Across India, 118 million adult women in 12 states now receive unconditional cash transfers from their governments, making India the site of one of the world's largest and least-studied social-policy experiments.

Long accustomed to subsidising grain, fuel and rural jobs, India has stumbled into something more radical: paying adult women simply because they keep households running, bear the burden of unpaid care and form an electorate too large to ignore.

bbc.com/news/articles/c5y9ez3k…

On today's episode of are you fucking kidding me?: I'm trying to get a Texas ID. On the website, it states that an ID from a different state can be used as one of the documents that you can use for the process along with a social security card and birth certificate. My visit to the DMV told me different. Apparently, because my ID from California that I got in 2020 which doesn't expire until 2027, wasn't a "real" ID, as in the newer ID's that are required for something like flying, isn't a viable form of indentification, and yet the pamphlet that was referenced and website say otherwise. "federal limits don't apply." was what the guy said. Iff this is true, information needs some serious updating.

If you fancy a game over Christmas, you might want to try this. It is a similar concept I built for the ZX Spectrum back in the 80's. I get a pretty decent score. Quoting ChanceyFleet I'm a Blind tech educator but this is my first game design! If you support Blind or low-vision learners, please consider sharing the retro audio Space Invaders game i built with Gemini and @Marconius β€” you can play with any screen reader, right in the browser. I wanted to build something with a simple interface and a progressively hard game mechanic so it would be fun for tech novices and for me. The game is free and open-source and we welcome your feedback. marconius.com/fun/audioInvader…

Another milestone for us at Icelandic Met Office πŸŽ‰

This week we launched a new site with #avalanche forecasts and conditions, including recent avalanches. A major update was required in the background, migrating to #Postgres and building the APIs and of course the website handled by our friends at Origo & Metall with maps from MapTiler

We just transitioned CoSocial from an ad-hoc combo of AWS, OVH, and DO to @fedihost, see fedihost.co, a Managed Fediverse Hosting outfit based in Canada and with no US dependencies. Already feels faster, and should be cheaper too. Self-managed instances are cool but not, I suspect, the general-case future.
This entry was edited (4 days ago)

Is the small market justification for the cost of #AssistiveTechnology still valid in 2025, or is it an easy copout for companies to continue charging high prices? #Accessibility #A11y

  • Yes, it's still valid (50%, 1 vote)
  • No, this argument is no longer valid. We have found ways to make these tools more affordable. (50%, 1 vote)
2 voters. Poll end: 3 days ago

Two reasons why I think it's unwise to move from Firefox.

First, browser engine diversity matters. If all browsers become chromium skins, this gives Google a very unfortunate amount of power. It can affect web standards, de facto web use, all kinds of things; and there's no guarantee chromium will keep being freely released.

Second, pretty much any other possible alternative is worse across a set of metrics that involve accessibility, access to source code, privacy, and safety.

Servo is promising, but a11y isn't there; so it may as well not exist for me.

This entry was edited (4 days ago)

I'm a Blind tech educator but this is my first game design! If you support Blind or low-vision learners, please consider sharing the retro audio Space Invaders game i built with Gemini and @Marconius β€” you can play with any screen reader, right in the browser. I wanted to build something with a simple interface and a progressively hard game mechanic so it would be fun for tech novices and for me. The game is free and open-source and we welcome your feedback. marconius.com/fun/audioInvader…
in reply to Scott

@Scott Not at the moment unless you navigate up and focus on the gameplay HUD. I need to group those together into single focus elements, and was considering adding a key shortcut for an energy announcement, plus am working on adding a danger noise so you know when you are about to lose. Also realizing that I should make the high scores list inert during gameplay to clean up the interface for us screen reader users. :)

I've just made a MR to document the remaining AT-SPI DBus interfaces. I'll wait a while before I merge it in case anyone wants to look it over (and it would probably be good if it is looked over by people who are not me). gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/at-spi2…
Unknown parent

mastodon - Link to source

James Scholes

@Bri I don't fully agree with you on this one. The add-on is legitimately useful when it works, and the alternative would be a separate (probably huge) app with global keyboard input, gesture remapping, speech output, etc. needing to be rebuilt.

That said, it does a lot of add-on stuff wrong, like implementing its own autoupdate mechanism for some reason. And the whole not currently working thing.

