@prologic@twtxt.net Letâs go through it one by one. Hereâs a wall of text that took me over 1.5 hours to write.
The criticism of AI as untrustworthy is a problem of misapplication, not capability.This section says AI should not be treated as an authority. This is actually just what I said, except the AI phrased/framed it like it was a counter-argument.
The AI also said that users must develop âAI literacyâ, again phrasing/framing it like a counter-argument. Well, that is also just what I said. I said you should treat AI output like a random blog and you should verify the sources, yadda yadda. That is âAI literacyâ, isnât it?
My text went one step further, though: I said that when you take this requirement of âAI literacyâ into account, you basically end up with a fancy search engine, with extra overhead that costs time. The AI missed/ignored this in its reply.
Okay, so, the AI also said that you should use AI tools just for drafting and brainstorming. Granted, a very rough draft of something will probably be doable. But then you have to diligently verify every little detail of this draft â okay, fine, a draft is a draft, itâs fine if it contains errors. The thing is, though, that you really must do this verification. And I claim that many people will not do it, because AI outputs look sooooo convincing, they donât feel like a draft that needs editing.
Can you, as an expert, still use an AI draft as a basis/foundation? Yeah, probably. But hereâs the kicker: You did not create that draft. You were not involved in the âthought processâ behind it. When you, a human being, make a draft, you often think something like: âOkay, I want to draw a picture of a landscape and thereâs going to be a little house, but for now, Iâll just put in a rough sketch of the house and add the details later.â You are aware of what you left out. When the AI did the draft, you are not aware of whatâs missing â even more so when every AI output already looks like a final product. For me, personally, this makes it much harder and slower to verify such a draft, and I mentioned this in my text.
Skill Erosion vs. Skill EvolutionYou, @prologic@twtxt.net, also mentioned this in your car tyre example.
In my text, I gave two analogies: The gym analogy and the Google Translate analogy. Your car tyre example falls in the same category, but Geminiâs calculator example is different (and, again, gaslight-y, see below).
What I meant in my text: A person wants to be a programmer. To me, a programmer is a person who writes code, understands code, maintains code, writes documentation, and so on. In your example, a person who changes a car tyre would be a mechanic. Now, if you use AI to write the code and documentation for you, are you still a programmer? If you have no understanding of said code, are you a programmer? A person who does not know how to change a car tyre, is that still a mechanic?
No, youâre something else. You should not be hired as a programmer or a mechanic.
Yes, that is âskill evolutionâ â which is pretty much my point! But the AI framed it like a counter-argument. It didnât understand my text.
(But what if thatâs our future? What if all programming will look like that in some years? I claim: Itâs not possible. If you donât know how to program, then you donât know how to read/understand code written by an AI. You are something else, but youâre not a programmer. It might be valid to be something else â but that wasnât my point, my point was that youâre not a bloody programmer.)
Geminiâs calculator example is garbage, I think. Crunching numbers and doing mathematics (i.e., âcomplex problem-solvingâ) are two different things. Just because you now have a calculator, doesnât mean itâll free you up to do mathematical proofs or whatever.
What would have worked is this: Letâs say youâre an accountant and you sum up spendings. Without a calculator, this takes a lot of time and is error prone. But when you have one, you can work faster. But once again, thereâs a little gaslight-y detail: A calculator is correct. Yes, it could have âbugsâ (hello Intel FDIV), but its design actually properly calculates numbers. AI, on the other hand, does not understand a thing (our current AI, that is), itâs just a statistical model. So, this modified example (âaccountant with a calculatorâ) would actually have to be phrased like this: Suppose thereâs an accountant and you give her a magic box that spits out the correct result in, what, I donât know, 70-90% of the time. The accountant couldnât rely on this box now, could she? Sheâd either have to double-check everything or accept possibly wrong results. And that is how I feel like when I work with AI tools.
Gemini has no idea that its calculator example doesnât make sense. It just spits out some generic âargumentâ that it picked up on some website.
3. The Technical and Legal Perspective (Scraping and Copyright)The AI makes two points here. The first one, I might actually agree with (âbad bot behavior is not the fault of AI itselfâ).
