Prof. Bigode mandou na outra rede:
âLamento informar o falecimento do matemĂĄtico catalĂŁo Claudi Alsina (1952-2025), foi dos maiores popularizadores da MatemĂĄtica da España e do mundo. Alsina conhecido por seu humor refinado tinha uma vasta cultura, doutorou-se em MatemĂĄtica pela Universidade de Barcelona e ao longo de sua vida acadĂȘmica aproximou a MatemĂĄtica de outras ĂĄreas do conhecimento, em especial a Arquitetura e o Design, fez parte da equipe que estudou os projetos de GaudĂ para a reconstrução da Sagrada FamĂlia de Barcelona. Alsina era professor catedrĂĄtico Universidade PolitĂ©cnica da Catalunha, onde se aposentou, autor de mais de 50 livros sobre MatemĂĄtica Recreativa, Cultura MatemĂĄtica, MatemĂĄtica para o Ensino Superior e para a Formação de Professores.
Sou âbi-neto acadĂȘmicoâ de Alsina que foi orientador de meus orientadores (de doutorado) e desde que o conheci hĂĄ cerca de 30 anos tenho me inspirado em seu trabalho.
Para quem sabe do que estou falando, Alsina tinha nĂșmero de ErdĆs = 2.â
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Lots of things stop me đ€Ł crappy wifi, no international roaming, no remote access (by design) just to name a few đ
I have to say. A well designed Hypermedia Driven Web Application such as yarndâ using HTMX is just as good, i'd not better, than one written in React.
Speaking of WAF(s) / Web Applicaiton Firewalls â I actually had forgotten that not only have I designed a new WAF from scratch, but Iâve actually implemented it already, and done some local testing. I just havenât put it into production yet⊠What od you think @aelaraji@aelaraji.com ? đ€ https://git.mills.io/prologic/caddy-waf
@aelaraji@aelaraji.com Yeah and I think I can basically pull the crowssec rules every N interval right and use this to make blocking decisions? â Iâve actually considered this part of a completely new WAF design that I just havenât built yet (just designing it).
construir coisas na internet passou a ter premissas tĂŁo complexas que uma pessoa se esquece de como se fazia. Ando a re-adoptar esta metodologia, que hoje em dia jĂĄ soa a punk
(entrevista com o Joshua Schachter, criador do del.icio.us)
Iâm still looking for people, podcasts, events talking about #Python without assuming everyone is a software developer or a âdata scientistâ.
Why are data journalists, type designers (Guidoâs brother!), Blender wizards, FreeCAD hackers, hobbyist game makers, casual automation buffs, robot tweakers, MicroPython enthusiasts, creative coders, educators, biologists, astronomers and other scientists, consistently ignored?
Are we f*ing invisible? One of Python Brasil keynoters kind of just did that. My heart sank. Other talks, like the Art&FLOSS one, by Jim Schmitz, lessened my pain.
Where is the follow up for that 2017 keynote by Jake VanderPlas?
Iâm still looking for people, podcasts, events, talking about #Python without assuming everyone is a software developer or a âdata scientistâ.
Why are data journalists, type designers (Guidoâs brother!), Blender wizards, FreeCAD hackers, hobbyist game makers, casual automation buffs, robot tweakers, MicroPython enthusiasts, creative coders, educators, biologists, astronomers and other scientists, consistently ignored?
Are we invisible? One of Python Brasil keynoters kind of just did that. My heart sank. Other talks, like the Art&FLOSS one, by Jim Schmitz, lessened my pain.
Where is the follow up for that 2017 keynote by Jake VanderPlas?
Testing new design, architecture and implementation of a Twtxt bridge Iâm working onâŠ
verification-token: ee9bc4da3356f4990671
Please ignore.
I used Gemini (the Google AI) twice at work today, asking about Google Workspace configuration and Google Cloud CLI usage (because we use those a lot). Youâd think that itâd be well-suited for those topics. It answered very confidently, yet completely wrong. Just wrong. Made-up CLI arguments, whatever. It took me a while to notice, though, because itâs so convincing and, well, you implicitly and subconsciously trust the results of the Google AI when asking about Google topics, donât you?
