Mastodon Feed: Posts

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
mttaggart@infosec.exchange ("Taggart") wrote:

I've been burned so many times; I've learned my lesson. You really need to read each of these things carefully if you want to understand what the researchers are concluding. Reading a news article—even worse, just the headline—is at best no information, at worst disinformation.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
mttaggart@infosec.exchange ("Taggart") wrote:

I am begging AI researchers trying to study human impact to get very rapidly better at methodology so I don't constantly read halfway through these papers only to find some ridiculous experiment design that will throw the conclusions into the air.

Mastodon Feed

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

LOL, i am heavily amused by the idea there is a single day in the office where Jayz2Cents isn't being absolutely bullied to shit by his employees.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by keul@fosstodon.org ("Luca Fabbri"):
html5test@front-end.social ("Niels Leenheer") wrote:

Smoke machine powered by CSS!

Fully based on web platform tech, such as WebUSB for the DMX connection and CSS for controlling everything.

My projects can sometimes get a little bit out of hand. Want to know more? Come see my talk at @btconf

https://beyondtellerrand.com/events/dusseldorf-2026/tickets

Attachments:

Mastodon Feed

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

Had a look at the Carnival of Transport in Coleford during my break. Some nice old cars, but what soured it for me was the neonazi bikers that showed up, and some goon waving an American blue lives matter flag.

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by zkat@toot.cat ("Katerina Marchán"):
jwildeboer@social.wildeboer.net ("Jan Wildeboer 😷:krulorange:") wrote:

TIL (Today I learned) that writing websites with simple HTML and CSS is now called "post-framework". Well. I did "post-framework" even before frameworks existed and I never stopped writing that little bit of HTML and CSS needed for static pages myself. I guess I'm so old that it is considered being young again :) (frantically adding "20+ years of experience and practice with post-framework web design" to my CV ;)

1/4

Mastodon Feed

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

roller coaster tycoon's overengineered puking system

remember the old days when people used to engineer stuff?

Mastodon Feed

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

well shit this guy's got his mouth open it must be good

video card with an asian guy wearing glasses with his mouth open. in the background is a data centre being hit by bombs

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
sophieschmieg@infosec.exchange ("Sophie Schmieg") wrote:

And the posts, they keep on coming.
I hundred percent agree with @filippo here, the question is not whether we're certain that a quantum computer exists by 2029, it's whether we're certain that one doesn't exist. And things have progressed far enough that non-physicists, or even physicists working in different subfields, can no longer reliably tell what's going on.

https://words.filippo.io/crqc-timeline/

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
HollyCo26588808@universeodon.com wrote:

Scientists Discover Lab Gloves Are Skewing Microplastics Data – Perhaps By A Lot

https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/scientists-discover-lab-gloves-are-skewing-microplastics-data/

#goodnews #goodearth #science #plastic #pollution #research #Michigan

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by dysfun@treehouse.systems ("gaytabase"):
xssfox@cloudisland.nz ("1.3.6.1.4.1.61513") wrote:

> Posts on Mastodon are not end-to-end encrypted. Do not share any sensitive information over Mastodon. Instead use https://forum.warthunder.com/

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason"):
PavelASamsonov ("Pavel A. Samsonov") wrote:

LLMs have no concept of "true" or "good." But they are trained to signal high-quality work. Meanwhile, bosses are pressuring workers: go faster, produce more, let the AI cook.

Study after study documents what this does to the human brain: cognitive surrender. We're "in the loop" but the bot calls the shots.

Read more in this week's issue of the Product Picnic newsletter:

#LLM #AI #UXDesign #tech #softwaredevelopment #software

https://productpicnic.beehiiv.com/p/ai-mandates-are-a-demand-for-cognitive-surrender

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason"):
thomasfuchs@hachyderm.io ("Human Brain Enthusiast") wrote:

“How may the compulsive programmer be distinguished from a merely dedicated, hard-working professional programmer? First, by the fact that the ordinary professional programmer addresses himself to the problem to be solved, whereas the compulsive programmer sees the problem mainly as an opportunity to interact with the computer. The ordinary computer programmer will usually discuss both his substantive and his technical programming problem with others. He will generally do lengthy preparatory work, such as writing and flow diagramming, before beginning work with the computer itself. His sessions with the computer may be comparatively short. He may even let others do the actual console work. He develops his program slowly and systematically. When something doesn't work, he may spend considerable time away from the computer, framing careful hypotheses to account for the malfunction and designing crucial experiments to test them. Again, he may leave the actual running of the computer to others. He is able, while waiting for results from the computer, to attend to other aspects of his work, such as documenting what he has already done. When he has finally composed the program he set out to produce, he is able to complete a sensible description of it and to turn his attention to other things. The professional regards programming as a means toward an end, not as an end in itself. His satisfaction comes from having solved a substantive problem, not from having bent a computer to his will.”
—Joseph Weizenbaum, Computer Power and Human Reason, 1976

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen"):
mathew@universeodon.com wrote:

https://amiatechbro.com

(No, I very much am not.)