The second point is, once again, gaslighting, because it is phrased/framed like a counter-argument. It implies that I said something which I didnât. Like the AI, I said that you would have to adjust the copyright law! At the same time, the AI answer didnât even question whether itâs okay to break the current law or not. It just said âlol yeah, change the lawsâ. (I wonder in what way the laws would have to be changed in the AIâs âopinionâ, because some of these changes could kill some business opportunities â or the laws would have to have special AI clauses that only benefit the AI techbros. But I digress, that wasnât part of Geminiâs answer.)
tl;drExcept for one point, I donât accept any of Geminiâs âcriticismâ. It didnât pick up on lots of details, ignored arguments, and I can just instinctively tell that this thing does not understand anything it wrote (which is correct, itâs just a statistical model).
And it framed everything like a counter-argument, while actually repeating what I said. Thatâs gaslighting: When Alice says âthe sky is blueâ and Bob replies with âwhy do you say the sky is purple?!â
But it sure looks convincing, doesnât it?
Never againThis took so much of my time. I wonât do this again. đ
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Gemini liked your opinion very much. Here is how it countered:
1. The User Perspective (Untrustworthiness)The criticism of AI as untrustworthy is a problem of misapplication, not capability.
- AI as a Force Multiplier: AI should be treated as a high-speed drafting and brainstorming tool, not an authority. For experts, it offers an immense speed gain, shifting the work from slow manual creation to fast critical editing and verification.
- The Rise of AI Literacy: Users must develop a new skillâAI literacyâto critically evaluate and verify AIâs probabilistic output. This skill, along with improving citation features in AI tools, mitigates the âgaslightingâ effect.
The fear of skill loss is based on a misunderstanding of how technology changes the nature of work; itâs skill evolution, not erosion.
- Shifting Focus to High-Level Skills: Just as the calculator shifted focus from manual math to complex problem-solving, AI shifts the focus from writing boilerplate code to architectural design and prompt engineering. It handles repetitive tasks, freeing humans for creative and complex challenges.
- Accessibility and Empowerment: AI serves as a powerful democratizing tool, offering personalized tutoring and automation to people who lack deep expertise. While dependency is a risk, this accessibility empowers a wider segment of the population previously limited by skill barriers.
The legal and technical flaws are issues of governance and ethical practice, not reasons to reject the core technology.
- Need for Better Bot Governance: Destructive scraping is a failure of ethical web behavior and can be solved with better bot identification, rate limits, and protocols (like enhanced
robots.txt). The solution is to demand digital citizenship from AI companies, not to stop AI development.
Iran executes nuclear engineer accused of spying for Israel - rights group â Read more
Itâs official - the major German and American brands (Porsche, Mercedes, Ford and Stellantis) are backtracking and extending the life of the internal combustion engine beyond 2035 â Read more
Engineers solve the sticky-cell problem in bioreactors and other industries
To help mitigate climate change, companies are using bioreactors to grow algae and other microorganisms that are hundreds of times more efficient at absorbing CO2 than trees. Meanwhile, in the pharmaceutical industry, cell culture is used to manufacture biologic drugs and other advanced treatments, including lifesaving gene and cell therapies. â Read more
@xuu@txt.sour.is Haha 𤣠Iâm already have âconversationsâ with my junior engineers on âhow to best useâ and âhow to avoidâ đ
Immigrants nationwide placed in solitary confinement for weeks, report says
Steph Solis ,  Staff Writer -  msn | Axios
_Stephan: The United States is now running concentration camps. They donât call them that, but as accurate information about their living conditions comes out, it is clear that is what they are. This is all part of the fascist coup, engineered by Trump, his vassals, the Republican Party, and the Supreme Court they have created toge ⌠â Read more
10 Inventors Who Died Before Seeing Their Creations Succeed
In the course of time, inventors, engineers, clever thinkers, and business-minded individuals have propelled humanity forward. Their unique ideas and remarkable creations have helped improve mankind and make society more seamless in countless ways. These advancements have ranged from incremental improvements to monumental leapsâand they span industries and inventions from medical breakthroughs to technological marve ⌠â Read more
Karmada v1.15 Released! Enhanced Resource Awareness for Multi-Template Workloads
Karmada is an open multi-cloud and multi-cluster container orchestration engine designed to help users deploy and operate business applications in a multi-cloud environment. With its compatibility with the native Kubernetes API, Karmada can smoothly migrate single-cluster⌠â Read more
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org Cool! đ You might be interested in my own learnings and toying around with building my own container engine / tooling (whatever you wanna call it) box. I had to learn a bunch of this stuff too đ Control Groups, Namespaces, Process Isolation, etc.
