Unknown parent

mastodon - Link to source

Delta Chat

@bmcd this message might be a leftover from a prior version of the channels. The current experimental channels released with v2.35.0 should remain operable also in future releases. But there remains a tiny chance we need to change things in an incompatible way, so therefore the more careful warning/wording.
in reply to Alison Creekside

I remember when the govt made a law to force porn magazines to have a plastic bag with a black box over the cover images, and now the Government actually endorses a nazi app that undresses girls and spews social discord and disinformation.

A vile social sickness has infected our governments, and they're apparently fine with it.

I got a new multifunction radio, with the ability to receive AM, FM, VHF and shortwave bands, among other things.
It can also act as a bluetooth audio device, and when it's switched to Bluetooth mode, it plays a shortened version of the Logon sound from Windows 8 of all things.
This entry was edited (1 week ago)

I just commented on issue 7751 of the Nextcloud client. Please thumb it up if you agree and boost this post for more range and awareness, that would mean a lot!
github.com/nextcloud/desktop/i…
#a11y #accessibility #blind #nextcloud

I often hear Americans & rich brits justify buying oversized, polluting vehicles by claiming they need them because they live in the "countryside".

I call bullshit, Ladies and Gentlemen, allow me to introduce, the Citroen C15⬇

#C15 #carBrain #CarDependency #SUV #NoSUV #Pickup_truck

This entry was edited (1 week ago)

reshared this

#selfhosting week 1, phase 3B bis: Disappointment.
Subscribed to a Ionos vps in alternative to Hostinger, but the interface is much, much more complex (I'm referring to the vps and domains management) - thought Hostinger was the worst.
But, if accessibility declaration on Hostinger says "partially accessible" giving an e-mail address (not dedicated, it's the generic support), Ionos makes me point to an Italian paragraph where they claim barrier-free then says "for support, contact us through contact form", redirecting to a German accessibility page where NO FORM is displayed. Is it this way to treat customers?
Does @fsfe and @EUCommission have something to say? These are fake accessibility declarations.
You can't say you respect all customers, when you make your showcase site mostly accessible but most important feature (the vps/firewall management panels) impossible to use. To give an example, the "edit" button for a single firewall rule is labeled as "y", the delete is "]", the add rule is "@" ... Not to say that @yunohost on Ionos creates ipv6 issues, the port TCP 25 is closed and I need to call them with EXACTLY my phone number to have them open the port for me...
I must definitely try to talk to them and start the refund procedure.
Unfortunately though, Ionos would give me 240 gb hard disk for storage while hostinger, even upgrading, would give me 100.
WTF. #accessibility #blind #frustration #selfhost #vps
in reply to André Polykanine

@menelion I had to listen to my best friend on this topic. "double resources/storage for half the price, where's the trap?" Alex is right once again even without knowing a single letter of Linux, hosting, shared vs. vps, and all that stuff.
Another big issue I had, was that you can assign an IPV6 address to your server, but then you must MANUALLY configure it by editing a file. /etc/network/interfaces or /etc/netplan. I found the documentation confusing and it is a very risky operation, you can unblock it through the ionos remote console, but, what about accessibility of that one?
It's like a guy telling me we're completely safe, and he has a condom in hand. A condom with braille dots on it to make it accessible. Got the idea?
Note for non-braillists: the Braille dots, in paper, are made through a pin which causes a hole on one side, the dot on the other.

Steve Russell—the man who made the first video game—is still alive. Not a myth. Not a footnote. Walking around, same as the rest of us.

In 1962, Russell coded Spacewar! on the DEC PDP-1 at MIT. It spread fast. So fast that it directly led to the formation of Atari. Their first arcade release, Computer Space was essentially Spacewar! shoved into a coin-op cabinet.

Russell didn’t stop there. He wrote the first two implementations of Lisp. He later taught Bill Gates and Paul Allen how to use a computer.

Video games. Programming languages. Microsoft.

Same guy. Still alive.

This entry was edited (1 week ago)

reshared this

#ArcaneChat 2.36.0 is on its way to the stores and should be available in the upcoming days, check arcanechat.me/ for direct apk download and other download options

🔮 What's new?

