Mastodon Feed: Posts

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason"):
charliejane@wandering.shop ("Yoko's Asterisk 🏳️‍⚧") wrote:

When people ask, "How can I promote my art when the world is going to shit"

I hear that as, "How do I have the right to make art when the world is going to shit"

And...

We need art more than ever during such times. You need to be making art more than ever during such times. And promoting it is part of the process.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen"):
admiralwonderboat ("Admiral Wonderboat") wrote:

i've found that when i don't make room for my mental health, it forces me to make room for it

Admiral is balancing a ball labelled "work" and a stone labelled "life" Admiral: oof! I've almost got 'em balanced! - A monster tosses a huge rock labelled "MENTAL HEALTH" causing Admiral to drop the first two. Monster: catch!

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen"):
emilylorange@mastodon.art ("Emily L'Orange 🦆🍊") wrote:

This month's #BirdWhisperer is a Golden Whistler!

(Ref Photo by Terri Sharp)
🦢🐡 #art #birds #FediArt #MastoArt #CreativeToots

A digital painting of a small, round bird sitting on a branch. He is mostly yellow, with a white chin and black marking on his neck and head. behind him, light filters through the leaves on a tree.

Mastodon Feed

baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason") wrote:

Social media regularly makes me feel like I'm a bit of an idiot. The way these sites are structured promotes surface reading, quick replies, and poorly thought out posts, all of which combine to make it likelier that you do something that might not show you at your best. 🫤

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jwz:
jef ("Jef Poskanzer") wrote:

Mastodon Feed

ChrisWere@toot.wales ("Chris Were ⁂🐧🌱☕") wrote:

Chris is shocked after his hand appears to have been bitten off by a dinosaur.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by EmilyEnough@hachyderm.io ("Emily 🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍⚧️"):
rooster@beige.party ("Jessica Rooster") wrote:

The Robert’s Supreme Court has been the most effective Republican administration in my lifetime

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by glyph ("Glyph"):
grimalkina ("Cat Hicks") wrote:

RE: https://mastodon.social/@glyph/116488954108427124

As I say in a reply to this lord almighty but this stuff is really hard to think about. I feel incredibly slow in my writing and evidence-gathering vs the actual needs people have for more helpful answers here. But I am thinking about it a lot. One thing I recommend if you ARE an AI user is self-testing and cadences of understanding checking outside of daily agentic work for this reason

Mastodon Feed

baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason") wrote:

My granddad’s instoscope light meter.

A weird cylindrical object with a viewfinder on one end and charts on its body

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
jalley@sfba.social ("J") wrote:

RE: https://flipboard.com/@associatedpress/politics-h8vn14lnz/-/a-wKChsZorRfeb3HC6obun6Q%3Aa%3A3199720-%2F0

Democracy is dead

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by glyph ("Glyph"):
adr ("john fink ok!! :goat:") wrote:

I know I've said it before but as a 30+ year Linux user it *still blows my mind* that Linux is now so much the superior OS for *gaming* that Microsoft is using it as an aspirational benchmark. like holy shit, this is real?

For gaming, Microsoft views steamOS as the benchmark, and is working to optimize the platform so that steamOS and Windows gaming performance are comparable. Within the next year or two, it believes that Windows will be able to truly compete head-to-head with steamOS in gaming performance on identical hardware due to foundational changes that are being made to the platform in the coming months.

Mastodon Feed

slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell") wrote:

Yes, overreach can happen! But unconfirmed reports of it on the left vastly outstrip verifiable sightings. Dems need (for once) to get caught trying. God knows they'll be accused of everything imaginable anyway.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by glyph ("Glyph"):
grimalkina ("Cat Hicks") wrote:

So I hope that my thoughts come with nuance and that I'm doing a good job showing that I respect these complexities. We are beings that have brains, our brains are involved in everything we do, and I want us to take care of our brains. Knowing how to do that matters to me, and I want people to be empowered to notice the things that are commonsense signals (fatigue, stress, difficulty achieving goals) for habits, behaviors, AND our brains

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
zeldman@front-end.social wrote:

“Not because AI is useless. It clearly is not. But useful and worth-a-trillion are different things.

“When the bill arrives, the industry may discover that the storm was not intelligence. It was arithmetic.” 2/2

https://www.pootlepress.com/2026/04/ai-tokens-and-the-gathering-storm/#aiEconomics

Mastodon Feed

cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen") wrote:

Anyway, just musing, and thinking through whether "boilerplate" is actually an indication of a problem or not. I think it's only a problem if you assume a certain perspective, a certain perspective that perhaps should not be given priority over other considerations.

Mastodon Feed

cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen") wrote:

When I encounter unfamiliar patterns and incantations I must perform to get to a goal, it is frustrating, but necessary. If I'm doing a one off thing, the boilerplate can feel like a waste of time, but that's just an issue of my perception and not necessarily an indication of a problem.