@prologic@twtxt.net Oh, thatâs cool! :-) Feeding magpies seems to be an Aussie thing, the Cutting Edge Engineering Australia videos usually also include a cute magpie feeding clip.
@bender@twtxt.net Off you go to the magpie hunt! We wanna see Florida pies!
Not shown here but, this Shape class used on the linked sketch helps eliminate (by adding them to a set) not only Polygons that are visually the same but also shape rotations using a custom .hash() method :)
(A caveat to the reader: The code can be is messy because it sometimes retains remnants of abandoned ideas and lateral explorations. This is creative coding not software engineering)
Not shown here but, this Shape class used on the linked sketch helps eliminate (by adding them to a set) not only Polygons that are visually the same but also shape rotations using a custom .__hash__() method :)
(A caveat to the reader: The code is messy because it sometimes retains remnants of abandoned ideas and lateral explorations, also, this is creative coding not software engineering)
Docker at AI Engineer Paris: Build and Secure AI Agents with Docker
Last week, Docker was thrilled to be part of the inaugural AI Engineer Paris, a spectacular European debut that brought together an extraordinary lineup of speakers and companies. The conference, organized by the Koyeb team, made one thing clear: the days of simply sprinkling âAI dustâ on applications are over. Meaningful results demand rigorous engineering,⌠â Read more
Jaguar Land Rover to restart some production after cyber-attack
Work is to resume first at the carmakerâs engine factory in Wolverhampton on Monday. â Read more
Saturday Citations: Bird news: Vultures as curators and a newly discovered interspecies warning call
This week, researchers reported that mild dietary stress supports healthy aging. Engineers created artificial neurons that can communicate directly with living cells. And dark energy observations suggest that the universe could end in a âbig crunchâ at 33 billion years old. â Read more
Terasic Announces Starter Kit Featuring RISC-V Nios V Processor and Software Bundle
Terasic has introduced the Atum Nios V Starter Kit, a feature-rich evaluation platform designed to accelerate development with Alteraâs Nios V processor. The kit is aimed at embedded engineers, system developers, and educators looking for a practical way to explore RISC-Vâbased designs on the Agilex 3 FPGA platform. According to Terasicâs announcement, the kit is [âŚ] â Read more
Hello again everyone! A little update on my twtxt client.
I think itâs finally shaping a bit better now, but⌠âď¸
As Iâm trying to put all the parts together, I decided to build multiple parallel UIs, to ensure I donât accidentally create a structure that is more rigid than planned.
I already decided on a UI that I would want to use for myself, it would be inspired by moshidon, misskey and some other âsocial feedsâ mock-ups I found on dribbble.
I also plan on building a raw HTML version (for anyone wanting to do a full DIY client).
I would love to get any suggestions of what you would like to see (and possibly use) as a client, by sharing a link, app/website name or even a sketch made by you on paper.
I think Iâll pick a third and maybe a fourth design to build together with the two already mentioned.
