Mastodon Feed: Posts

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jwz:
gsuberland@chaos.social ("Graham Sutherland / Polynomial") wrote:

M

Frame from an old video. There's a blue to grey gradient background, and the text over the top says: You can use the internet for: Sports scores. Chatting with women. Taxes. Football scores. Chatting with men about football. Egyptian literature. Sending electronic M.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by isagalaev ("Ivan Sagalaev :flag_wbw:"):
cloudhop@equestria.social ("Erik McClure") wrote:

Bose recently did an unambiguously good thing, by publishing the API for the audio hardware they were originally going to brick: https://www.theverge.com/news/858501/bose-soundtouch-smart-speakers-open-source

However, I've seen some people say "don't praise Bose for this, they didn't do this until there was backlash".

SHUT UP. Shut the FUCK UP. I'm DONE living in a society where you get dragged through hell if you make a mistake, EVEN AFTER YOU CORRECT THE MISTAKE. I'm so fucking tired of hearing stupid excuses for this kind of puritanism like "they should've known better" NOBODY KNOWS BETTER UNTIL *AFTER THEY MAKE THE MISTAKE*. THAT'S HOW LEARNING *WORKS*.

And before you say "Companies aren't your friend" PUNISHING THEM FOR FIXING THEIR MISTAKES WON'T MAKE THEM DO THE RIGHT THING EITHER. If other people, or companies, see someone get punished for both messing up AND fixing the mistake, they just won't bother at all!

People HAVE to be allowed to make mistakes. They HAVE to be given a chance to improve.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
ebel@moytura.org ("ebel aurora") wrote:

I hope 2026 treats you the way you treat trans women

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
bodil@treehouse.systems ("Bodil") wrote:

I'm watching people in my feed screaming at each other over Firefox's "AI kill switch" this morning with some trepidation.

As far as I'm concerned, Firefox already has an AI kill switch. It's called browser.ml.chat.enabled, I set it to false more or less the day it appeared, it hasn't mysteriously popped back on since, despite angry posts to the contrary, and that's been that for me. It's disabled every "AI" feature I find objectionable. I'd prefer if Mozilla leadership would sync up with reality on occasion and stop deciding to put this paid placement trash into Firefox in the first place, but at least there's a reliable way to get rid of it.

Everything else people have been screaming at Mozilla about? I'm not sure I see the problem. The little model you can download to summarise web pages for you? I wouldn't trust it, and so I don't think it's necessarily a productive use of Firefox devs' time, but at least it's opt-in. The other little model you can download to help organise your tab groups? I don't use it much, but this one seems more practical, and it's also opt-in, despite the occasional angry report of it slowing down people's browsers even without having been downloaded. Liek, bro, maybe try closing a Slack tab or two.

I don't want ChatGPT in my browser, or Claude, or any kind of world burning data centre LLM pretending to be our new AI god. browser.ml.chat.enabled = false does that for me. It would be even better if it wasn't there in the first place. But tiny, focused ML models doing nominally useful things? I not only do not see the problem there, I'd like some of them to be part of the Web platform rather than just the browser. I've been wishing since they launched them that Mozilla would make an API available to web sites out of those translation models of theirs, for instance.

I'm monitoring the situation, as European heads of state like to say, but so far, despite the posturings of their C-suite types, it doesn't seem like any critical Mozilla resources are being diverted away from maintaining the Web platform into AI boosterism. Every new Firefox changelog is delivering on what it should be delivering on, and it's only occasionally that I see a new "AI" feature advertised. Compare that to a product like VSCode, which has been completely consumed by the cancer of slop production with only one in a hundred changelog entries being about building an actual damned code editor, and I'm not feeling all that alarmed about Firefox just yet.

I know this is Mastodon, but sometimes I just wish people would entertain having opinions that can have some nuance in between "burn the world down so the AGI can live" and "Butlerian Jihad now," you know?

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
anirvan ("Anirvan Chatterjee") wrote:

"Trump didn’t tell Congress about the Venezuela attack before it happened. But he did claim to tell oil executives. Let that sink in. The president reportedly informed private oil companies about a military invasion before informing the people’s elected representatives. So who does the government work for, exactly?"

https://heated.world/p/its-time-to-embrace-climate-conspiracy

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
splendorr ("nina splendorr 🌻🏳️‍⚧️") wrote:

reminder:

yellow poster with drawings of the sailor moons. text says:  TRANS PEOPLE EXISTING DOES LITERALLY NOTHING NEGATIVE TO YOUR LIVES, YOU CRYBABY WIMPS YOUR LIFE IS GETTING HARDER AND COSTLIER BECAUSE OF THE OLIGARGS, NOT TRANS PEOPLE

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jwz:
hannah@posts.rat.pictures ("historic drystone sheep dyke") wrote:

Really starting to get why dante wrote thousands of lines of poetry describing the eternal torture of various political figures of his time

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by NfNitLoop ("Cody Casterline 🏳️‍🌈"):
fromjason ("fromjason.xyz ❤️ 💻") wrote:

It's fucking egregious that state sponsored violence is so commonplace in our country, so engrained in our culture, that you can defend loss of life by simply reminding people that if you make a mistake, if your fight or flight kicks in while being charged at by a cop and you flee, your murder is justified.

