Mastodon Feed: Posts

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

60 tons

oh, lightweight!

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

265G

that is quite a lot of collision force, yeah.

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

Stripe has a set number of countries it supports for sellers and anybody outside of that is told to incorporate in the US.

I'm not going to incorporate in a failing state that's in a trade war with the world and an actual war with a chunk of it, just to sell a few ebooks.

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

This is the reason why I jumped ship to Payhip, even though it's arguably not quite as good, as soon as Stripe bought Lemon Squeezy. Iceland's not on the list of supported countries for sellers for the service that's going to succeed Lemon Squeezy

https://www.lemonsqueezy.com/blog/2026-update

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Boosted by jsonstein@masto.deoan.org ("Jeff Sonstein"):
AaronDavid@beige.party wrote:

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Boosted by glyph ("Glyph"):
jonny@neuromatch.social ("jonny (good kind)") wrote:

If i can slip in a quick PSA while my typically sleepy notifications are exploding, these are all very annoying things to say and you might want to reconsider whether they're worth ever saying in a reply directed at someone else - who are they for? what do they add?

  • "why are you surprised"/"even worse than {thing} itself is people being surprised at {thing}": unless the person is saying "i am surprised by this" they are likely not surprised by the thing. just saying something doesn't mean you are surprised by it, and people talking about something usually have paid attention to it before the moment you are encountering them. this is pointless hostility to people who are saying something you supposedly agree with so much that you think everyone should already believe it
  • "it's always been like this": slightly different than above. unless someone is saying "this is literally new and nothing like this has happened before" or you are adding actual historical context that you know for sure they don't already know, you're basically saying "hey did you know this thing you care enough about to be paying attention to and talking about frequently has happened before now as well." this is so easy to frame in a way that says "yes and" rather than "i assume you dont know about the things i know about due to being very smart." eg. "dang not again, they keep doing {thing}"
  • "{thing} might be bad, but {alternative/unrelated, unmentioned, non-mutually exclusive thing} is even worse": multiple things can be bad at the same time and not mentioning something does not mean i don't think it's also bad
  • "funny how people who think {thing} is bad also think {alternative/unrelated, unmentioned thing} is good": closely related to the above, just because you have binarized your thinking does not mean everyone else has.

anyway if the mental image you are conjuring for your interlocuters positions them as always knowing less than you by default, that might be something to look into in yourself!

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

I realize the local "classic" rock style radio stations, probably owned by one mega corp, are optimized to generate nostalgia and dopamine for the target listener that happens to be in their car for fifteen minutes. But the playlist of some of these stations must be pathetically small. I hear the same few tracks anytime I tune in. Dopamine depleted.

There is *so* much music out there that their target audience would've missed at the time. You could easily throw in lesser known works between whatever they consider mainstream tracks.

Commercials and nostalgia. What a waste of the public airwaves. Like, mix up your playlists with tracks like this.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b-MFD5Sl6JU

Show us you care.

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Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
tylersticka@social.lol ("Tyler Sticka") wrote:

Hey gang, I need your help.

For @cloudfour’s design practice to survive, we need more projects.

If you’ve ever benefited from any of the 25+ talks, 80+ code repos or 500+ articles we’ve shared for free over the past 19 years, please read and share this post: https://cloudfour.com/thinks/more-projects-please/

#GetFediHired #OpenToWork #WebDesign #UXDesign #UIDesign #ProductDesign

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

getting totally countdown'd at the pub

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jwz wrote:

Once there is:

• A luxury hotel atop Everest, or
• A settlement 500m below the surface of any ocean; or
• Any city getting 30% of its veggies/grains from subway hydroponics; or
• Vegas making all of its own water;

...then I will concede that we have solved the first 1% of the problems needed to be a spacefaring species.

Absent any of that, putting monkeys in a can is just a premature stunt.

This timeline sucks.

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Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen"):
h_thoreson@mastodon.world ("hannah") wrote:

New song dropped! https://on.soundcloud.com/Qws1SQYLHntwG19uw3

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Boosted by isagalaev ("Ivan Sagalaev :flag_wbw:"):
hannah@posts.rat.pictures ("historic drystone sheep dyke") wrote:

The part of me that used to work for a survey research nonprofit is screaming into a pillow

The practice Aaru used is called silicon sampling, and it’s suddenly everywhere. The idea behind silicon sampling is simple and tantalizing. Because large language models can generate responses that emulate human answers, polling companies see an opportunity to use A.I. agents to simulate survey responses at a small fraction of the cost and time required for traditional polling.

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

4 meter pizza

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jwz wrote:

I miss the olden days when I could manage to give even one fractional shit about human spaceflight.

When every news article didn't require navigating whether it was propaganda, or a grift, or both (because it's *never* science).

When I thought that humanity surviving beyond Earth was even *remotely* possible.

This timeline sucks.

https://jwz.org/b/yk51

Screenshot

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Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen"):
davefischer@hachyderm.io ("Dave Fischer") wrote:

Military ruggedized magnetic core memory. ROLM, 1980.

More photos and info:

https://rcsri.org/collection/rolm-1602/

#Photography #RetroComputing #RCSRI

An abstract black and white closeup of core memory.

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Boosted by jwz:
passenger@kolektiva.social ("Passenger") wrote:

@burnitdown

I'm not gonna link to it here or mention the dude's name.

The very short version is that he is a very senior tech dude on the business side rather than the actual coding side, has worked in Google and places like that. The sort of person who we think of as belonging on LinkedIn. The sort who thinks tech happens in meeting rooms rather than in command lines. You know the type.