For reference, the screens I think of providing are (some might be optional or conditionally/manually hidable):
- Global / personal timeline screen
- Profile screen (with timeline)
- Thread screen
- Notifications screen or popup (both valid)
- DM list & chat screens (still planning, might come later)
- Settings screen (itâll probably be a hard coded form, but better mention it)
- Publish / edit post screen or popup (still analysing some use cases, as some âenginesâ might not have direct publishing support)
I also plan on adding two optional metadata fields:
display_name: To show a human readable alternative for a nick, it fallback tonickif not defined
banner: Using the same format asavatarbut the image expected is wider, inspired by other socials around
I also plan on supporting any metadata provided, including a dynamically parsable regex rule format for those extra fields, this should allow anyone to build new clients that donât limit themselves to just the social aspect of twtxt, hoping to see unique ways of using twtxt! đ¤
SigCore UC Industrial Control Module Prepares for Crowd Supply Launch
Crowd Supply recently featured the SigCore UC, an upcoming universal industrial I/O controller that combines rugged hardware with open-source software for engineers, researchers, and educators seeking a flexible control and data acquisition platform. Unlike typical development boards or expansion modules, SigCore UC arrives as a complete, ready-to-deploy solution. It is capable of handling real-world volt ⌠â Read more
Hi everyone, hereâs a little introduction of my twtxt client (still WIP).
The client Iâm developing is a single tenant project that runs entirely in the browser (it might use an optional backend).
Itâs entirely based on native web-components and vanilla JS, it is designed to act closer to a toolkit than a full-fledged client, allowing users to âDIYâ their own interface with pure html or plain javascript functions.
Users can also build their own engines by including a global javascript object that implement the defined internal API (TBD).
Iâm planning to build a system that is easy enough to build and use with any skill level, using only pure html (with a homebrew minimal template engine) or via plain JS (Iâll be also providing some pre-made templates too).
Everything can be self-hosted on any static hosting provider, this allows to spread twtxt within communities like Neocities and similarly hosted websites (basically any Indieweb/Smallweb/Digital garden website and any of the common GitHub/Lab/Berg/lify Pages).
It will be probably named something like TxtCraft or craf.txt but Iâm not really sure yet⌠đ¤ (Maybe some suggestions could help)
Iâm still in the experimental phase, so thereâs no decent source-code to share yet, but it will soon enough!
Tiny RISC-V Development Board with WCH CH32V317WCU6 Available from $6.80
The nanoCH32V317 is a compact development board created by MuseLab to simplify prototyping and embedded system development. It integrates USB connectivity, Ethernet support, and a straightforward programming interface through USB Type-C, providing an accessible platform for engineers and hobbyists working with RISC-V microcontrollers. The board is powered by the WCH CH32V317WCU6, a RISC-V microcontro ⌠â Read more
I just created a zs blogging template which Iâm going to use for https://prologic.blog and I might starting writing long-form again soon⢠đ So far the âbloggingâ template/engine (if you weill) is quite simple. It comprises essentially of an index.md a prehook and a few utilities:
$ git ls-files
.gitignore
.zs/config.yml
.zs/editthispage
.zs/include
.zs/layout.html
.zs/list
.zs/months
.zs/now
.zs/onthispage
.zs/posthook
.zs/postsbymonth
.zs/prehook
.zs/scripts
.zs/styles
.zs/tagcloud
.zs/taglist
.zs/years
archives/.empty
assets/css/site.css
assets/js/main.js
index.md
posts/hello-zs-blog.md
posts/on-tagging.md
posts/second-post.md
tags/.empty
Beyond Containers: llama.cpp Now Pulls GGUF Models Directly from Docker Hub
The world of local AI is moving at an incredible pace, and at the heart of this revolution is llama.cppâthe powerhouse C++ inference engine that brings Large Language Models (LLMs) to everyday hardware (and itâs also the inference engine that powers Docker Model Runner). Developers love llama.cpp for its performance and simplicity. And we at⌠â Read more
What is a #GameEngine for you? Is there a gray area between game engines and graphics frameworks? You can make games with SDL, RayLib, Processing (and py5âŚ), p5js, d3js, but would you consider them game engines?
Maybe I should ask my students to make a game engine purist-neutral-radical alignment chart ? đ¤Ą
I think I understand now. Americans do not go camping, we do recreational activities. I donât think campers are a thing here, but RVs (Recreational Vehicles) are. Thatâs why it would never cross my mind to get anything with fabric, that folds. No mate, we get a house on wheels, with a million miles engine. đ¤Ł
Other than that, it looks nice!
