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Right? Gosh, what difficult choices we got over here! #USPol infosec.exchange/@malwaretech/…
This entry was edited (3 weeks ago)


🚨🚨🚨 ARIZONA VOTERS — It’s been reported that thousands of early voters in Pima County returned only the first page of their two-page ballot. This is important because Prop 139 for Abortion Access is on page 2. Please don’t make the same mistake when you vote in person. Please share with AZ folks.

kold.com/2024/11/02/some-pima-…






Armchair prediction: the GIMP GTK3 port will be finished and enabled by default after GTK 5 is released and GTK3 is deprecated.
in reply to Seirdy

Flutter for Linux will switch from GTK3 after GTK3 is deprecated.


Inexperienced, poorly trained and underfed: the North Korean troops heading to Ukraine | North Korea | The Guardian theguardian.com/world/2024/nov…


TIL you can access the Hearing Test on iOS even if you're not in a supported region by pasting this in your Safari address bar: x-apple-health://HearingAppPlugin.healthplugin/HearingTest

reshared this



❌ i can't figure out how to put that thought into words
✅ i can't serialize that thought


One of the perks of my new job is they don't use Microsoft Teams
in reply to Adrianna Tan

So do they use Zoom, Google Meet, or something else? Just curious.



Am I, a Rust programmer, a hypocrite for asking if -Wextra is useful, as a C programmer as well?
in reply to Federico Mena Quintero

My personal list, in descending order of usefulness, goes -Wall -Wextra -Wpedantic -Wwrite-strings and maybe also -Wconversion -Wstrict-prototypes -Wmissing-prototypes.

-Wconversion catches bugs that nothing else catches but it also complains about a whole bunch of perfectly fine and idiomatic constructs. The prototypes ones used to be really helpful when dealing with code that was written pre-1990, but nowadays they mainly help you find functions that you forgot to mark "static".



I'm really enjoying researching information by accessing online databases from my local public library. Having free access to all of this information is absolutely amazing. Even if you don't think that you would ever need your public library, getting a library card is worth it just for accessing the online databases that they will likely offer to patrons. Not to mention that I used Libby for the first time for listening to an audio book and it was very accessible.
in reply to Eden Linnea

@EdenLinnea I'm sure that different library systems provide access to different databases, depending on which ones they choose to subscribe to. In my case, I was using the Gale Health and Wellness Resource Center.
in reply to David Goldfield

@EdenLinnea Here's a list of databases from the Philadelphia Public Library. This is a much larger collection than the one offered from my own library so, as I wrote earlier, what your library offers will likely differ from this list.
libwww.freelibrary.org/databas…
in reply to David Goldfield

Couldn’t agree more about the library and if you get stuck there is somebody savvy to help you out usually.


TIL: the practical minimum RAM requirement for OpenWrt is now 64 MB. openwrt.org/supported_devices/… I remember when 8 MB of RAM was adequate for a basic Linux desktop. For that matter, I'm pretty sure my first Linux install in 1996 was in 4 MB of RAM, but that might have been too tight for X11 in practice.
in reply to Matt Campbell

Saw the following on the comment thread where I learned about the 64 MB RAM requirement for OpenWrt (where I also commented):

> These days I mostly write code for systems with 256 KiB of RAM, so struggling with 64 MiB seems a bit excessive.

Just now, I wish I had chosen to work on that kind of embedded software. I guess I still could, at least as a side project. I know I'm doing important work where I'm at though, even if I have to tolerate the unconstrained excess of Electron and the like.

Tamas G reshared this.



USPol

Sensitive content



Quincy Jones, music titan who worked with everyone from Frank Sinatra to Michael Jackson, dies at 91.

apnews.com/article/quincy-jone…



Random linux question: I have my command history, in Linux, but not a record of command outputs. Now that text is as close to free as makes no difference, should we not store both? Command executed, standard-out resulting, all stored?

Given screamingly fast IO and effectively infinite drive space, at least as far as text is concerned, it's sort of remarkable how much useful information we just accidentally throw away these days, how little we routinely save.

in reply to mhoye

When I regularly used screen(1) I would set the scrollback buffer to Really Large, and would peruse it extensively. It was nice to be able to search in it.
in reply to Federico Mena Quintero

@federicomena I've done the same for years and I still use screen(1). My uptime is usually measured in months, interrupted by the occasional kernel upgrade. A terminal scrollback for three months of output is a couple of megs. It's possible to write it to disk automatically.

Keeping this habit has made me more cautious about running commands that might generate a lot of output spew, like cat'ing a file before checking its size. I'm not positive this is an improvement.



The old crypto(graphy) is more regulated than the new crypto(currency-garbage).

The should tell you everything.



One cool thing about Castro is we haven't added a useless AI feature that gets in your way every time you try to do anything.


Amazon Canada really is just a dollar store having a roid rage.


I promise you, two names you will not hear on Mushroom Escape any day this week are Donald Trump and Kamala Harris.

in reply to Carolyn

The original lighthouse. It was bought by a local farmer and moved after the decision to replace it. It has since been destroyed by a storm and then being used by firefighters for training.

You never know how long something you photograph will last. Here today, gone tomorrow.