Mastodon Feed

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

This is old news, but I just found out x86 picked up a crc32 machine instruction somewhere along the way (Nehalem?), but it uses a fixed polynomial, so... Why? I wonder what particular customer made the suggestion. 🤔

Mastodon Feed

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

New post: ""How are you leveraging AI in your technical writing?"" https://coyotetracks.org/blog/leveraging-ai-in-writing/

It's a question I expect to be asked in the future. I have an answer, but I can't help suspect it's the wrong question.

Mastodon Feed

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

hmmm... wwdd?

if i were dysfun i would simply invent a new branch of maths on top of bayesian statistics to give a language to talk about such things in.

and i am dysfun, sooooooo.....

Mastodon Feed

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

i think the answer is bayesian statistics.

you know, the analytical alternative to neural networks?

Mastodon Feed

soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker") wrote:

Another day, another annoying person to block

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
johnzajac@dice.camp ("John") wrote:

Scott Jensen's concern, in a nutshell, is the abuse and harrassment that AI propagandists have to face here, on Mastodon.

His concern about the unethical, immoral, and destructive externalities of yes, even "local AI models"? His concern about the deliberate, strategic conflation of ML applications like medicine and materials development? Protein folding? Physics modeling?

Apparently not urgent enough to even mention.

No, it's the propagandists receiving rudeness he finds alarming.

3/

Mastodon Feed

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

I try a new Fediverse client using only HTML and basic CSS (no JS). It is written in PHP

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by aredridel@kolektiva.social ("Mx. Aria Stewart"):
dave@alvarado.social ("Dave Alvarado") wrote:

BYD is absolutely bonkers with proving they understand their entire process. If I could buy a BYD car, I would.

> When defective cells appeared, Wang asked: “Have you found the root cause?” If yes: “Can you reproduce it?” Then the demand: “Make one hundred cells with exactly the same defect. If you can reproduce the failure one hundred times, identically, then and only then have you understood the mechanism.”

https://www.fastcompany.com/91519302/byd-nail-test-why-this-54-billion-innovation-is-terrifying-western-auto-executives

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by adele@social.pollux.casa ("Adële 🐁"):
Rue89Strasbourg@mas.to ("Rue89 Strasbourg") wrote:

La ferme maraîchère Riedoasis devient une coopérative, reprise par ses salariés

À Obenheim en Centre-Alsace, Riedoasis est devenue une société coopérative d'intérêt collectif en 2025. Mathieu Fritz, à l’origine de la ferme maraîchère en agriculture biologique, a choisi de la transmettre progressivement à ses salariés. La plaine du Ried alsacien, terre de maraîchers, est gorgée d’eau, en cette clémente fin d’hiver. Patates douces, céleris, blettes, épinards, mesclun,…

https://www.rue89strasbourg.com/ferme-riedoasis-cooperative-379783?utm%5Fsource=mastodon&utm%5Fmedium=jetpack%5Fsocial

Mastodon Feed

Boosted by aredridel@kolektiva.social ("Mx. Aria Stewart"):
Ashedryden@xoxo.zone ("Ashe Dryden 🙆🏼‍♀️🐈🐈‍⬛") wrote:

Putting accessibility features behind a paywall: amazing. A+.

Transcript Available to subscribers of The New York Times.

Mastodon Feed

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

"what's vibe coding?"
"it's where you ask for something in english and you don't have to write the code"
"like having a trans computer toucher partner?"

Mastodon Feed

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

I couldn't stand Sapiens, but I'll read Holly Dunsworth's critique.

https://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/2026/04/06/dr-dunsworth-is-good-at-this/

sapiens book

Mastodon Feed

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

@aredridel Yeah, he's become the oddest of ducks these days.

Mastodon Feed

aredridel@kolektiva.social ("Mx. Aria Stewart") wrote:

@baldur I cannot figure out Steve Yegge. He can't even figure out himself. He's said some interesting and useful things but also whoa nelly is there a bunch of weird in there too. Definitely not a source to cite without care and context.

Mastodon Feed

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

okay please excuse the maths thoughts and bear with me here, takes hit on crack pipe

when you have an immutable data structure such as a tree map, you rewrite up the spine of the tree from where you make the change to the root, right? if you happen to query for the key you just inserted, you look up that path exactly.

if you're talking about on disk data structures, append only, you're thus looking at fewer seeks to read precisely that path because you'll have just written it in order. but by the same token you'll probably worsen literally every other path in the tree...

how do i even start to quantify this sort of effect?

Mastodon Feed

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

A rainbow lorikeet resting in a magnolia in the yard this arvo.

#Australia #Canberra #autumn #birds #photography #BirdPhotography #WildlifePhotography #NatureLovers #nature #naturephotography #Birding #Ornithology #bird #rainbow #lorikeet

Rainbow lorikeet in a magnolia tree.