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The amount of ink spilled by Hachydermians about #Fedipact being an overreaction should be interrogated. We should all think about how giving fascists the benefit of the doubt is fucking stupid.


Hello Hachyderm! Thank you for your patience as we gathered the necessary data to write our announcement blog post regarding Threads.

The short version: Hachyderm has defederated from Threads.

Specifically, this is due to Threads changing their moderation policies and moderator guidance (see press cycle) to be in direct conflict with Hachyderm.

For the data and explainer, please see our announcement blog post:

community.hachyderm.io/blog/20…


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Please Please Please - if you don't have a good reason

NEVER SEND ME A VIDEO OR SCREENSHOT of your terminal.

Copy/paste the text. BAAAH

in reply to silverwizard

Bwahaha!

I remember being asked to migrate the Linux documentation for the Windows-centric MSP that had acquired a former employer.

I spent a fair amount of time making sure all was correct, well formatted and had plenty of examples.

It came back to me with the comment that there were no screenshots.

So you want terminal screenshots as documentation for command-based processes?

Of course I maliciously complied :D

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to Kicou

@Kicou Fuck - I hate it. That's so annoying.

I recently had to send a video to a support chat - rather than copy/paste them the error message. The video was of the error message.


in reply to silverwizard

Sometimes, systemd adds features, which are not embraced uniformly across the entire Linux distro ecosystems. Hopefully this is one of them...

ALSO luckily there are a few non systemd linux distros still hopping.

in reply to trashHeap

@trashHeap @vascorsd Yeah, and yeah. I am very glad I switched to OpenBSD as my daily driver before this all kicked off. But Linux is still valuable in a bunch of places and .... gaaaaaaaah


My son wants me to read all the dialogue in Star Dew Valley and give each character a unique voice. Guh

in reply to silverwizard

between ClassDojo doing AI collection, and School Days not having a proper privacy policy, I wonder if @404 Media has ever looked into the shady School Records Management industry


Edit:
corp.school-day.com/en/privacy… looks like School Day fixed their privacy policy so it exists now



One day I will find a designer at Drata, and I will either shake them, or buy them beers until they explain to me HOW THE FUCK their product design ended up there.

"We don't support multiple tabs, but we also wont let you filter messages across multiple viewings of the same list"



systemd startup and shutdown events that block on network connect and disconnect are a curse




My church is the kind of church where people test their home made life sized BB8 models after the service to make sure the magnets hold the head on when the body is rolling.

I am still somehow the local DNS and email expert

these skills are considered lost art, and are way too young to have that distinction

in reply to silverwizard

I started back in 1992 or thereabouts, working for a company that made a Microsoft Office software suite for UNIX (and later Linux) systems, so we had a couple of everything floating around plus a large suite of Sun Microsystems kit for infrastructure. I kept being in places where I did a little of everything until I moved to a global pharma company in 2007, at which point UNIX had been long dead and IT was increasingly specialized and I was servers with occasional storage.


marthawells.dreamwidth.org/649…

These kinds of articles are starting to make me itch.

Computers *are not people*. Computers *are not like people*.

Stories need to be able to grapple with computers as computers, and readers understand computers as computers. If you, as a writer, want to write about people and slavery, the time to call computers just like slaves is past, unless you lampshade and highlight it hard. It is now the writer's responsibility. Computers are part of our lives, and they are not slaves they are tools. And anthropomorphizing them is the dangerous action.

Getting angry because your audience sees computers as tools not people is annoying, because a very large problem in our society is that people see computers as people not tools.

AMS reshared this.

in reply to silverwizard

@silverwizard I agree with the sentiment and I would refine the conclusion further: a very large problem in our current society is that people see computers as responsibility-proof people, not tools which design can be criticized.

1970s science-fiction authors couldn’t know better because the technology in their books had to be entirely made-up. It is telling for me that we got to human likeness in chatbots way before we enacted any sort of global computing law that Isaac Asimov envisioned for robots.

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to Hypolite Petovan

@Hypolite Petovan yes! We waffle around computers. They're tools so we can't punish them, but they're independent so their users can't be held responsible.

We need to stop treating computers as special and magical, and viewing them as human suuuuuuuuuucks.




Boxing day dinner
Dessert is served

A google employee, an amazon employee, an openai employee, and a venture capitalist are standing by the dessert table, talking about running GPT on the Boston Dynamics Spot robots and how cool it would be

Needless to say, I got dessert late and had to text my wife I was in hiding



My child wanted to listen to Black Jack Justice instead of Christmas Carols

So - good choice kid


in reply to silverwizard

...and a par-tri-idge in a pear tree!

silverwizard reshared this.