★ as requested by you in the previous poll: allow to set subject when using the app as email client

★ Protect profile deletion and relays management with system pin

★ fix problem with quick-camera button in some devices

★ avoid background crash in some devices

★ allow to see inbox quota for all relays

This entry was edited (1 week ago)
in reply to nirik

@nirik I heard straps don't work, they break and fall off quickly. I considered 'socks', but they are quite difficult to put on, you have to move the car like 4 times. There are snow chains you can attach to the middle of the wheel, but they are expensive. Spending $500 on something you barely use once a year...
It's funny that I had the standard snow chains for 4 years, never tried to put them on until now. All those years I had them in the trunk and I thought I could rely on them. It's like making backups without ever trying to restore them and after years you find out you can't. 🙂

Admittedly, this feels like a small problem to have, given everything that's going on in the world, but why does life have to be this way? I'm trying to look at the menu for where I'm going tonight, and I'm having trouble finding the menu on the web page that's supposed to have the menu. So I save the page and start looking at the source, and I find an image called Untitled_design_53.webp, with an empty alt tag, so I think that Orca just wasn't reading anything for it. I OCR the image, and there we go; there's part of the menu (there's another image named Untitled_design_55.webp). I haven't tried in Windows, so I don't know if NVDA or JAWS would have worked any better (NVDA does have a handy OCR hotkey, assuming I can select the image that I want to OCR). But this kind of thing is annoying! I shouldn't need to know how to do all of this just to look at a menu.

Python programming. Long somewhat personal and motivational post

Sensitive content

in reply to Paweł Masarczyk

Python programming. Long somewhat personal and motivational post

Sensitive content

in reply to Paweł Masarczyk

Python programming. Long somewhat personal and motivational post

Sensitive content

reshared this

in reply to Paweł Masarczyk

Python programming. Long somewhat personal and motivational post

Sensitive content

in reply to Tara Owton

Python programming. Long somewhat personal and motivational post

Sensitive content

in reply to Paweł Masarczyk

Python programming. Long somewhat personal and motivational post

Sensitive content

in reply to Tara Owton

Python programming. Long somewhat personal and motivational post

Sensitive content

December 16 I bought a 512Gb SATAIII SSD thinking to myself: "Ok, I probably don't need it right now, but I know it will get only more expensive with all this AI hysteria. I don't know if I'll be able to buy it in the future". $43 is a bit much for a 512Gb if you ask me, but hey, it's manageable.
Today is January 8 and this same SSD now costs $125 in the same shop.
All this is sadly wrong.
Meanwhile I have to figure out which OS should I install on it.

Mutualaid, Please Boost

Sensitive content

Finally, our new mail server is up and running, so we've established our new contact page:

izzyondroid.org/contact/

If you need to reach out to us, you should find the necessary details there. Other already staged changes went live right along, e.g. our updated schedules page at

izzyondroid.org/about/resource…

"One down, more to go" – so focusing on the next steps now…

#IzzyOnDroid

I enjoy seeing that many reactions to my thread from yesterday, thanks guys, I appreciate yall spreading awareness about this. And I enjoy this kind of stuff on Mastodon, as I said a while back. Mostly it's just silently reading the TL, but when it gets fun like this. Then it's fun, and that in a good and human like way. I still feel like I have a good overview and the discussion is mostly productive.

I'm saying this because I feel it needs to be said, especially after seeing a thread yesterday that really irritated me. You can be the richest person alive or living in a box. You could have a clean bill of health. Guess what? You can become disabled at any moment. Could be 50 years from now, could be as you're reading my post and getting geared up to reply and start the ablism agenda. Disability. Does. Not. Care. It doesn't give a damn who you are or what your circumstances are. The only "good" thing about disability and I say good with sarcasm, is that disability doesn't exclude, like this world does. So the next time you're thinking about posting something like "be grateful" or some other garbage when someone with a disability says something about access or some other basic thing that you as an able-bodied person don't have to think about or fight for? Pump your brakes and remember that that disabled person could be you someday. Edited to add: This isn't just about that thread yesterday, was this prompted by it? Absolutely. People with disabilities are told to be grateful a lot and it's not right. What people spouting this nonsense forget is that there's a good chance they can and most likely will be disabled at some point in their lives and then oh noooo. you're being rude to me because I have a disability when someone gives them a taste of their own medicine. Access isn't something to be grateful for, people fought to pass section 504 and the Americans with Disabilities Act if you live in the states so we wouldn't have these problems, it shouldn't be a fight every day. There shouldn't be this excuse of oh well I'm able-bodied, I didn't know. That excuse should have died when the internet became a tool to use to gather information and yet here we are still fighting because of dumb ass comments like I saw on that thread. No we shouldn't show grattitude for something we can't use, whether it be an app or not. I show grattitude when I'm even remotely considered. The world isn't meant for folks like me and I can work around that, mostly. I have accepted that, but I'll be damned if I'm going to watch someone rub my face in that pile of shit and make me feel bad or like a burden because I spoke up.
This entry was edited (1 week ago)