We have common patterns we use to solve important problems. It's like the pipes that connect from your toilet to the sewer. You generally don't want to think about them, but somebody had to or else the shit wouldn't get where it's supposed to be. If you're the plumber in charge, you have to deal with the pipes. That's part of the job. Repeatedly needing to use pipes to solve particular problems are not an issue. It's actually a good thing in this case. Use understood solutions for particular problems.

Mastodon Feed

cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen") wrote:

We've all been seeing those comments about LLMs relieving us of the burden of boilerplate and surely this indicates the boilerplate is the problem!

Maybe... In any work I've been involved in, there's "boilerplate" in that there are patterns that recur repeatedly. The patterns aren't in the way, they are a common part of the pieces I use to solve particular problems. Some patterns have wider applicability than others. And I crib from myself liberally. I have boilerplate, but I'm not rewriting it from scratch every time. Once you're familiar with the patterns, reusing them is fast.

Perhaps we take DRY too far in software. It seems the ideal we aspire to is if something is not novel to *at least one person* then *none of us* should ever see it again or have to think about it, but I'm not convinced that is a worthwhile goal.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
foone@digipres.club ("Alice Averlong🏳️‍⚧️") wrote:

It's amazing how fast attitudes to security in the industry has changed. Like, I remember in 2023ish spending a while working on a system to securely trigger remote builds, because we couldn't have our slack chatbots on the same network as our Jenkins server

And in 2026 they just give a 3rd party LLM write access to both + the git repo

Mastodon Feed

slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell") wrote:

Biden's major failures were all acts of languid timidity: court reform, voting rights, Jan 6th culpability at the top, Ukraine supply hesitation, flinching from Gaza reality, etc.

Future political capital is a second derivative. Moving aggressively is not "spending", it's *building*.

Mastodon Feed

dysfun@treehouse.systems ("gaytabase") wrote:

i'm playing around with firecracker. anybody used it?

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
maxine@hachyderm.io ("maxine 🇵🇸") wrote:

Not to be unkind, but GitHub dying as the home of open source is a good thing for foss. We grew too complacent and dependant. Yeah it costs money and time to run our own spaces. Better than giving up.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
drwho@masto.hackers.town ("The Doctor") wrote:

https://www.404media.co/sxsw-used-ai-powered-trademark-tool-to-censor-dissent-on-instagram/

#SXSW

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by glyph ("Glyph"):
mttaggart@infosec.exchange ("Taggart :ifin:") wrote:

Ugggh this one is going to suck. cPanel is everywhere and most are not patched frequently.

https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/cpanel-whm-emergency-update-fixes-critical-auth-bypass-bug

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
lightspill@tailswish.industries ("Firrox Salient") wrote:

If you get the impression that I view currently popular UX wisdom as, basically, an evil cult destroying civilization, you’d be right.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
lightspill@tailswish.industries ("Firrox Salient") wrote:

My pet theory is that end-user popularity of LLMs comes from two factors in the commercialization of the web:

  1. The kind of terrible UX designer who perpetrates Apple/Mobile style interfaces with rubrics about how everything has to be visible. Everything has to be ‘a click’. Anyone who has internalized the idea that users shouldn’t be able to set up complex workflows or compound operations.
  2. The way commercial outfits have intentionally broken their search and metadata so when you try to find a specific thing you end up getting a pile of garbage instead. Users respond by making an LLM do a bunch of searches for them, actually read the pages, and collate the results.
Mastodon Feed

Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen"):
coop@denton.social ("Cooperation Denton (TX)") wrote:

What we are up against is nothing less than the deliberate cancellation of any future that could possibly reflect the desires of the masses. The same thing is happening right now, as I type this, under the umbrella term of AI. Scores of money - more than it would cost to do actually good things that we actually need - are being set ablaze to turn sand into math operations so that already rich people can realize "a future where intelligence is a utility...and people buy it from us on a meter."

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen"):
incanus ("Justin Miller") wrote:

See you at the next Web Day!

https://clipdx.com/webday

From the site:

"You just surf the web? Seriously?" Exactly! Web Day is silly, mundane, and banal together, in person.

When you sit down with us, next to a stranger or a friend, and explore open, free websites built by human hands, you directly combat the fascist forces which would prefer we stayed separated and locked into echo chambers.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
anthropy@mastodon.derg.nz ("Anthropy") wrote:

there's something very tiring about watching the FOSS ecosystem implode over donation sources every ~10 years

and then every time deciding that, rather than us all getting together and fixing that nasty funding problem, we're all just going to split up and be angy and aggro and pretentious at each other while fixing absolutely fuck all

Few appear to be looking at the bigger picture. It's all just "XYZ is bad so I'm righteous in my blind berserk rage!", while we infight and shoot our feet.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
Crell@phpc.social ("Larry Garfield") wrote:

Congress is considering a bill to give oil companies immunity for all the lies and harm they've caused. This is completely bass-ackwards.

Contact your Congresscritters and demand they vote no.

https://www.noimmunityforbigoil.org/

#uspol #ClimateChange #ClimateCrisis #BigOil

Mastodon Feed

baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason") wrote:

I clearly have not drunk enough coffee today. Caffeine obviously well below optimal operating levels.