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Opět jediné koho zaskočilo zimní počasí, jsou v karlovarském kraji silničáři. Už je to taková pěkná každoroční tradice.
in reply to Archos

nejvíc překvapuje sníh v zimě hlavně řidiče....
in reply to The_ERROR

@The_ERROR
Mě to nepřekvapilo, jezdím každý den do práce 60 km, jsem připravený. Pneumatiky jsem měnil v čas a jsou nové. Jen bych čekal, že když je kolem nuly a a prší se sněhem, na autech to namrzá, tak aspoň dálnici by chtělo trochou posypat. Zase z Varů na hranice, to není zas tak dlouhý úsek. Chápu, když je kalamita, že se nestíhá, ale do té to bylo daleko.



Sometimes I feel like life is one of perpetual questioning. Everyone else seems to have the perpetual answers.


[Nightly Blog] Celebrating 20 years of Firefox – These Weeks in Firefox: Issue 171 blog.nightly.mozilla.org/2024/…


It costs nothing to be kind. Being mean is also free, but people are likelier to want to hurt you.
in reply to The Amazing Panini

Being kind and compassionate requires a lot of effort in a society which emphasizes the self, be it personal gain, fame, or physical appearance. The mindset is very important, which is why selfhelp books work for many people.


Welcome to a Rogers/Shaw internet outage.
USB tethering on two Android phones is not working reliably with my router, and only one of the two works on Windows, so I'm serving up 5G from two separate phones until cable comes back.
This is probably because of bad weather, so the extra reminder to charge my stuff also doesn't hurt.


One of many earlier #British #ColonialCrimes in #SouthEastAsia. The #BriggsPlan in #Malaysia.

The Nazi regime during WWII forever gave the term #ConcentrationCamp a name symbolic of #atrocity, so when British #colonizers once again visited the idea of #ForcedRelocation of #IndigenousPeoples to isolate them they needed another name for the enclaves. They came up with #NewVillages. The New Villages were created under the Briggs Plan, which was developed to combat the communist insurgency in #Malaya during the 1950 #MalayanEmergency. The plan was prepared by Sir Harold Briggs, a British General who was the Director of Operations in Malaya.

#Britain lost the Malayan Peninsula and their fortress at Singapore to the Japanese during WWII and reoccupied their former dominion after the fall of Japan. Among the many difficulties the British encountered was the presence of roughly a half-million #Chinese in rural Malaya, most working as farmers working small plots of land for their own sustenance on land they did not own or lease. The British administration regarded these Chinese as squatters and found them a problem because they were physically distant from the machinery of British authority, which most of the Malayan population was not happy to see return to their country.

When the Malay #CommunistParty received support from armed #guerrillas from Malaya and #China, the British, intent on restoring #Imperial rule to the peninsula, looked with additional distrust upon these rural Chinese. While some of the Chinese were certainly sympathetic to the communists, most were indifferent. The British concern was that the communist #insurgents would receive support from the squatters in the form of food, neglecting the fact that the majority of the Chinese squatters were barely able to grow enough to support themselves. The Briggs plan required the forced relocation of the Chinese.

The New Villages isolated the Chinese, and they were guarded by Malayan police and British Military Police and some troops. The Chinese could not leave the villages except under escort and nobody was allowed in without the permission of the guards, making them effectively prisons. The villages were built with running water and electricity, amenities absent from most Malayan villages, and health care and some educational facilities were provided. This caused resentment towards the British from the Malay outside the villages, who didn’t receive the same amenities, and the Chinese, who resented the forced relocation settlement.

Although the New Villages, of which 450 were built, were an improvement over the forced detention camps of the Boer War, and death rates in the villages were roughly the same as for the rest of the country, there were racially motivated #CollectivePunishments directed towards the Chinese population in the villages. #Deportation without trial by the administration was a common punishment for the Chinese. Law within the villages was the decision of the British. Many of the villages are still standing and in recent years have been restored to serve as tourist destinations by the Malaysian government with support from China.

#AsianMastodon #SouthEastAsia #TootSEA #ColonialismInAsia #Decolonization #DecolonialLearning #ColonizerCrimes #ColonialViolence #Decolonize #AsianHistory #MalaysianHistory #LearnYourColonialHistory


in reply to SuspiciousDuck

Podle předpovědi se má koncem týdne oteplovat. Až 13 stupňů Celsia.


En cosas que no entiendo: Una empresa con muchos centros pequeños puede hacerles la vida imposible a sus trabajadores porque siendo los centros pequeños no pueden organizarse sindicalmente?

Las tres empleadas de la juguetería Afede en Ansoáin convocan una huelga indefinida

noticiasdenavarra.com/economia…

in reply to Óscar Gorri

No exactamente.

