I noticed Google put out this article: https://android-developers.googleblog.com/2025/09/lets-talk-security-answering-your-top.html itās very current day Google, but the comments under the YouTube video are pretty on point and I saw a few familiar faces there. There is also, unexpectedly, ways to contact Google.
First a form for āteachers, students, and hobbyistsā, that I filled politely, as someone who falls under their hobbyist category. It can be filled both anonymously, or with an e-mail attached, to be contacted by them (I chose the second option).
Also a general feedback and questions form, that I was not as polite in and used to send them the following message:
I have already provided some feedback, in the teacher, student and hobbyists form/questionaire, as well as an open letter Iāve recently sent to the European Commission digital markets act team, as I do believe your proposal might not even be legal, given the fact it puts privacy-focused alternative app stores at risk (https://f-droid.org/cs/2025/09/29/google-developer-registration-decree.html) and it was proposed this early, after Google lost in court to Epic Games, over similar monopoly concerns. Why should we trust Google to be the only authority for all developer signatures, right after the European courts labeled it a gatekeeper?
Assuming this gets passed, despite justified developer backlash and at best questionable legality, can you give us any guarantees, this will not be used to target legal malware-free mods, or user privacy enhancing patchers, like the ones used for applying the ReVanced patches? I have made a few mods myself, but I am in no way associated with the ReVanced team. I just share many peoples concerns, Google Chrome has been conveniently stripped of its manifest v2 support, that made many privacy protecting extensions possible and now youāre conveniently asking for the government IDs, of all the developers, who maintain these kinds of privacy protections (be it patches, or alternative open-source apps) on Android.
When Will Appleās Macs Get M5 Chips? 2025-2026 Launch Timeline
Weāre just about due for the next-generation Apple silicon chip, which will kick off a new wave of Mac refreshes. The M5 chip is expected to make an appearance in some new products before the end of the year, but most Mac refreshes will happen in 2026.
Weāve rounded up current rumors on when we might see updates for Appleās notebook and desktop machines.
MacB ⦠ā Read more@bender@twtxt.net I guess most clocks donāt support that. š My wrist watch can do it, you can select it in the menu:
https://movq.de/v/ccb4ffcbc5/s.png
In general, different transmitter means different frequency and different encoding, for example these two:
Surging price restores growers confidence in Australian merino wool
Amid a run of price rises at Australian wool auctions, the next generation of growers say global demand and fresh confidence could mark a turning point for the fibre. ā Read more
Robin Williamsās daughter begs fans to stop making AI content of her father
The daughter of the late actor Robin Williams has condemned AI-generated content featuring her fatherās likeness. ā Read more
@prologic@twtxt.net I wouldnāt know where to look for little cockroaches, or roaches, in general! LOL. We buy seeds to feed them. But not around the neighborhood, otherwise we would have a problem. š
iPad Mini 8 on the Way: Expected Features and Release Timeline
A new iPad mini is āabsolutelyā on the way, according to Bloombergās Mark Gurman. So what should we expect from the successor to the iPad mini 7 that Apple released a year ago?
Apple is working on a next-generation version of the iPad mini (codename J510/J511) that features the A19 Pro chip, according to in ⦠ā Read more
After a lost generation, Australia looks to the past on drought-breaking Ashes tour
New Kangaroos coach Kevin Walters was part of an era where the green and gold jersey was the highest honour rugby league could offer and ahead of the return of the Ashes itās a legacy heās desperate to pass down to his players. ā Read more
Next iPad Pro to Have Two Key Features, But One Rumor Still Uncertain
The next iPad Pro models are rumored to feature two key upgrades, including Appleās M5 chip, and an increased minimum of 12GB of RAM.
Last week, apparent unboxing videos for the next-generation 13-inch iPad Pro were uploaded to YouTube by Russian channels Wylsacom and [Romance ⦠ā Read more
Best Apple Deals of the Week: Apple Watch SE 2 Hits Ultra Low $179 Price, Plus Early Prime Day Deals
Weāre gearing up for big Prime Day deals over the next few days, and this week saw multiple early Prime Day discounts arriving for iPhone 17 cases, the second generation Apple Watch SE, and more.
Upcoming Apple Vision Pro Could Get More Comfortable āDual Knit Bandā
Apple is working on a next-generation version of the Vision Pro with an updated chip, and it could include a new Dual Knit Band that provides a more comfortable fit.