#Pugwash #NovaScotia #Lighthouse



If you're looking for a distraction, the first book of HELL'S ACRE just dropped last week. Assassins! Secret identities! Rooftop battles! Intrigue! Pretty dresses! And a whole lot more...
lilithsaintcrow.com/2024/10/re…


How to solve your Wi-Fi problems with smart router settings pcworld.com/article/2501811/ho…


Score the Latest Amazon Fire HD 8 at Its Lowest Price Yet With a 45% Discount pcmag.com/deals/score-the-late…


Digital accessibility needs for electric vehicle (EV) charging stations deque.com/blog/digital-accessi…


Understand Chemistry Concepts with the Tactile Ionic Bonding Kit aph.org/understand-chemistry-c…


New: A Conceptual Model of ATProto and ActivityPub

You might want to know a little bit more about how #Bluesky and #atproto works, without needing to know all the technical details. This is a high level overview of how to think about how atproto works, and how it differs from #ActivityPub.

It is also a reflection on the concepts of decentralisation and federation, and what they bring to both the #fediverse and the #atmosphere

Read at: fediversereport.com/a-conceptu…



#today
so I have a question.
Is ther a way for me to feel the level of the liquid dish washing soap while i'mpooring it into the dish washer?the stuff is strong and I don't want to hurt myself, do they have a low tech solution, somethig nI can use in the house to aid me in just poring itin?
in reply to Sarah A

What brand you using? I just wash my hands really good after handling it right away for a minute.


Hello everyone!

I write my bachelor's thesis about Mastodon as an alternative social network and how its users perceive the platform.

I would be greateful if you would particpate in my survey:
umfragen.uni-paderborn.de/inde…

It only takes 10-15 minutes and would help me a lot.
If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact me.

In case you want to support me, you can repost the access link, which would also help me.

Thank you!

in reply to Paula

This Questions are problematic, I think:

* Mastodon’s actions against any harmful content are sufficient.

* Mastodon’s actions against the spread of fake news are sufficient.

For this, the admins/ moderators are responsible and not Mastodon.



Hey,

#curl -v google.com as a metal song is a must see and hear experience. A masterpiece. I just love it.

youtube.com/watch?v=atcqMWqB3h…

#curl
in reply to daniel:// stenberg://

\m/ not only is this fun music, but greatly adds to my curl appreciation levels
in reply to daniel:// stenberg://

oh no, now you have to add Guitar solo and Vocalist has seizure to -v output to match the video.


Tesla updated its summon feature. Now this owner can’t get to his car.Tesla updated its summon feature. Now this owner can’t get to his car. electrek.co/2024/11/04/tesla-u…


I'm not even done with work and it's pitch black outside. Ugh.

in reply to JRelland :flower:

Do you mean the message during account setup about autoconfig entries, or is this another issue?
in reply to Thunderbird: Free Your Inbox

Not an issue. Just a comment about the "beta" status.

Thank you for your interest.

José



it's astonishing how often this happens in my line of work:

client: can you review our source code for security issues?

me: of course!

[we stare at each other in a long, tense silence]

me: ... may I see the source code?

client: absolutely not.

in reply to abadidea

In a past life, I worked on a compiler that the DoE used. I never had to handle their bug reports and was quite glad. The flow was:

Them: It doesn't work.

Us: In what way?

Them: That's classified. The wrong number comes out of the program.

Us: What program?

Them: That's classified.

Us: Can you send us a reduced test case?

Six months pass while the reduced test case is declassified, which involves review that it does not leak anything about the Super Secret Program that it's based on.

The reduced test case does not trigger the bug. Apparently the original did, but en route to being declassified the parts that triggered the bug were removed.



Gajim is currently migrating from GTK3 to GTK4. 🔧 GTK is Gajim's user interface toolkit. It provides building blocks, like windows, buttons and labels. 🧩

Version 4 of this toolkit brings performance improvements to Gajim, e.g. faster rendering of user interface elements. 💨
Additionally, switching to GTK4 allows Gajim to use newer widgets, like nice drop downs.
Here is a quick peek at a new group chat "@ mention" widget. 😎

Stay tuned! :xmpp:

gtk.org

#gajim #xmpp #chat #gtk4

This entry was edited (3 weeks ago)
in reply to Gajim

Are you migrating to widgets that respond to the GTK light/dark mode signal?
in reply to Diane

@alienghic Gajim does that already in GTK3 through DBus. If it does not work for you, feel free to join gajim@conference.gajim.org?join
Unknown parent

mastodon - Link to source
Gajim
@erua exactly. This is an announcement, not a release. A release has not been mentioned anywhere.


Twitch miał chyba jakąś poważną modyfikację algorytmów. Nagle zaczął mi sugerować samych Polaków, mimo że nigdy nie oglądam polskich kanałów. Nie sugerował za to anglojęzycznych kanałów, które były live i które czasem oglądałem.
Po zmianie języka strony na angielski trochę się tych drugich pojawiło, ale nadal ponad połowa sugerowanych jest z Polski.
in reply to Ganderonus

Tiktok to samo. Telefon po ang, region na US, a sugeruje tylko polskie.


I'm a full stack developer. I can code in every language from JavaScript to assembly.
in reply to Hubert Figuière

@hub @driusan I've seen a stack check in the Linux kernel that caused Firefox to crash when Google updated Maps with a function that declared 36000 variables on the stack. Incomplete memory barriers in macOS semaphores. DLLs sending window events to work around bugs in Explorer versions that don't exist anymore. And all those bugs have been filed in time... like issues... on Bugzilla.


I was happily ticking along, making a new telegram group on Android because it's easier than iOS and my speech just died! Was using Vocalizer and well, no more vocalizing for me. Had to get Kirsten to switch it to Acapela which worked. That is not cool.
I'd heard this was a common thing with that particular engine but until now, have never experienced it. No idea why it even happened.


"In Memory of Stiver", the original author of the Fernflower Java decompiler.

blog.jetbrains.com/idea/2024/1…