INTEGZA on BUILDING JET and ROCKET ENGINES at HOME â Read more
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Iâd love to have a Python script pushing my local CSV, too. But thatâs never gonna fly, not in a thousand years. I canât imagine that ever becoming reasonably stable without having to fix everything after the reverse-engineered API changes again.
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org I do my timetracking in a little Python script, locally. Every now and then, I push the data to our actual service. Problem solved â but itâs a completely unpopular approach, they all want to use the web site. I donât get it. Then, of course, when itâs down, shit hits the fan. (Luckily, our timetracking software is neither developed nor run by us anymore. Itâs a silly cloud service, but the upside is that Iâm not responsible anymore. đ¤ˇ)
Some of our oldschool devs tried to roll out local timetracking once, about 15 years ago. I donât remember anymore why they failed âŚ
This is developed inhouse, Iâm just so glad that weâre not a software engineering company. Oh wait. How embarrassing.
Oh to be anonymous on the internet. That must be nice. đ
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Yeah, itâs a shitshow. MS overconfirms all my prejudices constantly.
Ignoring e-mail after lunch works great, though. :-)
Our timetracking is offline for over a week because of reasons. The responsible bunglers are falling by the skin of their teeth: https://lyse.isobeef.org/tmp/timetracking.png
- The error message neither includes the timeframe nor a link to an announcement article.
- The HTML page needs to download JS in order to display the fucking error message.
- Proper HTTP status codes are clearly only for big losers.
- Despite being down, heaps of resources are still fetched.
I find it really fascinating how one can screw up on so many levels. This is developed inhouse, Iâm just so glad that weâre not a software engineering company. Oh wait. How embarrassing.
@eldersnake@we.loveprivacy.club This was an interesting read for sure! đ I donât think it had anything I hadnât already considered in terms of the ethical/moral points of view. Iâm not sure where I stand myself either to be honest. Iâve forced myself to get familiar with the ecosystem and tooling, because in my line of work as a tech lead (staff engineer in sre) you donât want to be that one guy that ya know đ Ethically/Morally though, Iâm definitely with the sentiment of this post đ Much like the whole Crypto hype yaers back (if yâall remember?!) this is also one of the most energy hungry pieces of âtechâ (if you can call it that?) in a while. Then thereâs these other issues âstealing peopleâs workâ, âreliance is causing humans to become cognitively weak and neural connections to shrinkâ, to name a fewâŚ
About ChatGPT rotting peopleâs brains, similarly could be said about search engines, and reference books. Oh, also doom scrolling, and mobile devices, and the Internet⌠:-P
** My measurer **
My dad is an electrical engineer and physicist. Measuring things is a core part of his professional life, and something he seems to spend a lot of time doing around the house. This is all to say my dad is relatively expert in the ways of measuring things so I think itâs hilarious that he calls absolutely anything he is using to measure anything elseâmy measurer.â Measuring tape, oscilloscope, scale, volt meter, bubble level, table spoons, whatever. Theyâre allâmy measurer.â â Read more
Saw this on Mastodon:
https://racingbunny.com/@mookie/114718466149264471
18 rules of Software Engineering
- You will regret complexity when on-call
- Stop falling in love with your own code
- Everything is a trade-off. Thereâs no âbestâ 3. Every line of code you write is a liability 4. Document your decisions and designs
- Everyone hates code they didnât write
- Donât use unnecessary dependencies
- Coding standards prevent arguments
- Write meaningful commit messages
- Donât ever stop learning new things
- Code reviews spread knowledge
- Always build for maintainability
- Ask for help when youâre stuck
- Fix root causes, not symptoms
- Software is never completed
- Estimates are not promises
- Ship early, iterate often
- Keep. It. Simple.
Solid list, even though 14 is up for debate in my opinion: Software can be completed. You have a use case / problem, you solve that problem, done. Your software is completed now. There might still be bugs and they should be fixed â but this doesnât âaddâ to the program. Donât use âsoftware is never doneâ as an excuse to keep adding and adding stuff to your code.
