiote wrote:
               | That's the International Reply Coupon mentioned in the
               | article, but it's not supported by all countries.
               | 
               | I think I've sent far more international letters and
               | parcels than domestic. Christmas cards for elderly
               | relatives in the country I was born in, and postcards
               | when I travelled abroad.
               | 
               | Some obscure things I sold on eBay were mostly sent
               | abroad.
        
               | mjevans wrote:
               | """
               | 
               | United Kingdom
               | 
               | The Royal Mail stopped selling IRCs on 31 December
               | 2011[26] due to a lack of demand. United States
               | 
               | The United States Postal Service stopped selling
               | international reply coupons on 27 January 2013.[27]
               | 
               | """
               | 
               | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_reply_coupon#
               | Uni...
               | 
               | That explains why I was confounded in my efforts to
               | search within USPS results.
        
               | ahazred8ta wrote:
               | -
        
               | Lex-2008 wrote:
               | yep, article also mentions them:
               | 
               | > I was disappointed to find out that the UK's Royal Mail
               | discontinued international reply coupons in 2011. The
               | only alternative that I could think of was to buy some US
               | stamps.
        
               | dl9999 wrote:
               | I send $3 U.S. with QSL (ham radio) cards. It seems like
               | everybody is able to convert that to local currency to
               | cover postage.
        
             | Someone wrote:
             | > I have no idea where else I'd look for <recipient
             | country> stamps should I want to include them on a SAE I
             | was sending to said country
             | 
             | I would try to buy them online from their post office. For
             | the USA, there is https://www.usps.com/business/postage-
             | options.htm:
             | 
             |  _"Print Labels Online with Click-N-Ship
             | 
             | With your free USPS.com account, you can pay for postage
             | and print just one label or a batch of shipping labels
             | online"_
             | 
             | Germany has (https://www.iamexpat.de/expat-info/germany-
             | news/deutsche-pos...):
             | 
             |  _"You simply need to open the app, select the appropriate
             | postage service, tick "Code for labelling" (Code zum
             | Beschriften), and pay with PayPal. You will then
             | immediately receive a code, consisting of the letters
             | #PORTO and an eight-digit string, which you must write in
             | pen in the top right-hand corner of the envelope or
             | postcard. Then, just pop it in the post box, and you're
             | done! The code is valid for 14 days and can only be used
             | for Germany-bound mail."_
             | 
             | That 14-day limit may not be a good idea for this use case.
        
               | Suppafly wrote:
               | that honestly seems more complicated and likely to fail
               | than just buying the correct stamps on ebay.
        
               | kalleboo wrote:
               | That German app is not available in the App Store in my
               | country (and I presume in any country other than
               | Germany), so I would also be forced to go to eBay for
               | stamps
        
               | Someone wrote:
               | Then I would Google for an alternative, and find https://
               | shop.deutschepost.de/briefversand/briefmarken/briefm...
        
               | wbl wrote:
               | You use an International Reply Coupon https://en.m.wikipe
               | dia.org/wiki/International_reply_coupon
        
               | layer8 wrote:
               | You obviously read neither the blog post nor the
               | Wikipedia article.
        
               | seabass-labrax wrote:
               | The Deutsche Post '#PORTO' method does not apply to
               | international shipments, unfortunately. However, you can
               | still purchase barcode labels online for printing, and
               | conventional stamps are simply values in Euro cents so
               | can be used for both domestic and international
               | deliveries.
               | 
               | In addition, the 14-day limit no longer applies. Deutsche
               | Post were challenged in court, and the digital stamps
               | must now last for as long as conventional stamps do:
               | 
               | https://nrwe.justiz.nrw.de/olgs/koeln/j2023/3_U_148_22_Ur
               | tei...
        
               | mvdtnz wrote:
               | I just priced a stamp to send to New Zealand using that
               | USPS website and it came to over USD$20 so that's not a
               | realistic option. To be fair I had to take some guesses
               | with weight (what the fuck is an ounce and how many
               | letters fit into one?) and dimensions (they don't have
               | units on that website, so I guess my letter is 6x3
               | whatevers).
        
           | cameronh90 wrote:
           | The author in the UK so it's pretty much a given that they're
           | exaggerating for comedic effect, but... living in the UK
           | myself, I have only sent maybe about 5 letters in my life,
           | all to the government bureaucracy, and none more recently
           | than a decade ago. And I'm a millennial, albeit on the
           | younger side (so I tell myself).
           | 
           | I don't have any pens, paper or a printer in my house, so I'd
           | probably go to my workplace if I needed to send a letter
           | nowadays. I do occasionally send a parcel though, which
           | involves printing off a shipping label, so the process isn't
           | _completely_ alien.
        
             | pbhjpbhj wrote:
             | We don't have a printer at home (UK), sending parcels is
             | the only time we'd need it but our small local post office
             | prints labels (eg for Amazon returns, or parcel companies).
             | 
             | I did print a page at work recently, the second one since I
             | started my job 5 years ago.
        
               | cameronh90 wrote:
               | Most of the time I have to send parcels now, I use those
               | drop off lockers where you just put it in the right
               | cubbyhole and - I guess - they label it when they pick it
               | up. Otherwise, most couriers will do label on pickup, or
               | the return label is included with the delivery in the
               | first place. Very occasionally there's no other option
               | but to find some way of printing it myself.
               | 
               | I did have a small inkjet printer at one point, but the
               | ink kept drying up, so in the end it was costing me PS10
               | and a trip to Tesco every time I needed to print
               | something. Thought about getting a laser, but it's quite
               | a lot of space to waste on something I use so rarely. I
               | might get one of those little thermal printers that are
               | small enough to keep in a drawer.
        
             | SpaceNoodled wrote:
             | It's bizarre to hear about people not even having a single
             | pen, like the author. What's the last time you ever used
             | one? What is your daily life like?
        
               | cameronh90 wrote:
               | I think the last the last time I used a writing implement
               | was actually about two months ago, and it was a sharpie
               | that I had to go to the corner shop to buy. I needed to
               | take a verification picture of myself holding the date
               | for an online pharmacy.
               | 
               | I do have an iPad with an Apple Pencil, but even that I
               | use quite rarely - though I at least know where it is. If
               | I'm annotating a PDF, that would be my tool of choice.
               | 
               | Aside from that, I'm not sure that my daily life is
               | really that unrecognisable from anyone else's. Just that
               | instead of writing stuff on paper, I either type it or
               | tap it on my phone. For maths, I'm just quite quick at
               | TeX input.
        
               | Macha wrote:
               | I went for 10 years not using a pen at home. That streak
               | would be even longer, except for about a year I took up
               | journalling as a hobby.
               | 
               | I'm not sure exactly what you think people must be
               | handwriting:
               | 
               | - Notes? I use Obsidian for work notes, Google Keep for
               | stuff like shopping lists
               | 
               | - Signatures? Delivery receipt signatures are done with a
               | finger on a touch screen, stuff like employment contracts
               | and finance paperwork have basically all moved to
               | e-signatures. I genuinely think the last thing I signed
               | with a pen might have been my mortgage, and that one I
               | had to go to solicitor's office anyway as it had to be
               | officially witnessed.
               | 
               | - Paper forms? Print, sign and scan was occasionally
               | requested until a few years ago, but I did it in the
               | office because I also didn't own a printer at that time.
               | Even "important government forms" are done online now.
        
           | grishka wrote:
           | I'm also a millennial software engineer but I usually write
           | stuff down to text files. I do use pen and paper to _draw_
           | things if that helps my understanding of them. Like when
           | there 's geometry involved.
           | 
           | Sending letters isn't an alien concept to me either. I'm old
           | enough to have done it regularly as a kid. I especially liked
           | the part where you have to write the zip code in those
           | machine-readable digits.
        
             | eru wrote:
             | > I especially liked the part where you have to write the
             | zip code in those machine-readable digits.
             | 
             | How long ago was that? The machine have gotten really good
             | at deciphering regular handwriting quite a while ago.
        
             | SpaceNoodled wrote:
             | When and where were you required to write the ZIP so
             | strangely? I've never heard of such a bizarre requirement.
        
               | grishka wrote:
               | Russia. It's still a thing most likely.
               | 
               | https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Russian_postal_co
               | des...
        
               | SpaceNoodled wrote:
               | Fascinating, thanks!
        
               | palata wrote:
               | That is cool!
        
           | eru wrote:
           | > And then wasting a few envelopes because writing down the
           | address is unusual? That kind of blew my mind.
           | 
           | Some people really have terrible hand writing. And dyslexia
           | is a thing, too.
        
             | layer8 wrote:
             | That weren't the reasons stated, though.
        
         | bradley13 wrote:
         | Honestly, sending letters is increasingly alien: I rarely send
         | one letter per year. This year I have sent two, only because I
         | am trying to contact an incredibly old-fashioned directorate of
         | the German government that doesn't seem to have an email
         | address.
         | 
         | The stamps I have, I bought years ago - by now, they don't
         | cover current letter prices. I wind up putting too much postage
         | on the letters, because I'm not going to go buy even more
         | stamps that I probably won't need...
        
         | liampulles wrote:
         | Sending international postage in my country (South Africa) is
         | not a very reliable process, so couriers and email are used
         | quite heavily here instead. Its not necessarily an age thing.
        
         | drivingmenuts wrote:
         | I have a roll of Forever stamps, purchased years ago. I don't
         | even remember why, specifically, I purchased them. In theory, I
         | could post a letter on my deathbed (I'm Generation X, so it's
         | not that far off) and be assured that the delivery fee is
         | covered by the cost of one stamp. Unfortunately, most of the
         | people I would wish to correspond with will also be deceased at
         | that time. So ...
         | 
         | I leave it to y'all to monkey-knife-fight for the rest of the
         | roll.
        
         | rwmj wrote:
         | Disappointed that International Reply Coupons are no longer a
         | thing too! I used one back in the 1980s to write to the authors
         | of the Power C compiler[1] in the US about a bug (yes, a bug
         | report by mail). I enclosed an IRC in case they wanted to
         | reply. They were kind enough to write back, and didn't use the
         | IRC (but sent it back). They did however include a floppy disk
         | with the fixed compiler, which was nice of them.
         | 
         | [1] Still around: http://mixsoftware.com/product/powerc.htm
        
         | ethbr1 wrote:
         | Slightly alternate take: this post (and the fact that FSF still
         | replies to paper mail) is about _accessibility_
         | 
         | Which changes as times change.
         | 
         | In the 90s, requiring access to the internet and an email
         | address would have been exclusionary and decreased access.
         | 
         | Now, 30 years later, it's reversed and physical mail is
         | difficult.
         | 
         | But from another perspective... the goal should be to ensure
         | that _anyone_ who wants to do a thing can, with as few third
         | party requirements as possible.
         | 
         | In the sense that the FSF wants to be the exact opposite of
         | {install this vendor's parking app to pay for parking} + {get
         | an email account with this particular provider to ensure your
         | email goes through} + {install TicketMaster for access to
         | venue} + {this site requires IE^H^HChrome} all the other
         | mandatory third-party choices we're forced into.
         | 
         | Postal mail, for all its faults, is universally accessible by
         | design. And continuing to support the most accessible method of
         | communication is laudable!
         | 
         | Accessibility _and_ convenience  >> convenience
        
           | Misdicorl wrote:
           | > the goal should be to ensure that anyone who wants to do a
           | thing can, with as few third party requirements as possible.
           | 
           | This is a good starting point, but if you have no barriers
           | then you get abuse problems which is why email is terrible. I
           | remember being horrified in the 90s about attempts to charge
           | 1 cent per email. Now I long for a world where that actually
           | happened.
        
             | creaturemachine wrote:
             | You're paying that cent, but in the form of endless ads
             | hijacking your consciousness.
        
               | overtomanu wrote:
               | you can still do some setup and access mail by using
               | applications like thunderbird, which have no ads.
        
               | odo1242 wrote:
               | Or use an adblocker
        
             | tshaddox wrote:
             | Ironically, the amount of effort I expend dealing with spam
             | from the postal service is much larger than the amount of
             | effort I expend dealing with email.
        
               | sokoloff wrote:
               | I'm pretty sure I spend less than 5 minutes a week
               | dealing with physical spam mail. I have a recycling bin
               | right next to where the mail arrives and most days are 15
               | seconds of "these go into that bin unopened" and
               | sometimes I have to open an envelope and glance at it to
               | see if it's something relevant to me.
               | 
               | Even with the best spam filtering on email, I'm well over
               | 5 minutes a week of distraction from it.
        
           | ta8903 wrote:
           | It's like the classic argument about IRC vs Discord. IRC is
           | more convoluted to use, the clients are subpar, you need to
           | set up a BNC to receive messages when offline, but Discord
           | requires you to give up your phone number.
           | 
           | Some people find IRC less accessible, but I find having a
           | phone number that I'm willing to give to a third party is a
           | much more difficult requirement.
        
             | immibis wrote:
             | Don't forget the next part: whenever you point out that
             | Discord requires you to give them your phone number,
             | hundreds of Agent Smiths appear in the replies to say that
             | actually you don't. Who are we to believe - the repliers,
             | or our own lying eyes?
             | 
             | (The Agent Smith effect is something conspiracy theorists
             | made up to explain why every time they show off their
             | conspiracy theory in public, every single person around
             | them suddenly gains the same opinion of them. I'm using it
             | humourously)
        
               | Macha wrote:
               | The explanation is pretty simple: The most fervent users
               | of discord also have overlap with the longest users of
               | discord, and their account age and usage patterns means
               | that discord's risk systems have never demanded a phone
               | number from them.
        
           | dheera wrote:
           | > is universally accessible by design
           | 
           | I disagree. It requires taking time out of business hours,
           | and they don't pay you your salary while you line up multiple
           | times for 30 minutes each. I've sometimes had to line up for
           | 2 hours total (4 times) just to mail one thing. Once to ask
           | "how do i mail this", once to ask for a pen (couldn't cut the
           | line because a Karen wouldn't let me), once because I filled
           | the wrong form, etc. Typical USPS experience
        
             | krisoft wrote:
             | I mean it is the fallback method. The solution for the "I
             | never heard of this internet thing, or something else is
             | preventing me from finding the licence online" problem.
             | 
             | Almost everyone will just use their search engine to find
             | this page: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-
             | licenses/gpl-2.0.en.html
             | 
             | What can you do to serve the licence to those who can't or
             | won't do that (for whatever reason)? I think it is hard to
             | find something more universally accessible to serve that
             | edge case.
             | 
             | You describe your story of how sending a letter went to
             | you, and I admit it sounds like a bit of a pain. But you
             | managed to do it. And by the sound of it you were totally
             | novice at it. (didn't even bring your own pen!) Someone can
             | do the same thing you did anywhere from Nairobi, McMurdo,
             | Pyongyang, or Viganpetend.
             | 
             | It is not "universally accessible" in the "easy and
             | comfortable" sense. It is "universally accessible" in the
             | "almost anywhere where humans live you can access this
             | service" sense.
        
               | dheera wrote:
               | I mean, part of the problem is I didn't own a pen at the
               | time.
               | 
               | I have multiple computers and phones, I thought that was
               | the interface to the post-2000 world.
               | 
               | I _do_ have paint, but that 's a little clumsy.
               | 
               | I grudgingly own a box of BIC pens now, but ... It's like
               | requiring people to own a horse to do something these
               | days. And in past experience during school days, those
               | goddamn BIC pens all go bad (ink dries up or something),
               | before I use even 5% of one of them.
               | 
               | I realize this all probably sounds very silly to someone
               | born before 1980 but ... yeah it's just the reality of
               | the world, I don't normally need pens to do anything, and
               | am used to pens being provided in the rare occasions I
               | need to sign a receipt or something, and usually I just
               | end up drawing a cat on the signature line.
        