Will it get better over time? Maybe. But what I really want is this:
- Good, well-structured, easy-to-read, proper documentation. Google isnât doing too bad in this regard, actually, itâs just that they have so much stuff that itâs hard to find what youâre looking for. Hence âŠ
- ⊠I want a good search function. Just give me a good fuzzy search for your docs. Thatâs it.
I just donât have the time or energy to constantly second-guess this stuff. Give me something reliable. Something that is designed to do the right thing, not toy around with probabilities. âAI for everythingâ is just the wrong approach.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Wow, thatâs a hell lot of food! If it doesnât spoil, itâs easily enough for the rest of your life and all your neighbors and surrounding cities, probably more. :-D
Thatâs a great font. I like it. It just suits the print style incredibly well. No offence, to the absolute contrary, I would not have thought that you actually designed that. It looks just so right. Hats off! :-)
@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
Thoughts/Opinions on Cap đ€
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@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.
GrrrrrâŠeat, one of my Bessey spring clamps broke. Ripped the arm right in half. I wouldnât be surprised if itâs just designed in Germany but actually made out of Chinesium. :-( I will attempt to glue it back together with two component adhesive tomorrow, but I donât have high hopes.
Design trends I think will take off in 2026
but tierlist

S - move from flat design to more detailed, 3D, more complex logos.
A - glass, not just liquid, Windows Vista, 7, 11,⊠accessibility concerns, but I like to see it.
B-/C+ - black and white icons, favicons. I did it before it was cool, but itâs getting overused.
E - gradientslop, barely started, already all blends together.
https://villares-shop.fourthwall.com/
#Python is for artists too!
#CreativeCoding #py5 #Processing #LSystem
#4 RFI: From an External URL Into your Application
Understanding RFI isnât just about finding a bug; itâs about recognizing a critical design flaw that, if exploited, hands an attacker theâŠ
[Continue reading on InfoSec Write-ups »](https://infosecwrit ⊠â Read more
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Yeah, give it a shot. At worst you know that you have to continue your quest. :-)
Fun fact, during a semester break I was actually a little bored, so I just started reading the Qt documentation. I didnât plan on using Qt for anything, though. I only looked at the docs because they were on my bucket list for some reason. Qt was probably recommended to me and coming from KDE myself, that was motivation enough to look at the docs just for fun.
The more I read, the more hooked I got. The documentation was extremely well written, something Iâve never seen before. The structure was very well thought out and I got the impression that I understood what the people thought when they actually designed Qt.
A few days in I decided to actually give it a real try. Having never done anything in C++ before, I quickly realized that this endeavor wonât succeed. I simply couldnât get it going. But I found the Qt bindings for Python, so that was a new boost. And quickly after, I discovered that there were even KDE bindings for Python in my package manager, so I immediately switched to them as that integrated into my KDE desktop even nicer.
I used the Python KDE bindings for one larger project, a planning software for a summer camp that we used several years. Itâs main feature was to see who is available to do an activity. In the past, that was done on a large sheet of paper, but people got assigned two activities at the same time or werenât assigned at all. So, by showing people in yellow (free), green (one activity assigned) and red (overbooked), this sped up and improved the planning process.
Another core feature was to generate personalized time tables (just like back in school) and a dedicated view for the morning meeting on site.
It was extended over the years with all sorts of stuff. E.g. I then implemented a warning if all the custodians of an activitiy with kids were underage to satisfy new the guidelines that there should be somebody of age.
Just before the pandemic I started to even add support for personalized live views on phones or tablets during the planning process (with web sockets, though). This way, people could see their own schedule or independently check at which day an activity takes place etc. For these side quests, they donât have to check the large matrix on the projector. But the project died there.
