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People ask me why we don't support Apple products. Well, it's shit like this theverge.com/2024/8/9/24216181…



Ok, I have thoughts about Chrystul Kizer being sentenced to prison.

The monster she killed was a known sex trafficker of young black girls. He’d been arrested and released without bail by the same cops that arrested this girl. He brutalized and trafficked this child, and she killed him. (I have no problem with that, personally. )

Wisconsin has a 2008 law on the books that allows trafficking as a defense, and her lawyers chose to plead out instead of taking it to trial.

I’m not a lawyer, but from the outside, that sure as fuck looks like malpractice. Let’s find a way to free this kid.

#ChrystulKizer #Milwaukee #injustice

jsonline.com/story/news/local/…



ugh. I picked up a shitty NUC from ewaste and it had a label on it for an AI company.
ahh, another startup that burnt out trying to build some silly AI project on crap hardware. I wonder what they did? I check their URL:
ahh. healthcare. great, great.

reshared this



Perhaps you have heard (or even believe) some or all of the elements of the following story about the past:

"Life in the past was crude and hard. People could not afford mercy or charity. People in primitive societies would leave the sick and weak behind to die, and even the ancient Greeks killed disabled infants through exposure."

I have frequently encountered this set of ideas, in various permutations. It shows up all over the internet in popular historical accounts:
"Infanticide was a disturbingly common act in the ancient world, but in Sparta this practice was organized and managed by the state. All Spartan infants were brought before a council of inspectors and examined for physical defects, and those who weren't up to standards were left to die...If a Spartan baby was judged to be unfit for its future duty as a soldier, it was most likely abandoned on a nearby hillside. Left alone, the child would either die of exposure or be rescued and adopted by strangers."

It is also quite wrong.

history.com/news/8-reasons-it-…

1/9

in reply to HeavenlyPossum

These were people who lived more than 2,000 years ago in the Iron Age. They did not have access to modern tools or artificial power. Everything they built, they built themselves, with their own hands, and occasionally some animal power. They were, by modern standards, unimaginably poor. And yet Sneed demonstrates that they devoted time, energy, and effort into caring for disabled infants and making buildings accessible to those who needed access.

In the United States, the Americans with Disabilities Act wasn't signed into law until 1990. Despite the law, Americans with disabilities still routinely face discrimination and inaccessibility around the country, often because enforcement is lax and private firms can't be bothered to spend resources on compliance. *But they have no excuse.* The US is the richest state that is or ever was; it has access to unimaginably more resources than the Classical Greeks did thousands of years ago. If they could do it, modern societies like the US can do it.

4/9

in reply to HeavenlyPossum

Archeologists have found evidence from around the world, in sites spanning tens of thousands of years, of people caring for the sick, the injured, and the disabled. A young man buried in what is now Vietnam who lived, paralyzed, with Klippel-Feil syndrome for about ten years. A Neanderthal man who survived grievous injuries, including a partial blinding and the loss of an arm, in what is now 45,000 years ago. A boy who lived to about 15 with spina bifida in what is now Florida, 7,500 years ago. On and on and on.

These were people who almost certainly required enormous levels of care. Many of them would have struggled to contribute to the sustenance of their communities. Many of them were not particularly mobile. And yet they survived, many of years, which could have only happened with the cooperation of multiple other people. These are ancient societies in which, we've been taught, life was "nasty, brutish, and short." Yet they diverted precious resources to the care of other people, many of whom could never materially reward their carers.

archive.is/laonH

5/9



EL SANTO NIÑO DE LA GUARDIA

Durante la segunda mitad del sXIV, en la localidad de La Guardia (Toledo), un niño fue cruelmente torturado y asesinado siguiendo un ritual mágico en el que un grupo de judíos y criptojudíos buscaban difundir una epidemia de cólera.

O, al menos, eso es lo que a día de hoy sigue afirmando parte de la Iglesia, como vemos en este artículo publicado en 2015 y cargado, todavía hoy, de propaganda antisemita y de un absoluto desprecio por la evidencia histórica.

oracionyliturgia.archimadrid.o…

Se conservan algunos de los documentos de este juicio, gracias a los cuales algunos historiadores tan poco sospechosos de rojeras como Luis Suárez Fernández (director de universidades durante la dictadura) han reconstruido coherentemente lo que realmente debió suceder.

En 1489 varios judeoconversos son detenidos por la Inquisición bajo la acusación de haber vuelto a sus viejas creencias judías. Al principio no hay nada más que esta acusación, pero bajo tortura, aparece el relato sobre un niño.

Los distintos acusados, bajo tortura, empiezan a lanzarse acusaciones unos a otros, incluyendo también a un par de judíos de la zona. Inmiscuyéndose los unos a los otros en la terrible historia de un niño raptado y torturado como blasfemo reflejo de la muerte de Jesucristo.

La única historia no obtenida bajo tortura la dio un judío que, enfermo y creyendo estar cerca de la muerte, pidió que le asistiera un rabino. Un monje se disfrazó de rabino y consiguió engañarle, consiguiendo, según él, una declaración que posteriormente el judío negaría.

Lo más curioso de esta historia es que no existe niño. De hecho, el niño no tiene ni nombre (la tradición posterior le adjudica el nombre de Cristóbal o el de Juan). No existen padres, los padres de los que se habla también son inventados. No hubo, por supuesto, cadáver.

Las distintas declaraciones están repletas de contradicciones importantes. Los acusadores tuvieron que crear un complicado relato en el que el niño fue transportado de un lado a otro (sin que nadie les viera) para explicar que cada uno hablara de sitios distintos.

Las mismas fechas son contradictorias, más allá de que todos decían que había sucedido en semana santa, según uno hacía cuatro años de aquello, según otro quince, según otro, once...

Los acusados fueron ajusticiados en 1491. La historia fue publicitada con gran eficacia por toda Castilla.

Unos meses después, la Reina Isabel firmaba la expulsión de los judíos. Sin duda, el caso del falso niño de La Guardia tendría su influencia en esta decisión.




#rant #libreoffice #Seitennummern

Also, ich komm ja echt gut mit meinem Writer in Libre Office klar. Und das viel besser als mit dem schrecklichen MS Word.
ABER: WARUM ist das Einfügen von Seitennummern so ein pain in the ass?
He, @LibreOfficeDE?
Kann man das nicht bisschen intuitiver gestalten?
Jedes verdammte mal, wenn ich ne Arbeit schreiben muss, muss ich wieder und wieder die Anleitung bemühen, weil es nicht einfach mit einem einzigen Menüpunkt funktioniert.
Dafür, und nur dafür HASSE ich dieses Programm.
Man verdammt, es ist ein Office Programm, es sollte intuitiv im Schreibprozess zu bedienen sein. Nein, statt dessen schreibe ich vorher einen Entwurf, um nebenbei in nem frischen Dokument erstmal den Pain der Seitennummerierung zu bewältigen. Damit es mir nicht meinen Text kaputt macht.
😤😤😤🤯🤯

This entry was edited (2 months ago)
in reply to LibreOffice

nope. That doesnt work. Normally, page numbers in documents with a titel page and a toc dont start at page number 1 and even not on the titel page. That means, adding the number 3 on the start on the main text, is not easy as that. When i try, my page number always show number 3 on every single page. On Yt, therefor are many tutorials, bcause many people have the same struggle like me. So, its not easy as how you said it should be.
This entry was edited (2 months ago)


Peso.
Hacía tiempo que no me pesaba. Sigo en los valores de siempre, más o menos. 66,7 kg. De momento no me preocupo.