En empresas que tengan en la misma provincia o en municipios limítrofes dos o más centros de trabajo cuyos censos no alcancen los 50 trabajadores, pero en su conjunto lo sumen, se constituirá un comité de empresa conjunto. Cuando unos centros tengan 50 trabajadores y otros de la misma provincia no, en los primeros se constituirán comités de empresa propios y con todos los segundos se constituirá otro.

Artículo 63.2 del ET.



Subtoot

I find it hilarious that the only-renewables crowd are now actually trying to coopt the phrase "too cheap to meter" (which, for the record, was never a slogan in the nuclear sector, it was just said once by a guy somewhere), at a time when we're increasingly done with the 'easy phase' of installing solar and wind installations.

At less than 10% of total energy use in the West, solar and wind already cause price hikes and, consequently, deindustrialisation in countries like Germany. The 'hard part' is just beginning, and if we insist on only trying to do that with solar and wind alone, it'll cost at least an order of magnitude more than it already has.

We'll reevaluate this cooptation in a few years, but let me say that the 'cost argument' is a very silly line of defense to take.

It's nigh time we face the facts for once: fossil fuels are dirt cheap and using economics alone means we'll be using them in perpetuity. The other side of that coin is that a decarbonised energy system *will* be more expensive. How we deal with that cost will be a social question that we'll need to solve.

Pretending that this isn't true and solar and wind are the best thing since sliced bread, is driving people paying the energy bills to the right, towards climate denialism, towards the fossil lobby. Saw the meme of people voting Trump to save 10 cents on their eggs? Yeah, look in a mirror who is driving that.

Be careful what you wish for, "too cheap to meter" will bite you in the ass.

This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to Emil Jacobs - Collectifission

Interesting issue. To what extent are price hikes a direct consequence of the energy mix rather than the specific marginalist design of EU electricity market though? Genuine question, I don't know the answer to this, but I would think there's some increase that's necessary and some that's not.


Mastodon, if you have to do starter packs, *please think about consent* for people being added to starter packs. The bluesky starter packs may be great for new accounts trying to find their people, but it has not necessarily been fun for people who've been added to starter packs without their knowledge. I feel like a couple thousand people looking for a coffee shop have suddenly turned up in my living room.

hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/113…

This entry was edited (4 days ago)


This is the leader of the Israeli opposition. The person who should be debunking the justifications for never-ending war and re-humanize Palestinians.

Instead, he parrots Netanyahu and shows that the entire Israeli establishment is complicit.

We need an arms embargo now.

#Israel #Palestine #Gaza



Cómo afecta a los despidos la sentencia del Supremo que obliga a escuchar a los trabajadores antes de echarlos eldiario.es/1_b48f95?utm_campa…


Buenos días desde la Administración Pública.

Hoy estamos con el RAT. Había perdido este tema completamente de vista.



#dobréRáno keby sa mi chcelo ako sa mi nechce tak by to bolo lepšie 😁


stop shaming people for having phases

if you think someone's dumb for having a phase then you're boring for not having so many different interests and interesting things you've done



Urgent Warning for Fedi Admins
We've discovered an ongoing Denial-of-Service attack against Misskey-based instances. The attacks exploit a zero-day vulnerability impacting Misskey, Sharkey, IceShrimp, and other related software. Patches are in progress and will be released ASAP. We encourage all admins to update immediately!

#Misskey #Sharkey #IceShrimp #FediAdmins #Security



Black Friday Deal Slashes the Price on This Helpful Surge Protector Down to Just $11 cnet.com/deals/black-friday-de…


FFS, how long are batteries supposed to last before they start inflating? My camera's are getting fat :(
in reply to Federico Mena Quintero

it depends. I have 12 year Fuji NP-W126 that are fine. I also have a bunch for B511 from my 2004 20D that are fine.
in reply to Federico Mena Quintero

Inflation means the batteries are physically damaged.

Bathtub graph might apply.



Mastodon should have a dedicated field where you can put all your defensive statements to prevent extremely predictable replies from reply guys. It shouldn’t count against your character limit and should only get shown when someone tries to reply.


- Do you play any musical instruments?
- I play the Unicode.
- Huh? The Unicode? What's that?
- It's a kind of string instrument.

reshared this



Someone shared this with me today, and it helped me finally come to terms with a truth I've been avoiding:

I'm *tired*. Deep tired, the kind of tired that doesn't go away with a nice weekend.

And I need to do something about it. Idk what. But I do.




the fucking audacity of white american latinos calling us Puerto Ricans gringos lost in an island so we can have the privilege to cleaning up their fucking fascist messes.