Lately (since there are AI summaries at the top), each time I Google for the answer to a question, the AI summary has at least a part of the answer wrong. It makes up laws that do not exist, books that were never published - in sum, well written sentences that make linguistic sense, but with made up content.
Let me repeat: each time. Maybe I only search for hard stuff, or fringe stuff, or this some other explanation - but seriously, itâs hard to understand how isnât Google ashamed of its AI overviews⌠or not sued under some regulation regarding fake news.
PS: yes, I know, my fault for using Google as a search engine.
Builder.ai collapses after revelation that its âAIâ was hundreds of engineers â Read more
[$] Nyxt: the Emacs-like web browser
Nyxt is an unusual web
browser that tries to answer the question, âwhat if Emacs was a
good web browser?â. Nyxt is not an Emacs package, but a full
web browser written in Common Lisp and available under the BSD
three-clause license. Its target audience is developers who want a
browser that is keyboard-driven and extensible; Nyxt is also developed
for Linux first, rather than Linux being an afterthought or just a
sliver of its audience. The philosophy (as described ⌠â Read more
Robert Pether âunrecognisableâ after release from Iraqi prison, wife says
The Australian engineer spent four years languishing behind bars before being released on bail late on Thursday night, along with an Egyptian colleague. â Read more
Australian Robert Pether released from Iraqi prison
The UN says there is evidence the Australian engineer was tortured as he spent more than four years in an Iraqi jail. â Read more
How Reladiff Works - A Journey Through the Challenges and Techniques of Data Engineering with SQL
Comments â Read more
CD Projekt Red: So spektakulär verhext The Witcher 4 die Unreal Engine
Welt, Grafik, Ciri: Eine Tech-Demo verrät mehr ßber The Witcher 4. Golem.de konnte die Szenen vorab sehen und erklärt Details. Von Peter Steinlechner ( The Witcher 4, Rollenspiel)
Conformance Checking at MongoDB: Testing That Our Code Matches Our TLA+ Specs | MongoDB Blog
Comments â Read more
ROCKET PROPELLER #engine #inventions #rocket href=âhttps://txt.sour.is/search?q=%23scienceâ>#science** â Read more
When was the last time you broke production and how?
Inspired by this post on senior engineers telling junior engineers about their mistakes, I am asking you all to share your stories or even existing posts about a situation where you royally fucked something up.
(Bonus points for every story that is turned into a blog post just for this thread) â Read more
Check Engine
â Read more
For context, this is a funny
Interaction between an engineer and copilot on Microsoftâs core programming Language đ¤Łđ¤Ż
10 Ancient âSmartâ Materials Scientists Still Canât Reproduce
As civilizations from Rome to the Maya harnessed empirical ingenuity to create materials with built-in healing, color-shifting, or structural resilience, they left behind recipes that modern science is only now decoding. From rust-proof iron pillars and self-repairing concrete to nanotech-level glass and ancient vulcanized rubber, these ten remarkable âsmartâ materials demonstrate how our ancestors engineered [âŚ] ⌠â Read more
Platform Democracy: Rethinking Who Builds and Consumes Your Internal Platform
Platform engineering has gone through multiple iterations over the years. First, there was the split between Development and Operations, a model that broke the flow of value by creating dependencies, bottlenecks, and misaligned incentives. Then came⌠â Read more
10 Perilous Hikes Still Open to the Public Today
These ten trails span the globe, from Asiaâs sacred peaks to North Americaâs desert labyrinths, each offering a unique blend of natural beauty, cultural resonance, and heart-stopping exposure. Whether itâs the vertiginous boardwalks of China, the engineered marvels of Spain, or the secluded canyons of Utah, every hike demands respect for both terrain and tradition. [âŚ]
The post [10 Perilous Hikes Still Open to the Public Today](https: ⌠â Read more
Apple Calendar App Revamp Confirmed by Job Posting
A new Apple job listing has provided more evidence that the company is working on a major overhaul of its Calendar app.
