we're destroying the open web
we're burning down the closest thing i've ever seen in my life to the library of alexandria
and people are explaining to me how warm it keeps their hands, and maybe, in the future, the ashes will contain the secrets of the universe
Boosted by jwz:
medieval_illuminations ("Medieval Illumination") wrote:
Hellmouths. #Apocalypse, Normandy ca. 1330. BnF, Latin 14410, p. 79.
#medieval #MedievalArt
zkat@toot.cat ("Katerina Marchán") wrote:
It happened to me: even though I already know better, I got a bit overeager at first with a language app and now my spaced repetition system is banging at my door like an armed loan shark collecting a debt
db@social.lol ("David Bushell 🪿") wrote:
the circus tent collapsed again 🎪
Boosted by adele@social.pollux.casa ("Adële 🐁!"):
gajim@fosstodon.org ("Gajim") wrote:
Gajim 2.4.6 has been released! 🎉
Gajim can now give you a clue if it's night for your contact 🌔
Gajim 2.4.6 comes with improvements for the activity feed, better display of mentions, fixed message scrolling, and many bugfixes.
Thank you for all your contributions ❤️ Let us know what you think!
Support Gajim's development: https://liberapay.com/Gajim
soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker") wrote:
(Yeah, I know AI slop has totally killed the emoji headers thing for most people, but my web design skills are calcified squarely in the late 2010s at best, so please bear with me until I commission an artist to replace them with gay furry stickers.)
soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker") wrote:
After a long weekend, I've finally updated https://publickey.directory to reflect the current state of affairs for the Public Key Directory which brings Key Transparency to the Fediverse, as part of the effort to build End-to-End Encryption (E2EE) for ActivityPub.
This project now supports* Post-Quantum Cryptography! (We're shipping ML-DSA-44 now and will consider new algorithms in the future.) HPKE also uses mlkem768x25519 (a.k.a. X-Wing).
* The only part that doesn't currently require post-quantum cryptography is RFC 9421 (HTTP Message Signatures), because no one has bothered to specify an IANA codepoint for it yet. I'm planning to write a C2SP spec soon if no one beats me to it. For the interim, Ed25519 is still allowed there, but in v2 I plan to drop it.
Boosted by adele@social.pollux.casa ("Adële 🐁!"):
evan@cosocial.ca ("Evan Prodromou") wrote:
I want to see our leaders do their part and post on Canadian social network services. Federation gives them reach to other countries, but keeps them rooted here.
Boosted by adele@social.pollux.casa ("Adële 🐁!"):
evan@cosocial.ca ("Evan Prodromou") wrote:
The American president doesn't use the big American social networks for his announcements. Why is the Canadian prime minister using them? #ElbowsUp
Boosted by adele@social.pollux.casa ("Adële 🐁!"):
gabboman@gabboman.xyz ("gabboman the wafrn dev") wrote:
HEY YOU, QUICKLY, BOOST THIS POST I NEED TO STRESS THIS SHITTY SERVER
Boosted by glyph ("Glyph"):
coderanger@cloudisland.nz ("Noah K") wrote:
I really can't overstate just how much all the social hubs for software people (of all kinds) are dying due to bots and spam. Across the board, places to learn the craft of building good software are being locked down because the tide of capital-c Content™ is unceasing. I have been a community organizer for approaching 20 years now and I have no idea what to do anymore. Weather the storm and hope the price of LLM inference soon reflects its actual costs? Ban everyone that looks suspicious? I've ranted before that manual verification isn't a useful answer and I stand by that, but public spaces have an even harder problem than projects vetting contributions. We _can't_ vet everyone posting to r/python or the kubernetes slack, it's literally impossible. The next generation isn't just being handed The Robot as an easy way to "learn" (maybe? when it's not completely wrong?), for many it's the only way left. The last teacher left standing.
aredridel@kolektiva.social ("Mx. Aria Stewart") wrote:
Putting white noise on in the background taken a bit literally there #monsterdon
Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
pastelexuvia@cathode.church ("maddox") wrote:
your occasional reminder that in the summer of '23, someone took a japanese musical toy called the otamatone and covered the first 60 seconds of "bring me to life"
Attachments:
jsonstein@masto.deoan.org ("Jeff Sonstein") wrote:
this is disgusting
https://www.thedailybeast.com/families-fume-over-pathetic-meals-for-american-forces-in-trumps-war/
EmilyEnough@hachyderm.io ("Emily 🏳️🌈🏳️⚧️") wrote:
I stepping outside and saw 3 bright spots in the dusk to the west.
Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
r@glauca.space ("R") wrote:
🌟 Project Release Announcement Time! 🎉
I wrote a WebUSB extension for Firefox.
This lets web pages access USB devices (with your permission). This has long been supported by Chrome, but Mozilla has not wanted it, at least by default. Fortunately, because add-ons are a thing (for now. make sure to keep fighting for this!), it's possible to change that!
Common reasons for wanting this include programming microcontrollers, 3d-printers, smartphone bootloaders, and similar "physical computing" projects.
This works on Windows, Linux, and macOS
You can get the source code here: https://github.com/ArcaneNibble/awawausb
In order to make this work, you will need to install a small program on your computer. This is explained in the README. You can then install the .xpi file (on the GitHub Releases page) into your browser (which was _just_ auto-approved while I was typing this announcement up).
Please boost (if you want), test, report bugs, etc. etc. (although do keep in mind that this code is entirely written by a single catgirl)
i think this is the perfect type of project to drop late on a sunday / very early on a monday?
Attachments:
Gargron ("Eugen Rochko") wrote:
I’ve been on a bit of a Wim Wenders streak recently. Wings of Desire, Paris, Texas, and now Perfect Days.