Hereâs a screenshot from one of the main views: https://lyse.isobeef.org/tmp/k3man.png
This Python+Qt rewrite replaced and improved the Java+Swing predecessor.
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org To be fair, Iâm not convinced of the web design / user interface decisions either. I just hacked this together over a couple of days. Iâm not sold on any of the UI/UX thus far. Open to suggestions, improvements, hell even a complete CSS rewrite đ€Ł UI/UX nor CSS is my strong suite đ
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Uh, that actually looks not that terrible. Somehow, I remember Swing GUIs being way uglier.
As for Visual Basic, I only had to use VBA once in my life. That was in the beginning of my career when I inherited a project from a leaving coworker. Fuck me, was that awful. Just alone the damn compiler error dialog box popping up in my face all the time while editing and the compiler already trying to parse the unfinished and hence of course uncompilable code. Boy, that left a lasting impression on me. I ported everything to Java very quickly. Luckily, the code base wasnât all that large at that point in time. I had to add a bunch of new features after that, so I was very glad that I convinced my workmate/project manager to do that first. We didnât even need a GUI, the button in Excel was transformed to a command line program that just generated the large file.
But I cannot comment on the VB GUI designer, I never used that. Your screenshot looks very similar to the Delphi one, though. Only towards the end of my Delphi days I found out about the possibility to make the widgets snap to window edges and corners (I donât remember how that was called), so that resizing the windows was actually possible without messing up their entire contents.
Switching to Linux, Delphi wasnât an option anymore. For some reason I couldnât use Kylix. Maybe it was already dead by the time I changed OSes. Or I couldnât get it to run. I just donât remember. I just recall that the unavailability of Delphi was the reason it took me a while to actually settle on Linux. I then fully switched to Java. The GridBagLayout was my absolutely favorite Swing layout manager. I reckon I used it 98% of the time, because it was so powerful and made the windows resize properly, just as I had learned to do in Delphi shortly before.
Up until discovering Swing, I used Javaâs AWT for a short amount of time. That was very limited I think and I hit the limits fairly quickly. Later at uni, we had one project making use of SWT. Didnât convince me either. I could be wrong, but I think there was also a SWT GUI designer plugin for Eclipse. If there really was, that one wasnât in the same street as Delphiâs (there must be a reason I forgot about it ;-)).
@bender@twtxt.net Kaboom! Hahaha, I did not think of that at all, thanks for pointing it out, mate! :â-D
But let me clarify just in case: I honestly do not want to bash this project. In fact, itâs a great little invention. Itâs just that Iâm not conviced by the current user interface decisions. Anyway, web design isnât right up my alley. I just wanted to add some fun. And luckily, at least someone liked it so far. :-)
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Donât you worry, this was meant as a joke. :-D
There was a time when I thought that Swing was actually really good. But having done some Qt/KDE later, I realized how much better that was. That were the late KDE 3 and early KDE 4 days, though. Not sure how it is today. But back then it felt Trolltech and the KDE folks put a hell lot more thought into their stuff. I was pleasantly surprised how natural it appeared and all the bits played together. Sure, there were the odd ends, but the overall design was a lot better in my opinion.
To be fair, I never used it from C++, always the Python bindings, which were considerably more comfortable (just alone the possibility to specify most attributes right away as kwargs in the constructor instead of calling tons of setters). And QtJambi, the Java binding, was also relatively nice. I never did a real project though, just played around with the latter.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de The one for Delphi was quite good. But JCreator (I donât remember exactly) was awful and I never looked back to GUI designers. Always layed out the GUI by hand in code myself since then. These days I donât deal with GUI programming anymore.
And maybe I should go back to using GUI designers. Havenât used those since the Visual Basic days. đ€ It wasnât pretty, but you got results very quickly and efficiently.