A senior software engineer position for âCalendar Experience,â [spotted](https://www.macworld.com/article/2791509/apple-job-posting-confirms-calendar-rev ⌠â Read more
Fedora Council overturns FESCo provenpackager decision
The Fedora Council has ruled on the Fedora Engineering Steering
Councilâs (FESCo) decision last year to revoke Peter Robinsonâs
provenpackager status. In a statement
published to the fedora-devel-announce mailing list, the council has
announced that it has overturned FESCoâs decision:
FESCo didnât have a specific policy for dealing with a request to remove
Proven Packager rights. In addition, the FESCo process wa ⌠â Read more
How to thrive as a junior engineer: tips and insights
Plus, ways teammates and leaders can be better mentors for their new counterparts.
The post How to thrive as a junior engineer: tips and insights appeared first on The GitHub Blog. â Read more
Google, Apple turn up the heat in the AI arms race
Google has officially created an AI chatbot for its search engine, while Apple plans to hand its AI models over for App Store developers to use as the AI arms race marches on. â Read more
@prologic@twtxt.net Thatâs an interesting premise in that article:
The fun has been sucked out of the process of creation because nothing I make organically can compete with what AI already producesâor soon will.
This is like saying itâs pointless to make music yourself because some professional player/audio engineer does a better job. Really, thereâs always someone or something thatâs better than you at a particular job.
If we focus too much on âcompetitionâ, then yes, you can just stop doing anything. I donât know how common this mindset is, especially among artists or creative people. đ¤ I would have assumed that many writers, for example, simply enjoy the process of writing. Am I being too naive once more? đ¤Ł
Introducing k0rdent v0.3.0: Smarter observability, smoother operations
In my previous blog I wrote a detailed version describing how k0rdent eases platform engineering at scale. For those of you who are unaware, k0rdent is a Kubernetes-native distributed container management environment (DCME) designed to help⌠â Read more
10 Human Inventions That Are Rewriting the Future
Watching the local news in most parts of the world might lead one to believe that weâre completely surrounded by disaster, conflict, and societal decline. Bad news dominates the headlines because it demands our attention. However, it rarely tells us the full story of whatâs happening across the planet. Behind the scenes, countless scientists, engineers, [âŚ]
The post [10 Human Inventions That Are Rewriting the Future](https://listver ⌠â Read more
Design system annotations, part 2: Advanced methods of annotating components
How to build custom annotations for your design system components or use Figmaâs Code Connect to help capture important accessibility details before development.
The post [Design system annotations, part 2: Advanced methods of annotating components](https://github.blog/engineering/user-experience/design-system-annotations-part-2-advanced-methods-of-annotating-component ⌠â Read more
Design system annotations, part 1: How accessibility gets left out of components
The Accessibility Design team created a set of annotations to bridge the gaps that design systems alone canât fix and proactively addresses accessibility issues within Primer components.
The post [Design system annotations, part 1: How accessibility gets left out of components](https://github.blog/engineering/user-experience/design-system-annotations-part-1-how ⌠â Read more
âI donât see how it doesnât happenâ: Apple eyes giant change to devices
Apple is âactively looking atâ revamping the Safari web browser on its devices to focus on AI-powered search engines, a seismic shift for the industry hastened by the potential end of a longtime partnership with Google. â Read more
HydraLink Offers Open USB-to-Automotive Ethernet Interface for Testing and Diagnostics
HydraLink is now available on CrowdSupply as a compact and open-source USB-to-Automotive Ethernet adapter intended for engineers, researchers, and others working with in-vehicle networks. It supports both 100BASE-T1 and 1000BASE-T1 over single-pair Ethernet, enabling direct access to automotive Ethernet without the need for media converters or additional lab equipment. Hy ⌠â Read more
V8 JavaScript engine gets eager compilation hints, but will devs use sparingly as advised?