Updated Apple backend code found by MacRumors includes a reference to a āDual Knit Band,ā which is not a band that exists at the current time. The [Apple Vision Pro](https://www.macrumors ⦠ā Read more
@movq@www.uninformativ.de canāt you use generic drivers? I did that for an enterprise copier/printer/scanner we used to have at work, and it worked just fine!
The MacRumors Show: Leaks Reveal What Apple Products Are Coming Next
On this episode of The MacRumors Show, we discuss the latest leaks about the next-generation iPad Pro, MacBook Pro, Studio Display, and Vision Pro.
_[Subscribe to The MacRumors Show YouTube channel](h ⦠ā Read more
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org I think you should be able to find some even in general stores in the hardware section.
Appleās 2026 Smart Glasses: Five Key Features to Expect
Apple is working on a set of smart glasses to rival the Meta Ray-Bans, and now that Meta has debuted glasses that include a display, Apple wants to speed up development on its first-generation model. Work has stopped on the next Vision Pro so that Apple can prioritize getting the glasses to market.
. Published in Portuguese with an English translation of the text.
500 unique generative covers, art by Rod Junqueira and title variations by AndrƩ Burnier.
@prologic@twtxt.net I know we wonāt ever convince each other of the otherās favorite addressing scheme. :-D But I wanna address (haha) your concerns:
I donāt see any difference between the two schemes regarding link rot and migration. If the URL changes, both approaches are equally terrible as the feed URL is part of the hashed value and reference of some sort in the location-based scheme. It doesnāt matter.
The same is true for duplication and forks. Even today, the ācannonical URLā has to be chosen to build the hash. Thatās exactly the same with location-based addressing. Why would a mirror only duplicate stuff with location- but not content-based addressing? I really fail to see that. Also, who is using mirrors or relays anyway? I donāt know of any such software to be honest.
If there is a spam feed, I just unfollow it. Done. Not a concern for me at all. Not the slightest bit. And the byte verification is THE source of all broken threads when the conversation start is edited. Yes, this can be viewed as a feature, but how many times was it actually a feature and not more behaving as an anti-feature in terms of user experience?
I donāt get your argument. If the feed in question is offline, one can simply look in local caches and see if there is a message at that particular time, just like looking up a hash. Whereās the difference? Except that the lookup key is longer or compound or whatever depending on the cache format.
Even a new hashing algorithm requires work on clients etc. Itās not that you get some backwards-compatibility for free. It just cannot be backwards-compatible in my opinion, no matter which approach we take. Thatās why I believe some magic time for the switch causes the least amount of trouble. You leave the old world untouched and working.
If these are general concerns, Iām completely with you. But I donāt think that they only apply to location-based addressing. Thatās how I interpreted your message. I could be wrong. Happy to read your explanations. :-)
@zvava@twtxt.net @lyse@lyse.isobeef.org I also think a location based reference might be better.
A thread is a single post of a single feed as a root, but the hash has the drawback of not referencing the source, in a distributed network like twtxt it might leave some people out of the whole conversation.
I suggest a simpler format, something like: (#<TIMESTAMP URL>)
This solves three issues:
- Easier referencing: no need to generate a hash, just copy the timestamp and url, itās also simpler to implement in a client without the rish of collisions when putting things together
- Fetchable source: you can find the source within the reference and construct the thread from there
- Allow editing: If a post is modified the hash becomes invalid since it depends on
[ timestamp, url, content ]
wait why are so many of my post hashes not generating correctly ;w;
edit: i read the spec wrong :3 only +/-00:00 is stripped, not the entire timezone offset >.<
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org retwts are a discovery feature! on federated platforms with no algorithm where you only ever see posts from accounts you explicitly follow, the element of āhey look at this!ā helps users to find other accounts they might like organically
i agree quoting and replying forum-style is generally a much better way of doing things even though im a heathen and i revel in the dark patterns inspired by quote posts but when you have nothing to add and you just want to share a twt with your followers itād be good to have a standardized way of linking to twt
** Strata **
A Counterfeit - a Plated Person -
I would not be -
Whatever strata of Iniquity
My Nature underlie -
Truth is good Health - and Safety, and the Sky.
How meagre, what an Exile - is a Lie,
And Vocal - when we die -
ā Emily Dickinson
I made another game! This one pretty much has one single verb:āmove.ā The game, like most games I make, is a roguelike that relies heavily on probabilities and rng (random number generation).