Kuffovci nie sú pomätenci ale prepnutý magory, teda je to asi to isté ale to moje pomenovanie je výstižnejšie.

youtube.com/watch?v=8Fa7fvMaTH…

This entry was edited (3 months ago)
in reply to Peter Hanecak

neviem, ťažko sa mi odhaduje ako na tom sú ale evidentne si to užívajú. Lepší výkon OČTK, to má byť vtip? Ja viem že nie ale je žalostný a po posledných úpravách trestného zákona...
This entry was edited (2 months ago)
in reply to SuspiciousDuck

Ak je mojim zaujmom mat tu kludny a dobry zivot, tak sa musim primarne snazit a slusne a funkcne riesenia. A teda preto ten "lepsi vykon OCTK".

Lebo sa samozrejme da napr. aj "brat spravodlivost do vlastnych ruk", ale to by v pripade ludi typu Kuffa rychlo vyeskalovalo:

- on mi zrusi divadlo
- ja mu zrusim omsu
- on prise zrusit mna
- ak sa mu podari zrusit mna, niekto dalsi skusi zrusit jeho
- …

vysledok: obcianska vojna

A prave any sme sa vyhli vojnam, mame zakony a OCTK.




linux-game-manager
Storm Dragon pushed changes to the master branch of the linux-game-manager project Massive rewrite of how speaking with TTS is handled. This should open up compatibility with pretty much every wad out there as far as TTS is concerned. There may be unwanted speech until everything is ironed out.



GNOME is grrrrreat! If someone picks on you for enjoying GNOME, they can buzz off.
in reply to Veronica Explains

And @vkc is great! Keep up the good work Veronica, you’re a joy to follow 🙌


🛠️ Maintenance Planned August 21, 2024 9:00-11:00 PM EDT/1:00-3:00 AM UTC

In preparation for the new release, Bitwarden will be undergoing server and web maintenance from 9-11 PM EDT/1-3 AM UTC.

More Information on the Bitwarden Status Page →
status.bitwarden.com/issues/66…

This entry was edited (2 months ago)


alt-right self-owns (funny but sad)

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Peter Vágner reshared this.

in reply to Rick Scott 🏳️‍⚧️

alt-right self-owns (funny but sad)

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friends, help me with a reality check here:

how many of you have 5+ years of experience in QA or dev
AND
3+ years using a GDS (eg Sabre, Amadeus)? 😅

in reply to Rick Scott 🏳️‍⚧️

I worked 1+ at Sabre and never learned how to use the GDS. (didn't need, maybe I should have)
in reply to Rick Scott 🏳️‍⚧️

@hub ...I say "nice" in relative terms. tech at airlines is an incredible mess, I can only imagine Sabre must have been....interesting as well 😅
in reply to Rick Scott 🏳️‍⚧️

I was hired as a Solaris sysadmin because they were selling a solution to an IBM shop (the IT dude hated Sun) and it would have cost way more on IBM.

It's at the time Sabre sold wholesale all that division to EDS.

This entry was edited (3 months ago)


whenever I see "AD&D insurance" I always think it's insurance in case I get petrified by a beholder or sth


I know nobody cares about this, but the real "scandal" is that Patreon DISBANDED THEIR INFOSEC DEPARTMENT.

There is nobody — NOBODY — running cybersecurity there.

Yet, all y'all care about is “Apple wants rent”.

Yep. 100%. Ask any of us who want to buy comics or audiobooks from someone besides Apple and we’ll gladly commiserate.

But, why on $DEITY’S own earth are you willing to put your $$$$ into an org who doesn’t care at all about the safety of your FINANCIAL SERVICES' data?



Who knew that the global human extinction ushered in by Skynet was caused by merely turning it on for the first time and watching it consume all the water and natural resources?

It didn't even need to get to that self-aware stage, or have enough reason to determine that "humans are a virus", or even ramp up the production of autonomous H/K drones and Terminators.

It just had to be powered on.