(When I switched to Linux, I quickly got stuck with GTK and that only had Glade, which wasnât super great at the time, so I didnât start using it ⊠and then I never questioned that decision âŠ)
US Senate moves to designate Russia a state sponsor of terrorism, over kidnapped Ukrainian children â Read more
Sobre o assunto da impotĂȘncia do design, nĂŁo percam o que diz e escreve o @entreprecariat@entreprecariat
SĂŁo alturas como esta que me convencem da incapacidade do design conseguir abordar qualquer problema de ordem social. Enquanto designer, sinto-me bem distante do que vejo ser o discurso da ĂĄrea.
A sĂ©rio, âhappisodesâ? :blobfacepalm:
News organizations hold out on signing Pentagon media policies âdesigned to stifle a free pressâ
Jeremy Barr,  Reporter -  The Guardian (U.K.)
_Stephan: Part of the Trump Republican Party fascist strategy is to use the American military to take control of Democrat controlled cities. And one aspect of that strategy is to suppress a free press from covering the military. Here is a good description of what they are doing. It has nev ⊠â Read more
Lobsters Interview with Zdsmith
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Apple Hosts Unusual Colorado Event to Showcase Latest Hardware
Apple has invited a group of social media influencers to Colorado this week for an unusual event involving group hiking, trail running, and other outdoor activities designed to showcase the companyâs recently launched iPhone 17 Pro Max, AirPods Pro 3, and Apple Watch Ultra 3.
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Hate the New Phone App on iOS 26 for iPhone? Get the Old Phone Layout Back Again
While the most significant visual change in iOS 26 is the Liquid Glass interface, youâll also find some pretty notable design overhauls of commonly used iPhone apps. The Phone app is one such example, with the new Phone app design in iOS 26 being wildly different from the prior versions, featuring a new cluttered design ⊠Read More â Read more
[$] Upcoming Rust language features for kernel development
The
Rust for Linux project has been good for Rust, Tyler Mandry, one of the
co-leads of Rustâs language-design team, said. He
gave a talk at
Kangrejos 2025 covering upcoming Rust language features and thanking
the Rust for Linux developers for helping drive them forward. Afterward, Benno Lossin and Xiangfei Ding
went into more detail about their work on the three most important language
features for kernel development: ⊠â Read more
The people that design these bills and laws are unhinged.
Karmada v1.15 Released! Enhanced Resource Awareness for Multi-Template Workloads
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After decades of lobbying and design controversy, the New South Wales government says it needs another $30â40 million to proceed with the Wilcannia Weir upgrade. â Read more
IBM Granite 4.0 Models Now Available on Docker Hub
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More Apple Apps Get Liquid Glass Redesign
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Both apps now feature Liquid Glass interface elements, such as more rounded buttons, floatin ⊠â Read more
Trump Administration Conjures Up New âTerroristâ Designation to Justify Killing Civilians
Nick Turse,  national Security Fellow for The Intercept -  The Intercept
_Stephan: The media wonât openly say it yet, but the Trump Republican fascist coup has now placed Democrat controlled cities under military occupation, and they are developing a legalistic rationale allowing Trumpâs Gestapo to shoot and kill people in the occupied cities. We ⊠â Read more
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10+ macOS Tahoe Features You Might Have Missed
Appleâs new Liquid Glass design has received most of the attention in news about macOS Tahoe, but there are quite a few new features that make the Mac better than ever, including some that are not super obvious. Weâve rounded up 10 useful macOS Tahoe features that you should know about.
With macOS Tahoe, you have more control over the layout of your menu ⊠â Read more
Researchers demonstrate substrate design principles for scalable superconducting quantum materials
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Apple Releases Safari Technology Preview 229 With Bug Fixes and Performance Improvements
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Powerbeats Fit Review: Appleâs New $200 Workout Earbuds Replace Beats Fit Pro
Appleâs Beats brand has a new set of fitness-focused earbuds available, the Powerbeats Fit. We picked up a set of the Powerbeats Fit to see how they compare to the prior-generation Beats Fit Pro and Appleâs AirPods Pro 3.