Each level is ⦠ā Read more
the code to generate this image (have you noticed it is a 3D mesh?)
is here: https://abav.lugaralgum.com/selected-work/py5band/
Ni Hao; bÄ«ng qĆlĆn!
Iām just dropping in, to emphasize my love for ice cream and the Chinese crawler bots, allocating their time and resources, towards scraping my humble website.
To show my gratitude, Iāve even added a random little dog generator to https://thecanine.ueuo.com/sparkle.html so that everyone can pick up their own custom dogFT, on their journey through my site.
Why do I care about this?
- The load will become a problem at some point.
- These crawlers and the current āAIā in general are breaking the rules. I am supposed to be paying for every little thing, I get sued for āpiracyā. But apparently, these rules only apply to me. If I had more money, I could break them. Fuck that.
- I simply donāt want it. Period.
Dear @doctormo@doctormo, Iām a great admirer of your work in general and hopefully I wonāt creep you out by telling everyone Iām your fan!
As a creator of digital vector-based art I find the color management stuff (trying to figure how to generate things to print āin CMYKā) mind boggling. I slowly try to read and acquire the concepts and vocabulary to understand more about this. Iām grateful for your work in this area. Thank you!
#Pyxel is a retro inspired #GameEngine for #Python, itās very impressive!
Itās not hard to generate a static HTML page that loads your game to run on the browser with #pyodide (WASM). And it comes with an assets editor and a #chiptune making tool.
@prologic@twtxt.net Thatās fair, this version really is a stretch. Similar to old Atari game spirites, a lot is left to interpretation,especially by those who have not seen any of the more detailed ones, before.
On the other hand, some suggested Iām still wasting too many pixels on the tail, but removing those, makes it just a generic dog (at best), even to me.
In order to publish my personal projects/pages (and most of my teaching materials, hundreds of pages) on #Codeberg, I need to convert #markdown files into #HTML and sprinkle some CSS & JS from a layout template, like #GitHubās Pages #Jekyll does, but I dread the complexity of installing and tending to Jekyll or Hugo or other static site generators, and I canāt even imagine going near Forejo Actions or any sort of CI intergration.
Should I be brave and do the Jekyll /static generator thing? Any other ideas for poor, overworked, stressed out, clumsy people? :(
@movq@www.uninformativ.de having to go to a gopher proxy to see a text document better served on readily available web servers⦠š¤, but I digress. Verbatim text:
What's Missing from "Retro"
~softwarepagan
------------------------------------------------------------------
You know, often, when I say I miss older ways of computing or
connecting online, people tell me "there's nothing stopping you
from doing that now!" and they are technicay correct in most cases
(though I can't, for example, chat with friends on MSN ever
again...) However, let me explain that while this type of thing can
*sort of* fill that hole in my heart, it isn't *the same.*
Say, for example, I wanted to connect with others over a BBS. This
wouldn't offer the same types of connections it used to. While
there are BBSes around with active users, they're no longer there
to discuss movies, Star Trek, D&D, games, etc. They're there to
discuss *BBSes.* The same can be said for Gopher, old-school forums
and all sorts of revival projects (such as Escargot, Spacehey,
etc.) Retrocomputing enthusiasts, while they have a variety of
interests, are often in these spaces to discuss the medium itself
and not other topics. This exists at a stark contrast from how
things were in the past, where a non-tech-inclined person may learn
the tech to connect with likeminded others (as I did as a
Zelda-obsessed kid.)
The same can be said of old media. People will say "well, nobody is
stopping you from watching old shows/movies now!" Again, they are
technically correct. I can go home right now and watch *Star Trek:
The Next Generation* to my heart's content. It will never again,
however, be current, or new. When something is new, it serves as a
shared cultural experience. Remember how "Game of Thrones* felt in
the mid-to-late 2010s? Yeah, that.
It's sad. I sustain myself on a mixed diet of old things, new
things, and new things intended for old millenials like me who like
old things. It can be bittersweet.
I wish I could watch this (maybe theyāll record it⦠but Iām not sure):
āFrom #Fortran to #Python: A Conversation Across Generations of #ScientificComputingā #PyOhio
https://www.pyohio.org/2025/program/talks/from-fortran-to-python/
Hereās an example of X11/Xlib being old and archaic.