               | krisoft wrote:
               | Oh, i absolutely get you! Was not intending to pen-shame
               | you in any way. Just used it to illustrate that the
               | postal process worked (eventually, and with a lot of
               | inconvenience) even though you were not best prepared for
               | it.
               | 
               | But i have been exactly where you are. We were having a
               | book club and trying to vote on the next book to read,
               | and turns out none of us out of twenty literature loving
               | people had a single pen on us. So yeah, that is for sure
               | the current reality.
               | 
               | > usually I just end up drawing a cat on the signature
               | line.
               | 
               | Thats awesome! Do the they accept it usually?
        
               | dheera wrote:
               | Yes! I've never had an issue -- in the US at least,
               | signatures on receipts generally don't matter. Cat
               | sketches are usually fine.
               | 
               | The only place I've had it mattered is when signing bank
               | documents in Asia.
        
               | hermitdev wrote:
               | > I realize this all probably sounds very silly to
               | someone born before 1980
               | 
               | I was born after 1980 and I think you're beating a dead
               | horse, here. You're conflating accessibility with
               | convenience. Not just with this comment, but others
               | you've made in this thread.
               | 
               | > those goddamn BIC pens all go bad (ink dries up or
               | something), before I use even 5% of one of them.
               | 
               | Grab the pen by the end opposite the nib, give it a good
               | shake for a few seconds, lick the nib, scribble on a
               | scrap piece of paper until it starts writing again.
               | Problem solved. You can't resurrect a dead laptop or
               | computer by licking and shaking it (at least I've never
               | succeeded in doing so).
        
               | Octopodes wrote:
               | Bravo! I cannot tell if this is a satire of something.
               | Can some explain the joke, if any?
        
               | sokoloff wrote:
               | Your life sounds positively exhausting.
        
               | Symbiote wrote:
               | You are intentionally making things difficult when you
               | don't own a pen.
               | 
               | That's very much your problem, and the rest of the world
               | doesn't need to accommodate it.
        
               | dheera wrote:
               | When paper and pen was invented, I'm sure there was a
               | bearded caveman holding a fish who made a comment about
               | how it was someone's problem that they didn't have a tool
               | to carve stone tablets.
               | 
               | Paper is on its way out, electrons are the new medium.
        
             | ethbr1 wrote:
             | If you're talking about packages via USPS, you can use
             | print + pay & drop boxes for anything that fits.
             | 
             | https://www.usps.com/ship/online-shipping.htm
             | 
             | If you're talking about letters, the innumerable blue drop
             | boxes.
        
             | seabass-labrax wrote:
             | I find it hard to believe that waiting two hours is normal
             | for customers of the USPS. You can order stamps online,
             | they have (collection) postboxes and even offer a pick-up
             | service for parcels. At $0.73 to send a letter anywhere in
             | the USA, that sounds like a pretty impressive offering to
             | me.
        
               | dheera wrote:
               | It's lining up multiple times. When I walk in with a box,
               | I don't know how the hell to mail it, what to fill out,
               | what the pricing vs. delivery ETA grid is so I can decide
               | where I want to position myself on that curve, the
               | different forms you need to fill to be on different parts
               | of that curve.
               | 
               | I usually end up screwing it up a few times in the
               | process too. I didn't realize that the free boxes they
               | give you are only for 2 day service (and doesn't work for
               | 1 day or 3 day). 1 day is a different box, 3 day is
               | bring-your-own-box.
               | 
               | The pens they provide don't work, you have to line up to
               | get a pen. You have to line up to ask a question. The
               | workers are grumpy, the people in line are grumpy, I've
               | had the experience that sometimes nobody will let you cut
               | anything even if it's just for a pen or a piece of tape.
               | 
               | Oh and they charge you if you ask for more than about X
               | of tape. It's a tricky dance. I think X is about 20cm. If
               | you ask for 30cm, they will refuse even the 20cm and ask
               | you to buy 300cm, which entails getting in the 30 minute
               | line again (so the actual cost of the tape is 0.5 * your
               | hourly consulting rate, so if you're a software engineer
               | paid $100/hour of stocks and $100/hour of equity, that'll
               | be a $50 roll of tape plus $30 of stock assumimng Trump
               | just announced more tariffs). If you ask for 15cm, they
               | might give you 20cm for free. It's tricky. I wish there
               | were a sign that said "free tape: <=20cm" or whatever the
               | actual number is, in front of each employee's desk.
               | 
               | Which reminds me, the actual number also seems depends on
               | the mood of the USPS employee, so you also need to
               | carefully watch your position in line so that you try to
               | get yourself in front of the happiest employee. If the
               | grumpiest employee is almost done with their previous
               | customer, you have to fake needing to fix something
               | really quick and let someone ahead of you in the line so
               | that they get the grumpy one and you get the happy one.
               | Or you can try to estimate the processing time of the few
               | people ahead of you in line by eyeballing the complexity
               | of shipping whatever they are holding, and time your
               | place in line to be in front of the happiest employee
               | when it gets to you. That way you are more likely to get
               | more free tape to seal your box.
               | 
               | You also need to think about how to keep them happy. That
               | usually involves some small talk. More small talk gets
               | you more tape. Weather is a good safe topic on the east
               | coast, because you can commiserate the bad weather with
               | the USPS employee, but in California the weather is
               | always good, so it doesn't make for good small talk, and
               | the USPS employee might be at risk of going from happy to
               | grumpy because they'd rather be outside.
        
               | mvdtnz wrote:
               | > I find it hard to believe that waiting two hours is
               | normal for customers of the USPS.
               | 
               | GP said postal services are "universally accessible". So
               | first, it doesn't matter is it's "normal", it matters if
               | it happens at all. And USPS does not represent postal
               | mail universally - I have never even seen a USPS building
               | in my life and don't expect to. Is postal mail as
               | universally accessible to a homeless man in Laos and a
               | 5-year-old kid in rural India? I think it's ludicrous to
               | claim that postal mail is "universally accessible" and
               | displays a huge Western bias.
        
           | samspot wrote:
           | A common mistake in accessibility is to assume accessibility
           | is mostly for users who are blind. I've rarely seen the
           | opposite approach, calling something accessible that is very
           | much not accessible to a person who is blind. A url is much
           | more accessible for many people with disabilities than the
           | postal mail.
           | 
           | Even if you mean access instead of accessibility, presumably
           | a person who can find a way to acquire stamps can just as
           | easily make it to a library with public computers.
        
             | ethbr1 wrote:
             | accessibility: the quality of being able to be entered or
             | used by everyone, including people who have a disability
        
           | xmprt wrote:
           | > Postal mail, for all its faults, is universally accessible
           | by design
           | 
           | I think it's important to note that this isn't actually true.
           | For a lot of homeless people or people who move often postal
           | mail isn't as good. Online communication is actually more
           | universal. Most (all?) public libraries have computers now.
        
             | Tijdreiziger wrote:
             | Not sure if this works in other countries, but here in the
             | Netherlands, homeless folks can get a postal address at
             | municipal offices. People who move can set up (albeit paid)
             | mail forwarding for up to a year.
             | 
             | Other than that, there's good old 'poste restante', in
             | which you can supposedly address mail to any post office
             | and they'll hold it for the recipient (even
             | internationally), although I've never tried this.
             | 
             | (I appreciate that not everyone may actually know about
             | these options, though.)
        
           | bigstrat2003 wrote:
           | Physical mail isn't difficult, even now, for anyone with a
           | modicum of competence. I can understand if someone hasn't
           | used physical mail before, but it's _very_ easy to look up
           | how to send a letter + buy envelopes and stamps. If someone
           | cannot do that without difficulty, they really need to work
           | on their basic life skills.
        
             | carstenhag wrote:
             | Buying a stamp in the home country is doable for most
             | people. But even then, imagine you are 20, how many mails
             | do you think will you have sent?
             | 
             | For a different country, I'd have no idea. Especially if
             | it's so far away like the USA and I can't locally get a
             | special reply post stamp. What I would have done is to put
             | in 5EUR in the envelope and call it a day. The person would
             | probably be happy seeing other money.
        
             | mvdtnz wrote:
             | His difficulty was finding postage stamps for the self-
             | addressed return envelope, and clearly the author is not
             | American. Do you think it would be quite so easy to "buy
             | envelopes and stamps" if you had to send a stamped return
             | envelope to Nepal or Manila? Is that a "basic life skill"
             | or would you have to do a little research to figure out
             | what you'd need?
        
               | Symbiote wrote:
               | He had difficulty writing an address on an envelope.
               | 
               | This skill is something we expect of 8 year old children.
        
         | ryandrake wrote:
         | > Not sure if it's being exaggerated for comedic purposes but
         | it is interesting to me how alien the act of sending a letter
         | by post is to the author.
         | 
         | It was pretty recognizable as trolling--the very good and
         | clever "old school Internet" style of trolling where it sounds
         | plausible and sincere, but then you get done reading it and
         | say, "Oh lawd, he got me! Good one!" The kind of writing that
         | people used to spend a lot of time perfecting on Slashdot. I
         | refuse to believe there are adults out there where things like
         | using a pen to write and mailing a letter are alien concepts
         | that need to be learned. It was very earnestly written though,
         | bravo!
        
           | petesergeant wrote:
           | > I refuse to believe there are adults out there where things
           | like using a pen to write and mailing a letter are alien
           | concepts that need to be learned.
           | 
           | Some adults were born in 2007
        
             | xmprt wrote:
             | Younger than Gmail, YouTube, and the iPhone.
        
               | layer8 wrote:
               | The iPhone is not yet 18.
        
             | bigstrat2003 wrote:
             | Anyone, even someone born in 2007, should know how to use
             | pen and paper. This is a basic component of being an
             | educated person, not knowing how to do that is as shocking
             | as being illiterate.
        
           | bongodongobob wrote:
           | > I refuse to believe there are adults out there where things
           | like using a pen to write and mailing a letter are alien
           | concepts that need to be learned.
           | 
           | Well, believe it. I'm in my 40s and haven't written a letter
           | since I was a kid. Why would I ever have to? Ask someone who
           | was born in 2003 if they've ever written and mailed a letter.
           | 99% are going to say no.
        
             | programjames wrote:
             | As someone born in 2003, I did this just last week when
             | filing my tax returns.
        
               | Suppafly wrote:
               | >As someone born in 2003, I did this just last week when
               | filing my tax returns.
               | 
               | Why didn't you efile like a normal person? The only time
               | you need to do it the hard way is if you are under 16 and
               | filing for the first time.
        
               | tart-lemonade wrote:
               | I had to file by mail because I moved to a new state and
               | got 2 W-2s for the same job, of which the W-2 for the
               | former state left the federal fields (1-13) blank. This
               | weird W-2 apparently makes me ineligible for e-file.
               | 
               | Edit: In hindsight, I could have just waited until the
               | start of 2025 to update my address in the HR system and
               | gotten a single, normal W-2, but then I would be both
               | violating the remote work rules (by not adding my new
               | work location) and (probably) committing tax fraud.
        
               | pbhjpbhj wrote:
               | You file tax returns by post? What country? Do they
               | charge you extra to submit by post?
               | 
               | That's crazy to me - tax returns for our micro-business
               | and personal tax has been online since at least 2005.
        
               | yyhhsj0521 wrote:
               | I had to file my tax by postal mail in the US. Granted
               | there is the option to file online, but that only works
               | for ~80% of the people when things are completely within
               | the intended domain. I have just one extra item outside
               | of standard salary slips and some investment income, so I
               | had to file physically.
        
               | ndiddy wrote:
               | For federal returns, there's a site called Free File
               | Fillable Forms, which has digitized versions of all the
               | tax forms. Unlike the normal IRS Free File program,
               | there's no restriction on income. If you're comfortable
               | filing paper tax returns, this is the exact same process
               | except the returns are digital and sent over the
               | internet. For state returns, the process depends on your
               | state but everywhere I've lived has a free site that you
               | can use to file your state return.
        
               | coldpie wrote:
               | In my state (Minnesota), there is no free online filing
               | for state income tax. You either pay for one of the
               | online filing softwares, or print the sucker out and mail
               | it in. I choose the latter :)
        
               | bongodongobob wrote:
               | Most people do it digitally or have an accountant do it,
               | this isn't the norm.
        
             | tart-lemonade wrote:
             | Do you not send thank you cards for birthday and holiday
             | gifts?
        
               | singingboyo wrote:
               | Physical thank you cards are pretty dead. I don't even
               | keep track of mailing addresses for a number of my
               | friends (and a couple siblings, come to think of it) -
               | how would I send them a physical card?
               | 
               | Even older relatives - we sent a physical gift a bit ago,
               | but the response/thanks was by text. It just doesn't make
               | sense to send a letter, have it take a week, never know
               | whether it got lost, etc.
        
               | layer8 wrote:
               | In Europe where I live sending birthday letters and the
               | like to relatives is still a standard practice, at least
               | in my social environment.
        
               | bongodongobob wrote:
               | No. In person, text, or phone call.
        
               | Macha wrote:
               | The only people I know of that do this are over 60.
        
             | SoftTalker wrote:
             | I just sent in my taxes by USPS mail a couple of weeks ago.
             | Long after online payments were available, I would pay my
             | monthly bills by writing checks and sending them in the
             | mail, as that process actually took me less time than
             | logging in to five or six different websites and navigating
             | through their online payment flows.
        
               | bongodongobob wrote:
               | That's very uncommon. All my bills are set to autopay on
               | my credit card. Who manually pays bills? You don't need
               | to click the buttons every month.
        
               | SpaceNoodled wrote:
               | I click them manually every month. It's kind of a
               | holdover from when I needed to time things in order to
               | keep my checking account in the black, but I kept the
               | process as it helps me keep track of my bills and catch
               | any errors or discrepancies, which does happen.
               | 
               | It certainly takes less time than writing a check and
               | stuffing an envelope, though, what with saved credentials
               | and smartphones; I can do this in a matter of moments
               | while lying in bed every other Friday morning.
        
               | SoftTalker wrote:
               | Payment to a credit card often involves extra fees. And I
               | don't want to give them autopay access to my checking
               | account.
        
             | SpaceNoodled wrote:
             | There's a difference between writing a letter longhand, and
             | simply _knowing how to use a pen._
        
           | dheera wrote:
           | Once I had to send an international RMA that they wouldn't
           | pay for the shipping. It went something like this:
           | 
           | 0. Went to Fedex to check on the shipping cost for this tiny
           | box. It was $120 so I passed
           | 
           | 1. Went to USPS, found that they were closed, the only option
           | was a 30 minute line to use the machine. Lined up for 30
           | minutes, found that it the goddamn UI on the machine did not
           | support international shipments.
           | 
           | 2. Went home to generate a USPS international shipping label.
           | $25, much more acceptable. FedEx should be out of business.
           | 
           | 3. I didn't have a 2D printer at home, tried to 3D print the
           | shipping label with 1 layer of white and 1 layer of black but
           | it wasn't high resolution enough in the X/Y direction for the
           | label to be readable so I gave up
           | 
           | 4. Went to FedEx to use their 2D printers but realized I
           | forgot my USB drive at home
           | 
           | 5. Went home to get my USB drive
           | 
           | 6. Back to FedEx, realized I forgot my mask (this was COVID
           | times, so no go)
           | 
           | 7. Went home to get my mask
           | 
           | 8. Back to FedEx, printed the 2D shipping label
           | 
           | 9. Back to USPS, found out they had no tape
           | 
           | 10. Back to FedEx to buy a roll of tape because I don't know
           | where the hell else to buy tape same day, and all my tape at
           | home are electrical tape, teflon tape, or Gorilla tape
           | 
           | 11. Back to USPS and the stupid package drop box had a
           | mechanical issue preventing it from opening more than a few
           | cm, not enough to fit my package
           | 
           | 12. Went to another USPS to drop the package
        
             | processunknown wrote:
             | > 3. I didn't have a 2D printer at home, tried to 3D print
             | the shipping label
             | 
             | This sentence really captures the absurdity of this story.
        