_Subscribe to the MacRumors YouTube channel for more videos._
The Powerbeats Fit are designed for wo ⊠â Read more
Hello again everyone! A little update on my twtxt client.
I think itâs finally shaping a bit better now, but⊠âïž
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€
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!
The Trust Paradox: When Your AI Gets Catfished
The fundamental challenge with MCP-enabled attacks isnât technical sophistication. Itâs that hackers have figured out how to catfish your AI. These attacks work because they exploit the same trust relationships that make your development team actually functional. When your designers expect Figma files from agencies theyâve worked with for years, when your DevOps folks trust⊠â Read more
@alexonit@twtxt.alessandrocutolo.it Yeah I think weâre overstating the UNIX principles a bit here đ€Ł I get what youâre trying to say though @zvava@twtxt.net đ If I could go back in time and do it all over again, I would have gotten the Hash length correct and I would have used SHA-256 instead. But someone way smarter than me designed the Twt Hash spec, we adopted it and well here we are today, it worksâą đ
@prologic@twtxt.net to clarify: i meant the ability to parse feeds using unix command line utilities, as a principal of twtxtv1âs design. im not sure how feasible it is to build a simple feed reader out of common scripting utilities when hashing is in play, and;
i concede, it does make a lot of sense to fix up the hashing spec rather than completely supplant it at this point, just thinking about what the rewrite would be like is dreadful in and of itself x.x
And I need to make something absolutely clear as well here. Twtxt was completely and utterly dead back in {Aug 2020](https://yarn.social/about.html) when I came across the spec and its simplicity and realised the lost opportunity. Since then weâve continued to grow a small but thriving community. The extensions weâve built over time have stood and lasted the test of time for the past ~5 years. We need not break things too badly, because what we have today and was designed years ago actually works quite wellâą (despite some flaws).
@prologic@twtxt.net the simplest thing to do is to completely forgo hashing anything because we are communicating using plain text files right now :3 while i agree hashes are incredibly helpful in the backend im not sure it has a place outside of it, it basically eliminates two core design principals of twtxt (human readability and integrating well with unix command line utilities) and makes new clients more difficult to build than it should be
Raspberry Pi Updates Keyboard PC with New 500+ Model
Raspberry Pi 500+ is the newest all-in-one personal computer in the Raspberry Pi family. It combines the Raspberry Pi 5 platform with a mechanical keyboard, upgraded memory, and integrated storage. The design builds on the earlier Raspberry Pi 400 and 500 models while adding higher specifications and new input features. The Raspberry Pi 500+ is [âŠ] â Read more
Each origin feed numbers new threads
(tno:N). Replies carry both (tno:N) and (ofeed:<origin-url>). Thread identity = (ofeed, tno).
Example:
Alice starts thread href=âhttps://txt.sour.is/search?q=%2342:â>#42:**
2025-09-25T12:00:00Z (tno:42) Launching storage design review.
Bob replies:
2025-09-25T12:05:00Z (tno:42) (ofeed:https://alice.example/twtxt.txt
) I think compaction stalls under load.
Carol replies to Bob:
2025-09-25T12:08:00Z (tno:42) (ofeed:https://alice.example/twtxt.txt
) Token bucket sounds good.
Introducing the Docker Premium Support and TAM service
The Docker Customer Success and Technical Account Management organizations are excited to introduce the Premium Support and TAM service â a new service designed to extend Dockerâs support to always-on 24/7, priority SLAs, expert guidance, and TAM add-on services. We have carefully designed these new services to support our valued customersâ developers and global business⊠â Read more
«⊠It all went well until 1980 or so, when Ronald Reagan appointed a new head of the EPA. The lady didnât like her stationery we had designed and with a simple âI want my daisy backâ undermined the overall graphic system. If the Queen doesnât like it, we donât like it became the attitude, and the program began to crumble. The old logo was fully reinstated and the graphic system was abandoned. A decade later, nobody at the EPA could find a copy of the Graphic Standards System, except a bunch of legalese that you will find on its website.