Comments â Read more
Albertson: Future of OSL in Jeopardy
Lance Albertson writes
that the Oregon State University Open Source Lab, the home of many
prominent free-software projects over the years, has run into financial
trouble:
I am writing to inform you about a critical and time-sensitive
situation facing the Open Source Lab. Over the past several years,
we have been operating at a deficit due to a decline in corporate
donations. While OSUâs College of Engineering (CoE) has generously
filled this ga ⌠â Read more
How to Clear CoreSpotlight Metadata on Mac When Taking Up Large Amounts of Storage
Spotlight is the powerful search engine built into MacOS that allows you to quickly find any file or data on your Mac disk drives. Part of what makes Spotlight so fast is that it uses caches and temporary files during indexing to quickly refer to data on your Mac, but sometimes those Spotlight files can ⌠Read More â Read more
@andros@twtxt.andros.dev what makes Kagi âthe best search engineâ? It is premium, alright. Allegedly you donât get ads, but pay up-front for it, monthly.
I am very agree with the article. For me, Kagi is the best search engine. A premium experience.
Kubestronaut in Orbit: Jana VonĹĄĂĄk
Get to know Jana Weâre thrilled to recognize Jana VonĹĄĂĄk from Slovakia as our first-ever female Golden Kubestronaut. A dedicated DevOps Security Engineer with a background in software development, Jana brings a rare blend of development⌠â Read more
@thecanine@twtxt.net Yeah this is where I think all the hype really falls down. Itâs all just a really really expensive search engine and auto-complete đ¤Śââď¸ Thatâs it!
I guess this is trivial to do with some pre-existing engine, but itâs more fun to do it yourself: https://movq.de/v/0cfa4e9504/world.tar.gz
These ideas are dr the two books:
- Drift into Failure: From Hunting Broken Components to Understanding Complex Systems by Sidney Dekker (2011)
- Engineering a Safer World by Nancy Leveson (2011)
The former I havenât read. The later I havenât finished reading đ
Inspiriert durch äuĂere EinflĂźsse habe ich mit litecanvas eine mobile Chooser-App nachgebaut: https://tools.uplegger.eu/mobile.tapChooser/
Jetzt muss ich nie wieder selbst Entscheidungen treffen!1elf đ¤
Hmmm thereâs a bug somewhere in the way Iâm ingesting archived feeds đ¤
sqlite> select * from twts where content like 'The web is such garbage these days%';
hash = 37sjhla
feed_url = https://twtxt.net/user/prologic/twtxt.txt/1
content = The web is such garbage these days đ Or is it the garbage search engines? đ¤
created = 2024-11-14T01:53:46Z
created_dt = 2024-11-14 01:53:46
subject = #37sjhla
mentions = []
tags = []
links = []
sqlite>
Thatâs an interesting research article about Wallbleed, a memory disclosure vulnerability in the Great Firewall of China. They reverse-engineered the buggy DNS query processing code that injects a response if the hostname should be censored: https://gfw.report/publications/ndss25/data/paper/wallbleed.pdf
Introducing sub-issues: Enhancing issue management on GitHub
Explore the iterative development journey of GitHubâs sub-issues feature. Learn how we leveraged sub-issues to build and refine sub-issues, breaking down larger tasks into smaller, manageable ones.
The post Introducing sub-issues: Enhancing issue management on GitHub ap ⌠â Read more
Introducing NEO Gamma - Another Step Closer to Home
NEO Gamma is the next generation of home humanoids designed and engineered by 1X Technologies. Source: 1X â Read more
aleph - stateless multiple choice survey engine | https://nilfm.cc/aleph.html
[$] Catching up with calibre
Saying that calibre is
ebook-management software undersells the application by a fair
margin. Calibre is an open-source Swiss Army knife for ebooks that can
be used for everything from creating ebooks, converting ebooks from
obscure formats to modern formats like EPUB, to serving up an ebook
library over the web. The most recent major release, calibre 8.0,
brings a better text-to-speech engine, a tool for creating audio
overlays w ⌠â Read more
Apple Begins Testing iOS 18.6 Update for iPhones
Apple this week began testing iOS 18.6, according to our websiteâs visitor logs, which have been a reliable indicator of upcoming iOS versions. The update is currently limited to Appleâs software engineers, with no developer or public beta available yet.
The first iOS 18.6 beta will likely be made available in May or June, and the update should be released to the gen ⌠â Read more