               | genewitch wrote:
               | Could have 3D printed a pen holder for the 3D printer and
               | then used the 3D printer as a plotter to write the
               | address on a sticker or the envelope itself.
               | 
               | Right?
        
             | Suppafly wrote:
             | >12. Went to another USPS to drop the package
             | 
             | You have a USPS drop box for tiny boxes in front of your
             | house.
        
               | dheera wrote:
               | > house
               | 
               | I can't afford a house ($2M+ where I live), so I don't
               | have one of those mailboxes. My apartment complex doesn't
               | have a visible USPS pickup anywhere that I know of.
               | 
               | If you meant those inverted U shaped things that look
               | like they are from WW2 (maybe WW1?), I forgot about
               | those, but somehow I never know how frequently they are
               | checked ... there is no indicator about when they were
               | last opened and I wonder whether the mailman might just
               | forget about a couple of them in odd parts of town, which
               | is why I always feel more "secure" dropping it at a USPS.
               | 
               | I was once walking down the street when I saw a
               | presumably-GenZ person who thought they were a trash can
               | and casually dumped trash in it so there's also that
               | concern, if everyone is using them as trash cans now ...
        
               | Spooky23 wrote:
               | Most are picked up daily at a scheduled time.
        
               | Suppafly wrote:
               | >My apartment complex doesn't have a visible USPS pickup
               | anywhere that I know of.
               | 
               | They usually a slot or little door for outgoing letters,
               | if your package was larger than that, sometimes you can
               | leave them at the 'office' of your complex if they have
               | one. But yeah, in your case, going to an actual post
               | office might have been the solution if you don't trust
               | the street mailboxes.
        
               | SpaceNoodled wrote:
               | I do? Where?
        
               | retrac wrote:
               | Mailboxes are bidirectional. If there is outgoing mail in
               | the mailbox your postal worker will take it to the post
               | office. That is what the flag is for. Not sure how well
               | this is adhered to anymore, to be fair. I could be out of
               | date.
        
               | Rebelgecko wrote:
               | Not sure about OP but it's become more common in certain
               | areas of the US to not have mailboxes in front of each
               | house. But usually there's a shared bank of mailboxes
               | within a mile so with the ability to drop off outgoing
        
             | ac29 wrote:
             | > FedEx should be out of business.
             | 
             | Those crazy retail rates exist so businesses can get big
             | discounts. The company I work with ships maybe half a dozen
             | packages international with FedEx a year and they still
             | give us like 60-70% off retail.
        
         | SpaceNoodled wrote:
         | I think the strangest part is that it had been years since they
         | had used a _pen._
        
           | immibis wrote:
           | Keeping a pad of paper at your computer is one of those
           | underrated things. You'd think the computer can record
           | information just like the paper, and it can, but psychology
           | is weird.
        
             | SpaceNoodled wrote:
             | Agreed. Grabbing a pen and a post-it is faster for me than
             | opening a text document, and a pad of paper allows me to
             | format and diagram things freely.
             | 
             | The post-its can be sorted, stacked, moved, stuck to
             | pertinent notebook pages, altered, and ultimately recycled
             | when they are no longer relevant. It's much freer than a
             | document on a phone or computer, where it can still be a
             | pain to move information from one domain to another.
        
         | kccqzy wrote:
         | I don't send letters by post but I often need to send packages
         | by post. Perhaps it's returning some merchandise where the
         | merchant didn't have free shipping. Perhaps it's shipping a
         | security key to a close friend so I can have offsite backup of
         | a key. When I moved, I got rid of my book collection by asking
         | friends which books they wanted and I shipped it to them (media
         | mail is cheap).
         | 
         | It's efficient to transmit information over the internet, but
         | it's still essential to send physical items by post. When I
         | visit USPS branches, I always see plenty of people mailing
         | packages.
        
         | Scoundreller wrote:
         | > Writing the address on the envelope was awkward, as I haven't
         | used a pen in several years; it took a few attempts and some
         | wasted envelopes, printing the address would have taken less
         | time.
         | 
         | Sometimes I cut out my address from a bill and tape that on as
         | my return address. I know it's formatted right.
         | 
         | I'd definitely do the same on a "self"-addressed stamped
         | envelope that I need returned.
        
         | globular-toast wrote:
         | As far as I know there are still some things you have to post
         | in the UK, like sending your cut up old driver's licence to the
         | DVLA and maybe you still have to post your V5 when you sell a
         | car. OP might not own a car or drive, though, so who knows?
        
       | diggan wrote:
       | > The first thing that came to attention, the paper that the text
       | was printed on wasn't an A4, it was smaller and not a size I was
       | familiar with. I measured it and found that it's a US letter size
       | paper at about 21.5cm x 27.9cm. I completely forgot that the US,
       | Canada, and a few other countries don't follow the standard
       | international paper sizes, even though I had written about it
       | earlier.
       | 
       | I guess I shouldn't be surprised that the US and some other
       | countries decided to do things differently... As a European, I
       | don't think I've ever seen something not A4 or A3/A4 in a
       | professional context in my life, ever. Are US letter sizes what
       | people use instead of A4 in a workplace for documents and such
       | (seems confusing if so), and do printers sold in the US default
       | to US letter sizes when printing? Or just happens to be something
       | FSF only seem to be doing?
        
         | robin_reala wrote:
         | It's US standard. Hence the infamous default PC LOAD LETTER
         | message on HP printers that made zero sense to anyone outside
         | the US: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PC_LOAD_LETTER
        
           | bombcar wrote:
           | PC isn't Personal Computer, it's Paper Cartridge.
           | 
           | That's the missing link for Americans.
        
           | crazygringo wrote:
           | That's implying it made sense to people _in_ the US...
        
         | bayindirh wrote:
         | > do printers sold in the US default to US letter sizes when
         | printing? Or just happens to be something FSF only seem to be
         | doing?
         | 
         | Yes, the default printing paper for US is US Letter. I prefer
         | to use my computers with US English language, and macOS
         | defaults to US Letter as print and page size when you use US
         | English as the default language.
         | 
         | Moreover, I had a ream of US Letter paper in the past, given me
         | by our neighbor (I live in a A4 country, so it's that "odd"
         | size).
        
         | jodaco wrote:
         | It's a US thing and most printers in the US default to it. You
         | would be hard pressed to find someone who knows what A4 is.
         | 
         | Letter size is 8-1/2 x 11 inches by US standards.
        
           | bombcar wrote:
           | I've found that many Americans know what A4 is - that "weird
           | European size that doesn't print right".
        
         | remram wrote:
         | Yes all paper is usually letter. It's close to A4, so you don't
         | usually need to reformat documents to print on one or the
         | other. Most printers take A4 and US letter and adapt
         | automatically.
         | 
         | A4 is readily available in the US but not commonly used.
         | 
         | The main problem is that if you cut it in half, you get a
         | really silly sizes (too narrow) instead of A5.
        
           | sgarland wrote:
           | > Most printers take A4 and US letter and adapt automatically
           | 
           | I found out that they do not automatically adapt to JIS
           | sizes. My wife's work once had a printer that somehow got
           | configured to use JIS, I assume JB5. It then refused to print
           | on US Letter, but as printers are wont to do, didn't produce
           | any useful error message, nor relay this information to the
           | computer. It just wouldn't print. I only discovered this
           | (because if you work in tech, you must know how to fix
           | printers, right?) by laboriously scrolling through every menu
           | on the tiny LCD screen, and finding that the paper settings
           | were incorrect.
        
             | frutiger wrote:
             | > if you work in tech, you must know how to fix printers,
             | right?
             | 
             | You kid, but it turns out the assumption was correct in
             | this case. I suppose the truth is that by working in tech,
             | you are likely very methodical and rely on deduction, which
             | are both essential in fixing printer issues.
        
               | sgarland wrote:
               | Yes, but that's the annoying part. So many tech problems
               | that people encounter can be trivially solved with a
               | quick web search, poking at menus until you find
               | something promising, or a combination thereof. I remember
               | helping my mom over the phone to troubleshoot something
               | on her iPhone - at the time, I had an Android, so
               | everything was foreign to me, but I was able to deduce
               | where a given setting _might_ exist, and figured out
               | whatever the problem was.
               | 
               | I don't know when or why this skill declined, but it's
               | upsetting.
        
         | jccalhoun wrote:
         | Yes, in the USA letter size is the standard. A3,4 don't exist.
         | It isn't confusing because I would guess that more than half of
         | all people in the USA don't even know that letter size isn't
         | the standard everywhere. I was probably in my late 20s before I
         | found out that Europe doesn't use the same size paper as we in
         | the USA do. I can remember exactly once that I encountered it
         | in the wild (I was at a conference and someone from Europe had
         | some handouts).
        
           | jillyboel wrote:
           | Rest of the world, not just europe. You're the weird one here
           | (as usual).
        
             | umanwizard wrote:
             | No, letter is used throughout North America and in parts of
             | South America.
        
               | jillyboel wrote:
               | Yeah, just you weirdos: https://www.reddit.com/r/MapPorn/
               | comments/19dswr4/standards_...
        
               | rafram wrote:
               | It really isn't such a big deal. Switching to A4 would
               | mean replacing every single binder, folio, cover, and
               | clip in the country, and for what? A slightly taller
               | sheet of paper? US printers can already print A4 if
               | necessary without any issue.
        
               | pasc1878 wrote:
               | I think the UK has done that - I have foolscap and letter
               | folder from the 70s. And no we did not replace every
               | binder, folio etc.
               | 
               | We just bought new ones when needed.
        
               | jillyboel wrote:
               | "Switching" to A4 won't force you to reprint every
               | document you've ever printed in the past. It will require
               | you to acknowledge that America does not, in fact, know
               | best. And as recent developments have shown this is
               | apparently an impossible ask.
        
               | rafram wrote:
               | This is just obnoxious. If you really do live in a much,
               | much better country, then why don't you get offline and
               | enjoy it instead of spending your time trying to convince
               | Americans that theirs is so much worse?
        
           | bombcar wrote:
           | The European sizes exist in the USA if you want them, you
           | just have to order them from a print shop or supplier.
           | 
           | Or you can get whatever you want - I wanted B4 paper to print
           | a booklet (or B3 maybe) and I just bought a ream that was
           | larger and had a print shop slice it down to B4. My US laser
           | printer was fine printing onto B4.
        
         | sgarland wrote:
         | Oh no, it's worse.
         | 
         | 8.5 x 11" is US Letter, or 215.9 x 279.4 mm. We also have US
         | Legal, which as the name implies, is frequently used by legal
         | professions. I have no idea why. It is 8.5 x 14", or 215.9 x
         | 355.6 mm. Finally, we have US Tabloid (I guess used for small
         | newspapers?), which is 11 x 17", or 279.4 x 431.8 mm.
         | 
         | And yes, our printers default to US Letter. The line from the
         | movie Office Space: "PC Load Letter? WTF does that mean?" is
         | the printer's cryptic way of saying "Load Letter-sized paper
         | into the Paper Cassette."
         | 
         | EDIT: there are are apparently more US-specific sizes I was
         | unaware of, which you can view and compare with others on this
         | site: https://papersizes.io/us/
        
         | dsr_ wrote:
         | Nearly everything in the US uses letter, legal (letter but
         | longer), or tabloid (double width letter, to be folded over).
         | 
         | Much to my surprise, a random check of a US-based office supply
         | company shows that they do have A4 in stock -- at a price about
         | 40% higher than letter-sized.
        
           | kstrauser wrote:
           | And by "nearly everything", I've never personally seen or
           | used printer or copier paper that wasn't letter or legal. I
           | know it exists, but I've never, not once, bought or used it.
        
           | kevin_thibedeau wrote:
           | I used to work at Kodak and they had an industrial printer
           | division in my building. They would go through pallet-fulls
           | of A4 for their testing. Only place Ive seen it in use in a
           | business setting in the US.
        
           | owl57 wrote:
           | > legal (letter but longer)
           | 
           | This one surprised me quite a bit. I think most people have
           | A4/letter-sized folders. Why does anyone think that papers
           | slightly longer than those folders are a good idea?
        
             | bombcar wrote:
             | Legal size folders exist and are widely used by people who
             | use ... legal size paper.
             | 
             | Legal folders can be great to be able to print letter-sized
             | things on, then you have an area at the bottom to write
             | notes and stuff.
        
               | cannam wrote:
               | I'm just about old enough to remember (in the UK)
               | foolscap paper, an imperial size also a bit longer than
               | A4. You never see it any more (at least I don't) but
               | foolscap sized box-files are still readily available. I
               | guess a slightly bigger box than you need is not usually
               | a problem.
        
               | bombcar wrote:
               | Foolscap is just half an inch below legal - and I bet
               | having a box a bit larger than what you're putting in is
               | a selling point, not a hindrance.
        
               | alexjm wrote:
               | Many filing cabinets in the US are also sized so you can
               | put letter sized folders in one way, or rotate the
               | folders 90 degrees and legal sized folders will fit
               | correctly.
        
           | codazoda wrote:
           | Don't forget my favorite size, "statement". This is half of
           | letter size. Sometimes used for small statements, sometimes
           | used as letter folded.
           | 
           | Hacker News users may be familiar with Julia Evans
           | (http://jvns.ca) who creates technology zines that work in
           | both A4 and Letter sizes, folded in half.
        
         | rietta wrote:
         | It's the standard here in the USA. The other standard is the US
         | Legal at 8.5 inches by 14 inches (216 mm by 356 mm). This is
         | what is used in court settings (hence the name) but also things
         | like paper mortgage statements will typically come printed on
         | that. That is much similar to your A4 size.
         | 
         | I am familiar with A4, A5 and such. But I think that fewer and
         | fewer people are. It's just not something used every day.
         | 
         | As a side note, most of the big important house bills and
         | statements I still insist on receiving via US mail for
         | protection reasons. There is a risk if I only had them emailed
         | to me that my wife would not have access. If I were to suddenly
         | die, I don't want my wife with our kids to miss a critical
         | bill. By having them show up at the house in physical form
         | provides a bit of defense in depth here.
        
         | gnfargbl wrote:
         | There's a map of ANSI vs ISO paper size usage around the world
         | which crops up on Reddit occasionally:
         | https://reddit.com/r/MapPorn/comments/19dswr4
         | 
         | I can guess why the Philippines uses ANSI sizes. But Chile?
        
         | sanderjd wrote:
         | How is this "confusing"? I don't think I've ever thought about
         | paper size a single time in my life.
        
           | int_19h wrote:
           | I think GP is referring to the name - "letter" implies that
           | it's the standard paper size used for writing letters
           | specifically, as opposed to printed documents (of course, in
           | US it's really both).
        