X11 knows the data type ācardinalā. For example, the window property _NET_WM_ICON
(which holds image data for icons) is an array of ācardinalā. I am already not really familiar with that word and Iām assuming that it comes from mathematics:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardinal_number
(It could also be a bird, but probably not: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardinalidae)
We would probably call this an āintegerā today.
EWMH says that icons are arrays of cardinals and that theyāre 32-bit numbers:
https://specifications.freedesktop.org/wm-spec/latest-single/#id-1.6.13
So itās something like 0x11223344
with 0x11
being the alpha channel, 0x22
is red, and so on.
You would assume that, when you retrieve such an array from the X11 server, youād get an array of uint32_t
, right?
Nope.
Xlib is so old, they use char
for 8-bit stuff, short int
for 16-bit, and long int
for 32-bit:
That is congruent with the general C data types, so it does make sense:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_data_types
Now the funny thing is, on modern x86_64
, the type long int
is actually 64 bits wide.
The result is that every pixel in a Pixmap, for example, is twice as large in memory as it would need to be. Just because Xlib uses long int
, because uint32_t
didnāt exist, yet.
And this is something that I wouldnāt know how to fix without breaking clients.
gomdn: Yet another Static Site Generator
Yet another Static Site Generator (SSG), but this one is mine.
Itās a stupidly simple Go program ( wc
says 229 lines), more like a
hack, really, but I donāt need something like Hugo. Most of the real
work is done by the goldmark package, of course. This is mostly just a
wrapper, deciding if something needs to be rebuilt.
Iāve been using a Perl script together with cmark
(originally
Markdown.pl
) since forever. And before that the old [txt2tags](htt ⦠ā Read more
Desktop SSH->Pinephone->here. This is crazy. Sxmo is the best UI for the Pinephone, and maybe phones in general. Insane: basically dwm on a phone with gestures and built-in yt-dlp + mpv (among others).
I have a Python script that transforms the original YouTube channel Atom feed into a more useful Atom feed by removing the spam description and replacing it with the video duration, filtering out videos by title, duration, etc. I just updated it to exclude the damn Shorts garbage more efficiently. Finally, YouTube updated their Atom feed generation, so that the video URL contains /short/
if itās of this useless kind. Never thought that they ever actually will improve their Atom feeds. Thank you, much appreciated!
I give up.
Letās try again next year. I donāt have the stamina. Death by a thousand paper cuts.
Canāt set up a meaningful taskbar: https://github.com/labwc/labwc/discussions/2924 (This is not a labwc issue, itās a generic issue in the broader Wayland ecosystem.)
TKey: The Next Generation
Not speaking for my employer, just as an interested developer in an
interesting open source project.
As you might have noticed, the platform repo of the Tillitis TKey has
some alpha tags for the next generation, Castor:
https://github.com/tillitis/tillitis-key1/tags
An alpha tag means that all planned features for the platform are in
place, but thereās not yet a complete audit and a lot of testing ⦠ā Read more
** Om nom nom LLMs, in which I respond to Simon Willisonās analogy **
I am hesitant to wade into the tumultuous waters that are the discourse around generative AI and LLMs, but this morning I came across a thing that so thoroughly melted my brain I feel uncontrollably compelled to respond.
This morning, at evidently 4:10 AM (no mention of timezone), Simon Willison shared the following blog post, quoted here in full:
Quitting programming as ⦠ā Read more
#Meta to the #EU: āthe focus should be on creating a regulatory infrastructure that ensures any licence that is sufficiently permissive for the user is considered open source, rather than anointing specific licences as āopen sourceā.ā
Brilliant, sure, letās ignore existing definitions and go with gut feeling (incidently, Meta has a gut feeling generator).