My issue with firefox soft forks is that even in their most ideal form, they can only be reactive harm-reduction, and any reasonable fork necessitates compromises that introduce some amount of risk (delayed security updates, compromised trust anchors etc.)

Perhaps that is the best anyone can do within reasonable costs.

Perhaps the only affordable proactive actions we can take is to reinforce that front against future inevitable assaults.

Perhaps that must be enough. I wish it were not so.

in reply to Sarah Jamie Lewis

I've spent time this year gaming out other possible strategies with people. Because the question of "no seriously how do we move forward in a world where every single mainstream browser engine is aligned towards making the web worse?" is one of the important ones.

The only viable path I can see requires that a collection of organizations/soft-forks commit to co-maintaining a shared base browser fork of firefox (something like the base browser used by Tor for TB and Mullvad)

in reply to VΓ‘clav PaΕ‘ek

dΓ­ky, jsem rΓ‘d, ΕΎe to pomohlo. SkromnΔ› dodΓ‘m, ΕΎe to je nejlepΕ‘Γ­ hlavnΔ› proto, ΕΎe nic jinΓ©ho neexistuje. Proto jsem to začal dΔ›lat. πŸ™‚
Jinak ve formΔ› desktopovΓ© aplikace je to určitΔ› pohodlnΔ›jΕ‘Γ­. Ale jeΕ‘tΔ› bude potΕ™eba do UI doladit. Doteď jsem Ε™eΕ‘il jen to, aby to dΔ›lalo to samΓ©, co ten pΕ―vodnΓ­ skript a v UI to Ε‘lo naklikat.

Need to send someone their favourite animal, butt only the backside? Want to learn various animal names in Bernese Swiss German? Just want silly stickers?

This fops got you covered!

presenting to you: the FΓΌdliverse!

Available at tailwag.ch/stickers/Fuedlivers… (Signal and Matrix not up to date yet), have fun!

Was mir bei solchen Testberichten immer fehlt:
Angaben zur #Datenverarbeitung, #Datensicherheit #digitalePrivatsphΓ€re :

adac.de/rund-ums-fahrzeug/auto…
Und eine Frage an die Wissenden:

Kann ich ein solches Vehikel auch ohne Google oder Apple Account bewegen?

#Auto #EAuto

Bird2 BGP Management Networking Daemon is all configured with the Vultr private ASN, as well as the private ASN they assigned me. So that should get traffic from the global Internet to a Vultr gateway router, then to my router runnning on Vultr, then to where I am able to route it from there. The only thing missing is a subnet. But considering Servarica took nine days to assign me a /27, I expect it'll be a few more days for this restricted /24, if I get approved at all.

Skew v2 from @Sinevibes - a unique, multi-curved, reverse delay effect - adds new features like feedback and sound improvements. And one *major* new feature: now it's free.

macOS, Windows, and Linux.

cdm.link/sinevibes-skew-2-free…

reshared this

I feel really inept sometimes. I was trying to create a merge request on gitlab.gnome.org, and, for the life of me, I couldn't find the button to create a new merge request. I suspect that the UI has changed since I last did this. It's supposedly on the upper right corner of the merge requests page, but knowing that doesn't do anything to help me. So I started googling and found that gitlab has a CLI, which I didn't know existed, so of course I want it. Now I'm looking at the README to figure out if I can use it on GNOME's instance. htps://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/cli.git
htps://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/cli.git

Edit: My issue was that I wasn't signed in, but I'm still really glad that I found the CLI tool.

This entry was edited (4 days ago)

#AndroidAppRain at apt.izzysoft.de/fdroid/?radd=1… today brings you 15 updated and 2 added apps:

* Remember My Sort: LSPosed module that persists Android file picker sort order πŸ›‘οΈ
* 5G: a simple utility to force "NR Only" 5G network mode πŸ›‘οΈ

Further, our monthly quality checker chimed in again. We're still running over all the forges informing the devs of its findingsΒΉ.

Enjoy your #free #Android #apps with the #IzzyOnDroid repo :awesome:

ΒΉ mostly "bugs" in their Fastlane trees

in reply to IzzyOnDroid βœ…

If you wonder about those "bugs", here's an excerpt:

* descriptions (short/full) too long and thus being truncated
* same for changelogs

But the checker also finds where fastlane has been established now, so we can add it; where a repo was renamed/moved – or where it was archived/deleted. Or where the license changed. These are things we then adjust at our end…

⇧