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Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen"):
kristapsdz@bsd.network ("Mr Taps") wrote:

Does computer #history interest you, or maybe you're just curious where well-known and well-used tools come from? I've just updated the History of #Unix #Manpages, https://manpages.bsd.lv/history.html, with the content you didn't know you wanted til this very moment. Learn about how the "man" program came to be, and just why are manpages styled like that? It includes snippets from Cynthia "Cindy" Livingston, who wrote the manpage language "mdoc"; John Eaton, who wrote the first GPL man tool; Doug McIlroy, who helped to divide manpages into sections; and more. Did you know that serving manpages online was part of one of the original http daemons? Or that an xman existed before X11R6, in X10? Enjoy!

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

It's not AI, it's real

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Mastodon wrote:

In a new blog post, @imanijoy provides a deeper dive into the design process for Collections, and explains what we’ve included (and things that are left out) for the first release. We’ll be enabling this feature on mastodon.social next week, and rolling it out more widely in Mastodon 4.6 very soon. We’re excited to hear what you think!

https://blog.joinmastodon.org/2026/04/designing-collections/

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Mastodon wrote:

The initial release will be a starting point, while we learn from your feedback. The early focus is on creating Collections, with search and additional discovery options to come later. There are a few choices we’ve made (on size, following, etc) that we expect to revisit.

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Mastodon wrote:

We’re ready to show you a new feature coming in Mastodon 4.6 - Collections. These are a way for people on Mastodon to curate and share bundles of accounts that they’d recommend to others, to help find connections and grow their network more quickly.

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Boosted by aredridel@kolektiva.social ("Mx. Aria Stewart"):
whitequark@treehouse.systems ("✧✦Catherine✦✧") wrote:

monthly routine ^_^

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

@jwz Extremely reasonable!

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Boosted by adele@social.pollux.casa ("Adële 🐁"):
HadasWeiss ("Hadas Weiss") wrote:

the mother is smiling

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

so as it turns out, i am in fact not an amateur and i had everything dialled in pretty fucking well for productivity for a good decade or two

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

I did not find this amusing.

https://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/2026/04/09/not-funny/

Professor Glickman, the lab practical joker, deftly places a single drop of hydrochloric acid on the back of Professor Bingham's neck.

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

i will say that the main difficulty with continuing to not smoke is that my productivity has taken a huge hit.

this is where you're all supposed to tell me you love me even if i'm completely unproductive.

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Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
zackwhittaker ("Zack Whittaker") wrote:

Since North Korea has been in the news thanks to two massive hacks just days apart, I'm re-sharing my long-read primer on the ongoing and major threat from North Korean hackers, what they do, how they do it, and why they're incredibly successful — so much so that they could even be your co-worker.

https://this.weekinsecurity.com/thousands-of-north-koreans-have-secretly-infiltrated-us-and-european-companies-as-remote-it-workers/

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

I've been watching a technical meltdown about to happen for a few weeks, and the communication about it was very abstract, and _nobody_ but a few caremad nerds got any real conversation going. And nothing was done. Turns out: caremad nerds talking about abstract problems doesn't do shit.

But then the problem became less theoretical, and actual measurements of the problem came out, pointing to specific impacts and places and situations. Now people are taking action!

I wonder if there's a lesson in here somewhere. :P

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

Looking for some good, clean C++ fun? [1] Here's a vectorised HTML parser based on the research @lemire's incredible work from simdjson [2]:

https://source.chromium.org/chromium/chromium/src/+/main:third%5Fparty/blink/renderer/core/html/parser/html%5Fdocument%5Fparser%5Ffastpath.cc

[1]: yes, I understand. That's the joke.
[2]: https://arxiv.org/pdf/1902.08318

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Boosted by aredridel@kolektiva.social ("Mx. Aria Stewart"):
filippo@abyssdomain.expert ("Filippo Valsorda") wrote:

Two papers came out last week that suggest classical asymmetric cryptography might indeed be broken by quantum computers in just a few years.

That means we need to ship post-quantum crypto now, with the tools we have: ML-KEM and ML-DSA. I didn't think PQ auth was so urgent until recently.

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

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

Every morning I open Ivory and see a bunch of notifications ... vanish before I can read them because people have deleted the posts.