@kat@yarn.girlonthemoon.xyz Welcome back. š (Itās a bit quiet here in general. š¤)
Da wird nicht gedacht: Apple-Studie deckt Schwachstellen bei KI-Reasoning auf
Forscher von Apple haben eine brisante Studie veröffentlicht, die ein ernüchterndes Bild der aktuellen KI-Generation zeichnet. ( Apple, KI)
The PM might be a baby boomer but gen X rules Australiaās political class
Generation X is overwhelmingly in charge of government and increasingly holding the wealth. ā Read more
Inquest for woman who died after fall from moving car on Bruce Highway
Queenslandās Attorney-General says Courtney Andersonās family provided new information and shared their concerns that the case was not fully investigated. ā Read more
āBuy a generatorā, power provider tells WA hotel angry at blackouts
The owners of Bremer Bay Resort say Western Power told them purchasing a diesel generator was the only way to avoid the outages plaguing the small community. ā Read more
Scientists breed coral from āhotā and ācoolā parents to stop bleaching
After one generation of breeding, scientists say they have been able to double the heat tolerance of Ningaloo Reef coral. ā Read more
I wanted to port this to Rust as an excercise, but they still have no random number generator in the core library: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130703
On my blog: Generative AI Wish List https://john.colagioia.net/blog/2025/06/08/ai-wish-list.html #artificialintelligence #harm #rant
Current toy project: an image feed generated by mk(1). Still some edges to clean up but itās nice: http://a.9srv.net/img/_readme.html
Man mistakenly deported to El Salvador returns to US to face criminal charges
US Attorney-General Pam Bondi says Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was mistakenly deported to El Salvador, has returned to the United States to face criminal charges. ā Read more
How Gaza has ālost a generationā of students
Palestinian academics who fled Gaza after the war say a āgeneration of studentsā has been lost due to the conflict. ā Read more
Climate activists fined $10k each after Woodside stench gas media stunt
Three climate activists who planned to release stench gas in an attempt to cause the evacuation of a Woodside annual general meeting in Perthās CBD have been fined $10,000 each. ā Read more
[$] Open source and the Cyber Resilience Act
The European Unionās
Cyber Resilience Act (CRA) has caused a stir in the
software-development world. Thanks to advocacy by the Eclipse Foundation, Open
Source Initiative, Linux Foundation, Mozilla, and others, open-source software
projects generally have minimal requirements under the CRA
ā but nothing to do with law is ever quite
so simple. Marta RybczyÅska spoke at Linaro Connect 2025 about the impact of the
CRA on the open-source eco ⦠ā Read more
Is this āonce-in-a-generationā mini city the Rosehill Racecourse solution?
Half an hour south-west of the Rosehill Gardens Racecourse lies a large swathe of industrial land, ripe for rezoning, Liverpool City Council argues. ā Read more
iPhone 17 May Support Up to 50W MagSafe Wireless Charging (Qi 2.2)
Apple appears to be moving to the next-generation Qi 2.2 wireless charging standard, according to regulatory filings on Taiwanās NCC certification website. Qi2.2 is the forthcoming update to the Wireless Power Consortiumās (WPC) Qi standard, building on improvements introduced with Qi 2.
Spotted by _[91mobiles.com](https://www.91mobile ⦠ā Read more
The Luke Bateman backlash highlights publishingās diversity problem
When former Canberra Raiders player and farmer Luke Bateman joined TikTok, he went viral for his love of fantasy novels. A month later he announced a book deal, but the news has generated controversy. ā Read more
Treasurer accuses opponents of āextremely generousā super tax changes of āliesā
Jim Chalmers declares his intention to pass the changes without amendment. ā Read more
After 67 years of patrols, long-serving lifesaver hangs up the cap
Col Laing became a surf lifesaver in 1958 and went on to found a club at a hotspot for rescues, but is now ready to leave North Entrance beach patrols to the younger generations. ā Read more
Requirement for professional carpet cleaning at end of lease invalid, ruling finds
Renters in Tasmania are not required to have their carpets professionally cleaned at the end of their lease āas a matter of general practiceā, the Residential Tenancy Commissioner has ruled. ā Read more
One of Queenslandās biggest power generators back online after explosion
One of Queenslandās biggest coal-fired power generators is operational again after it was forced offline in April following another explosion. ā Read more
Launchpad mailing lists going away
Canonicalās Launchpad
software-collaboration platform that is used for Ubuntu development
will be shutting down its hosted mailing lists at
the end of October. The announcement
recommends Discourse or Launchpad Answers as
alternatives. Ubuntuās mailing\āØlists are u ⦠ā Read more
Apple Raises iCloud+ Prices in Three Countries
Apple recently raised prices for its iCloud+ plans in Brazil, Chile, and Peru, according to a support document updated last Thursday.
The table below outlines the price changes in each country.
CountryOld PricesNew PricesBrazil50GB: R$ 4.90
200GB: R$ 14.90
2TB: R$ 49.90
6TB: R$ 149.90
12TB: R$ 299.90
⦠ā Read more
prologic@JamessMacStudio
Sun May 25 21:44:41
~/tmp/neurog
(main) 130
$ go build ./cmd/ttt/... && ./ttt
Generation 27 | Fitness: 0.486111 | Nodes: 44 | Conns: 82
⦠experimenting with building and training a tic-tac-toe game, which evolves a. neural net that learn to paly the game against the best evolved champions š
This is one of my attempts:
$ go build ./cmd/xor/... && ./xor
Generation 95 | Fitness: 0.999964 | Nodes: 9 | Conns: 19
Target reached!