If Luigi wrote words on his bullets, doesn't that mean that those bullets are speech?

Please help, I don't understand US law, but bribes are speech? Why aren't words in any medium?

in reply to silverwizard

"Speech"
- sometimes it's words; once thought to be powerful, they are surprisingly impotent because any rando can spout nonsense
- sometimes it's not baking a cake because you don't like who might eat it
- sometimes it's not paying for certain kinds of healthcare for your employees because you think your sky friend wouldn't like it
- sometimes it's bribes; this is a very powerful form of speech in US politics. mostly used by the wealthy.
- sometimes it's lead; even more powerful than money; the government thinks it should be the only one to use speech of such finality


Last night I made pong in Scratch for my 5yo. This morning we modded it together, we made a colour selector for the paddles and made you able to move the goals.

He's now making sprites and adding code. He's not able to read and refusing help, so he's mostly throwing things to the right, but he's getting there!



In the new year I wanna feel safe working from the coffee shop. But that means feeling safe without an N95, and that isn't gonna happen, is it?
in reply to silverwizard

@silverwizard I've found the library to be a good option to work from when I just want to get out of the apartment. No need to remove the mask.
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

@Jonathan Lamothe Part of the issue is just that I don't like sitting there for 8 hours in a mask - but that's not a terrible plan

The library near me is pretty small though - but I should think thoughts



My son has a much loved audiobook that he listens to every night. But. One of the line reads in it scared him sometimes, and he sometimes fears to listen because he's worried about it.

We talked, and we're experimenting with a version of the story where the line is said in my voice, I opened the file, cut out the scary line, said it instead in my voice, and left the rest of the audiobook intact.

Talk to me again about DRM.

in reply to silverwizard

As an audiobook author, I would have no reservations about someone doing these things. I would much rather my efforts be enjoyed, even if they needed a bit of custom editing.
in reply to Mister Spinalzo

@Mister Spinalzo yeah! I 100% paid for the book for my son to enjoy! The line reading was great! But sometimes the line read of "a dragon surprises the main character" is too scarey for an anxious 5yo!

Thanks for writting books it's important work!

in reply to silverwizard

My mom reminded me she kitbashed some VHS tapes for me when I was scared of movies, and yeah! That's way harder core!



Quick, someone give the police force a billion in OT to shake the bushes at a local park! We need 4000 posts about how supporting OpenAI in these times is unthinkable!


I was just talking to a colleague about the AI bubble. These companies are in so deep they can't tell the truth. They are all lying about the efficacy, costs to consumers and most importantly how & when this tech works or doesn't.

Is there enough money on the line to kill over?

There's likely a trillion bucks of valuations across the industry. Billions in sunk costs, billions in c suite remuneration, billions in VC mgmt costs.

RIP Suchir

mercurynews.com/2024/12/13/ope…

#OpenAI #AI #VC #SuchirBalaji


in reply to silverwizard

this is not to claim that there isn't differences between the two killings. I just hate hypocrites

in reply to silverwizard

@silverwizard Dec 24th 6pm, I just lost Whamageddon, at the restaurant we’re having Christmas Eve dinner, thanks to an assist from my partner.

I was so close!



Played WiiU games and Mario DDR for the gamecube and ate tacos with the kids

This is what I want to live for



The hardest problem in Web Infrastructure is accepting that your webapp will only receive a few dozen to hundred requests per second

in reply to silverwizard

I did some work on porting miller's work on the risc-v userspace over to 9front, the toolchain works well enough to compile all of /sys/src (at least at the time of its writing). There was some work on a qemu targeted kernel but people lost steam and we never got it booting to userspace.

If you want to check out the userspace parts you can find it here: shithub.us/moody/riscv/HEAD/in…

in reply to moody

@moody I probably don't have the C for this, but I wanna! I am gonna look and then mostly get lost.

I should buy DevTerm R01s for some Plan9 devs...


Unknown parent

@Allen that definitely is a shocking connnection!

My kids are young, but I've been talking to them about shorts since they were 3

Unknown parent

@Allen My older son picked a lock before he turned 2. My younger son built his own computer (with help from mom) at 3.

I basically am going to accidentally make the stars of a heist show, and I'm ok with that.