             | twoodfin wrote:
             | I'd guess that nomenclature originates in the world where
             | every small US Main Street had a stationary store carrying
             | all manner of paper sizes and stocks for diverse purposes--
             | none of which involved use in anything more sophisticated
             | than a typewriter.
             | 
             | One particular "standard" that sticks out in my memory was
             | "math paper", which I recall as being unbleached, about 5"
             | x 8", and used pervasively in primary education (at least
             | in New England) into the 1990's.
        
             | sanderjd wrote:
             | Oh... I don't really see why "letter" is a more confusing
             | way to describe a paper size than "A4"...
             | 
             | My general point is just that I'm surprised so many people
             | seem to notice and care about paper size in general. I've
             | just never thought about this at all.
        
               | int_19h wrote:
               | Well, "A4" doesn't imply anything about the intended use.
               | The format of the name also implies that there is A3, A5
               | etc, both of which aren't all that uncommon either.
               | 
               | But, yes, for most people it doesn't really matter - you
               | go to the store, you buy paper, you shove it into your
               | printer, and it mostly just works. However, it's also not
               | all that hard to run into situations where things break.
               | E.g. most PDFs originating from US are rendered for
               | Letter size paper, which means that printing them outside
               | of US generally requires setting "fit size" rather than
               | "original" to ensure that nothing gets clipped. Vice
               | versa also happens, but because US is so culturally
               | dominant, Americans rarely run into that particular
               | issue.
        
         | int_19h wrote:
         | Like most other weird things in US that pertain to measurements
         | and units thereof, letter-sized paper predates the A-series
         | standard (which originated in Germany). FWIW the latter didn't
         | became an ISO standard until late 20th century.
         | 
         | Americans are just very obstinate about those things. It's like
         | the Windows of metrology - backwards compatibility trumps
         | everything else, even when you have utterly bonkers things like
         | ounces vs fluid ounces.
        
           | umanwizard wrote:
           | We are not particularly obstinate, we just have no strong
           | reason to change. Metric is already used in areas where it
           | actually matters (e.g. STEM)
        
             | eadmund wrote:
             | > Metric is already used in areas where it actually matters
             | (e.g. STEM)
             | 
             | Using French Revolutionary units doesn't really matter in
             | STEM, either: one can conduct science just as well in any
             | units one wishes. One unit of measure is not more
             | scientific than another. For example, degrees Kelvin and
             | Rankine measure the same thing with different units. If
             | anything, the Rankine degrees are more precise!
        
               | pasc1878 wrote:
               | However the abbreviation is STEM. For S and especiually M
               | you can do in different units.
               | 
               | For T&E it really matters see NASA's Mars Climate Orbiter
               | and the need for heroics in the Gimli glider.
               | 
               | You need to keep to the same unit.
        
               | eadmund wrote:
               | > For T&E it really matters see NASA's Mars Climate
               | Orbiter and the need for heroics in the Gimli glider.
               | 
               | > You need to keep to the same unit.
               | 
               | Completely agreed. You'll get similar issues if you have
               | one set of parts using m/s and others using km/hr.
               | 
               | And you'll avoid those issues with any standard, whether
               | it's m/s, knots or mph. The important thing is to have a
               | standard.
        
               | tialaramex wrote:
               | You shouldn't use degrees for Kelvin, it's an absolute
               | unit, the degrees are needed for the relative units like
               | Celsius.
               | 
               | Anyway, the French system isn't what people mean by
               | "metric" in this context, they mean the SI system of
               | units, and so in practice it's not so much that it
               | wouldn't matter which you choose as that you don't have
               | any option except SI.
               | 
               | If you wanted an independent system of units you'd need
               | to do a lot of expensive metrication, and in practice
               | Americans are too cheap for that, so the US "customary"
               | units are just aliases for so-and-so-much amount of some
               | SI unit, they aren't actually independent at all.
               | 
               | The reason people focus on metric is that for everyday
               | people that's the part which jumps out as more intuitive.
               | All these nice powers of 10, very tidy.
        
           | HideousKojima wrote:
           | >Americans are just very obstinate about those things.
           | 
           | It's not just obstinance, switching everything to metric in
           | the US would likely cost billions (if not trillions) of
           | dollars. And other countries that have made the switch have
           | often ended up with weird Frankensystems of measurement, like
           | the UK where they mix metric and imperial all the time (plus
           | the weird UK-specific measurements they have like "stone",
           | which is based on the pound).
        
             | andyferris wrote:
             | Other countries switched. Short term pain for long term
             | gain.
        
               | HideousKojima wrote:
               | >Other countries switched.
               | 
               | Except they didn't actually, see my points about the UK
               | (similar points apply to Canada).
        
               | KolmogorovComp wrote:
               | Other countries than the UK and Canada exist.
        
               | coldpie wrote:
               | The trouble is there is just very little gain. It really
               | just doesn't matter. All the systems are fine, they all
               | work. If you come live here, you'll adjust after 2 years.
               | If I moved to Europe, I would adjust in 2 years. Once in
               | a blue moon you have to bother with converting units but
               | _c 'est la vie_. There's bigger things to worry about.
        
               | int_19h wrote:
               | I've been living in US for 15 years now and I still can't
               | remember which unit scales are factor-of-3 and which ones
               | are factor-of-4. How many cups are there in a gallon? How
               | many yards in a mile? I don't want to waste my brain
               | cells on stuff like this, yet it comes up all the time in
               | e.g. cooking, or using maps for navigation.
        
               | coldpie wrote:
               | Yeah, every system has pros & cons. I think the lack of
               | an approximately-one-foot (30 cm) unit in metric is
               | clumsy to work around, and I think degrees-C are too
               | wide. We can argue about the details if you find it fun
               | ("yards in a mile" does not come up all the time), but
               | they're all evolved from hundreds of years of usage, and
               | that means they all work fine at the end of the day.
        
               | int_19h wrote:
               | > I think the lack of an approximately-one-foot (30 cm)
               | unit in metric is clumsy to work around
               | 
               | What's clumsy about 30cm though? If you are working at
               | scales where this level of precision is needed, you can
               | just use cm throughout, and the beauty of metric is that
               | even someone who has never had to do that before will
               | know immediately how much it is because conversion to
               | meters (or millimeters, or whatever the primary unit is
               | in _their_ usual applications) is so easy.
               | 
               | Similarly, I've heard similar sentiments expressed about
               | lack of pound equivalent in metric. But in practice we
               | just say "500 grams" etc (and for bonus points you get
               | 400 grams, 300 grams etc).
               | 
               | Miles and yards are both used as units of distance, so
               | conversion is obviously relevant. The only reason why
               | "yards in a mile" doesn't come up all the time is because
               | Americans work around it by subconsciously (?) avoiding
               | any such cases where the conversion is non-trivial. E.g.
               | a road sign in Europe might say "400 m", whereas in US a
               | similar one will be "1/4 miles".
               | 
               | And "evolved from hundreds years of usage" generally
               | means a lack of internal consistency, because most units
               | originated a long time ago as a way to measure something
               | very specific - in many cases, something completely
               | irrelevant to most people using those units today. Nor
               | did those units remain consistent through history - just
               | look at how many definitions ounce has in US in different
               | contexts, all of them historical! Or regular vs nautical
               | vs survey mile. Even just cleaning up that mess would be
               | a massive improvement.
        
               | coldpie wrote:
               | > would be a massive improvement
               | 
               | This is where we disagree. It would be a small
               | improvement at best. Most of what you're pointing out are
               | the awkward corner cases that just don't come up or, like
               | you said, we already have other solutions for. Outside of
               | some specialties, pretty much no one needs to know how
               | many cups are in a gallon or yards in a mile or what a
               | nautical mile is. I don't know those things, and I
               | somehow get by OK.
        
               | bigstrat2003 wrote:
               | Two cups to a pint, two pints to a quart, four quarts to
               | a gallon. That makes sixteen cups to a gallon. There are
               | 5280 feet in a mile, and three feet to a yard, so that
               | makes 1760 yards to a mile (if I did the math correctly
               | in my head just now).
               | 
               | These are conversions I know off the top of my head, I
               | didn't need to look them up. Which is the point the GP
               | was making: it's not hard to memorize the handful of
               | conversions you will encounter in everyday life. Most
               | people living here did it as children and have never had
               | to think about it since. That's why there's no actual
               | gain for us to switch to metric units. On the other hand
               | there would be quite a bit of pain as everyone had to
               | adjust to estimating things in kilos vs pounds, grams vs
               | cups (in recipes), and so on. So for the typical
               | American, it is actually a net negative for the country
               | to switch to the metric system. It isn't just
               | stubbornness.
        
             | thesuitonym wrote:
             | Also, switching everything to metric is just not necessary.
             | We already use the metric system all the time. We also use
             | imperial.
        
               | int_19h wrote:
               | Yes, so you have all the disadvantages and none of the
               | advantages.
               | 
               | And sure, of course metric isn't _necessary_. You can
               | also write all software in COBOL and PL /I. But over the
               | long term, the convenience of having a self-consistent
               | system based on a few simple principles rather than
               | historical precedent adds up.
        
             | graemep wrote:
             | It is a weird mix in the UK, distances are measured in
             | miles, and speed limits are set in miles per hour, but fuel
             | is sold in litres, for example.
             | 
             | People get very worked up about it too. People got very
             | worked up about a government proposal to allow people to
             | put imperial units on food in larger type than metric (at
             | the moment it has to be metric larger - or at least the
             | same size).
             | 
             | Everything in engineering and science has been entirely
             | metric since the 80s.
        
               | mrob wrote:
               | Distances in the UK are measured in miles and yards (or
               | fractions of a mile). Google Maps gets this wrong and
               | uses miles and feet. I don't think many people in the UK
               | have a good intuition for how far 500ft is.
        
               | int_19h wrote:
               | The whole yard vs feet thing is especially weird. Indeed,
               | in US as well, feet are normally used to measure sizes -
               | at scales where it's reasonable - while yards are
               | normally used to measure distances. Even though the two
               | units are in the same ballpark / order of magnitude. And
               | yes, as you rightly point out, it means that few people
               | can estimate distances in feet.
               | 
               | OTOH on road sings, US at least seems to be using miles
               | alone consistently, so you end up with labels like "1 3/4
               | miles" every now and then, which I find to be difficult
               | to parse quickly.
        
               | graemep wrote:
               | TomTom Amigo uses miles and yards. I think OSMAnd does
               | too.
               | 
               | I tend to think in metres at that scale but a yard is
               | near enough.
        
               | tialaramex wrote:
               | Only _road_ distances for _cars_ are in miles and yards.
               | The British railways continue to use chains (which are
               | not used for any other ordinary activity) and non-road
               | traffic is often in metres or kilometres as appropriate.
               | 
               | Some of those "Metric martyr" types, the kind of people
               | who think anything which changed after they were 35 is an
               | abomination, but somehow anything which changed ten years
               | before they were born has never been any other way, will
               | vandalize legal stuff which uses (in their opinion) the
               | wrong units. So if you put a (legal and reasonable) 1.5km
               | distance sign on a cycle route, but some car driver who
               | thinks sane units are fascism sees it, they might smash
               | it to pieces which is annoying.
               | 
               | There has been a very gradual lean towards sanity, after
               | all my mother was taught decimal currency because it was
               | _forthcoming_ when she was at school, her parents had
               | used a non-decimal currency system. When I was a teenager
               | I still had coins which, though they were treated as
               | their modern decimal value, if you read their faces had a
               | non-decimal value printed on them, because it 's too
               | expensive to replace the currency when you switch.
               | 
               | When I was a child I would buy a quarter pound of sweets.
               | At the turn of the century I'd ask for, and receive, 100
               | grams or 200 grams as I felt, but most customers would
               | use pounds (although legally they'd be served in grams).
               | These days everybody else would likely also ask in grams.
               | So it's changing, it's just very slow.
        
             | mikeocool wrote:
             | Interestingly, it's actually codified in US law that the
             | metric system is the "preferred system of weights and
             | measures for United States trade and commerce" -- however
             | it wasn't a mandatory change so most industries didn't make
             | the change, nor did the government.
             | 
             | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metrication_in_the_United_Sta
             | t...
        
             | int_19h wrote:
             | Every single country in the world that is on metric today
             | had to switch from something else at some point in the
             | past. Why overfocus so much on UK when you have literally a
             | hundred successful examples?
             | 
             | One does have to wonder what it is about Anglo countries
             | specifically that makes it so difficult for them, though.
             | Well, Canada at least has the excuse of being next door to
             | US, with the resulting economic effects. For UK I'm pretty
             | sure it's just about not being like "the Continent" at this
             | point.
        
               | HideousKojima wrote:
               | >Every single country in the world that is on metric
               | today had to switch from something else at some point in
               | the past. Why overfocus so much on UK when you have
               | literally a hundred successful examples?
               | 
               | A huge percentage of those countries didn't have
               | established industrial bases, infrastructure, etc. And
               | also no educated general populace that needed
               | reeducating. And often those countries were effectively
               | forced into adopting metric through colonization and/or
               | invasion.
        
             | pasc1878 wrote:
             | For the UK in practice it is only distance measurements
             | that are non metric now. For some things like small liquid
             | amounts we colloquially use imperial - pints - which differ
             | from US pints. I think the actual official volume is the
             | metric it is just you could say slang that keeps to pints.
             | 
             | Anything to do with STEM is metric.
        
               | tialaramex wrote:
               | If you buy beer "loose" like at a bar it has to be sold
               | in pints. Most people will have seen a "half" and anybody
               | who likes stronger beers or goes to festivals where you
               | taste different ones will know a "third" of a pint is
               | also a legal amount of beer to sell. You would not want
               | to try out a few different 8% stouts if they were sold
               | only in whole pints, unless they're going to make it a
               | multi-day event and provide somewhere for you to sleep it
               | off.
               | 
               | Milk is also allowed to be sold in pints, traditionally
               | glass bottle re-usable milk bottles were one pint.
               | 
               | It is also usual (but not legal) to sell a pint or a half
               | of various soft drinks, in theory you should be sold
               | these in some other way, I always say "large" or "small"
               | but in practice ordinary people say "pint" and after all
               | the staff will probably more or less fill a pint glass
               | so, whatever.
               | 
               | Spirits (e.g. gin) are measured in either 25ml or 35ml
               | shots. An establishment can choose either, post which one
               | they picked and use that consistently. Why two seemingly
               | unrelated sizes? Well, historically there were two
               | different non-metric sizes permitted in law, and when the
               | government legislated to make these SI units there were
               | lobbyists demanding they allow this to continue despite
               | the opportunity to rationalize.
               | 
               | As in the US, containers you purchase in a store are
               | labelled, but here the labels must prominently show SI
               | volume units and EU-style value metrics are required on
               | shelf markings, so e.g. 10p per 100ml of Coke is a good
               | price, maybe the Pepsi is on a deal for 9.5p per 100ml,
               | the store's terrible own brand is 5p per 100ml. This EU
               | strategy prevents people screwing with sizes to make you
               | think you're getting a better deal, that cheaper bottle
               | may look like a good idea but hey, it's 18p per 100ml,
               | ah, it's slimmer in the middle which makes it actually
               | much smaller than it looks.
        
             | ascorbic wrote:
             | The UK uses metric for almost everything. Miles/mph for
             | driving and pints in the pub are the only things that are
             | always non-metric. Human height and weight are the only
             | other thing that is often non-metric, and even then a lot
             | of people will know their weight in kg rather than stone.
        