A trained cop can murder someone out of fear. But a regular citizen must have the nerves of a navy seal when interacting with a man who can kill you then go on paid vacation.

#ICE

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by NfNitLoop ("Cody Casterline 🏳️‍🌈"):
zkat@toot.cat ("Kat Marchán 🐈") wrote:

Thinking of starting a list of popular open source software developed using LLMs and by LLM boosters, along with alternatives that can be tried instead. LLM in FOSS should be socially shunned.

Anyone interested?

Update: https://codeberg.org/gen-ai-transparency/open-slopware alright, it's up. Patches welcome! Please send me your PRs at your leisure.

#foss #opensource #genai

Mastodon Feed

NfNitLoop ("Cody Casterline 🏳️‍🌈") wrote:

@zkat Oh no, nushell. 😞

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by zkat@toot.cat ("Kat Marchán 🐈"):
catsalad@infosec.exchange ("Cat 🐈🥗 (D.Burch) :paw:⁠:paw:") wrote:

Ask your vet if cat extensions are right for you.

Photo of a fluffy, longhaired cat peeking out a back door window, except because the kitty had a recent vet visit that required a belly trim, the cat looks quite silly. Fluff on both ends, skinny belly in the middle

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jwz:
netblocks ("NetBlocks") wrote:

⚠️ Update: #Iran has now been offline for 12 hours with national connectivity flatlining at ~1% of ordinary levels, after authorities imposed a nationwide internet blackout in an attempt to suppress sweeping protests while covering up reports of regime brutality 📉

Graph from NetBlocks showing network connectivity in Iran from January 1, 2025, to January 9, 2025. The y-axis represents normalized connectivity, ranging from 0% to 100%, and the x-axis represents the dates. The green line representing Iran's connectivity remains lower than normal most of the time period due to protests, with a sharp drop on the evening of January 8. The drop in connectivity aligns with protests across the nation. The minimum and current connectivity levels are indicated as 1% and 1%, respectively. The chart has a dark background with a red horizontal arrow labeled 'SHUTDOWN', indicates the period of disruption.

Mastodon Feed

jwz wrote:

Eyeball Landscape.

It has only just come to my attention that the Brazil "eyeball" sequence was actually filmed. I may need to make adjustments to the Peepers screensaver.
https://jwz.org/b/yk1g

Screenshot

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jwz:
angiebaby@mas.to ("Angie") wrote:

The number of Gestapo in Germany was 32,000. The population was 70 million. That's one Gestapo for every 2200 citizens.

The number of ICE agents is 20,000. The population of the US is 348 million. That's one ICE agent for every 17,000 citizens.

There are more of us.

#USPol

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
indivisibleteam ("Indivisible ❌👑") wrote:

We’re mobilizing across the country this weekend to honor Renee Nicole Good, demand accountability for ICE’s killing of Renee, and make visible the human cost of ICE’s terror: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1F8Iu3kLxOuzXax%5FAwrQgiOtggsEtasx4-Wvi9oNavtg/edit?usp=drivesdk

(over a photo of protesters holding “ICE OUT” signs) ICE OUT FOR GOOD WEEKEND OF ACTION: JANUARY 10-11

Mastodon Feed

fromjason ("fromjason.xyz ❤️ 💻") wrote:

RE: https://syzito.xyz/@selzero/115862360219972810

If/when we get a democrat administration again, they'll fear monger crime and set record breaking budgets for ICE and police again, and again we'll hear the rationale that we must do this to court white moderates, and again, we'll demand that Black and brown people fall in line.

This anger we feel today will fade, like the anger after George Floyd's murder, and it'll be the same thing over and over.

How can anyone not get how infuriating that is?

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen"):
TomF@mastodon.gamedev.place ("Tom Forsyth") wrote:

Recent discussion about the perils of doors in gamedev reminded me of a bug caused by a door in a game you may have heard of called "Half Life 2". Are you sitting comfortably? Then I shall begin.

A Combine soldier threatening with a baton, in front of a door. Which one is a greater menace in gamedev?

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by fromjason ("fromjason.xyz ❤️ 💻"):
evacide@hachyderm.io wrote:

Ten years ago, if someone had told me that tech policy bloggers would be calling for ICE to be abolished, I would have thought it very unlikely.

"Abolish ICE" is an increasingly mainstream and extremely correct position.

https://www.techdirt.com/2026/01/08/abolish-ice-before-they-kill-again-impeach-trump-noem-before-they-incite-more-murder/

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by fromjason ("fromjason.xyz ❤️ 💻"):
carsten@minnesotasocial.net ("Carsten") wrote:

Hello Minnesota!

This is a new server for people who live in Minnesota. We hope to connect people in the state and the greater fediverse.