But honestly, kids love to learn everything. And we all know enough to be a friend and mentor to a kid. Don't sell yourself short for raising awesome kids. The kids may be alright, but parenting is hard work, and doing it *matters*



Remember when Boeing was assassinating whistleblowers?

Why is no one up in arms about that? We have more important assassins to be chasing.

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in reply to benda

@benda I am not a fan of murder as a solution! But like, there's a reason why it's happening! We're not... stopping it

And fuck - people need to stop being hypocrites where we don't show *horror* that people killing people in masses, but get upset because one murderer got vigilante justice

in reply to silverwizard

yeah people just dont discuss sociological problems seriously. and the propaganda works. i genuinely believe people aren't talking about the boeing assassinations and they are talking about this ceo, because the media presented one as a non-story and the other as 3 day long headline grabbing news.


wfsb.com/2024/12/05/anthem-bac…

A CEO can get shit done when motivated



email# ls |wc -l
   14999
email# ls -l |wc -l
   15000
email# find . -ctime -1 -exec ls -lT {} \;|wc -l 
   15027
email# 

Something is very wrong

Unknown parent

@Andreas lol, sadly yes. But it was the weird inconsistent numbers, but I think I got why, it's because I forget about ls


Can we apply Common Carrier rules to Cloudflare so they don't get to control who has access to the internet and how?

in reply to silverwizard

To be clear - Piketty wanted to continue capitalism and said that if we didn't make it slightly less garbage people would die.

I guess no one started the process of even making it slightly equitable, so I guess we're on the other path.



My new RPG Dungeons in Dragons where intrepid explorers explore living systems inside massive behmoths in order to reach their hearts to slay them. The Dragons are the size of small mountains, and contain dangers and complex ecosystems of microbes the size of a person.
in reply to Hypolite Petovan

@Hypolite Petovan @Dave "Wear A Goddamn Mask" Cochran The main question is how do you evoke the weirdness of a dungeon inside a monster without too much body-horror but also the right amount. And then how do you differentiate the dragons. Gotta pull out some Dragon theories about why you'd delve into dragons.
in reply to Hypolite Petovan

@Hypolite Petovan @Dave "Wear A Goddamn Mask" Cochran gotta start with humans - why build in the mouth of a dragon? obviously because it's the safest place! Are dragons safety, or are they the danger being escaped? I don't know if we want people normally inside, since it's the Dungeon. But if that means we need something desired inside. I'd like this to not be Shining Heroes but instead scrappy underdogs, so that means it's gotta be food, water, or safety. Food would be funny, Water would be terrifying, safety would be expected.
in reply to silverwizard

@silverwizard @Dave "Wear A Goddamn Mask" Cochran Like the diamond mines in Africa, dragons' insides could contain a valuable resource that desperate people would be ready to risk their life to obtain for a chance at upward social mobility.



Star Trek Enterprise's CMO had a cool trait of using medical properties from aliens and lifeforms from around the universe, which was cool, but also made him a naturopath.

He also withheld a vaccine and committed a genocide.

This makes him a consistent character.



in reply to silverwizard

Ok, looks like I can read tapes. Now I need to figure out if I can write a tape from this USB deck, and source some blank tapes!

Dat tapes for the future!

in reply to silverwizard

Storing my SSH key on a DAT tape would be easier than a record since I don't have a turntable...
Unknown parent

@💞 eva 💞 I will never learn to use a camera

I'm using an R01 (the RISC-V one) because I wanted the cool form factor, but also needed to justify it with a weird CPU to play with.

I really want to love the DevTerm but the keboard is in a magical place to be annoying no matter how it's held, but if I use an external keyboard it' *wonderful*.



My son is trying to build a websearch DB by scanning the barcode on every book in my house
I should save this work for loading into Koha

Bob Jonkman reshared this.

in reply to silverwizard

There must be a wormhole. They've aged three years in the span of an eyeblink. That, or I've been travelling close to lightspeed...

in reply to silverwizard

twice now I had it stop resolving recursively and I needed to futz to make it work

might be openbsd router time

in reply to silverwizard

any suggestions for frontends to openbsd's networking stack for capable and sensible people who don't do this professionally or for fun? #openbsd
in reply to Bram

@Bram @BSD NL I don't think the wife and kids are gonna manage the DNS server - I'm pretty comfortable in Bind currently so I'll likely stay they. I just want them to be able to forward a port or reboot if needed. Or figure out pings.
Unknown parent

Solène
@stsp ah, this is what it is used for! :flan_aww: