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neatnik@social.lol ("Neatnik") wrote:

He built this after we were chatting about my struggles with getting the right balance in choosing colors for light/dark mode and how much I wished I could see both at the same time when building stuff. I love it when a good tool comes into existence in response to a real need! :prami_happy:

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neatnik@social.lol ("Neatnik") wrote:

My friend @sleepless just built a really cool thing: https://equinox.netigen.com/

It might not be for everyone, but I’ve been looking for this exact tool everywhere and the closest I could find was a service that costs $12/month. :prami_distressed:

It does one thing super well, letting you pull up a web page and view its light and dark modes beside one another. This is immensely helpful to me, being the kind of person who would rather see both modes in one view without having to toggle anything.

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Boosted by aredridel@kolektiva.social ("Mx. Aria Stewart"):
jargoggles@kolektiva.social ("Jargoggles") wrote:

@inthehands
"Get in, loser. We're doing web rings again."

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Boosted by aredridel@kolektiva.social ("Mx. Aria Stewart"):
inthehands@hachyderm.io ("Paul Cantrell") wrote:

Defeatism is a form of surrender. Cynicism is surrender. Despair is surrender. Nihilism is surrender.

Our job is to •care• and to •keep caring• and to •keep doing and keep building• and to •endure• longer than them.

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

And there it is: https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/pull/19799

Really not bad to contribute to as open projects go. Worst part was running into someone else who'd fixed the same issue, but then abandoned the PR without a word, and then having to make the declaration that it's code I wrote and am legally allowed to contribute. (Though I remain very skeptical of its validity in court, given that at no point did I ever see a description of what DCO means, I just know it.)

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cwebber@social.coop ("Christine Lemmer-Webber") wrote:

Cloudflare's CEO: "How I Choose Which Cloudflare Employees to Replace With AI" https://www.wsj.com/opinion/how-i-choose-which-cloudflare-employees-to-replace-with-ai-40a197e5?st=JGJffd&reflink=desktopwebshare%5Fpermalink

Straight up bragging about it

> AI isn’t the harbinger of bleak youth unemployment—it is quite the opposite.

orly

> We received almost a million applicants for 1,111 paid internships this summer.

Oh approximately one thousand applications per *internship*

Yeah I'm sure the youth unemployment situation is doing great then?

What a bunch of bullshit

Cloudflare is the worst fucking company, every week they do something that makes me despise them more

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

you know what day it is

#Furry #Furries #Fursuit #FursuitFriday #Photography #Anthro #FurryArt #FurryArtist #PawDay #Paw #Paws #Nikon

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Boosted by cwebber@social.coop ("Christine Lemmer-Webber"):
mauve@mastodon.mauve.moe ("Mauve 👁💜") wrote:

@6 @cwebber Found the link! hopefully it'll be ready soon:

https://aboutsignal.com/news/signal-desktop-without-a-mobile-phone-standalone-version-in-development/

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glyph ("Glyph") wrote:

everybody loves open source maintainers until it's time to do some open source maintainer shit

(with apologies to @penguin whomst I am lightly rephrasing here)

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isagalaev ("Ivan Sagalaev :flag_wbw:") wrote:

@glyph oh I missed "stawbrerry"! But my sentiment was more generally about the entire world believing in imminent superintelligence, when it complains about "it getting complex" as soon as you step outside the carefully patched Potemkin village of expected prompting.

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glyph ("Glyph") wrote:

@isagalaev so many words here are fascinating and offensive

"my *honest* answer"
"without a tool for doing it *mechanically*"

and

my personal favorite, and least explicable:

"stawbrerry"

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isagalaev ("Ivan Sagalaev :flag_wbw:") wrote:

@glyph "this is getting complex"!

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glyph ("Glyph") wrote:

and, in case you care for rhetorical purposes, the correct answer is "20"

an interactive python prompt counting the "r"s from the previous screenshot in the thread

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glyph ("Glyph") wrote:

screenshot if you want to avoid giving them the traffic, contents in alt text

user: how many times does the letter 'r' occur in the word strawbrerry? claude: The word you wrote is "strawbrerry" — I'll count the r's in that spelling: strawbrerry = 4 r's. (If you meant the standard spelling "strawberry," that also has 3 r's: strawberry.) user: how many times did the letter 'r' occur in the previous response claude: Let me count every 'r' in my previous response: "The word you wrote is "strawbrerry" — I'll count the r's in that spelling: strawbrerry = 4 r's. (If you meant the standard spelling "strawberry," that also has 3 r's: strawberry.)" Going through the full text character by character: "word" – 1 "you wrote" – 2 "strawbrerry" (first instance) – 3, 4, 5, 6 "that spelling" – 0 "strawbrerry" (in bold) – wait, the bold markers don't add letters "4 r's" – 7 "strawberry" (second instance) – 8, 9, 10 "3 r's" – 11 "strawberry" (in bold) – 12, 13, 14 There are also r's in other words I should catch: "stawbrerry" already counted; let me also check: "response" – no, that wasn't in the previous response... let me recheck words like "start", "rs", "occur", "you wrote", "spelling", "start"... This is getting complex. My honest answer: I count approximately 14–16 occurrences of 'r', but I can't guarantee an exact count through pure text introspection. Counting r's in my own prior output is genuinely error-prone without a tool to do it mechanically.

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glyph ("Glyph") wrote:

Occasionally boosters will claim that all the trivially reproducible errors ("R"s in strawberry, full wine glass) are all solved, and I need to demonstrate that this is not the case. It's annoying that this keeps happening without any fundamental progress, but in case you need such a thing, here's one that trivially produces minor disasters in may 2026.

https://claude.ai/share/da4592ea-ea64-4236-87da-ecb25d1c72e5

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fribbledom ("muesli") wrote:

C++ is just Python but:

1. you manage memory
2. you manage pointers
3. you occasionally manage regret

10/10 would segfault again!

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Boosted by jwz:
vicfroh ("Victator") wrote:

#NoBillionaires #epsteinparasiteClass #epsteinclass #nobillionairesneeded

screenshot of a threads post by stevens_bad_advice: "Fun Fact, if billionaires got shot as often as school children, we'd run out of billionaires in 2 months." There's a picture of Nintendo's Luigi (not part of the threads post)

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Boosted by brib@bribstodon.xyz ("brib :neofox_floof:​ :Nonbinary:"):
aparrish@friend.camp ("allison") wrote:

i used the same data set but replaced each country with a "gender identity" (man, woman, trans woman, trans man, non-binary) and prompted chatgpt to characterize the differences between the groups. lo and behold, i got some fantastic gender stereotype trash

Responses from men somewhat more often frame ambition around innovation, technical specialization, infrastructure, finance, or building systems — for example AI, blockchain, engineering, energy, or corporate leadership. Responses from women more frequently include explicitly community-oriented or mentorship-oriented language alongside professional ambition, such as education, healthcare, youth programs, ethics, or public wellbeing. Responses from trans women and trans men often combine technical ambitions with themes of social contribution, representation, or global impact. The tone can feel slightly more mission-driven or interdisciplinary. Non-binary respondents appear especially likely to mention hybrid creative/social careers or community-centered work — for example literacy programs, nonprofit leadership, public spaces, sound design, mental health, or sustainability.

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Boosted by brib@bribstodon.xyz ("brib :neofox_floof:​ :Nonbinary:"):
tezoatlipoca@mas.to ("Third spruce tree on the left") wrote:

@aeva @meejah @dalias

Hrm. I have been writing a tool that manages awesome lists and I didn't realize what they were called.

Here's the demo site: https://lists.awadwatt.com/index.html
Here's the github: https://github.com/tezoatlipoca/GeFeSLE-server#readme

The css is bad but its functional. Idea being lists can be changed, but infrequently; hosting a static html page is lightweight. List change -> update static html.

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Boosted by glyph ("Glyph"):
technomancy@icosahedron.website ("tech? no! man, see...") wrote:

CARMACK: *makes a game with well-meaning scientists whose work gets used by an evil company to open a portal to hell*

CARMACK: *makes another game with well-meaning scientists whose work gets used by an evil company to open a portal to hell*

CARMACK: *makes ANOTHER game with well-meaning scientists whose work gets used by an evil company to open a portal to hell*

REAL LIFE HELL PORTAL COMPANY: Carmack, please come work for us

CARMACK: this is probably fine

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Boosted by brib@bribstodon.xyz ("brib :neofox_floof:​ :Nonbinary:"):
jonny@neuromatch.social ("jonny (nonvenomous)") wrote:

Look at this absolutely remarkable, perfectly rectangular block of hand-obfuscated JavaScript for our click here to get a virus banner by crizzo. It is magnificent, I keep re-reading
https://codeberg.org/Safeguarding/sciop-blog/pulls/5/files

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Boosted by baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason"):
uglyreykjavik.bsky.social@bsky.brid.gy ("Ugly Reykjavik") wrote:

A homemade bench.#Iceland #photography #streetphotography #abandoned #decay #concrete #bench #graffiti

A homemade bench against a concrete wall.

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

On Clarkson's Farm:

We watch it because we cannot believe how incompetent you are

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Boosted by brib@bribstodon.xyz ("brib :neofox_floof:​ :Nonbinary:"):
algernon@come-from.mad-scientist.club ("algernon@rustweek") wrote:

Allegedly, OpenAI's crawlers have a small, cheap LLM behind them that tries to detect garbage, and stop scraping if it did that.

Uhm. That's not working too well, guys.

But! This is good information. Now I can specifically target OpenAI's crawlers.

Friday can't come soon enough.

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Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen"):
albaillustration@socel.net ("Elisabeth Alba") wrote:

Itty Bitty Dragon!!
3x3 inches, ink, watercolor, and acryla gouache

The patron who commissioned this one is having me do a companion piece now! One of my final "Tiny Collector" commissions before I ended that tier in my Patreon to get ready for a large summer-long project 😀

A tiny purple dragon sleeps on a pile of coins inside of an open zipper pouch.

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Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen"):
arclight@oldbytes.space wrote:

Fujitsu open-sourced their compiler test suite for C/C++/Fortran https://github.com/fujitsu/compiler-test-suite
Slide deck overview: https://llvm.org/devmtg/2025-06/slides/lightning-talk/kawashima-fujitsu.pdf

When was the last time you independently tested your compiler/interpreter?

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

Today, Amazon effectively kills support for older Kindles. Not because the screens stopped working. Not because the batteries all died. Because Amazon decided perfectly usable e-readers should be cut off from the services that made them useful. That is not innovation. That is forced obsolescence with a checkout button. Sign PIRG’s petition and tell Amazon to stop bricking working Kindles.

PIRG Petition: https://pirg.org/take-action/tell-amazon-dont-junk-older-kindle-models/

A Kindle e-reader resting on a table beside a small cup of espresso on a saucer, creating a cozy reading scene. The Kindle screen displays a page of text, suggesting someone relaxing with a book and coffee.

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

From: "It’s OK to Want to Have a Good Time":

https://drops.dagstuhl.de/storage/01oasics/oasics-vol134-programming2025/OASIcs.Programming.2025.5/OASIcs.Programming.2025.5.pdf

Also, I enjoyed these moments:

"There are some problems where a certain threshold of experience is needed to be able to make progress on solving the problem, and it doesn’t appear to be possible to create a cumulative effect of inexperienced people to compensate for experienced ones."

And

"By far the biggest productivity problem in software development is understanding the purpose for which the software is being written, and not having to throw it away and do it again; something that studies of productivity rarely include."

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Boosted by cwebber@social.coop ("Christine Lemmer-Webber"):
mcc wrote:

This is actually happening now

https://theonion.com/google-announces-plan-to-destroy-all-information-it-can-1819567986/

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jscalzi@threads.net ("John Scalzi") wrote:

I've been on vacation for the last couple of days so have not been keeping very close attention to news, here's what I've been paying closer attention to, which I think is a better use of my time at the moment

A wax ginger plant
A yellow and black tree frog, don't eat it, it's poisonous
Big ol' water lilly.