Iâm a fan of the EPA and all its efforts and hope that we helped in some small way for this agency to communicate within itself, to other government agencies, and with the American people. Iâm very grateful and appreciative that Jesse Reed and Hamish Smyth of Standards Manual, and Julie Anixter of AIGA, brought this document to life again. Have fun revisiting.»
(from the introduction by Steff GeissbĂŒhler)
«1977 United States Environmental
Protection Agency
Graphic Standards System
Designed by Steff GeissbĂŒhler,
Chermayeff & Geismar Associates
The EPA Graphic Standards System is one of the finest examples of a standards manual ever created. The modular and flexible system devised raised the standard for public design in the United States.
The book features a foreword by Tom Geismar, introduction by Steff GeissbĂŒhler, an essay by Christopher Bonanos, scans of the original manual (from GeissbĂŒhlerâs personal copy), and 48 pages of photographs from the EPA-commissioned Documerica project (1970â1977).»
free me from the hell of not knowing how to design a website
Folks I finally made something I wanted to make for a long time, a T-Shirt design thing.
Available at Rednubble https://www.redbubble.com/i/t-shirt/numpy-shapely-trimesh-and-py5-by-villares/173500912.7H7A9?asc=u
And also available in Brazil at Uma Penca: https://umapenca.com/villares/
You can also buy stickers and other items⊠soon my âPython Reading Clubâ and âPython is also for artists!â designs will be available. This will help support my free and open source activities. I make free and open educational resources, I teach at several places and I need to make ends meet.
#python #numpy #shapely #trimesh #py5 #creativeCoding #FLOSS
Folks I finally made something I wanted to make for a long time, a T-Shirt design thing.
Available at Redbubble https://www.redbubble.com/i/t-shirt/numpy-shapely-trimesh-and-py5-by-villares/173500912.7H7A9?asc=u
And also available in Brazil at Uma Penca: https://umapenca.com/villares/
You can also buy stickers and other items⊠soon my âPython Reading Clubâ and âPython is also for artists!â designs will be available. This will help support my free and open source activities. I make free and open educational resources, I teach at several places and I need to make ends meet.
#python #numpy #shapely #trimesh #py5 #creativeCoding #FLOSS
Folks, I finally made something I wanted to make for a long time, a T-Shirt design thing.
Available at Redbubble https://www.redbubble.com/i/t-shirt/numpy-shapely-trimesh-and-py5-by-villares/173500912.7H7A9?asc=u
And also available in Brazil at Uma Penca: https://umapenca.com/villares/
You can also buy stickers and other items⊠soon my âPython Reading Clubâ and âPython is also for artists!â designs will be available. This will help support my free and open source activities. I make free and open educational resources, I teach at several places and I need to make ends meet.
#python #numpy #shapely #trimesh #py5 #creativeCoding #FLOSS
@twtxtory@twtxtory.adn.org.es it is designed that way on purpose đ€Ł
I have a #CreativeCoding course at Domestika, teaching the first steps of #Python and #py5. The feedback from students always makes me happy!
Check out this work by a student:
https://www.domestika.org/en/projects/1841169-programacion?ttag=a_b_a_villares
And other testimonials:
I have a #CreativeCoding course at Domestika, teaching the first steps of #Python and #py5. The feedback from students always makes me happy!
Check out this work by a student:
https://www.domestika.org/en/projects/1841169-programacion?ttag=a_b_a_villares
And other testimonials:
@bender@twtxt.net Yeah, the subject and multiline extensions are great and absolutely needed. If incorporated right from the beginning, though, they could have been designed even better. :-)
Been mucking around with designing my own camper (floor plan). 
