Mastodon Feed: Posts

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jsonstein@masto.deoan.org ("Jeff Sonstein"):
skinnylatte@hachyderm.io ("Adrianna Tan") wrote:

I always forget about this group but I think it’s great. Ted’s hikes is a group that organizes regular Bay Area hikes where they meet in San Francisco and take transit together somewhere to hike together.

I usually meet interesting people of all ages here. Not cliquey. I’ve been a few times

It’s a great way to learn how to get around to do outdoor things with transit

https://www.meetup.com/san-francisco-hiking-meetup-7-12-miles-slow-paced/

#SanFrancisco #transit #California #BayArea #Hiking

Mastodon Feed

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

Big Time Woman by Leon Redbone

https://pandora.app.link/pkdeG2IY8Ub

Mastodon Feed

jwz wrote:

Please enjoy jwz mixtape 253.
https://jwz.org/b/ykrh

Attachments:

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your friendly 'net denizen"):
flyingsaceur@ioc.exchange ("AN/CRM-114") wrote:

@djsundog one regret that Sinatra did not like to mention was the time he insulted Australia and their trade unions stranded him there until he apologized

https://jacobin.com/2021/08/australia-frank-sinatra-1974-tour-sexist-comments-apology-journalists-actu-unions

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your friendly 'net denizen"):
seemo wrote:

Hey we’re hiring at our studio (democratically run and operated, flat salary, 4 day work weeks, cool project). We’re looking for a unity rendering engineer and/or general senior engineer to join our lovely team. 85k CAD salary - yes it’s a pay cut for some but in exchange you get a workplace unlike any other where you really matter ✌🏼 https://workwithindies.com/careers/ko-op-senior-rendering-programmer

Mastodon Feed

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

Very relatable[1] comic from Tauhid Bondia:

https://www.gocomics.com/crabgrass/2025/07/19

[1] Relatable in that I was rather jealous of my peers that had calculator watches, and I would've probably acted like Miles had I ever received one.

Crabgrass comic for 2025-07-19 by Tauhid Bondia. Comic with two kids. 1st panel Miles: [excited] Check it out! My dad got me a CALCULATOR WATCH! Isn't it AWESOME? Kevin: [not sharing the excitement] I guess... 2nd panel Miles: It's like having a whole COMPUTER on my wrist. RAW PROCESSING POWER right at my fingertips! The ULTIMATE fusion of MAN AND MACHINE! 3rd panel: Miles: Come on. Give me ANY two numbers and I'll multiply them. ANY numbers at all! Kevin: Oh GOSH! Uhm... 4 times 6? 4th panel: Miles: [visibly upset and intense] Dude, I said ANY NUMBERS!! Is THAT the best you've got!? Kevin: [shrinking back] Why are you so SCARY right now?!

Mastodon Feed

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

I would love a weekly syndication of the best blog posts across the web. I know there are #Fedi specific aggregators which is cool. Also, the Good Internet magazine is an exciting publication.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
ricmac ("Richard MacManus") wrote:

Out of sheer boredom on a Saturday post-dinner, I opened up Threads (I no longer post there) and saw this cry for help. Poor bastards… #MetaWorld #AOLvibes

Threads user: “imagine a world in which you could put a link in an instagram post and it was ... clickable”

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jwz:
PavelASamsonov ("Pavel A. Samsonov") wrote:

#AI is a marketing term; before we discuss "AI is fake" vs "AI is real" we need to unfold what we *mean* by AI.

For example, "artificial general intelligence" is fake and can't hurt you. Layoffs excused by "AI efficiency" are real and can hurt you.

Linkedin discourse is fake - but it CAN hurt you.

Auto-complete: real, can't hurt you Super-intelligence: not real, can't hurt you Layoffs: real, can hurt you LinkedIn: not real, can hurt you.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jwz:
luis_in_brief@social.coop ("Luis Villa") wrote:

🤔

A screenshot of a publisher’s website of a book titled “The Invention of Scarcity” by Deborah Valenze, showing pricing, availability, etc.. Circled in yellow are three things: the title of the book (“The Invention of Scarcity”), the word “ebook”, and (in the same row as the ebook) text saying that the ebook is “out of stock”.

Mastodon Feed

jwz wrote:

"Even God Cannot Hear Us Here": What I Witnessed Inside an ICE Women's Prison.

Rümeysa Öztürk: I was looking forward to taking a short walk and catching up with friends at the interfaith center, when I was suddenly surrounded and grabbed by a swarm...
https://jwz.org/b/ykrf

Screenshot

Mastodon Feed

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

I did it! I wrote 800 words, all of it complete shit. I drive home, take a quick nap, then write a paragraph that I think sounds great.