#Minnesota #MN

Mastodon Feed

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

HCR is calling them what they are: fascists.

https://www.youtube.com/live/CQPOHCoTbgE?si=aOkxf58VwInB9qts

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen"):
vga256@tomodori.net wrote:

a few years ago i mentioned that i wrote a book about the exciting, awkward and embarrassing experiences of growing up with computers and video games in the 80s and 90s.

i wanted to remember what it felt like being the only dorky computer kid at school. or what it was like to hear my first modem handshake sound. or starting the first flamewar on the school's national FirstClass BBS in the macintosh lab over the lunch-hour

it was originally something i wrote only for my family and friends who were there at the time.

and then i met all of you folks when i started my first masto instance 4 years ago. i had no idea there were so many hardcore retrocomputing and gaming nerds out there; unix and mac and ms-dos folks alike.

so i mentioned it casually. i was surprised by the interest in the book.

so i spent the better part of the past 3 years rewriting the book for *you* fellow mastodon dorkus malorkuses. the book is a celebration of all of the best (and worst) parts of a kid growing up in the digital age.

we're all busy old tired stressed folks now. so every memory and cringetacular story is short enough to read on a 5 minute bus/metro/toilet ride. they're weaved together into an arc that starts at my family's first Tandy TRS-80 and ends at my school's Mac LC II and building my first Pentium 133.

it's finally published, and i'm super proud of what it became thanks to everyone here nerding out for years.

enjoy the book. i wrote it just for you. ❤️

paperback edition: https://mybook.to/EDuUf

DRM-free ebook (EPUB format) and chapter samples here:
https://tomotama.itch.io/mages-modems

#books #indiePublisher #bookstodon #author #macintosh #vintageApple #vintageComputing #msdos #dosGaming #yeg #canada #alberta #bbs #smolWeb #indieWeb

The front cover of Mages & Modems: A Childhood Well-Wasted in the Golden Age of Personal Computers, Games & Internet Piracy - a confessional by vga256. It shows a collage of computer and tech paraphernalia stacked on top of each other like a junk pile: a bright red telephone handset, a pile of 5.25 and 3.5-inch floppy disks, a mouse, a cocktail napkin from lefty's bar, two RAM simms.
[![The rear cover of the book, showing a Carmen Sandiego-style letter from the ACME Detective agency. The letter has a picture of a spazzing out kid wearing a Just Do It sweater. The letter reads: ACME Detective Agency Dear Detective #0294, As discussed, I have enclosed a hardcopy of VGA256's journals discussed at the departmental briefing. The journal entries are chronological, and document the suspect's computing and gaming activities from the early 1980s to late 1990s - his childhood and adolescent years. Each vignette is an introspection into the suspect's self-described obsessions, including but not limited to: * IBM PC, Amiga, Apple ], Macintosh, Tandy * MS-DOS, MacOS, Windows 3.1 & 95, UNIX * NES, GameBoy, Sega Genesis, TI-85 * Modems, BBSes, CompuServe, Prodigy, ISPs * Warez, FTP, Usenet, IRC, Shell Accounts * Origin Systems, LucasArts, and Sierra On-Line ... and so on. The stories are a treasure trove of immoral and illicit activities that made him the dysfunctional adult he is now. I hope these will be of value in building your dossier on this delinquent. I expect a report on my desk by Friday. Deputy Chief Conover Brat & Punk Division]20

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
beyondmachines1@infosec.exchange ("BeyondMachines :verified:") wrote:

#Sloperator

No, Yes lady meme: First image (NO), caption: "Prompt Engineer" Second image (Yes), caption: "Sloperator"

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen"):
ajroach42@retro.social ("Andrew (Television Executive)") wrote:

Standard eBooks celebrates public domain day: https://standardebooks.org/blog/public-domain-day-2026

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jsonstein@masto.deoan.org ("Jeff Sonstein"):
losso3000 wrote:

Yo dawg, I herd you like Amiga mouse pointers? Well, here’s all of them!

https://heckmeck.de/pointers/

#amiga #pixelart

An oldschool AmigaOS window with some colorful mouse cursors. Drawer icon in the center, labelled "Amiga Pointer Archive"

Mastodon Feed

jsonstein@masto.deoan.org ("Jeff Sonstein") wrote:

Today in History: Arcangelo Corelli dies in Italy, 1713

Mastodon Feed

jsonstein@masto.deoan.org ("Jeff Sonstein") wrote:

[END TODAY IN HISTORY RUN]

Mastodon Feed

jsonstein@masto.deoan.org ("Jeff Sonstein") wrote:

Today in History: David Bowie (then David Robert Jones) is born in London, 1947

Mastodon Feed

jsonstein@masto.deoan.org ("Jeff Sonstein") wrote:

Today in History: Elvis Presley born in East Tupelo, Mississippi, 1935

Mastodon Feed

jsonstein@masto.deoan.org ("Jeff Sonstein") wrote:

Today in History: Monaco gains its independence, 1297

Mastodon Feed

jsonstein@masto.deoan.org ("Jeff Sonstein") wrote:

Today in History: Battle of New Orleans