Best network performance:
[0 0] ā got=0 exp=0 (raw=0.000) ā
[0 1] ā got=1 exp=1 (raw=0.990) ā
[1 0] ā got=1 exp=1 (raw=0.716) ā
[1 1] ā got=0 exp=0 (raw=0.045) ā
Overall accuracy: 100.0%
Wrote best.dot ā render with `dot -Tpng best.dot -o best.png`
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 āCalendar Experience,ā [spotted](https://www.macworld.com/article/2791509/apple-job-posting-confirms-calendar-rev ⦠ā Read more
[$] An update on continuous testing of BPF kernel patches
Ihor Solodrai has been working on the BPF subsystemās continuous-integration
(CI) testing for the last six months. At the 2025 Linux Storage, Filesystem,
Memory-Management, and BPF Summit, he remotely shared
an update on his work, and solicited feedback on how the tests could be further
improved. Much of the work heās done has been specific to the BPF subsystem, but
some is more generic and could potentially be of use to other subsystems. He
also shared some general lessons le ⦠ā Read more
[$] Debian AI General Resolution withdrawn
Despite careful planning and months of warning, Debian developer Mo
Zhou has acknowledged that the project needs more time to grapple with
the questions around AI models and the Debian Free Software Guidelines
(DFSG). For now, he has withdrawn his proposed General Resolution (GR)
that would have required the original training data for AI models to
be released in order to be considered DFSG-compliantāthough the
debates on the topic continue. ā Read more
To follow up what I said minutes ago, they donāt even want you to think of the initial idea, they want you to be a mindless organism, the AI algorithm analyses and tells what you should make, down to the script, so that you get the highest number of people possible to click it and see some AI generated advertisement, blended seemly into whatās no lonher even your work.
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2025/05/netflix-will-show-generative-ai-ads-midway-through-streams-in-2026/
https://youtu.be/dGA6sVaGveU
Report: Appleās Next-Gen Version of Siri Is āOn Parā With ChatGPT
Apple has big plans to improve Siri over the next few years, Bloombergās Mark Gurman and Drake Bennett report.
Some Apple executives are now reportedly pushing to turn āSiriā into a true Chat ⦠ā Read more
@thecanine@twtxt.net Things in general just sitting around collect dust. Granted, plush is an even worse dust magnet. We badly need some anti-dust material. ;-)
Nice, did you print this keychain yourself?
Apple Stops Signing iPadOS 17.7.7 After Reports of App Login Issues
Apple has stopped signing the iPadOS 17.7.7 update that was released earlier this week for devices unable to run versions of iPadOS 18, meaning that users will not be able to install the update even if they see it available in Software Update. Affected devices include the sixth-generation iPad, the 10.5-inch [iPad Pro](https://www.macrumors ⦠ā Read more
static site generators make website-ing so fun like i wanna do so much with my site now
1 RPM
. This is a rather aggressive rate limit actually. This basically makes Github inaccessible and useless for basically anything unless you're logged in. You can basically kiss "pursuing" casually, anonymously goodbye.
@prologic@twtxt.net that will not be a problem; as long as it doesnāt affect authenticated users it wouldnāt make a difference. But we are comparing apples and eggs here. I donāt access GitHub while unauthenticated, but I can see how others might. It comes across as anti-web in general.
ALPHA-One Leverages RISC-V StarPro64 for Compact Local LLM Deployment
PINE64 has shared early details of the ALPHA-One, a compact generative AI agent powered by the RISC-V-based StarPro64 SBC. Priced at $329.99, the device is aimed at developers and testers, and comes preloaded with a 7 billion parameter LLM running in a Docker container. The ALPHA-One is built on the StarPro64 SBC, which features the [ā¦] ā Read more
that site of mine i mentioned earlier? well itās now statically generated with astro, AND it automatically builds and deploys after i push changes to my own git instance, with the power of sourcehut builds! this is so cool
@kat@yarn.girlonthemoon.xyz Nothing wrong with handwritten HTML. Thatās often superior to generated stuff I believe. :-)
tar
and find
were written by the devil to make sysadmins even more miserable
@kat@yarn.girlonthemoon.xyz @prologic@twtxt.net Given that all these programs are super old (tar
is from the late 1970ies), while trying to retain backwards-compatibilty, Iām not surprised that the UI isnāt too great. š¤
find
has quite a few pitfalls, that is very true. At work, we donāt even use it anymore in more complex scenarios but write Python scripts instead. find
can be fast and efficient, but fewer and fewer people lack the knowledge to use it ⦠The same goes for Shell scripting in general, actually.