I forget who said we should write to get all the bad writing out of our system but damn if that isn't true.

Mastodon Feed

jwz wrote:

"Visit Dubai!"

Caitlín Doherty: I went to Dubai wrongheaded. I learnt nothing and left nauseated. I had thought it would be fun -- funny, even -- to experience the disorientation of standing at the pivot point between two world systems. Instead, it...
https://jwz.org/b/ykrd

Screenshot

Mastodon Feed

chipotle@mstdn.social ("Watts Martin") wrote:

Swift neophyte question: I was noodling with a SwiftData-backed document application, but I'm going to need the document to contain more than one model. Not only can I find no examples of this, the DocumentGroup API suggests this isn't even possible. Should I give up and use FileDocument? #Swift

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jwz:
jensorensen ("Jen Sorensen") wrote:

Recent comic: It's time to update the old binaries.

#cartoon #comic #uspol #science #humanrights

TERMS for our TIMES LET'S FACE IT: THESE OLD BINARIES HAVE BECOME TIRED AND VAGUE. EVIDENCE-BASED vs. PSEUDO-SCIENTIFIC CONSTITUTIONAL VS. UNCONSTITUTIONAL CORRUPT VS. FAIR IMAGINE IF THESE TERMS WERE INSERTED INTO TYPICAL HORSE RACE NEWS COVERAGE. Anchorman: THE CONSTITUTION IS DOWN IN THE POLLS. CAN IT APPEAL TO SWING VOTERS? TV reporter with Ice agent hauling away older woman in background: AND ANOTHER SETBACK FOR HUMAN RIGHTS TODAY. Pundit: PSEUDOSCIENCE IS VERY POPULAR AND WILL BE KEY TO WINNING THE MIDTERMS. Reporter: SOME SAY BARBARISM HAS BEEN WRONGLY EXCLUDED FROM OUR INSTITUTIONS.CONSERVATIVES VS. LIBERALS RIGHT VS. LEFT DEMOCRATS VS. REPUBLICANS MAYBE WE SHOULD TRY THESE INSTEAD: AUTHORITARIANISM VS. DEMOCRACY HUMAN RIGHTS VS. BARBARISM

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by adele@social.pollux.casa ("Adële 🌹"):
jlundell@ioc.exchange ("Jona 🐳") wrote:

@adele “I often think there should exist a special typographical sign for a smile — some sort of concave mark, a supine round bracket, which I would now like to trace in reply to your question.” So close! Nabokov, 1969.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by adele@social.pollux.casa ("Adële 🌹"):
fyr@indieweb.social wrote:

@adele they're so much easier to type on a regular keyboard compared to the emoji that need to be searched and selected! I get a unique "disappointment and rage" feeling when I type an ASCII smiley and it gets autoincorrected to the emoji variant.

>:(

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jsonstein@masto.deoan.org ("Jeff Sonstein"):
MarkHoltom@mastodonapp.uk ("Mark Holtom (aka Kingbeard)") wrote:

If you read the Daily Mail, you are by definition, misinformed.

@RussInCheshire  Daily Mail is banned by Wikipedia as source for "poor fact checking... and flat-out fabrication" and Microsoft's fact-check plugin tool warns Daily Mail "fails basic standards of accuracy and accountability" If you read the Daily Mail you are, by definition, misinformed.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jsonstein@masto.deoan.org ("Jeff Sonstein"):
NouranKhaledGh ("Nouran 🍉") wrote:

I am Nouran, a 19 years girl from Gaza. At this age, I should be sitting in a classroom, wearing a white coat, learning how to heal people’s teeth and bring back their smiles. I should be walking the university halls as a dentistry student.

But dreams in Gaza don’t survive.

Now, I spend most of my days sitting in front of a fire. I help my family cook basic meals. My hands are rough from the heat and smoke.

But I'm still dreaming

Please stand with my family

https://chuffed.org/project/121561-urgent-help-for-ahmads-family

Mastodon Feed

adam@social.lol ("Adam") wrote:

The DNS stickers have arrived (much sooner than I expected!) and they are *awesome*. Made a vid so you can see the sparkle effect. Ethernet cable for scale.

The remaining protocol stickers (HTTP and SMTP) should arrive within the next few days, and then they’ll be in the mail to everyone who ordered!

It’s still not too late to pick up a full set of six protocol stickers! More info here: https://social.lol/@adam/114848069266526841

Attachments:

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by adele@social.pollux.casa ("Adële 🌹"):
eclecticpassions@fosstodon.org ("Naty") wrote:

New #blog on #BurgeonLab ✍️

➡️ https://www.burgeonlab.com/blog/customize-retext-markdown-editor/

My full guide on how to customize the look and feel of ReText (Python Markdown Editor)! I'm quite happy with this post—one of those "learning while doing" type scenarios.