Anyway, he posted a thread about how Mastodon is not going to be taken seriously until we stop being mean to AI aficionados. As he wrote it turned into something of a meltdown, with the term bubble used extensively, and finally led to comparisons between Black people not feeling welcome on Mastodon (which is a problem and sucks) and AI boosters not feeling welcome (which is good and proper and we should bully them more.)

After a great deal of pushback, he said he was going to back off and reconsider, which is the classy thing to do; and then got back into fighting with individuals, which is not.

There are some very thoughtful comments on the matter by various people.

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

Regulators and the tech press are sleeping on the web's power to unlock mobile computing the way it pried open the desktop. What started an oversight is now a crisis for the legitimacy of both institutions:

https://infrequently.org/2026/04/the-web-is-an-antitrust-wedge/

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Boosted by jwz:
davey_cakes@mastodon.ie ("Davey") wrote:

"I want to talk about an under-represented group on Fedi"

Young people? "No"
Africans? "No"
Less techie folks? "No"
Indigenous folks? "No"
Women? "No"
Non-English/German speakers? "No"
Anyone not white? "No"
South Americans? "No"
Minority religious folks? "No"
People with cognitive differences? "No"
Non-graduates? "No"
Working class folks? "No"
Retired people? "No"
Occupied people? "No"

Emmmm, the Sentinel Island people? "No"

Ok, who?

"Tech journalists who love AI"

Fuck all the way off.

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

Steve Yegge is so bad that whenever I want to convince somebody on the fence on ”AI” that the biggest LLM boosters all seem to be having serious mental health episodes, I send them a link to one of his posts. Works every time.

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glyph ("Glyph") wrote:

Since we are AI discoursing again today, I just want to say: I'm sick of it and I don't want to hear about it any more.

I am doing my best to contribute to the discourse in a positive and respectful way. But at the end of the day I'm just very tired, and _really_ disappointed in a lot of people.

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Boosted by jwz:
zzt@mas.to ("[object Object]") wrote:

your engineering job now involves smoking 3 packs of cigarettes a day and bragging about how much it costs and if you don’t you’ll be left behind

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fribbledom ("muesli") wrote:

My PineTime's touchscreen just died after ~5 years. Super sad, as I was just about to finish a couple more PRs for the entire ecosystem (firmware, render-path, sim, emu) 🥺

Now I'm really not sure if I should just order another one or if I'll wait for the PineTime Pro - which is still several months away.

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Boosted by jwz:
xgranade@wandering.shop ("Cassandra is only carbon now") wrote:

So, since the "the fediverse needs to be open to new ideas" canard is going around again, let's just be clear. AI is not a new idea, it's the oldest idea in the tech industry.

It's the idea that capital can embrace, extend, and extinguish computing, the idea that industry is more important than labor, that the climate crisis is an externality not worth worrying about. AI is the idea that stocks matter more than people.

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Boosted by jwz:
jalefkowit@vmst.io ("Jason Lefkowitz") wrote:

This is also why I have little patience for the "we have to stay on X to ~resist~" argument. If you are looking for people whose minds are available to be changed, X is the absolute last place you will find them

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Boosted by jwz:
jalefkowit@vmst.io ("Jason Lefkowitz") wrote:

This chart Nate Silver made of the X accounts with the most engagement in 2026 seems like it might be useful to show decent orgs who resist moving their primary online presence off X. Is this really the company your org wants to keep?

https://www.natesilver.net/p/social-media-has-become-a-freak-show?utm%5Fsource=post-email-title&publication%5Fid=1198116&post%5Fid=193285131&utm%5Fcampaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=wabr&triedRedirect=true&utm%5Fmedium=email

Nate Silver chart of the X accounts with the most engagement so far in 2026. It is absolutely dominated by right-wing influencers.

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Boosted by jwz:
rooster@beige.party ("Jessica Rooster") wrote:

Me: see? He’s just a potato but when we put clothes and stuff on, poof! He has gender, he’s Mr. Potato head. See?

Conservative: show me his potato dick

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Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen"):
_thegeoff ("Geoff 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿") wrote:

If I was on Artemis I'd spend the 40 minute radio blackout rigging all the clocks, logs, instrumentts etc to show that 6 hours had passed, then refuse to comment on what I'd seen on the far side.
This is probably why I'm not allowed on the Artemis.

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Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen"):
olivia@scholar.social ("Olivia Guest · Ολίβια Γκεστ") wrote:

New-ish preprint! Marcela, @Iris, and I have been working on what CAIL means to showcase & propagate the idea of thinking very differently to tech industry norms on "artificial intelligence"

Towards Critical Artificial Intelligence Literacies https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17786243

1/

Figure 1: The important dimensions of CAILs across research and education; clockwise from 12 o’clock: Con- ceptual Clarity is the idea that terms should refer. Critical Thinking is deep engagement with the relationships between statements about the world. Decoloniality is the process of de-centring and addressing dominant harmful views and practices. Respecting Expertise is the epistemic compact between professionals and society. Slow Science is a disposition towards preferring psychologically, techno-socially, and epistemically healthy practices. The lines between dimensions represent how they are interwoven both directly and indirectly.

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

So, if you're like me, and you grew up with Lucky Luke comics, then watched all too many classic westerns, then the new French-language Lucky Luke series on Disney Plus (Europe only, I think) is tailor-made to your interests. Does a good job of capturing and modernising the feeling of the original

Its aesthetics occasionally remind me of that one page where Jean Giraud drew Lucky Luke in the style of Blueberry as a gag, but that's kind of inevitable when you inject realism into a cartoon style

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

wow that is very hair

there is a lot of wavy brown hair. it looks very sproingy