i got so emo about my site not being statically generated and instead hand coded but itās like i donāt even know if i want that because i feel most SSGs are built for blogging and continuous posting and i donāt want that i just want to make my silly pagesā¦.
that being said, the one iād use if i did switch to one would be astro and that one is so flexible i could really do anything with it including keeping my pages as is mostly without doing the blog stuff. idk! something to consider
Deals: Up to 20% Off iPad Models, iPad 11th Gen for $278, iPad mini 7 for $399, etc
Amazon is back with some really great deals on Apple products, taking 20% off the iPad 11th generation model making it just $278, 20% off the iPad mini 7 for just $399, 17% off M3 iPad Air models, and theyāre cutting 15% off the price of the M4 MacBook Air series which now starts at ⦠[Read More](https://osxdaily.com/2025/05/09/deals-up-to-20-off-ipad-models-ipad-11th-gen-fo ⦠ā Read more
[$] A kernel developer plays with Home Assistant: general impressions
Those of us who have spent our lives playing with computers naturally see
the appeal of deploying them though the home for both data acquisition and
automation. But many of us who have watched the evolution of the
technology industry are increasingly unwilling to entrust critical
household functions to cloud-based servers run by companies that may not
have our best interests at heart. The Apache-licensed Home Assistant project offe ⦠ā Read more
E nĆ£o Ć© que os finórios do Airbnb conseguiram encaixar um artigo no PĆŗblico como āopiniĆ£oā?
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 OSUās College of Engineering (CoE) has generously
filled this ga ⦠ā Read more
The conclusion of the FSF board review
The Free Software Foundation has announced
the completion of the review of its board of directors; the process
resulted in the reconfirmation of all five sitting board members.
The review examined board members Ian Kelling, Geoffrey Knauth,
Henry Poole, Richard Stallman, and Gerald Sussman. The process
generated detailed philosophical and policy discussions between
board members and the FSFās global associate members on to ⦠ā Read more
We havet an AI assistant at work, new version came out today ānearby restaurant recommendationsā mentioned. Gotta try that!
Ask it where I can get a burger, knowing thereās 3 spots that had it on the menu, AI says thereās none. Ask it to list all the restaurants nearby it can check⦠it knows 3, of the 10 or so around, but 1/3, even has a burger, on the menu.
Ask it to list the whole menu at restaurant 1: it hallucinates random meals, none of which they had (I ate there).
Restaurant 2 (the one most people go to, so they must have at least tested it with this one): it lists the soup of the day and ¾ meals available. Incomplete, but better than false.
Restaurant 3: it says āfoodā and gives a general description of food. You have to be fucking kidding me!
āBuT cAnInE, tHe A(G)i ReVoLuTiOn Is NoWā
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Agreed, finding the right motivation can be tricky. You sometimes have to torture yourself in order to later then realize, yeah, that was actually totally worth it. Itās often hard.
I think if you find a project or goal in general that these kids want to achieve, that is the best and maybe only choice with a good chance of positive outcome. I donāt know, like building a price scraper, a weather station or whatever. Yeah, these are already too advanced if they never programmed, but you get the idea. If they have something they want to build for themselves for their private life, that can be a great motivator Iāve experienced. Or you could assign āem the task to build their own twtxt client if they donāt have any own suitable ideas. :-)
Showing them that you do a lot of your daily work in the shell can maybe also help to get them interested in text-based boring stuff. Or at least break the ice. Lead by example. The more I think about it, the more I believe this to be very important. Thatās how I still learn and improve from my favorite workmate today in general. Which Iām very thankful of.
Weāre all old farts. When we started, there werenāt a lot of options. But today? Iād be completely overwhelmed, I think.