See: techradar.com/pro/water-consum…



A Remote Control for Your Phone: The Hable One Keyboard eastersealstech.com/2024/08/13…


speaking of old reading machines, does anyone remember the Rainbowe made by Robotron, maker of the Eureka A4? I remember wanting one of those after seeing it, when two Robotron employees came to our house when I lived in Oakland, and demonstrated it.


Global Policies and Subsidies for Electronic Assistive Devices: A Comprehensive Guide Across the U.S., Canada, and the U.K. zoomax.com/low-vision-informat…


The Acolyte S01E03

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in reply to Federico Mena Quintero

The Acolyte S01E03

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in reply to troy_s

The Acolyte S01E03

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Review: ‘Star Trek: Lost to Eternity’ Pulls At Leftover TOS Movies Threads To Spin A Fun Adventure trekmovie.com/2024/08/14/revie…




The last time a woman got promoted as a Python core developer was 21 men ago.

Sometimes I feel alone in thinking about this.



4 ad blockers that still work with Chrome pcworld.com/article/2429437/fo…


That book is poison: Even more Victorian covers found to contain toxic dyes

Old books with toxic dyes may be in universities, public libraries, private collections.

arstechnica.com/science/2024/0…



My personal opinion: this European Accessibility Act is going to face a lot of similar obstacles as other similar “acts” that have been introduced in other countries, for example, USA. Reason? Written primarily by lawyers and non-technologists, too many “but”’s and apologies on behalf of small-size businesses, etc. Example: a business that generates 2 min mln Euros per year is excused from being accessible? Say what? In 2024? digitala11y.com/introduction-t…
This entry was edited (3 months ago)
in reply to Mikołaj Hołysz

@miki But 2 mln Euros? That’s an arbitrary number. Plus I don’t think accessibility should be sacrificed, not in 2024. 20 years ago, yes, accessibility was hard. Today? Not so much, especially if you think about it from the start. Mind you, I am a pragmatic person by nature!
in reply to victor tsaran

It's an arbitrary number, but there has to be some arbitrary number.

And the question isn't just about how easy accessibility is, it's about how easy people think it is and what effect a legal scare will have on them. Whether the scare is warranted is entirely unimportant here.



Are you #blind or #VisuallyImpaired? Are you a sucker for retro hardware and/or software? Do you hate to see icons of the past slip into the land of the forgotten? Consider joining my BVTC (Blind Vintage Tech Community) mailing list! groups.io/g/bvtc
This entry was edited (3 months ago)


For any #Blind folks interested in watching the Democratic National Convention this week, here's a YouTube stream that includes #AudioDescription: youtube.com/live/ySzrZCmbsbw?s…


My Little Finger Can Only Play B... youtube.com/shorts/eww1uhFbk98…


Introduction to European Accessibility Act and Compliance digitala11y.com/introduction-t…



Here's a very rough demo of a bit of old technology from 1989 or so, at least that's when we got ours. Almost certainly headed for a landfill soon, as we're moving and not taking it with us. The Xerox Kurzweil Personal Reader model 7315, a print reading machine for the blind. The system we had with the electronics unit and automatic scanner cost $10,000 in 1989. This or a machine very similar was demonstrated on an episode of Mr. Roger's Neighborhood.
in reply to Jayson Smith

Here's a recording of the power-on sequence of self tests, after I set the machine to verbose mode as opposed to terse mode. I explain what this recording is, and have a few comments. @datajake1999 @bryansmart
in reply to Jayson Smith

oooh this is fascinating, I'm glad this is demoed, would have been lost to history otherwise. Especially as most wouldn't be interested to explore these underpinnings.
(I'll edit this to also say that I was amused by how DECTalk would lower its pitch through some of the POS tests, like it was getting more serious as they went on.)
This entry was edited (2 months ago)



The Call for Papers for Linux App Summit is open until August 21! linuxappsummit.org//cfp/ (dates there are incorrect, you can still submit talk proposals)