GO DEAL WITH YOUR ANTI-BLACK GWANABÍS DE MIERDA AND KEEP NUESTRA PATRIA OUR OF YOUR FUCKING MOUTHS

fuck y'all.

mastodon.social/@blogdiva/1135…



And here's an hour of one of Larry King's interviews with Gork, president of the planet Fringas, who made several appearances on his show. The YouTube video mistakenly credits Gork as being voiced by Robin Williams. This is incorrect; Gork was voiced by Herb Cohen, one of King's best friends since childhood and the author of "You Can Negotiate Anything."
This clip claims to have been recorded from WCAU, now WPHT out of Philly. WCAU started carrying the Larry King show around 1981 after it had been airing on WWDB. WWDB was not only one of Philly's all-talk stations but it was unusual in that it was also an FM station. I have recordings of this station from 1979, some of which I've already digitized and would like to share them with Philly talk radio enthusiasts.

youtube.com/watch?v=lycL5_3oUL…

This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to David Goldfield

The first time I ever heard Larry King, he spent a couple of hours talking to Dr. Demento.
in reply to David Goldfield

At the time, I'd never heard of Larry King, and I'd only heard of Dr. Dementonbut hadn't heard him yet.
in reply to David Goldfield

oo radio history, I live in toronto ontario canada and miss listenign to regular physical radio. We used t get some of Philadelphia's stations like the big talker aroudn 1220 I think it was at night.
in reply to Robin Frost

@robini71 @Angela2000 Yep, I have fond memories of WCAU back in the day. They did a lot of local talk as well as a long-running evening show called Radio Cllassics where they'd play several OTR shows. My dad and I both enjoyed that show and my dad won a few prizes from it by answering trivia questions. I think one of them might have been a tin of Riceman pretzels.
in reply to Angela2000

@Angela2000 Yep, WCAU was 1210 and I'm not surprised you picked them up from Canada. I remember picking up one or two Canadian stations; wasn't one of them 900 CHML in Hamilton?


In honor of Larry King's birthday, here is his account of the famous Carvel Ice Cream story.
youtube.com/watch?v=9tI9I7HIRA…
in reply to Robin Frost

@robini71 I haven't thought about him in a while but as I remember him tonight on his birthday I find myself missing him, as well.
in reply to David Goldfield

Awww I totally understand that. I have a friend who, when remembering prior days would often say "I wanna go home." I always knew what she meant and now do even more so than when she used to say it to me. I wanna go back often on many levels.


With all these sexual assaulters as picks, we should call them his Grabinet


I wonder how much fun a Vampire The Masquerade campaign in the verse of What We Do In The Shadow would be.

#ttrpg



Today is the birthday of Larry King, who was born on November 19, 1933. In my teen years, I listened to a lot of local talk radio in the Philly area but the Larry King show was one of the few shows that aired during that time which was national. There was something about that show that just captivated me. I loved Open Phone America, where he took calls about any topic from 3:00-5:30 AM Eastern time. He had a guest on for three hours and he was a master at interviewing. He could even interview his own daughter and made it so interesting. His daughter Chaia sadly also passed away. I even called Larry at his hotel when he was in Philly and talked with him for around ten minutes.
I read both of his autobiographies. I wish more recordings were publicly available from his show on Mutual.
He was my favorite radio talk show host and one of our best interviewers. Here's a link to a blog post that I wrote about him when I learned of his passing.
davidgoldfield.wordpress.com/2…
This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to David Goldfield

David, we recorded a lot of his shows most of them old radio guests and sports guests. It might take a while but, we can share them with you possibly by drop box?.
in reply to John Gassman

@JohnGassman John, that would be fabulous, but only when your time allows for it. There's absolutely no rush for it. The shows with guests from radio would be great.


"Empire of Death" wasn't a great way to end a #DoctorWho season. Episode 488 of the Two-minute Time Lord podcast: twominutetimelord.com/2mtl-488…
in reply to That Chip Guy

It was better than Space Babies, which, in my opinion, was a horrible way to begin the season.


Remembering the late William Russell on what would’ve been his 100th birthday, who played one of the Doctor’s first companions, Ian Chesterton, in the very first Doctor Who adventure, An Unearthly Child, which originally aired on the BBC in 1963. #DoctorWho


NLS BARD is grouping their #DoctorWho novels into two separate series: Doctor Who and Doctor Who Library, and I don't think those two series list all of their novels. If they're going to have more than one series, they should be catalogued as Doctor Who TV Novelizations and Doctor Who BBC Books. Clearly, they haven't had a Doctor Who fan assisting them with this task. Perhaps I should offer my services to them?
www.loc.gov/nls
in reply to David Goldfield

Would love to read more of those novels, there were some where Riker was a ship's captain
in reply to David Dunphy

@startrek2025 Ah, those are the books where Riker is captain of the Titan. I may be wrong but I don't think that NLS has made any of those books available, but they're available on Bookshare and I'm sure they're still available to purchase on Kindle. I haven't read any of them but I wouldn't mind trying one of them.