Hence, Iād recommend to start programming with a console program. As for the language, not sure. But Python is probably a good choice
Thatās what I usually do (when we have young people at work who never really programmed before), but it doesnāt really āhitā them. Theyāve seen so much, crazy graphics, web pages, itās all fancy. Just some text output is utterly boring these days. ā¹ļø And thatās my problem: I have no idea how I could possibly spark some interest in things like pointers or something ālow-levelā like that. And I truly believe that you need to understand things like pointers in order to program, in general.
Going to the vet kids for general check up ā Read more
[$] Debian debates AI models and the DFSG
The Debian project is discussing a General Resolution (GR) that
would, if approved, clarify that AI models must include training data
to be compliant with the Debian\āØFree Software Guidelines (DFSG) and be distributed by Debian as
free software. While GR discussions are sometimes contentious, the
discussion around the proposal from Debian developer MoĀ Zhou has
been anything butāthere seems to be
consensus that AI models are not DFSG-comp ⦠ā Read more
iPhone 16 Ad Highlights a Key Advantage Over Android Smartphones
Apple today shared a new ad that highlights a key advantage that iPhone 16 models have over Android smartphones: the Ceramic Shield.
Apple says the iPhone 16, iPhone 16 Plus, iPhone 16 Pro, and iPhone 16 Pro Max displays are all protected by the latest-generation Ceramic Shield material, which is advertised as being ā2x tougher than glass on any other smartphone.ā
In the new āTrust Issuesā ad ⦠ā Read more
NLnet announces funding for 42 FOSS projects
The NLnet Foundation has announced
the projects that have received funding from its October call
for grant proposals from the Next\āØGeneration Internet (NGI) Zero Commons Fund.
The selected projects all contribute, one way or another, to the
mission of the Commons Fund: reclaiming the ⦠ā Read more
@bender@twtxt.net I can fix and make that work in the parser too. But Iām no longer sure how to cater for the general case. Itās too much to support all punctuation whilst at the same time as other contradicting rules. For example you cannot both support .
in nicknames and then expect to be able to to end a mention with a .
š¤¦āāļø
iPhone 17e Nears Trial Production, Launch Tipped for Late May 2026
Appleās next-generation iPhone 17e is nearing the trial production stage, with the mid-range device tentatively scheduled for a May release, according to a proven leaker with sources in Appleās Chinese supply chain.
WeChat-based leaker Fixed Focus Digital shared the claims on Tuesday, adding that the i ⦠ā Read more
Todayās stroll was really nice. Just around 11km in total Iād reckon. We had a barbie at a mateās garden where everybody went on a hunt for an easter basket. Oh boy, what a preparation that must have been! Baking the bunnies, dying the eggs, mixing the bear leek butter and so on. Thatās dedication, let me tell you. :-)
It was the first time this year that we had half proper April weather and a thunderstorm in general. It started off with clear sky and lovely sunshine. Right after arvo lunch it started to rain, so we went into the hut. Then, the sun returned.
On the way back with the growling thunder in the distance coming closer and closer we escaped the rain just perfectly. A minute or two after we reached the car, wet stuff started coming down the sky. Not even half a minute after opening the front door, it poured like crazy. Lucky twice today. Thereās beautiful sunshine again by now. It smells absolutely great after the rain. I love it!
So, the Pope died. From my non-religious stand point, I think he has been the best Pope in a generation. Letās see how the upcoming one does.
Top Stories: iPhone 17 Pro Rumors, CarPlay Bug Fix, and More
This week saw rumor updates on the iPhone 17 Pro and next-generation Vision Pro, while a minor iOS 18.4.1 update delivered not just security fixes but also a fix for some CarPlay issues.
We also looked ahead at what else is in Appleās pipeline for the rest of 2025 and even the 20th-anniversary iPhone coming in 2027, so read on belo ⦠ā Read more
[$] The problem of unnecessary readahead
The final session in the memory-management track of the 2025 Linux Storage,
Filesystem, Memory-Management, and BPF Summit was a brief, last-minute
addition run by Kalesh Singh. The kernelās readahead mechanism is
generally good for performance; it ensures that data is present by the time
an application gets around to asking for it. Sometimes, though, readahead
can go a little too far. ā Read more
Apple Sports App Now Lets You Share Game Cards via iMessage and Social Media
Just in time for the start of the NBA and NHL playoffs this weekend, the Apple Sports app has received a new Game Card Sharing feature.
With this feature, Apple Sports users can generate and share game cards for all supported leagues, whether the matchup is upcoming, live, ⦠ā Read more