working on a new astroJS based site and i hate being shit at web design because like i have the media for it ready (itâs for my fandom creations which are all done and ready to be shared here lol) but i keep agonizing over the design T__T
Pessoas da comunidade brasileira de #ProgramaçãoCriativa por muitos anos fizeram encontros sob o nome promovido pela Fundação Processing, os chamados #ProcessingCommunityDay, fizemos encontros em vĂĄrias cidades e entĂŁo depois de 2020, com a pandemia do COVID-19, fizemos trĂȘs eventos nacionais muito inspiradores em 2021, 2022 e 2023 (vide https://compoetica.github.io/links/)
Ano passado não conseguimos fazer e este ano pretendemos retomar, só que usando outro nome: #Compoética. Vamos aos poucos divulgar mais sobre o encontro brasileiro de programação criativa em https://compoetica.github.io/CP2025/
Meus agradecimentos profundos ao @guilhermesv@guilhermesv que dedica generosamente um enorme esforço para organizar esses eventos da comunidade e cria o design e peças de comunicação sempre emocionantes de lindos.
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.
Tablet: Apple kĂŒndigt iPadOS 26 mit neuem Fenstersystem an
Apple hat iPadOS 26 vorgestellt, das ein ĂŒberarbeitetes Design und ein neues Fenstersystem hat, das an MacOS erinnert. ( iPad OS, Apple)
Australian costume designer Marg Horwell on her âsurrealâ Tony Award win
Australian costume designer Marg Horwell speaks to the ABC about what made The Picture of Dorian Gray a Tony Award-winning success. â Read more
ROC-RK3506J-CC Board Integrates RK3506J and Dual LAN Support
The ROC-RK3506J-CC is a compact single-board computer based on Rockchipâs RK3506J processor. Designed for embedded systems with real-time demands, it supports a wide range of I/O and OS options and is available in both industrial and commercial variants. The RK3506J processor includes a tri-core ARM Cortex-A7 cluster alongside a single Cortex-M0 core, fabricated using a [âŠ] â Read more
Apple unveils software visual redesign, but no revamped Siri
This yeaârs software updates will bring a new visual design that Apple is calling Liquid Glass. â Read more
WWDC 2025: Apple stellt MacOS Tahoe 26 vor
iPhone und Mac gehen aufeinander zu. Das neue Design von MacOS Tahoe 26 gleicht die BenutzeroberflÀchen von iOS und MacOS aneinander an. ( WWCD 2025, Apple)
WWDC 2025: Apple stellt iOS 26 in neuem Gewand vor
Der Nachfolger von iOS 18 heiĂt iOS 26. Besonderes Augenmerk legt Apple bei der AnkĂŒndigung auf das neue Design. ( Apple, WWDC 2012)
Could Apple Ditch Siri Name in Major AI Rebrand at WWDC?
Apple will highlight its AI strategy at Mondayâs WWDC 2025 keynote, with its much-talked-about âLiquid Glassâ software redesign playing a secondary role in announcements, claims industry analyst Ming-Chi Kuo.
Reports leading up to WWDC have indicated that iOS 26 will feature a [major design overhaul](https://www.macrumors.com/2025/06/06/ios- ⊠â Read more
Sarah Snook wins Tony award for lead performance in The Picture of Dorian Gray
Australian actor Sarah Snook has won the Tony award for Best Leading Actress in a Play for The Picture of Dorian Gray, with fellow Australian Marg Horwell also taking home a Tony for Costume Design. â Read more
CH32H417 Dual-Core RISC-V MCU Offers USB, Ethernet, and SerDes Support
WCHâs new CH32H417 microcontroller introduces a dual-core RISC-V architecture designed for embedded applications requiring high-speed connectivity and peripheral integration. It is built on the Qingke V5F core running at 400 MHz and the V3F core at 144 MHz. The microcontroller supports USB 3.2 Gen 1 with a 5Gbps PHY and dual-role host/device functionality, along with [âŠ] â Read more
EdgeLogix-1145 Brings Industrial Control and Edge Computing with Raspberry Pi CM5
The EdgeLogix-1145 is a rugged industrial controller that integrates edge computing, PLC functionality, and IIoT gateway capabilities. Designed around the Raspberry Pi CM5, it offers a compact, fanless platform designed for automation tasks in harsh environments such as factories, energy systems, and smart infrastructure. The system is built on the Broadcom BCM2712 SoC, a quad-core ⊠â Read more
