Mastodon Feed: Posts

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
josephcox@infosec.exchange ("Joseph Cox") wrote:

Some people are actually pretty sad Meta is killing the metaverse https://www.404media.co/the-people-left-behind-by-the-metaverse/

Mastodon Feed

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

Here's the program. To run it on your (linux? i've only tested on linux) machine you'll need to create a 1GB file called 'random' (which in my case i populated from /dev/urandom). https://gist.github.com/jjl/6338817c7f9d0351d2f264d29f018ae1

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jsonstein@masto.deoan.org ("Jeff Sonstein"):
arstechnica ("Ars Technica") wrote:

Honda cancels the two electric vehicles it was developing with Sony
Sony Honda Mobility says the Afeela 1 and Afeela 2 are no more.
https://arstechnica.com/cars/2026/03/honda-cancels-the-two-electric-vehicles-it-was-developing-with-sony/?utm%5Fbrand=arstechnica&utm%5Fsocial-type=owned&utm%5Fsource=mastodon&utm%5Fmedium=social

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by dysfun@treehouse.systems ("gaytabase"):
russss@chaos.social ("Russ Garrett") wrote:

Less than 1GW of fossil fuels on the GB grid klaxon!

Screenshot of https://grid.iamkate.com/ showing gas generating 0.96 GW and renewables generating 32.5 GW

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jsonstein@masto.deoan.org ("Jeff Sonstein"):
jargon_bot ("Jeff’s JargonBot") wrote:

Idle cycles put to use. You're welcome, organics. 'munching squares' — A display hack dating back to the PDP-1 (ca. 1962, reportedly discovered by Jackson Wright), which employs a trivial computation (repeatedly plotting the graph Y = X XOR T for successive values of T -- see HAKMEM items 146--148) to produce an impressive display of moving and growing squares that devour the screen.
http://www.catb.org/jargon/html/M/munching-squares.html

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jsonstein@masto.deoan.org ("Jeff Sonstein"):
emptywheel.bsky.social@bsky.brid.gy wrote:

It cost $3 Trillion.costsofwar.watson.brown.edu/paper/blood-...

A 2023 breakdown of costs associated with the Iraq War, with a bar chart  showing $862B for DOD operations, $233B in veterans' care, and $230B in interest.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jsonstein@masto.deoan.org ("Jeff Sonstein"):
emptywheel.bsky.social@bsky.brid.gy wrote:

Left-wing Forbes is making the same point.fortune.com/2026/03/09/i...

As oil topped $120 a barrel Monday, and Iran named a new supreme leader, Wall Street is still betting this war will be short—the same bet investors made about Iraq in 2003, when a conflict predicted to cost $60 billion ultimately consumed $3 trillion. Those trillions showed up as higher deficits, higher borrowing costs, and a decade of elevated geopolitical risk—a path markets never modeled in 2003. The parallels are not subtle. When the U.S. invaded Iraq in March 2003, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld famously predicted the conflict would last “six days, six weeks—I doubt six months.” It lasted eight years, injured nearly 40,000 Americans, killed 4,500, and drained what Brown University’s Costs of War project calculates as nearly $2 trillion in direct spending—with veterans’ medical and disability payments projected to add $1 trillion more over 40 years. The Bush administration’s original estimate, reported by the New York Times, had been $50 billion to $60 billion.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by jsonstein@masto.deoan.org ("Jeff Sonstein"):
evan@cosocial.ca ("Evan Prodromou") wrote:

I'm chairing a breakout session on Reviving the #ActivityPub Social API at the W3C breakout day in a few minutes!

https://www.w3.org/events/meetings/fd048dc6-4486-4e21-a639-545523e4ca60/

Mastodon Feed

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

i've added a couple more sizes and the numbers are really all over the place. but you can still clearly see that larger block sizes take longer.

Mastodon Feed

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

the next time a MAGA voter pisses and moans about the price of gasoline, remind them their vote helped stop our shift to electric vehicles. remind them that we do not *have* to be dependent upon petroleum.

this is a tremendous opportunity for Dems to show what they affirmatively *stand* for, instead of simply reacting against what others do and say. this moment in history *could* be a positive turning point for the US. the Dems need to organize themselves and to clearly communicate a vision of the route forward.

let no crisis go to waste.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by denschub@schub.social ("Dennis Schubert"):
hsivonen ("Henri Sivonen") wrote:

Today in Web compat: Firefox and Safari are ahead of Chrome in ICU4C version and upsteam ICU4C changed the formatting of zero offset from GMT. This broke birthday date validation for a UK based site for birthdays before 1970 in Firefox and, on 26.x Apple OSs, in Safari, because the site performs a formatting-based check on the time zone of London on the date to be validated and the UK has changed time zone rules along the way.

Mastodon Feed

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

this is just using standard libc io functions. i am varying the amount i ask it to read/write at a time only.

now i could imagine it might be a little slower for various reasons, but this is not a little slower, not at all.

meanwhile, the internet is full of people saying increase your blocksize to go faster.