I've written about #ReText before, so if you're interested in trying a new #markdowneditor, read the first post too on how to install it on macOS.

https://github.com/retext-project/retext

#blogging #blogs #hugo #weblog #smallweb #markdown #python #FOSS

Mastodon Feed

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

Well fuck, my library is closed on saturdays now. Used to be open. That sucks.

Okay, coffee shop. Same mission. Here I go.

Mastodon Feed

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

Okay, holding myself accountable. I'm headed to the library to write 800 words. Won't leave until I do or they close lol

Mastodon Feed

adam@social.lol ("Adam") wrote:

Sundial on a cemetery monument: “WE LIVE IN DEEDS NOT YEARS”

A bronze sundial on a piece of granite. The bronze is weathered and green with oxidation. An hourglass with wings appears beneath the gnomon, and there are Roman numeral markings for the hours. In a semicircle outside of the dial is the inscription WE LIVE IN DEEDS NOT YEARS.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jakedel@mamot.fr ("S. Delafond"):
santiago@framapiaf.org ("Santiago") wrote:

Approaching the speed of light talk by #cern is about to start.

It's really nice to know that #Debian is being used in the world's largest particle accelerator!

#DebConf25

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jakedel@mamot.fr ("S. Delafond"):
rhertzog@hachyderm.io ("Raphaël Hertzog") wrote:

Nice article of my Kali co-worker Arnaud Rebillout. He also gave a talk about mirrorbits (Kali's mirror redirector) during #Debconf25, and here he dives into some the issues that Kali faces due to lack of the Acquire-by-Hash feature in our package repository.
https://arnaudr.io/2025/07/17/acquire-by-hash-for-apt-packages-repositories-and-the-lack-of-it-in-kali-linux/

Mastodon Feed

adele@social.pollux.casa ("Adële 🌹") wrote:

The charm of ASCII smileys :-)

on my blog

Nowadays, it's easy to forget about ASCII smileys. These simple text faces were the first way to show feelings online. They have a special place in the history of the internet and in my heart.

A bit of history

The story of ASCII smileys starts in the early 1980s. Back then, the internet was just beginning, and people mostly communicated through text. Scott Fahlman, a computer scientist, had an idea. He suggested using :-) for jokes and :-( for serious comments. This small idea changed how we talk online forever.

Simple and for everyone

ASCII smileys are wonderfully simple. Unlike today's emojis, they look the same no matter where you see them. In an email or a text message, they always look familiar. This makes them a reliable way to share feelings.

But their simplicity is deceptive. With just a few keystrokes, you can make many different expressions. Some examples for youngest readers:

  • ;-) for a wink
  • :-D for a big grin
  • :'( for crying
  • >:-( for anger
  • :-/ for skepticism

These little combinations let us express a lot, even in plain text.

A touch of nostalgia

For those of us who remember the early days of the internet, ASCII smileys bring back memories. They remind us of simpler times, of chat rooms and the first social media sites.

Using ASCII smileys today can be a fun way to remember the past. It connects us with others who share those memories. It's a small way to celebrate how digital communication has evolved.

A spark of creativity

ASCII smileys also encourage creativity. With just a few characters, you can make unique faces. This adds a personal touch to your messages. For example, ^_^ can show a playful tone, and :-| can show indifference.

This creativity can be fun. Challenge your friends to make their own smileys. Use them to add a personal touch to your messages. I like and often use ^^. I remember a friend using o_0 because of his asymmetrical face caused by a childhood illness, we knew it was him when we read the forum posts!

Why they still matter

Even with all the new emojis, ASCII smileys are still around. They are used in emails, texts, and forums. Their appeal is in their simplicity and universality.

ASCII smileys are a nice return to basics. They remind us that simple things can be very effective. They also allow us to send plain text emails without worrying about compatibility issues.

So next time you write a message, think about adding an ASCII smiley. It's a small way to connect with the past and add a bit of personality to your words.

Mastodon Feed

fribbledom ("muesli") wrote:

I've set out to learn Blender about 12 times now. But today's different. Today I opened it, stared at the cube for 15 minutes, and almost deleted it. Progress. Totally gonna nail it this time. Probably. Maybe. Okay, see you in 3 months!

Mastodon Feed

fribbledom ("muesli") wrote:

Dear DPD. No one, and I mean absolutely NO ONE, is memorizing their 14-digit parcel number 🤣

Still not creating that account tho 😛

DPD's website asking you to create an account so you don't have to "memorize" your parcel's number.

Mastodon Feed

fribbledom ("muesli") wrote:

Probably should have taken that insurance... 🤔