From Hollywood heavyweights to community advocates: Kingâs honours announced
Some 830 Australians will be recognised as part of the Kingâs Birthday 2025 Honours on Monday, including film director Baz Luhrmann and his frequent collaborator Catherine Martin, an award-winning costume, production and set designer. â Read more
House GOP âdidnât knowâ what was in the spending bill when they voted: report
Krystina Alarcon Carroll,  Contributing Writer -  Raw Story
_Stephan: The spineless, moral weaklings Republican Americans elected as their Congressional Representatives, as this report describes, did not even bother to read the Trump fascist bill designed to destroy healthcare in the United States and make the uber-rich even richer, before voting on it. I hope all you Repub ⊠â Read more
Luckfox Pico 2 Adopts RP2350A Dual-Core MCU, Launches at $3.99
Luckfox has released the Pico 2 Micro Development Board, a compact module designed around Raspberry Piâs RP2350A microcontroller. It targets embedded development and experimentation with both ARM and RISC-V instruction sets, offering dual-core support in a low-cost form factor. The RP2350A microcontroller from Raspberry Pi features a dual-core, dual-architecture design, offering both ARM Cortex-M33 and [âŠ] â Read more
Concern missing middle housing proposal could see âhodgepodgeâ development
The ACT government architect insists proposed changes to planning rules allowing denser development in Canberraâs suburbs will help âmums and dadsâ as much as big property developers. â Read more
Avalue Introduces ACP-PI Boards as Raspberry Pi Alternatives
Avalue Technology has introduced two industrial single-board computers designed to match the Raspberry Pi form factor while addressing the requirements of edge computing and IoT integration. The new models, ACP-3566-PI and ACP-IMX8-PI, offer ARM-based platforms for different embedded applications and performance demands. The ACP-3566-PI is based on the Rockchip RK3566 quad-core Cortex-A55 processor operating at [âŠ] â Read more
Ex-Apple Designer Reveals âLiving Glassâ iOS 26 Concepts
Designer Sebastiaan de With has published an impressive preview of what Appleâs rumored iOS redesign might look like, complete with detailed mockups and a design philosophy that he believes could reshape how users interact with their devices.
With WWDC just days away, de With â co-foun ⊠â Read more
âEveryone needs joyâ: Gala celebrates women affected by domestic and family abuse
An event, designed to create a space of connection and celebration, has been held in Greater Hobart for women with lived experience of domestic and family abuse. â Read more
At least 27 Palestinians killed near Gaza aid site, health authorities say
The Israeli military said its forces had opened fire on a group of people who had left designated routes near the US and Israeli backed food distribution site. â Read more
Iâve spent time with tech oligarchs â you have no idea just how weird they are
Like the rocket ships Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos are shovelling money into, the tech being prioritised by Silicon Valleyâs billionaires isnât designed to save us. Itâs meant to save them. â Read more
Pakistani Army facilitates UN designated terrorists â Read more
Touchscreen Smart Box Based on ESP32-P4 with Wi-Fi 6 or Ethernet
The ESP32-P4 Smart 86 Box is a compact development board with a 4-inch capacitive touchscreen, designed for HMI, smart control panels, and edge processing. Its 86 mm form factor allows it to be easily installed in wall-mounted enclosures for use in embedded automation and smart terminal applications. As the name implies, this board is built [âŠ] â Read more
Intense Culture of Fearâ: Behind the Scenes as Trump Destroys the EPA From Within
Akela Lacy,  Staff Writer -  The Intercept
_Stephan: The Trump and Congressional fascist coup is dismantling the government agencies that were designed to help America prepare for climate change and assist Americans when they experience some kind of climate crisis. Trump is gutting EPA, as well as FEMA, and I feel very sad for the millions of Americans who are goi ⊠â Read more