I really dislike this, both the behavior, and the way the app enables it.

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

Doing research into the performance and memory overhead of the most popular "CSS-in-JS" approaches, and my question for the authors of these systems is always the same: are you proud of this?

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

Tech journalists that do not understand prohibitions on shipping software as power relations, or do not understand technology enough to connect API access to profits and predation, are not useful as narrators of the present moment:

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

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Boosted by dysfun@treehouse.systems ("gaytabase"):
acarsdrama@live.acarsdrama.com ("ACARS Drama") wrote:

Air to Ground Message:

CERTIFICATE WILL BE SENT TO YOU TO PROUDLY DISPLAY AT YOUR DESK.

Area: Washington DC, USA
Type: Embraer 175 (Enhanced Wing)
A: #a5bc77a5724
F: #f6e484d3f4a

#acars #vdlm2

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Boosted by baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason"):
dingemansemark@scholar.social ("Mark Dingemanse") wrote:

I was supposed to finish this last week but then the #Claude Code leak happened, promptly giving me an excellent opening example (h/t @jonny for their digital archaeology work that drew my attention to the magic prompting techniques)

(I think it is likely btw that #Anthropic shifted the #Mythos announce forward to this week to bury the leak & its security implications)

In March 2026, an Anthropic employee released the source code of Claude Code, a wrapper around their large language model that is widely used to generate code in programming tasks. Its thousands of lines of Typescript code contained many hopeful prompts and in cantations to shape Claude’s behaviour. Here are some examples: “Report outcomes faithfully”; “Never characterize incomplete or broken work as done”; “Be careful not to introduce security vulnerabilities ” (prompts.ts in Anthropic 2026) . There is more than a passing resemblance here to the Azande witch -doctor apprentice who, while stirring the medicine, utters: “You medicine which I am cooking, mind you always speak the truth to me. Do not let anyone injure me with his witchcraft, but le t me recognize all witches. … Let me be expert at the witch -doctor’s craft so that people will give me many spears on account of my magic.” (Evans-Pritchard 1937: 93). In the case of Claude, the incantation s appeared insufficient: analysis of the codebase, which according to a company executive was “pretty much 100% written by Claude Code ”, revealed severe security vulnerabilities (Townsend 2026).

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Boosted by baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason"):
davidgerard@circumstances.run ("David Gerard") wrote:

currently playing "where the fuck's the beef" with claude mythos amongst all the proclamations of THIS IS IT. the openbsd "zero day" does not AIUI in fact appear to be one, for example - just a non-exploitable bug. what about these much hyped claims checks out?

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

when a doctor makes their own cheese, call that medi feta

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Boosted by baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason"):
daedalus@eigenmagic.net ("JP") wrote:

I have a magic rock that finds 0-day RCE in critical infrastructure and also keeps tigers away. It is too powerful for anyone to see but me and a few of my friends who are laughing and having a lovely time just out of shot.

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

lol, trying to extrapolate old benchmarking numbers to modern hardware i don't have access to through the power of educated guesswork.

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

this includes great stuff like median merge time for copilot-reviewed requests.

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

github sure is adding a lot of features regarding checks notes copilot usage metrics.

is this just so microsoft can keep doing the least advisable thing to their own staff?

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

reading: My salary history
https://adactio.com/journal/22519

my own accounting is a mess, i'm tempted to find the numbers, but from memory: worst years ~£20k and best years ~£60k (since 2012 self-employed). I work a 4 day week but fall shy of my theoretical "maximum" (for my rate) because i don't pack in work

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jwz wrote:

Important XScreenSaver policy update.

25: No contributions built with, or assisted by, LLMs or any kind of "generative AI" tools will be considered. If you didn't bother writing it, I'm not going to bother reading it. XScreenSaver is art by humans for humans.

https://jwz.org/b/yk56

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Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
owa ("Open Web Advocacy") wrote:

🔥 "Capable browsers, and the PWAs they support, hold the power to grow an ecosystem of applications that no gatekeeper can own or tax, based on standardised APIs that resist enclosure. But few outlets are connecting these dots for readers."

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

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

'tight feedback loop' sounds extremely lewd.