         | umanwizard wrote:
         | > seems confusing if so
         | 
         | It is no more confusing to Americans than the fact that
         | Europeans use A4 is to Europeans. Why should it be? Just like
         | you didn't know standards other than A4 exist, Americans don't
         | think about the fact that standards other than 8.5x11 inches
         | (I.e. letter) exist. All printers, binders, folders, hole
         | punchers, etc. are made with letter size paper in mind, and
         | most people unless they are involved in business with other
         | countries have never encountered an A4 sheet of paper in their
         | lives and probably have no idea other standards exist.
        
           | diggan wrote:
           | > It is no more confusing to Americans than the fact that
           | Europeans use A4 is to Europeans. Why should it be?
           | 
           | Well, A4 (and variants) are not Europe-specific formats, it's
           | the formats most of the world except some few countries
           | (including the US) use, so I'd say it's slightly more
           | surprising than the other way around.
        
             | umanwizard wrote:
             | Right, but why does that make letter size confusing?
             | 
             | Even if every other country in the world used A4, the only
             | people in the US who would even notice would be people who
             | commonly do business with other countries or who live near
             | the border. And in reality, Canada and Mexico also use
             | letter so the border thing doesn't apply.
             | 
             | So why should letter confuse us just because other people
             | use something else?
        
               | diggan wrote:
               | > Right, but why does that make letter size confusing?
               | 
               | That's the part I initially quoted; "the paper that the
               | text was printed on wasn't an A4, it was smaller and not
               | a size I was familiar with. I measured it and found that
               | it's a US letter size paper at about 21.5cm x 27.9cm"
               | 
               | The author isn't from North America, so they had
               | forgotten the format was different, so they got confused
               | when they assumed it would have been A4 like the rest of
               | the world, but it wasn't.
               | 
               | > the only people in the US who would even notice would
               | be people who commonly do business with other countries
               | or who live near the border
               | 
               | Or, as in the case of the author, they live outside of
               | North American and send/receive letters to/from North
               | America.
        
           | echoangle wrote:
           | A4 isn't some random format, you can derive it with three
           | pieces of information:
           | 
           | A0 is 1 square meter
           | 
           | An to An+1 means cutting the paper along the middle of the
           | longer edge
           | 
           | Each An has the same aspect ratio
           | 
           | Those are pretty useful properties and precisely define the
           | dimensions of A4.
        
             | ElevenLathe wrote:
             | Why is this useful if you want to write a letter?
        
               | echoangle wrote:
               | For a normal letter, it probably doesn't matter. But it's
               | useful in general and doesn't make it worse for writing
               | letters, so it's still better to use than a specific
               | letter format with worse properties.
        
             | umanwizard wrote:
             | True, but I don't understand why this would make letter
             | size confusing to Americans. European office workers are
             | not sitting around marveling at the mathematical elegance
             | of the definition of A series paper. It just doesn't matter
             | in daily life.
        
               | tialaramex wrote:
               | > It just doesn't matter in daily life.
               | 
               | Like a lot of mathematics it does matter in your daily
               | life but you actually just don't think about it because
               | of _course_ this works - unless you 're an American and
               | so no it doesn't.
               | 
               | The A-series paper sizes mean everything scales very
               | naturally. Poster? Pamphlet? It's just the same ratios
               | again but bigger or smaller. There is a single design
               | where this works, and that's why the A-series exists, you
               | can't just pick anything, only this works.
        
               | umanwizard wrote:
               | Can you explain concretely why it matters in daily life
               | that I can cut the paper posters are printed on in half
               | several times to wind up with paper of the size that
               | letters are printed on, and that these have the same
               | aspect ratio? Why would I ever want to do that / why
               | should I care that it's possible?
               | 
               | I'm not trying to be combative; I genuinely don't know.
        
               | tialaramex wrote:
               | Not the paper, the stuff _on_ the paper scales the same.
               | Want a large poster and then also handbills to give out?
               | They 're identical. Got 15 full size sheets of colour
               | information but now want to turn it into a pocket handout
               | ? No problem, it's the same thing but smaller.
               | 
               | This feels obvious - of course it works like that, until
               | your paper sizes _aren 't_ using this ratio (which the US
               | ones don't) and then the frustration is apparent.
        
             | therealpygon wrote:
             | Not sure where you got "random format" from the comments,
             | but we (U.S.) also use a very precise method for defining
             | the size of paper, which is 8.5x11 and legal as 8.5x14. For
             | the US, both are sized to fit in the same standard
             | envelopes. I've never thought, "boy, I really need half
             | this sheet length-wise but made shorter to keep the same
             | aspect ratio for this situation", so while I can understand
             | why that could make sense when creating an international
             | standard, it isn't more or less random or more/less precise
             | than any other basis. Our basis simply evolved naturally
             | from our system of measurement and our needs with countries
             | we traded most closely, rather than as an international
             | standard based on a different system of measurement that
             | needed to be shared among numerous countries situated
             | closely together.
        
             | rswail wrote:
             | Not only that but C envelope sizes match the A size. So an
             | A4 piece of paper fits a C4 envelope flat.
             | 
             | A4 folded in half (size of an A5) fits in a C5 envelope.
             | 
             | An ISO standard that makes sense and isn't based on
             | different professions like "letter" vs "legal" vs "folio"
             | and other US sizes.
             | 
             | But also the reason that, for example, screens have 80
             | columns, (also related to punch cards), but that was about
             | the width of a "letter" page at 10cpi.
        
             | eadmund wrote:
             | > A4 isn't some random format, you can derive it with three
             | pieces of information ...
             | 
             | You can derive letter paper with _two_ pieces of
             | information: 81/2 and 11. Just having a laugh, of course --
             | I do admire the A /B series, even if I wish that they were
             | based on a square yard :-)
        
         | dizhn wrote:
         | It's a pretty good paper size standard. Fold A4 in half and you
         | get A5. Put two A4s side by side and that's an A3 size.
        
         | tallanvor wrote:
         | Look, there's plenty of things to complain about with regards
         | to the US - especially these days. But getting upset about US
         | citizens not using all the same standards in their daily lives
         | as many other places is just silly. --It's like complaining
         | about the UK and a relatively small number of countries that
         | chose to drive on the left instead of the right. Could they
         | change? Sure. Are they likely to change? Seems pretty unlikely.
        
           | diggan wrote:
           | > But getting upset about US citizens not using all the same
           | standards in their daily lives as many other places is just
           | silly
           | 
           | Good thing it wasn't a complaint then, just questions from
           | someone who doesn't know how it works across the pond :) And
           | it seems to be the story of someone outside of North America
           | trying to interact with the North American standards, not
           | some internal confusion between internal states or whatnot.
        
         | therealpygon wrote:
         | > Are US letter sizes what people use instead of A4 in a
         | workplace for documents and such (seems confusing if so)
         | 
         | Yes, it is just our standard like A4 is yours. When you pull a
         | paper out of the pack it is A4 when we pull it out it is ANSI
         | A, commonly known a US Letter size. Instead of 8.27"x11.69", we
         | use 8.5"x11". We also commonly use US Legal size, which is
         | 8.5"x14". Slightly longer and can fit in the same envelope.
         | 
         | > do printers sold in the US default to US letter sizes when
         | printing?
         | 
         | Yes. However all of our printers can do all sizes since our
         | paper is slightly larger, while an A4 specific printer couldn't
         | print a US letter.
        
           | rswail wrote:
           | Except pretty much all printer drivers these days can down
           | convert from letter to A4.
           | 
           | Margins on left/right might be skinnier, but length wise US
           | letter fits.
        
       | PaulRobinson wrote:
       | I'm interested in hearing from someone at FSF (and I used to know
       | someone, but I don't think he's there any more), who can tell us
       | how often this has happened. I can't imagine it's a frequent
       | occurrence.
        
         | philipwhiuk wrote:
         | Yeah I sort of hoped it would cover that bit not just the
         | author's foibles at writing a letter.
        
         | bluGill wrote:
         | As I implied in my top level comment, it should happen more
         | often than it likely does. If you work on a commercial project
         | with any GPL code ask your test group who has done that and
         | when - if you don't see a lot of hands go up then your test
         | group isn't doing their job. (if you are only automated tests,
         | then I assume you have an automated test to send this letter
         | and verify the response)
        
           | 01HNNWZ0MV43FF wrote:
           | For April fools I should set up an API for sending postal
           | mail as a service
        
             | xoe26 wrote:
             | https://docs.lob.com/#tag/Letters
        
             | layer8 wrote:
             | I'm pretty sure that's a common business use case.
        
         | stusmall wrote:
         | I love how small of a world this site is:
         | https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43784538
        
       | gwd wrote:
       | > Writing the address on the envelope was awkward, as I haven't
       | used a pen in several years; it took a few attempts and some
       | wasted envelopes...
       | 
       | Wow -- I mean, sure, I don't use a pen _that_ often, but I 'm
       | sure I hand-write _something_ at least once a month...
        
         | dharmab wrote:
         | I'm at the point where the only things I handwrite are gift
         | labels and holiday cards. Maybe an occasional doctor's office
         | form, but those are increasingly digital.
        
         | int_19h wrote:
         | I can't even remember the last time I've used a pen for
         | anything other than writing a check.
        
           | cormorant wrote:
           | Well, there's my minimum of once per month :)
        
           | maccard wrote:
           | I've never written a check in my life.
        
             | dharmab wrote:
             | How do you pay for things above a few thousand dollars? I
             | guess if you don't ever buy a pricey car or own a home you
             | wouldn't need it.
        
               | gwd wrote:
               | Not the person you're replying to, but the bank payment
               | system in Europe is waaaay better than the US; nearly all
               | four- and low-five-digit sums in the last 20 years I've
               | paid for with bank transfer.
        
               | Symbiote wrote:
               | Electronic transfer through online banking, or a debit
               | card (may well be followed with a call from the bank to
               | verify, though it's years since I've done this).
               | 
               | Visa's debit card limit on Denmark seems to be 100,000
               | DKK, roughly 13,000EUR. There's no limit with the
               | national system, Dankort.
        
               | maccard wrote:
               | Credit Card, Debit Card, or Bank Transfer.
               | 
               | Faster payments [0] is pretty much instant. Some banks
               | have lower limits, and CHAPS[1] is same day and
               | unlimited. I used faster payments for buying a car, and
               | for paying a house deposit. My bank transferred my
               | mortgage via CHAPS.
               | 
               | [0] https://www.starlingbank.com/resources/banking/guide-
               | to-fast... [1] https://www.hsbc.co.uk/current-
               | accounts/what-is-a-chaps-paym...
        
               | yieldcrv wrote:
               | wire transfer, or walk into the bank and have them create
               | a cashier's check
               | 
               | and a normal check is the same as an ACH transfer, so I
               | will do the ACH transfer
               | 
               | or lawyer's escrow
               | 
               | and every other larger transfer has been cryptocurrency
               | in my life, its been over a decade of that unlimited
               | amount, zero scrutiny, 24/7/365 option
               | 
               | (I've tried various other country's and international
               | system transfers, and the convenience is completely over-
               | embellished, and limited to small amounts at best. and
               | yes, I'm talking about instant SEPA in European banks. A
               | lot of people don't have balances in crypto currency so
               | it would just be more inconvenient for them to get into
               | that system)
               | 
               | but the only time I'm personally using checks are because
               | a new employer's HR system wants me to write VOID on a
               | physical one, and I've opted to photoshopping a template
               | with my account number and routing number, because checks
               | are the same as an ACH transfer, and they could have just
               | asked me to copy and paste those numbers into a input
               | field
        
               | schlauerfox wrote:
               | There was a time that printed checks had to use special
               | laser toner called MICR Toner that was magnetic so the
               | magneto readers could machine read the check bottoms
               | routing and account numbers, but that went away when the
               | Fed just ran it all as ACH/ electronically and optically
               | scanned checks around the time mobile deposit and well
               | after OCR became a thing. Last I checked the rule was
               | still present in the statues.
        
               | dbrgn wrote:
               | Many people in Switzerland love to buy used cars with
               | cash, even if they cost a few thousands.
               | 
               | (But we can also just scan the QR code of the recipient's
               | bank account with the e-banking app and initiate a
               | transfer that way.)
        
             | int_19h wrote:
             | This is very much an American thing. And it's only a thing
             | because our banks don't offer a truly universal and no-fee
             | equivalent of easily transferring money between accounts
             | across bank boundaries.
        
           | lolinder wrote:
           | I can't remember the last time I wrote a check, but I use
           | pens pretty regularly.
        
           | jrmg wrote:
           | You don't even write down temporary notes? Or doodle geometry
           | when coding UI?
        
             | dharmab wrote:
             | I use a text editor for notes. I do have a drawing tablet
             | for digital art but that's not really the same as a pen or
             | pencil.
        
               | int_19h wrote:
               | Yep, exactly so.
               | 
               | For notes especially I find the digital version
               | preferable because it is automatically archived,
               | searchable, and readily accessible across all my devices.
        
           | 01HNNWZ0MV43FF wrote:
           | Not even a whiteboard marker?
           | 
           | I'm in the US so I use permanent marker to write my lawyers
           | phone number on my arm before protests
        
             | int_19h wrote:
             | Whiteboard brainstorming is an interesting scenario that I
             | haven't considered, but even then I'd have to say no
             | because I've been fully remote for a while now.
        
             | bregma wrote:
             | That would only work if the phone system in El Salvador is
             | operating.
        
             | Alex-Programs wrote:
             | As a Brit, the concept of "My lawyer" is slightly
             | unfamiliar. The average Brit doesn't "have a lawyer"; they
             | would only find a lawyer if they had a specific need, eg
             | being accused of a crime or wanting to write a contract
             | etc.
             | 
             | And yet as far as I can tell, most middle class Americans
             | seem to refer to "their lawyer". Do you pay a monthly fee?
             | Are they a criminal defence lawyer, or something broader?
             | How often do you talk to them? How do you find them?
        
               | seabass-labrax wrote:
               | Not an American but have been involved in lots of US
               | legal things for a charity. Generally "their lawyer"
               | refers to a lawyer (solicitor in British usage) who is
               | 'on retainer', which means that the client either pays a
               | monthly fee to secure the lawyer's availability, or has a
               | deposit with the lawyer which will be drawn from if legal
               | assistance is needed.
               | 
               | Funnily enough, Americans do not use the term solicitor;
               | that's reserved for lawyers working for the government!
        
               | acuozzo wrote:
               | > most middle class Americans seem to refer to "their
               | lawyer"
               | 
               | I've only run into this among the so-called "upper middle
               | class" here (e.g., physicians making $500K+/yr) and even
               | then it's pretty rare.
        
           | gwd wrote:
           | I probably write a check every 5 years, and each time I need
           | to ask someone how to do it, because the checks are slightly
           | different compared to the country I grew up in.
        
         | daedrdev wrote:
         | There will soon be many people who never learn how to write,
         | only type
        
           | mort96 wrote:
           | And many, many more people who never learn how to write or
           | type, only to tap a phone screen!
        
             | rswail wrote:
             | And many many more people that will just say it or think
             | it.
        
         | xaitv wrote:
         | Think the last time I used a pen is about 8-9 years ago when I
         | had to sign something to buy my home. Notes and stuff I just
         | write on my phone or computer and I don't see what else I'd use
         | a pen for.
        