Boosted by glyph ("Glyph"):
whitequark@treehouse.systems ("✧✦Catherine✦✧") wrote:
do any of you have experience with Windows code signing certificates?
(i could always go to the cheaters' forums, they know everything about Windows code signing, but would rather not)
Boosted by jwz:
Robotistry@fediscience.org wrote:
@graydon @johnzajac @jwz @mikej @mjg59 @glyph Long covid took away my ability to interpret symbols for months.
I went from a paperback-a-day habit plus intense cognitive work to picture books because I couldn't hold a word and its meaning in my head simultaneously.
I lost English, math, music, programming, graphs - everything that involved interpreting symbolic information. Spell checking was like crawling over gravel.
These were all things that I *knew* I used to be able to do, but my brain couldn't access the actual skill anymore.
Doing something by writing a prompt would have been just as difficult as doing the job. And evaluating whether the prompt accomplished the task or not? Impossible.
(I'm better now, but bad symptom flares still trigger cognitive impairment and my ceiling is nowhere near where it used to be. On a bad day I communicate the same way an LLM does - by having chunks of pre-stored communication that fall out in response to the right trigger. I'm crashy today and had to deploy the chunk that means "I'm not comprehending what's going on and can't answer questions right now".)
Boosted by jwz:
graydon@canada.masto.host ("Graydon") wrote:
@johnzajac Debugging absolutely requires the short term memory COVID infection shreds. Current ability to debug is not great.
Most people currently employed as programmers are able to remember being able to do this stuff, and vaguely how you do this stuff, but they can't actually do it anymore and are desperate to keep people from finding out that they can't do their jobs.
It makes LLMs very popular; it doesn't get the job done but it does let you look busy.
Boosted by dysfun@treehouse.systems ("gaytabase"):
3x10to8mps ("LisaH") wrote:
Yes
dysfun@treehouse.systems ("gaytabase") wrote:
RE: https://live.acarsdrama.com/@acarsdrama/116433601332613747
what a good toilet, eager to please
dysfun@treehouse.systems ("gaytabase") wrote:
i realised something today. LLM enthusiasts make excellent marks.
i haven't worked out how to profit from this without actually using this godawful shit, but it's worth thinking about.
Boosted by glyph ("Glyph"):
TheQuinbox@dragonscave.space wrote:
Would anyone be interested in an LM4000 (one of the old Franklin Language masters) I've got lying around? I just managed to find an LM6000 with bestspeech, the same kind of one I used in school and purchased it, and the 4000 I got months ago doesn't appear to have TTS built-in. I'd ask you to pay shipping and maybe a little for the unit + its case and original instructions but it's not worth much to me as a fully blind individual, so I'm very flexible and willing to have you pay just as much as it costs to get it to your door. Feel free to boost so this might actually get in front of some sighted peoples eyes, I imagine almost no one blind will want this.
bcantrill ("Bryan Cantrill") wrote:
Tomorrow on Oxide and Friends, Polish software engineer Gregorein joins @ahl.bsky.social and me at a Europe-friendly(ish?) time: noon Pacific (9p in Europe) to discuss his work taking apart Garry Tan's code -- and my blog entry reflecting on the peril of laziness lost.
https://bcantrill.dtrace.org/2026/04/12/the-peril-of-laziness-lost/
Join us live, or catch the recording in syndication (as always):
Boosted by glyph ("Glyph"):
cwebber@social.coop ("Christine Lemmer-Webber") wrote:
This is interesting. In my blogposts analyzing ATproto I had compared the shared heap vs message passing from a CS perspective
https://dustycloud.org/blog/how-decentralized-is-bluesky/
https://dustycloud.org/blog/re-re-bluesky-decentralization/Ian Preston of Peergos did the actual formal mathematical proof of the incentive structure: https://peergos.net/secret/z59vuwzfFDp45jmsA6Wj2jc9hemCjB4JJHB81iosJsA9GAVRtkbrqBs/1024927538#%7B%22app%22:%22markup%22%2c%22path%22:%22ianopolous/docs%22%2c%22args%22:%7B%22filename%22:%22social-scaling.note%22%7D%2c%22writable%22:false%2c%22secretLink%22:true%2c%22linkpassword%22:%22UfAQURKSTTmM%22%2c%22open%22:true%7D
> It is interesting that this is independent of N. Let's say you have 1000 servers, and 1000 followers per user. Then the shared heap model uses about the same network bandwidth. With a small number of servers SH can be better, with many servers AP is better.
> The conclusion is that the shared-heap model builds in a structural incentive to keep M small, and thus has a natural centralizing force. Conversely there is an incentive in AP to keep F small.
Ie, there is a mathematical incentive in ATproto to only have a few large players.
bcrypt@infosec.exchange ("yan") wrote:
extremely niche content for SF parents just launched: restaurant reviews from my baby's perspective https://diracdeltas.github.io/blw/
Boosted by ChrisWere@toot.wales ("Chris Were ⁂🐧🌱☕"):
chris@video.thepolarbear.co.uk ("Chris Were but on PeerTube") wrote:
Freebooters, food and drink edition, with Wing
dysfun@treehouse.systems ("gaytabase") wrote:
@NfNitLoop odd from the perspective of what i want, not necessarily odd from the perspective of luajit.
also it's not really documented and it's designed for a single threaded environment.
Boosted by jwz:
johnzajac@dice.camp ("John") wrote:
Well, two of the most common persistent cognitive effects of COVID - memory loss and attention deficit - are ripe for having a fake cybernetic solution swoop in like LLMs and "fill the gaps".
Also, my guess is that low grade CFS and sleep disruption is *widespread*, and most people have less energy overall.
Automation sounds good when you've got no energy.