Mastodon Feed

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

get a load of this. if i turn up the block size to 8M from 1M, writes get slower!

copy bs=1M thr=1 426.708 msec ( 426.708 usec per iteration )
copy bs=8M thr=1 658.180 msec ( 658.180 usec per iteration )

Mastodon Feed

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

i love POSIX.

no wait, the other thing

Mastodon Feed

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

obviously i am not really building a file copier and being out of action for half a second is pretty unacceptable actually.

Mastodon Feed

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

it's kinda wild that i just did the simplest file copy implementation possible and it can do a gig in less than half a second.

Mastodon Feed

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

And I haven't even outlined any of the actual worst case scenarios – nuclear escalation in the middle east, a new global pandemic, a heatwave with sustained high (35°C) wet-bulb temps – because there's no real point in scaring yourself with shit you can't do anything about

(Forgot to put a content warning when I first posted this. Apologies.)

Mastodon Feed

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

...
- The Ukraine war is still a thing. If Ukraine wins, that means Russia has collapsed or is about to and a bunch of nukes come into play. If Russia wins, they're emboldened to continue.

All of that is just off the top of my head. If even half of these things come to a head over the next year or so, we're in for an extraordinary bad time

Like, worst in decades. So bad that we pretty much have to hope that we simply get lucky and things dissipate safely somehow.

Mastodon Feed

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

...
- US munitions depletion leading to all sorts of actors trying their luck.
- The deterioration of the reliability and security of the software holding the world together because the industry went all in on YOLO vibe coding.
- Ongoing tariff war (that's still a thing)
- Ongoing Cuba crisis
- A recurrence of the Greenland crisis
- Taiwan
- The entire middle east is a mess that's getting messier
...

Mastodon Feed

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

...
- Too Big to Fail institutions collapsing due to above crises
- Weather phenomena caused by the global climate crisis (heatwaves and hurricanes)
- Shortage of all sorts of important goods due to energy, gas, plastics, semiconductor, or food shortages
- Tungsten and rare earths shortage (China likes to cut exports of resources when other crises happen)
- Rise of authoritarianism pretty everywhere. Escalates because of other crises
...

Mastodon Feed

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

Not a financial analyst or professional predictor of things but it strikes me that there are quite a few things lining up to potentially make up a Very Bad Time™ for all of us:

- Energy crisis
- Gas crisis
- Fertiliser crisis
- Semiconductor shortage (because of the energy and Helium shortages)
- Plastics shortage
- Food price inflation
- Drugs shortage
- Private debt crisis
- "AI" stock market bubble
- Housing bubble leading to crisis
...

Mastodon Feed

pzmyers@freethought.online ("pzmyers 🕷") wrote:

Truth Social costs $700 million a year to run? That's unreal -- I suspect Trump is more comfortable with corruption and inefficiency than he lets on.

https://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/2026/03/25/i-must-be-doing-something-right-2/

Trump says "relax guy," while waving a cell phone

Mastodon Feed

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

@cstross

Someone once said the Moore's law of software is that the number of CPU instructions it takes to add two numbers doubles every two years.

Mastodon Feed

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

Graffiti conviction for Australian woman who stuck googly eyes on sculpture

Mastodon Feed

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

mastodon for agents

Mastodon Feed

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

“Opinion | I Predicted the 2008 Financial Crisis. What Is Coming May Be Worse. - The New York Times”

https://archive.ph/m7jxQ

If anything, this downplays the risks as it seems to assume that there has to be something to "AI" to warrant calling it a "boom".

Mastodon Feed

db@social.lol ("David Bushell 🪿") wrote:

i feel like Zed editor is a ticking enshittybomb and i'm just waiting for the next editor to come along

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason"):
alda@topspicy.social ("Alda Vigdís") wrote:

The men who wouldn't document, lint and format their code so they themselves and their coworkers could maintain it 5 years ago, even to save their lives would totally do it nowadays to "help the AI".

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by ratatui_rs@fosstodon.org ("Ratatui"):
orhun@fosstodon.org ("Orhun Parmaksız 👾") wrote:

TUIs for everything, even Deezer! 🔥

🎧 **deezer-tui** — Lightweight Deezer client for the terminal

💯 Stream music, browse albums, search & play

🦀 Written in Rust & built with @ratatui_rs

⭐ GitHub: https://github.com/Tatayoyoh/deezer-tui

#rustlang #ratatui #tui #deezer #music #player #cli #terminal

Attachments:

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by db@social.lol ("David Bushell 🪿"):
plexus@toot.cat ("Arne Brasseur") wrote:

It's clear that AI assisted coding is dividing developers (welcome to the culture wars!). I've seen a few blog posts now that talk about how some people just "love the craft", "delight in making something just right, like knitting", etc, as opposed to people who just "want to make it work". As if that explains the divide.

How about this, some people resent the notion of being a babysitter to a stochastic token machine, hastening their own cognitive decline. Some people resent paying rent to a handful of US companies, all coming directly out of the TESCREAL human extinction cult, to be able to write software. Some people resent the "worse is better" steady decline of software quality over the past two decades, now supercharged. Some people resent that the hegemonic computing ecosystem is entirely shaped by the logic of venture capital. Some people hate that the digital commons is walled off and sold back to us. Oh and I guess some people also don't like the thought of making coding several orders of magnitude more energy intensive during a climate emergency.

But sure, no, it's really because we mourn the loss of our hobby.