           | massysett wrote:
           | Wow, I use a pen nearly every day. Sometimes I deliberately
           | get a pen or pencil and paper rather than a phone. I was
           | doing some home improvements in my attic, and I would often
           | need to jot down a measurement so I could cut wood etc. I did
           | this once or twice on my phone and realized it's much easier
           | to do this with a pencil and small notepad.
           | 
           | In what is perhaps the most ironic blend of high and low
           | tech, I wrote my own software to build grocery lists, which I
           | then print and use a pen to cross items off as I shop. This
           | is by far the most efficient vs trying to faff about with
           | some mobile solution.
        
             | alabastervlog wrote:
             | Apple Reminders has native grocery lists now. The
             | collaboration feature (a household can keep just one shared
             | grocery list) and auto-categorizing by store section are
             | serious time and frustration savers. No "oh shit, I left
             | the list at home", no "I could go to the grocery store
             | while I'm out, if we need anything... but the list's at
             | home...", no manually organizing the list, no grocery-list-
             | by-text. It's so nice, saves far more time than any _faff_
             | it introduces (I 'd agree that without the collaboration
             | and auto-categorizing, grocery lists on phones would be
             | more trouble than they're worth)
             | 
             | (I know other apps have also done it, but having it on a
             | built-in is really handy and it works well)
        
             | SpaceNoodled wrote:
             | I prefer an app for grocery lists since it can be managed
             | with a single hand while shopping - no need to stop in the
             | middle of an aisle to pull out a pencil and cross something
             | off, nor to print anything out before heading to the store,
             | for that matter. Plus, I won't have to re-sync the list
             | with what remain on the physical list at the end of the
             | trip.
        
               | massysett wrote:
               | My software is highly idiosyncratic. I input recipes for
               | the week, and it adds ingredients to the shopping list,
               | but only some ingredients. Other staple ingredients are
               | things we keep in standard inventory and these go on the
               | shopping list periodically rather than on demand.
               | 
               | UNIX is a friendly environment for me to write my own
               | software like this. Phones are hostile, they're more like
               | appliances. Pair up UNIX with old-school peripherals like
               | printers and I'm in business.
               | 
               | But yeah I love my phone for its appliance-like uses.
        
           | alabastervlog wrote:
           | I tried for a while to do the whole "notebook life" thing
           | that was really trendy to blog about some years back, but
           | found I never had the notebook I wanted on-hand (even if I
           | was just using one notebook...) or forgot to grab a pen or
           | can't find a pen et c. Then making it possible to find
           | anything in them requires more effort afterward.
           | 
           | What do I have on me basically all the time? My phone.
           | 
           | I've done everything in Apple Notes for years now, and it's
           | so much less hassle, and actually works for me. I just make
           | sure to include words I might use to search for a note, when
           | writing a new note. Search does the rest. I can and sometimes
           | do organize things into directories, but usually it's kinda
           | wasted effort. Search is enough.
           | 
           | Meanwhile, the few dozen pages scattered across four or five
           | notebooks that I generated in that brief kick remain,
           | passively, a pain in the ass. I've carted them through two
           | moves, meaning to digitize them, because when I remember they
           | exist and browse I'm like "oh yeah, that was a good idea!"
           | but, out of sight out of mind and when I stumble across them
           | I'm always in the middle of doing other, more important shit.
        
         | mcgrath_sh wrote:
         | Genuinely curious, I don't write anything long by hand, but do
         | you not jot down disposable information with frequency, or date
         | food, or anything like that? I date food we put in the
         | fridge/freezer. I jot down something like a phone number if I
         | am redirected. I have to give my pet medication occasionally
         | and I use a post-it to track so the household can know. Like I
         | said, I'm not writing anything even as long as a card, but I
         | use a pen multiple times a week, and essentially daily. I know
         | a lot of people use their phones for this stuff (and I do too),
         | and maybe I'm an old person now for not using my phone for all
         | of that.
        
           | dharmab wrote:
           | I use a text file in my phone for notes.
           | 
           | I don't have roommates, but if I did we'd probably use a
           | whiteboard for tracking errands and schedules.
        
           | diggan wrote:
           | > I date food we put in the fridge/freezer
           | 
           | What date are you putting on the food? Every packaging here
           | in Spain (and Europe I assume) has both the production date
           | and "best before" dates printed on them from the factory, and
           | stuff that doesn't have packaging you know if they're bad by
           | looking/smelling/tasting.
        
             | dharmab wrote:
             | This is handy if you're doing things like separating a
             | package into portions for your fridge for near term use and
             | freezer for long term storage. Such as the large packages
             | from Costco/Sam's Club.
        
             | spiffytech wrote:
             | When I open milk, I write the date on the cap to help keep
             | track of how long it'll remain good.
        
               | wongarsu wrote:
               | My method is that I assume it's gone bad when it tastes
               | sour.
        
               | hk__2 wrote:
               | Yeah, no need to write anything down when you already
               | have a detector built-in in your body called
               | "nose+tongue" (well, at least for milk).
        
               | stevetron wrote:
               | I throw away bread when the green fuzzy stuff on it no
               | longer tastes good.
        
               | wongarsu wrote:
               | I can taste the mold in bread before it's grown big
               | enough to become visible.
               | 
               | For most foods evolution has graced us with the ability
               | to see, smell or taste any issues well before they
               | actually become a problem. There are some things you have
               | to look out for like botulism or salmonella, but for
               | simple foods like bread and milk there isn't much point
               | in taking precautions
        
               | pasc1878 wrote:
               | Much easier to just drink enough so there is no chance of
               | that happening.
               | 
               | But then I am in UK where milk is easily obtained in 2
               | pint or less packages and is all long term - over a week.
               | It is harder to gat 4 int or gallon containers which I
               | think are more common in the US.
        
               | stevetron wrote:
               | In the US, the way milk is sold, is that larger amounts
               | cost less. In other words, the 1/2-gallon container, buy
               | two of those, and it costs significantly more than a
               | single 1-gallon container. It gets even worse for quarts.
               | But I seldom buy in the 1-gallon container as it will
               | generally spoil before I've used it all, so there isn't
               | any savings there for me.
        
               | Suppafly wrote:
               | >In other words, the 1/2-gallon container, buy two of
               | those, and it costs significantly more than a single
               | 1-gallon container.
               | 
               | Except sometimes the 1/2 gallons will be randomly on sale
               | where you can get like 3 of them for the price of a
               | gallon. Milk economics makes no sense to me. But yeah,
               | it's usually cheaper to buy more than you need and just
               | throw it out if you don't use it, as is the American way.
        
               | omegaham wrote:
               | Inversely, I've also seen promotions where the gallon is
               | heavily featured in the ads, and they're selling the half
               | gallon for full price. Neat, you're paying extra to get
               | less milk!
        
             | HeyLaughingBoy wrote:
             | Food that's not prepackaged. e.g., I recently threw out a
             | container of eggs that had been in my freezer for about two
             | years because my hens were laying so much faster than we
             | could consume, that we had dozens of extras.
             | 
             | I also label things like the date I install a new HVAC
             | filter, or how much to cut off on a piece of lumber, etc.
        
               | stevetron wrote:
               | I was unaware that it was safe to freeze eggs.
        
               | HeyLaughingBoy wrote:
               | Why would you think it wasn't?
        
             | mcgrath_sh wrote:
             | I batch cook and freeze meals, and some of them look
             | similar (sauce and chicken vs sauce and pork) and I want to
             | eat the older stuff first. There are also some products
             | that are recommended to be disposed of within X days of
             | opening, which fall well before their best by date.
        
               | Macha wrote:
               | When I batch cook meals, I then eat them over the next
               | few days until either it's done or it's been too long for
               | that meal. Then I batch cook something else. I usually
               | don't have multiple batches on the go.
        
             | omegaham wrote:
             | Unopened, a jar of pasta sauce is good basically
             | indefinitely, but as soon as you actually open the jar the
             | clock starts ticking. We don't make enough pasta at a time
             | to use a full jar, (and in fact will usually use a small
             | fraction of the jar) so I write the date that I opened the
             | jar on the lid to plan its use a little better. "Hey,
             | better find a use for this sauce, it's going to go bad
             | eventually."
        
         | mytailorisrich wrote:
         | He's also obviously not used to write/type letters... The whole
         | thing is quite awful.
         | 
         | Schools used to teach this a minimum but they no longer do. It
         | was also standard to learn that for job hunting but, again, I
         | don't think many people apply for jobs by post nowadays
         | although it can still be useful to know how to write a formal
         | cover letter.
        
           | dharmab wrote:
           | These days most candidates use AI generated cover letters.
        
             | SpaceNoodled wrote:
             | Good thing I got ahead of the curve by never reading them
        
         | sph wrote:
         | My hand writing got rusty and awkward until I read that writing
         | something by hand is shown to strengthen one's memory and
         | recollection. It definitely seems to be the case for me and has
         | made me much more organised.
         | 
         | Now I journal on a paper notebook, take daily notes on a
         | whiteboard and I'm rediscovering index cards for long term
         | storage, but I wish real life had a search function.
         | 
         | If I had an automated scanning + OCR + convert to Org system, I
         | would never use a text editor for notes ever again.
        
           | pasc1878 wrote:
           | Try using a tablet with hand written notes. There are
           | programs (or even applications that replace the popup
           | keyboard ) that will convert your writing into computer text.
           | 
           | I think that gives the improved retention plus easy filing of
           | the result and if your writing is like mine the ability to
           | actually read what you wrote a year before.
        
         | brnt wrote:
         | Wow wow wow, look at mr bestseller over here!
        
         | johannes1234321 wrote:
         | I recently was in an awkward situation when ordering my new
         | passport. Most times I got to sign some papers I have some
         | signature which is a few waves, not forming many letters. In
         | the passport office the clerk told me they can't recognize any
         | enough letters in there, so I had to do multiple attempts till
         | they were happy ... now my passport got a signature I won't be
         | able to replicate ever.
         | 
         | (I do some handwriting for notes taking, but that's some
         | writing based on block letters, not script as in a signature)
        
           | Suppafly wrote:
           | >now my passport got a signature I won't be able to replicate
           | ever
           | 
           | I'm not sure I could ever prove I am who I say I am using my
           | signature. My wife signs my name most of the time when it's
           | necessary for a check or a health form for the kids or
           | whatever. Whenever I go to vote, I try to sneak a look at
           | their copy of the form to see how I signed it when I
           | registered. I think my credit union has one 'on file' for me,
           | but I'm sure it's nothing like how I actually sign my name
           | and is from ~25 years ago.
        
         | Suppafly wrote:
         | >but I'm sure I hand-write something at least once a month..
         | 
         | I'm sure I do too, but I couldn't actually tell you what I used
         | it for. Probably to cross items off a shopping list or sign my
         | name on something. Actually we got a new car and I needed to
         | sign the form at the DMV to get license plates, so I guess that
         | was it.
        
         | sudobash1 wrote:
         | This thread is more interesting to me than the article itself.
         | I am the complete opposite. I always have a pen in my pocket
         | along with a really small (2"x3") notebook, and I absolutely
         | use it all the time.
         | 
         | Personally, I find pen and a memo pad much handier than a
         | phone. There is no unlocking, searching, or loading. And I can
         | write much faster than tap a little screen keyboard. Even more
         | importantly, on my memo pad there are no notifications to
         | completely sidetrack my lizard brain.
         | 
         | But aside from the practical, it is also just such a nice
         | change of pace to use analog technologies when I can. I use my
         | computer and write software all day. It's good to get a break
         | sometimes.
        
       | WaitWaitWha wrote:
       | This was written in 2022. Do people still know how to postal-mail
       | things? Asking as the acquisition of envelope, paper and stamps
       | read like a new adventure for the author.
       | 
       | I make a practice of sending _(picture) postcards_ to each of my
       | descendants, when i arrive at a new place. It is a very rare
       | occasion when I can find them, even rarer for the vendor to know
       | what they are. Once the vendor was insisting that a flash card
       | (smallish, lined cards for taking notes) was indeed a postcard.
       | Sadly, I often have to buy them at the airport on arrival.
        
         | munchler wrote:
         | > flash card (smallish, lined cards for taking notes)
         | 
         | These are called "index cards" in the US, although you can
         | certainly use them to make flash cards if you want. Source: Am
         | old enough to have used index cards unironically.
        
           | NelsonMinar wrote:
           | my flash cards all store at least 32 GB of data but are so
           | tiny I keep losing them.
        
         | voidUpdate wrote:
         | What places don't have postcards? Whenever I go to places in
         | the UK, tourist tat shops will often have hundreds of them in
         | every flavour of souvenir
        
           | alberto-m wrote:
           | It seems to be a cultural thing. As an European I am used to
           | find postcards in every town, but when I went to Singapore I
           | had a hard time procuring them. None of the souvenir shops
           | had them, and when I asked the employees they often looked at
           | me as if I were some kind of strange animal. I finally found
           | a small, dusty selection in the darkest corner of a huge
           | department store.
        
           | philipwhiuk wrote:
           | I always like to buy a postcard.
           | 
           | Occasionally actually post them before I leave a place
           | (ideally soon after I arrive).
           | 
           | Generally they arrive substantially after I get back.
        
             | WaitWaitWha wrote:
             | Yep, same path. Arrive, get cards ASAP, usually as I walk
             | out of the airport, give it to the hotel concierge the next
             | morning. They will often stamp and drop it in the mail for
             | me.
             | 
             | It is so much fun to watch my spawns showing me the cards
             | they got with strange stamps and neat pictures of far away
             | lands. I address them individually, so there are plenty to
             | write, still fun.
        
         | 01HNNWZ0MV43FF wrote:
         | I know how to send mail but it's like doing taxes, I'm afraid
         | I'll get something wrong and not find out until I'm in trouble
         | for it
         | 
         | I'm probably younger than you by quite a bit.. no descendents,
         | no time to travel, not allowed in many countries or US states
         | anyway
        
         | Suppafly wrote:
         | >Asking as the acquisition of envelope, paper and stamps read
         | like a new adventure for the author.
         | 
         | I can pretty much guarantee it'd be an adventure for my teen,
         | nearly adult, children.
        
         | radnor wrote:
         | Yes! Check out Postcrossing, where you can sign up to send and
         | receive postcards to random people. :)
         | 
         | https://www.postcrossing.com/
        
       | cormorant wrote:
       | Different addresses are stated in different copies of the
       | license. https://opensource.org/license/gpl-2-0 has: "59 Temple
       | Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA"
       | 
       | https://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.txt has no
       | postal address.
       | 
       | https://spdx.org/licenses/GPL-2.0-only.html has "51 Franklin
       | Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA" in red italics,
       | and says: " Text in red is replaceable (see Matching Guidelines
       | B.3.4). License or exception text will match to the text for the
       | specified identifier if it includes a permitted variant of this
       | replaceable text. The permitted variants can be found in the
       | corresponding regular expression as shown in title text visible
       | by hovering over the red text."
       | 
       | Which in turn says: "can be replaced with the pattern .{54,64}"
       | (that is, any string between 54-64 characters long).
        
       | yapyap wrote:
       | > as I haven't used a pen in several years
       | 
       | Lol this is a bit ridiculous but a fun blogpost!
        
       | pabs3 wrote:
       | The FSF has moved address at least once, and more recently, now
       | closed their offices entirely. I wonder if the new owners of
       | their old addresses will or did get confused by copy-of-GPL
       | requests.
        