Episode 2 of Access On is nearly here.
This week, Samsung is working on a Meta Smart Glasses rival, the Blindshell Classic 3 is out, new BT Speak firmware, and Google Gemini stops by for an interview regarding its new iOS app. Jonathan Mosen speaks with Mike Buckley, CEO of Be My Eyes. They discuss the partnership that has led to deep integration of Be My Eyes on the Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses. Plus, what happened to that amazing real-time AI function from Open AI that was demonstrated in May?
in reply to Access On

There is plenty of listener engagement, including discussion about getting audio descriptions of the videos on your smartphone.
All this, and more, in episode 2 of Access On, available wherever you get your podcasts. Be sure to follow today.

reshared this



The early-morning guffaw this pulled out of me was the right start to the week.


I hate this bullshit service, even more after reading their ableist response to this person: 'I was banned from the hCaptcha accessibility account for not being blind' michaels.world/2023/11/i-was-b…
#HCaptcha
This entry was edited (3 days ago)



Is there anyone among my followers using Audio Technica ATH M60X headphones? I am trying to match a 1-quarter-intch adapter to their cable but none I have fit. A customer supporter (LOL) from Audio Technica says that any should fit but this does not seem to be the case here. Should I be looking for a specific adapter on Amazon? Thanks for any advice! #audio #headphones #audiotechnica
This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to victor tsaran

Oh, well that's dumb. I can tell you, because I'm sitting here looking at them, that I have at least three different adapters that aren't compatible with each other's mating threads. Either they're too deep, or the threads are the wrong size.
in reply to Patrick Perdue

@BorrisInABox OK, I think I found a kindred soul here. Let me call them back tomorrow then. I certainly cannot confirm that any 1-quarter-inch adapter fits their cable.


Tune into our newest episode of the Nation’s Blind Podcast where our hosts are joined by Jonathan Mosen, former producer and host of the Bolotin award-winning Living Blindfully podcast and our incoming executive director for Accessibility Excellence. They discuss Access On, our new podcast that focuses on the role that technology plays in living the life we want. Jonathan also provided advice and tips for new podcasters: nfb.org/resources/publications…


A study asked 50 doctors to make six different diagnoses for medical conditions. "Doctors who did the project without AI got an average score of 74%, doctors who used AI got an average score of 76%, and ChatGPT itself got an average score of 90%." "AI didn’t help doctors using it as much as anticipated because physicians “didn’t listen to AI when AI told them things they didn’t agree. Most doctors couldn’t be convinced a chatbot knew more than them." #LLM #AI #ChatGPT qz.com/chatgpt-beat-doctors-at…
in reply to Chi Kim

Who trained ChatGPT on that data though? This sounds a bit contradictory!
in reply to victor tsaran

@vick21 They mentioned that the researchers intentionally used the cases that are never published specifically so that the ChatGPT can't cheat from training dataset.
in reply to Chi Kim

But how would it make its conclusions if it has never seen the data? Can we verify this somewhere?
in reply to victor tsaran

@vick21 The research article was published on journal JAMA Network. I don't have access to that, but I think it's a pretty serious peer-reviewed medical journal.
in reply to Chi Kim

Believe me, it does sound amazing. It’s just when you see all these articles claiming this and that with no easy way to verify what they say, the questions arise! At the end of the day though it matters little until we see an impact in real people’s lives.
in reply to victor tsaran

@vick21 I guess you have to read the actual article to find more info. :) jamanetwork.com/journals/jaman…
in reply to victor tsaran

@vick21 Maybe I'm not understanding the question. Isn't it the point of AI though? AI systems recognize patterns and draw conclusion from similar patterns they've seen before. They are not just capable of simply regurgitating exact pattern.
in reply to Chi Kim

You did understand my question. I understand the premise. I just don’t want to assume, hence always asking… I’ll look at the article. Thanks for the link!
in reply to victor tsaran

@vick21 Of course, Ask instead asume is always a great choice! :) Having said that, Jama is one of the most respected medical journals in the world with rigorous peer-review processes, so I'm sure if reviewers noticed anything suspicious, they would have raised red flags before publishing. :)
in reply to victor tsaran

@vick21 From New York Times: "The cases intentionally have never been published so that medical students and others could be tested on them without any foreknowledge. That also meant that ChatGPT could not have been trained on them."


That’s cute… I wonder what sort of AI Jesus he/she/it is? Does their Jesus incorporates an encoder, decoder or both? I assume their Jesus is a multi-modal bot / agent? LOL mastodon.social/@Richard_Littl…


I give up. Now there's a Swiss church that has an #AI Jesus....

"Artificial intelligence is revolutionizing religious life at a small church in Lucerne, Switzerland, where a virtual Jesus is caring for the concerns and needs of the faithful."

Hold on...
Isn't this from the film THX 1138?

Good god, we're living in a low-budget 1970s dystopia.

dw.com/en/switzerlands-ai-jesu…


This entry was edited (3 days ago)