         | vinceguidry wrote:
         | Postman probably just redirects, with a business or institution
         | it's easy to just have the Post Office direct all mail
         | addressed to "Free Software Foundation" to the current address.
        
           | bluGill wrote:
           | For a few months. The post office will do it for anyone for a
           | few months, but then they stop forwarding mail. Maybe
           | businesses get that treatment longer, but when people move
           | they only get a few months.
        
             | jen20 wrote:
             | Standard US Mail forwarding is 12 months and may be
             | extended for a further 18 months.
        
             | thesuitonym wrote:
             | Standard mail forwarding is one year, and you can extend
             | that for an additional 18 months. I don't know of any
             | reasonable person who would call that "a few months"
        
           | pabs3 wrote:
           | They don't have a current address to redirect to, they went
           | completely virtual.
        
         | mattl wrote:
         | I used to work at the FSF and one of my jobs was replying to
         | these letters. They would be so infrequent by 2008 that I think
         | I handled less than 10 in my time there. I sent way more copies
         | of books to prisoners who requested them, gave more tours of
         | the office, etc. I also did some other stuff when I worked
         | there but if you were to look at the FSF website today you
         | might think I'm still there as pages often have the name of the
         | person who created the page listed as the author still.
         | 
         | The FSF has moved a few times.
         | 
         | * 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge.
         | 
         | * 59 Temple Place, Boston
         | 
         | * 51 Franklin St, Boston
         | 
         | * 31 Milk Street, Boston
         | 
         | The first address wasn't around for too long, but does still
         | exist. It's an office building above a bank in Central Square,
         | Cambridge right above the Red Line stop.
         | 
         | The second address was around for a long, long time. A few
         | years ago, the building was demolished and turned into a hotel.
         | I don't know if 59 Temple Place is still a valid address or
         | not. For this one, I found many of most frequent places and
         | filed bugs to get it updated. Greg K-H helped me update the
         | kernel and many of the issues I opened got resolved with other
         | projects. Worth noting too that the FSF had two different
         | offices in the same building but mail would go to the building.
         | Mail did forward from here to the next address for a while, but
         | I'm not sure if it'll forward again to the latest address.
         | 
         | 51 Franklin St is just around the corner from 59 Temple Place.
         | When they moved here, many staff were able to walk their stuff
         | over to the new office. This one finally closed last year. I
         | worked here my entire time at the FSF.
         | 
         | The final one is a PO Box but also around the corner from 51
         | Franklin St.
        
           | Thoreandan wrote:
           | I'd always wanted to see a physical copy of the $5,000.00
           | 'Deluxe Distribution' -
           | 
           | https://web.cecs.pdx.edu/~trent/gnu/bull/16/gnu_bulletin_23..
           | ..
           | 
           | > The FSF Deluxe Distribution contains the binaries and
           | sources to hundreds of different programs including GNU
           | Emacs, the GNU C Compiler, the GNU Debugger, the complete MIT
           | X Window System, and the GNU utilities.
           | 
           | > You may choose one of these machines and operating systems:
           | HP 9000 series 200, 300, 700, or 800 (4.3 BSD or HP-UX);
           | RS/6000 (AIX); Sony NEWS 68k (4.3 BSD or NewsOS 4); Sun 3, 4,
           | or SPARC (SunOS 4 or Solaris). If your machine or system is
           | not listed, or if a specific program has not been ported to
           | that machine, please call the FSF office at the phone number
           | below or send e-mail to gnu@prep.ai.mit.edu.
           | 
           | > The manuals included are one each of the Bison, Calc, Gawk,
           | GNU C Compiler, GNU C Library, GNU Debugger, Flex, GNU Emacs
           | Lisp Reference, Make, Texinfo, and Termcap manuals; six
           | copies of the manual for GNU Emacs; and a packet of reference
           | cards each for GNU Emacs, Calc, the GNU Debugger, Bison, and
           | Flex.
           | 
           | > In addition to the printed and on-line documentation, every
           | Deluxe Distribution includes a CD-ROM (in ISO 9660 format
           | with Rock Ridge extensions) that contains sources of our
           | software.
           | 
           | I wonder how many (if any?) were sold, it'd be an excellent
           | museum piece.
        
             | mattl wrote:
             | By the time I joined in 2008, I don't think they were being
             | offered anymore as IIRC the person locally who was handling
             | the compiling and tape archiving didn't have access to the
             | systems anymore.
        
       | bluGill wrote:
       | At least he got a response. Meaning the address didn't change
       | mostly.
       | 
       | A few years back I worked on an embedded linux project. For our
       | first "alpha" release one of the testers read through the license
       | agreement (as opposed to scrolling past all that legalese like
       | most people do) and found the address to write to to get all the
       | GPL source, he then send a letter to the address and it was
       | returned to sender, invalid address. Somehow the lawyers found
       | out about this and the forced us to do a full recall, sending
       | techs to each machine to install an update (the testers installed
       | the original software and were expected to apply updates, but we
       | still had to send someone to install this update and track that
       | everyone got it). Lawyers want to show good faith in courts -
       | they consider it inevitable that someone will violate the GPL and
       | are hoping that by showing good faith attempts to follow the
       | letter and spirit the court won't force releasing our code when a
       | "rouge employee" manages to violate the license.
       | 
       | The more important take away is if your automated test process
       | doesn't send letters to your GPL compliance address to verify it
       | works then you need manual testers: not only are you not testing
       | everything, but you didn't even think of everything so you need
       | the assurance of humans looking for something "funny".
        
         | diggan wrote:
         | An updated version would say to make sure every email address
         | you use/show in the application/terms/policies are usable and
         | someone receives it.
         | 
         | When reviewing stuff that introduces new emails and whatnot I
         | always spend 10-20 seconds sending an email with "Please
         | respond if you see this" to verify it actually works and
         | someone receives it, as I've experienced more than once that no
         | one actually setup the email before deploying the changes that
         | will show the email to users.
        
         | terinjokes wrote:
         | Why should the test process be sending physical letters (edit:
         | in 2025)? Nothing in the GPLv2 requires a physical letter.
         | 
         | The address the OP sent a letter too has already been removed
         | from the canonical version of the license (and was itself an
         | unversioned change from the original address), and section 3
         | doesn't require a physical offer if the machine-readable source
         | code is provided.
        
           | ndiddy wrote:
           | Some companies still do this mainly to make the GPL request
           | process more annoying so fewer people do it. If you have to
           | mail a letter with a check to cover shipping/handling and
           | wait for the company to send you a CD-R with the code on it,
           | fewer people will look at the code compared to if the company
           | just put it on Github or something.
        
             | bluGill wrote:
             | Most of the time the GPL request is a waste of time with no
             | purpose other than annoy a company. You can download linux
             | source code from many places, why do you want to get it
             | from us?
             | 
             | There is a slight possibility we have a driver that you
             | could get access to, but without the hardware it won't do
             | you any good. Once in a while we have hacked the source to
             | fix a bug, but if it isn't upstream it is because the fix
             | would be accepted (often it causes other bugs that don't
             | matter to use), and in any case if it isn't upstream, the
             | kernel moves so fast you wouldn't be able to use it anyway.
        
               | regentbowerbird wrote:
               | You only have to serve those requests if you distribute
               | your changes yourself.
               | 
               | So presumably as a hardware company you'd be offering
               | your hardware with your custom linux installed, and then
               | people wanting to audit or hack the product they bought
               | would request the code from you.
        
               | bluGill wrote:
               | This is GPL2 - there is no requirement that you be able
               | to install/use/hack the software, only that you get the
               | same source.
        
               | ndiddy wrote:
               | Again I see no purpose in doing things this way besides
               | trying to minimize the amount of people who look at your
               | GPL code for some reason. Isn't it more annoying for the
               | company to make someone in customer support read paper
               | letters, burn the GPL package onto a CD-R, and mail it
               | than it is to simply host the GPL package for each
               | product on a support site or Github or something and
               | include a link in the product documentation?
        
               | immibis wrote:
               | There's actually a near-100% chance that the kernel on my
               | device is not the upstream kernel. There's a near-100%
               | chance that you have added some custom drivers or got
               | them from your upstream. There's also a near-100% chance
               | that you have written some scripts to install the kernel
               | on the device, which you are required (at least one
               | German judge thinks so) to share with me so that I can
               | install a modified kernel on my device.
        
             | terinjokes wrote:
             | If the goal is to be annoying, sure make sure folks can
             | jump through hoops. I just don't think in 2025 a company
             | legitimately intending to satisfy the GPL requirements
             | needs anything to do with physical mail, since they'll
             | provide it online.
             | 
             | I stopped putting in requests for source code offers
             | because I've had a 0% success rate.
        
               | immibis wrote:
               | Companies don't legitimately intend to satisfy the GPL
               | requirements.
               | 
               | If you put in a source code request and get no reply you
               | should try to contact the copyright holder or someone
               | like the Software Freedom Conservancy or the EFF, because
               | they are breaking the law. There was a case recently in
               | Germany where a court forced a maker of home routers to
               | give up not just their source code, but also the scripts
               | to install modified software - as required by the
               | license. (As I understand it there is no precedent in a
               | civil law system, but it does mean at least one judge
               | believes Tivoization of GPLv2 software is illegal)
        
               | terinjokes wrote:
               | I am keeping an eye on SFC's lawsuit against Vizio[0].
               | 
               | [0]: https://sfconservancy.org/copyleft-
               | compliance/vizio.html
        
         | AlbinoDrought wrote:
         | The Free Software Foundation closed their office at 51 Franklin
         | St in August 2024 [1]. Their new mailing address is on 31 Milk
         | Street [2].
         | 
         | If this test was reproduced today, we may see different results
         | ;)
         | 
         | [1]: https://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/fsf-office-closing-
         | party
         | 
         | [2]: https://www.fsf.org/about/contact/mailing
        
           | dunham wrote:
           | That's recent enough that mail forwarding should work, if
           | they set it up:
           | 
           | > Standard mail forwarding lasts 12 months. You can pay to
           | extend mail forwarding for 6, 12, or 18 more months (18
           | months is the maximum).
           | 
           | Edit for source: https://www.usps.com/manage/forward.htm
        
             | giancarlostoro wrote:
             | > > Standard mail forwarding lasts 12 months. You can pay
             | to extend mail forwarding for 6, 12, or 18 more months (18
             | months is the maximum).
             | 
             | That's kind of awkward when you consider people will find
             | that address for source code where that license file just
             | wont be updated for decades to come, if at all.
        
               | __turbobrew__ wrote:
               | We need DNS, but for mail addresses.
        
               | ajb wrote:
               | One thing I've been meaning to try, but never got round
               | to, is to stick a URL on an envelope, pointing at a page
               | with an address, and see if the mail (royal mail, in my
               | case) actually deliver it. I suspect they would but that
               | it would take a few extra days. It's no worse than some
               | of the addresses that they do deliver.
        
               | ayewo wrote:
               | What about encoding the address as a QR code?
               | 
               | This should not require any Internet access to view by
               | whoever is scanning it to be sorted for delivery.
        
               | aftbit wrote:
               | It also does not help you to update the address later.
        
               | giancarlostoro wrote:
               | It does if it leads to a web page with an address.
               | 
               | What happens when all project maintainers die and the
               | source code disappears?
        
               | solarkraft wrote:
               | Even moving once has made the need for this clear to me,
               | it boggles my mind that it isn't a (common) thing.
        
               | schlauerfox wrote:
               | CGP Grey, a youtube channel, has a video on some of the
               | problems of the postal codes and addresses from earlier
               | this year that I learned about alternates to my familiar
               | US based system.
               | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1K5oDtVAYzk
        
               | 1oooqooq wrote:
               | since this is hacker news... i once had some trouble
               | changing mail address from one supplier (they would send
               | the materials to the new address, but insisted on sending
               | billing/tax info to the old one) so i did the mail
               | forward process some three times + their extensions (i
               | recall it was 6 + 3mo or so)... it got me close to 3 yrs
               | of reliable mail forward from the great folks at usps
               | until i could get thru the supplier personnel thick
               | skull.
               | 
               | the only issue "redoing" the request is that people at
               | the old address can block it, so be sure to talk to them
               | first.
        
               | giancarlostoro wrote:
               | > the only issue "redoing" the request is that people at
               | the old address can block it, so be sure to talk to them
               | first.
               | 
               | That's so strange, especially when you consider that for
               | legal purposes, if you receive mail at someone's home,
               | you are now a "resident" and it is harder for police to
               | kick you out. Why would anyone willingly want your mail
               | to come to your address.
        
           | mattl wrote:
           | I wrote a little more about the various offices as someone
           | who used to work there.
           | 
           | https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43783632
        
           | brian-armstrong wrote:
           | Did they also force RMS to move out?
        
             | Scoundreller wrote:
             | Maybe he refused to move, so they did?
        
           | twic wrote:
           | This test isn't about writing to the FSF, it's about writing
           | to the vendor who supplied the software.
        
         | chasd00 wrote:
         | reminds me of this old joke. Two testers walk into a bar, the
         | first says "i'll have a beer please" and they get their beer as
         | expected. The second says "I just want water" and they get the
         | water just like the asked. Then a user walks into the bar and
         | asks "where's the bathroom?". The bar explodes.
        
       | terinjokes wrote:
       | A few countries I'll be visiting this summer still sell
       | International Reply Coupons. It might be interesting to pick some
       | up and see how difficult it is to exchange them. Would a PostNL
       | point even know what to do with one?
        
       | maxloh wrote:
       | Perhaps the FSF got confused about which license the author was
       | referring to, or perhaps they intentionally mailed back GPL v3 --
       | this isn't the first time they haven't been generous.
       | 
       | In the old days when they released GPL v3, Linus Torvalds
       | considered it "not the same license at all". He felt betrayed
       | because the FSF "try to sneak in these new (tivoization) rules
       | and try to force everybody to upgrade". People could fork the
       | Kernel and relicense the fork in a way that prevented him from
       | merging their improvements upstream. He referred to the FSF's
       | move as "dishonest", "sneaky" and "immoral" and decided he would
       | "never have anything to do with the FSF again".
       | 
       | https://youtu.be/PaKIZ7gJlRU
        
         | coldpie wrote:
         | > Perhaps the FSF got confused about which license the author
         | was referring to
         | 
         | When no version is specified in the request, returning the
         | latest version seems like a reasonable thing to do.
        
           | maxloh wrote:
           | IMO, the correct response would be "Hey we have version 1, 2,
           | and 3 of this license, all of them have been attached. Please
           | make sure which one you were talking about".
        
             | coldpie wrote:
             | That would also be reasonable, sure. Triple the cost
             | though!
        
       | roywashere wrote:
       | That reminds me on the time the FSF moved, they changed their
       | address, and the open source product I worked on had to change
       | their address in the license notices in our product:
       | 
       | https://github.com/moritz/otrs/commit/e845575e1848fd0124fb8d...
       | 
       | And of course, as happens more often, this issue was raised to us
       | by Debian developers, who care a great deal about 'correctness'
        
         | craniumslows wrote:
         | The FSF offices have moved again if you weren't aware. The new
         | address is
         | 
         | Free Software Foundation 31 Milk Street, # 960789 Boston, MA
         | 02196 USA
         | 
         | https://www.fsf.org/about/contact/mailing
        
           | collinfunk wrote:
           | In Gnulib we distribute and use the license with just a link
           | to <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/> [1]. I would just use
           | that.
           | 
           | Many GNU projects use a rule that will fail 'make distcheck'
           | when it sees an address in the sources [2].
           | 
           | [1] https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/gnulib.git/commit/?id=b
           | f31... [2] https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/gnulib.git/commi
           | t/?id=086c...
        
       | sinuhe69 wrote:
       | It would be a perfect story for the "Dull Men Center" or alike :D
        
       | martopix wrote:
       | _Writing the address on the envelope was awkward, as I haven't
       | used a pen in several years;_
       | 
       | Really??
        
       | VikingCoder wrote:
       | I think these licenses are incredibly useful.
       | 
       | I have a really, really dumb question.
       | 
       | Why don't we have more licenses and contracts like this? Do we
       | just need to set up a foundation that drafts them and makes them
       | freely available to use?
       | 
       | Like, for instance, "Hi, Mark - we'd like to offer you a job here
       | at our daycare, but first we need you to look over this contract
       | and sign it."
       | 
       | This contract says, roughly, that if there's an accusation of
       | sexual abuse against children that it will go to a mediator who
       | has final say, and if they say it was a credible accusation, that
       | Mark immediately loses his job, and can never work anywhere that
       | uses this same contract, ever again. Sorry, you lost your chance
       | to work with kids. It sucks that it might have been a false
       | accusation, but our kids are just far too important to trust to
       | the existing systems.
       | 
       | Guess what? Churches should follow a similar license. Letting
       | priests or pastors move from town to town, abusing kids? That was
       | completely bonkers insane. And I feel like a contract like this
       | (and a registry, and etc.) could have helped. If people forced
       | their daycares and churches to accept a license like this.
       | 
       | Another one, "Hi, Greg. We understand we'd like your endorsement
       | from our political party? Sounds good, here's a contract for
       | you..."
       | 
       | It says, among other things, that if Greg switches political
       | parties that he must resign from office. Sorry. He's welcome to
       | run again, but he can't stay in office on our votes.
       | 
       | Like, shouldn't we have more contracts like this?
        
         | yjftsjthsd-h wrote:
         | If I follow correctly, then yes I agree that having more widely
         | used standard licenses/contracts would be nice. One of my crazy
         | legal fantasies is that _all_ EULAs have to go through a
         | central government authority that pushes back on new ones,
         | because one of the things I love about FOSS is that there 's
         | only a handful of common licenses, so you can reasonably read
         | them _once_ and then just see them and know what you 're
         | getting. I don't need to re-read the GPL every time I use a new
         | piece of software using it, because I already know what it
         | says.
         | 
         | To a specific point, though,
         | 
         | > Guess what? Churches should follow a similar license. Letting
         | priests or pastors move from town to town, abusing kids? That
         | was completely bonkers insane. And I feel like a contract like
         | this (and a registry, and etc.) could have helped. If people
         | forced their daycares and churches to accept a license like
         | this.
         | 
         | Er, yes, that does sound bonkers; where are you that every
         | school, church, and daycare isn't already doing a background
         | check on every single person working there?
        
           | VikingCoder wrote:
           | > Er, yes, that does sound bonkers; where are you that every
           | school, church, and daycare isn't already doing a background
           | check on every single person working there?
           | 
           | Someone has to be convicted for something to show up on their
           | background check, yes?
        
         | equinoxnemesis wrote:
         | I could imagine a judge holding a contract to resign from
         | office void as contrary to public policy (on the basis of the
         | intuition that elected representatives shouldn't have their
         | continuance in office subject to random contracts with third
         | parties lest this interfere with their service to the public.)
        
         | inetknght wrote:
         | > _Like, shouldn 't we have more contracts like this?_
         | 
         | So... like a social scorecard that's easily manipulated?
         | 
         | No.
        
         | gus_massa wrote:
         | > _and if they say it was a credible accusation, [...], but our
         | kids are just far too important to trust to the existing
         | systems._
         | 
         | You mean dropping some hard earned human right like Presumption
         | of Innocence?
         | 
         | You may think it doesn't apply to you, but the landlords and
         | HOA can add a similar clause, because children must be safe at
         | home too. And every software company may add the same clause
         | because they (may) have a game division and children must be
         | safe online too. And ...
         | 
         | Suddenly, any accusation that a non-professional fake-judge
         | says is "credible" makes you an outcast of society.
        
         | skeltoac wrote:
         | Contracts are negotiable. Don't like the numbers in paragraph
         | twelve? Can't agree to forfeit one of the rights listed in
         | appendix G? Redline it and see what they say.
         | 
         | EULA, TOS, and Docusign have mostly forced people to forget
         | their right to negotiate contracts because all they let you do
         | is agree to the terms offered. So it seems natural today that
         | people just want standard contracts for everything.
         | 
         | Lazyweb: what's that story about the guy who redlined his
         | credit card contract and the bank accepted it?
        
         | Suppafly wrote:
         | >Like, shouldn't we have more contracts like this?
         | 
         | We have tons of them, they are written by lawyers.
        
           | VikingCoder wrote:
           | I wish they were standardized and freely available.
        
       | rietta wrote:
       | I am impressed that the FSF has kept up the same office / mailing
       | address for 32 years at the time the article was written!
        
       | yukiAkita wrote:
       | Sure but, on the other hand, this was overly kind of him.
        
       | low_tech_punk wrote:
       | Exploring implications of an absolute physical address. FSF
       | basically claimed a physical "domain name" and no future
       | organizations will be able to reside in that address. FSF can
       | move out and ask USPS to do a 301 Moved Permanently or 308
       | Permanent Redirect.
        
         | jraph wrote:
         | they actually did move in the meantime :-) [1]
         | 
         | Can this redirection be forever?
         | 
         | > no future organizations will be able to reside in that
         | address
         | 
         | You are supposed to put the name, no? "Some Organization, <old
         | address>" would unambiguously refer to the new org.
         | 
         | [1] https://www.fsf.org/blogs/community/fsf-office-closing-
         | party
        
         | reaperducer wrote:
         | _ask USPS to do a 301 Moved Permanently or 308 Permanent
         | Redirect._
         | 
         | The USPS doesn't honor either 301 or 308. As someone who moves
         | just about every year, and fills out the paperwork to get my
         | 301s and 308s for free, instead of paying a third-party
         | service, I can tell you that the 301/308 at USPS is only good
         | for one year.
         | 
         | To get around this, I used to use a 305: Use Proxy, but then my
         | UPS Store of choice closed, and I was back to 301/308 land.
        
         | HeyLaughingBoy wrote:
         | At my first job, we'd occasionally have old people showing up
         | to pay their water bill (with checks, of course!) because 20
         | years previously, the local water utility occupied the same
         | building that we were in. They were generally pretty upset
         | because we had no idea where the water company was and they
         | were paying in person because the bill was late, and their
         | water could potentially be shut off.
        
       | crmi wrote:
       | > After a few weeks of waiting, I eventually received the
       | 'African Daisy global forever vert pair' stamp which was round! I
       | should have noticed that the seller sent me the item using stamps
       | at a much lower denomination that those I had ordered. Oh well.
       | 
       | Wild that so many commenters don't see the satire dripping from
       | the post. Is it just a UK thing to never take things at face
       | value?
        
         | Luc wrote:
         | I don't think that's satire. A wry observation perhaps.
        
         | returningfory2 wrote:
         | I don't understand the satire, can you explain?
         | 
         | We can't see the full set of "lower denomination" stamps on the
         | letter, but I'm not 100% sure it's actually lower denomination.
         | The sender of the stamps seems to be using the "2 domestic
         | forevers + some amount of cents = 1 global forever" formula. I
         | think the UK sender didn't need to include _two_ global
         | forevers.
        
           | returningfory2 wrote:
           | Indeed, the formula is correct. Wikipedia maintains a list of
           | historic Forever pricing: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Histo
           | ry_of_United_States_posta...
           | 
           | From the blog, the letter from California was dated April
           | 2022, at which point the rates were domestic = $0.58 and
           | global = $1.30. So the California sender correctly attached
           | two domestics valued at $1.16 total plus an additional $0.14
           | to make $1.30.
        
           | sudobash1 wrote:
           | > I think the UK sender didn't need to include _two_ global
           | forevers.
           | 
           | It would be hard to know that ahead of time though. The
           | global forever stamp is good for letters up to 1oz which can
           | be as little as 4 US letter pages. It took the FSF 5 double-
           | sided pages. Granted, it looks like lightweight paper & the
           | post office doesn't seem to be very picky about this. But I
           | think sending two forever stamps was being on the safe side.
        
             | returningfory2 wrote:
             | Good point!
        
           | crmi wrote:
           | I think quoting that part alone, didn't make it clear I was
           | referring to the whole article.
           | 
           | >...... "Oh Well."
           | 
           | May have been more apt.
           | 
           | Is eBay really anyones first thought when looking for a (non-
           | collector) stamp to (actually) mail?
           | 
           | Perhaps he should have picked up a few PS1 coins on eBay, use
           | them to purchase some stamps from the post office?...
        
             | Scoundreller wrote:
             | They needed US stamps.
        
               | crmi wrote:
               | I didn't see any request for a return envelope or stamp.
               | Author decided to include them (unless I missed
               | something).
        
               | xp84 wrote:
               | It seems like common courtesy for me. Given the FSF are
               | providing that service out of altruism, and are not the
               | ones who neglected to give OP the license in the first
               | place, it's only appropriate to not impose upon them to
               | go buy stamps to send an international letter.
        
         | Scoundreller wrote:
         | I'm surprised this stamp seller didn't cover half the envelope
         | in 5 cent stamps.
         | 
         | That's what I usually get _on_ the envelopes from stamp
         | sellers: decades old stamps from the "bad investment" portions
         | from stamp collectors.
        
       | davisr wrote:
       | This is funny because I was the operations assistant (office
       | secretary) at the time we received this letter, and I remember it
       | because of the distinct postage.
        
         | MadnessASAP wrote:
         | How wonderful! Since the game of the day seems to be the
         | technicalities of the minutiae, could you explain the decision
         | to send the GPLv3 vs GPLv2? Is this a request that happens
         | often?
        
           | jenscow wrote:
           | The version wasn't specified in the request
        
           | self_awareness wrote:
           | The sender didn't specify the version in his request, so I
           | find it natural that they've sent him the latest version.
        
             | kevincox wrote:
             | How does a sender who only has a GPLv2 license notice even
             | know that there is a v3? Should they first send a letter
             | asking which versions are available?
        
               | self_awareness wrote:
               | If the sender requests GPLv2, he should receive GPL
               | version 2.
               | 
               | If the sender requests GPL, I find it natural for him to
               | receive version 3, because it's the latest version. At
               | the time of receiving the license, he gains knowledge
               | about the existence of version 3 (the header on the print
               | says the GPL he received is version 3).
               | 
               | If the sender has a notice about GPLv2, it means that
               | there's a high chance that there's also GPLv1. This
               | should be a sufficient hint that requesting only "GPL" is
               | not sufficient, because the sender should be aware of the
               | risk of receiving GPLv1 if he won't mention the "v2".
        
               | snickerbockers wrote:
               | the usual license header has something along the lines of
               | "either version [23], or at your discretion, any
               | subsequent version", which clearly explains that there
               | are specific versions with distinct rules. Many people
               | opt not to include this clause because they
               | (understandably) don't want to automatically agree to a
               | contract that hasn't even been written yet. However if
               | they fail to make the version clear that's on them.
               | 
               | Anyways I don't think this defense would ever fly in
               | court. As soon as the plaintiff's lawyers produce
               | evidence that you _are_ aware of GPLv3 (such as pointing
               | out that you have GPLv3 software on your PC or phone) the
               | judge is going to see that you 're trying to game the
               | system on technicality and sanction you. Judges really
               | don't like this sly loophole BS where it's extremely
               | obvious that you're feigning ignorance for the sake of
               | constructing an alternate reality where you
               | hypothetically never knew there was a GPLv3.
        
             | taftster wrote:
             | The author mentioned this exact problem. Quoting:
             | 
             |  _> There was a problem that I noticed right away, though:
             | this text was from the GPL v3, not the GPL v2. In my
             | original request I had never mentioned the GPL version I
             | was asking about._
             | 
             |  _> The original license notice makes no mention of GPL
             | version either. Should the fact that the license notice
             | contained an address have been enough metadata or a clue,
             | that I was actually requesting the GPL v2 license? Or
             | should I have mentioned that I was seeking the GPLv2
             | license?_
             | 
             | This is seemingly a problem with the GPL text itself, in
             | that it doesn't mention which license version to request
             | when you mail the FSF.
        
               | DSMan195276 wrote:
               | Well to be fair, that's not the full license notice,
               | that's only the last paragraph. There should a couple
               | more above that one and the first paragraph says the
               | version of GPL in use. That said I think the license
               | notice is also just a suggested one, it's not required
               | that you use that _exact_ text.
        
               | hughw wrote:
               | A Sid Caesar skit showed doughboys celebrating and one
               | shouted "World War 1 is over!"... when they made GPLv2
               | maybe they didn't anticipate creating future versions
               | (although yeah, if you're already on v2 you should
               | foresee that).
        
         | cortesoft wrote:
         | What sort of request volume did you get? How many per day were
         | you sending out?
        
           | davisr wrote:
           | On average, zero per day, maybe 5 to 10 per year.
        
             | zorked wrote:
             | I'm really surprised that it's more than 1 ever.
        
       | samspot wrote:
       | If you never pick up a pen to sign a birthday card, thank you
       | note, or wedding album, that's a symptom you are too isolated!
        
       | supportengineer wrote:
       | "Writing the address on the envelope was awkward, as I haven't
       | used a pen in several years; it took a few attempts and some
       | wasted envelopes"
        
       | ray023 wrote:
       | Dude wastes the FSFs time, complains about wrong license without
       | telling them the one he wanted. Then complains again that he
       | needs to recover from the HORROR of using the postal service that
       | was a deliberate, POINTLESS CHOICE. Gets fame on Hacker News for
       | it.
       | 
       | YAY!
        
       | avodonosov wrote:
       | I once was reading a software license, and deep inside it there
       | was a promise: who has read till this place will get a certain
       | prise. I emailed them, they kind of confirmed that I am eligible
       | for the prise. But it was a far away city, so I never went to
       | claim it.
        
       | johnea wrote:
       | This was such a laugh!
       | 
       | I have to wonder if the whole exercise was a prime example of a
       | brit "taking the piss" 8-)
       | 
       | > the US, Canada, and a few other countries don't follow the
       | standard international paper sizes, even though I had written
       | about it earlier
       | 
       | I literally laughed out loud at this 8-)
       | 
       | And the outrageous expectation of obtaining... stamps!
       | 
       | It was just too funny.
       | 
       | For unfamiliar muricans: The success, according to british
       | cultural standards, in the humiliation of the intended victim is
       | increased, when the victim replies while being completely unaware
       | that they are actually being mocked.
        
       | renecito wrote:
       | is the owner of the address a perpetual owner of the GPL?
       | Example: - Step 1: Create evil Corporation - Step 2: Buy that
       | address - Step 3: Create a new GPL, still GPL but technically a
       | new version. This can make sure the sole owner of the claimed IP
       | (remove the FSF of course). - Step 4: Sell your updated license
       | to anyone that'd want to go around previous GPL.
        
       | AxEy wrote:
       | Tangentially related: I've always wanted to write a hello the
       | address that they show during the opening credits of MST3K. Has
       | anyone tried?
        
       | pcbmaker20 wrote:
       | Why would you do this, the text is available online!
        
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