reshared this

The new web-based WhatsApp Desktop app for Windows presents a significant accessibility issue for blind and visually impaired users. Currently, this version is incompatible with widely-used screen readers such as NVDA (NonVisual Desktop Access) and JAWS (Job Access With Speech). As a result, this essential communication tool becomes practically unusable for millions of individuals who rely on these assistive technologies for daily communication and interaction.


TFW you're so incompetent someone makes a change.org petition to get you to do your job.

What really happened at MTV on New Year's Eve, why the demise of MTV started in 1992, what we gained and lost -- and how to get switch on 33,000 videos worth of MTV right now.

cdm.link/forget-channel-closur…

because I keep biting off more than I can chew. I wanted to release a small utility first to get familiar again with #GNOME / #GTK / #Flatpak development.

also something that I need myself. a week worth of hacking.

introducing Bobby: a SQLite file viewer.

github.com/hbons/Bobby

#rust

This entry was edited (3 weeks ago)

reshared this

Leider sind mir jetzt die Ideen ausgegangen die Instanz wieder flotter zu bekommen. Ich hab zwar die ein oder andere Sache gefunden, aber den Durchbruch hat es bisher nicht gebracht. Ich hab jetzt schon etwas über 3 Tage meines Urlaubs da rein investiert und möchte jetzt den Rest des Urlaubs gerne genießen. chaos.social wird also mindesten ein paar Tage weiter hin und wieder slow.social sein. Genießt die Zeit der Entschleunigung und macht am Besten was schönes ohne Social Media.

A few days ago, a client’s data center (well, actually a server room) "vanished" overnight. My monitoring showed that all devices were unreachable. Not even the ISP routers responded, so I assumed a sudden connectivity drop. The strange part? Not even via 4G.

I then suspected a power failure, but the UPS should have sent an alert.

The office was closed for the holidays, but I contacted the IT manager anyway. He was home sick with a serious family issue, but he got moving.

To make a long story short: the company deals in gold and precious metals. They have an underground bunker with two-meter thick walls. They were targeted by a professional gang. They used a tactic seen in similar hits: they identify the main power line, tamper with it at night, and send a massive voltage spike through it.

The goal is to fry all alarm and surveillance systems. Even if battery-backed, they rarely survive a surge like that. Thieves count on the fact that during holidays, owners are away and fried systems can't send alerts. Monitoring companies often have reduced staff and might not notice the "silence" immediately.

That is exactly what happened here. But there is a "but": they didn't account for my Uptime Kuma instance monitoring their MikroTik router, installed just weeks ago. Since it is an external check, it flagged the lack of response from all IPs without needing an internal alert to be triggered from the inside.

The team rushed to the site and found the mess. Luckily, they found an emergency electrical crew to bypass the damage and restore the cameras and alarms. They swapped the fried server UPS with a spare and everything came back up.

The police warned that the chances of the crew returning the next night to "finish" the job were high, though seeing the systems back online would likely make them move on. They also warned that thieves sometimes break in just to destroy servers to wipe any video evidence.

Nothing happened in the end. But in the meantime, I had to sync all their data off-site (thankfully they have dual 1Gbps FTTH), set up an emergency cluster, and ensure everything was redundant.

Never rely only on internal monitoring. Never.

#IT #SysAdmin #HorrorStories #ITHorrorStories #Monitoring

This entry was edited (1 week ago)
in reply to Uriel Fanelli

@uriel ✋ worked for years for an ISP/datacenter whose primary datacenter space was in the first level of our office building. We had only one service for the building. It's technically possible to get two, but it would be from the same power company... so when the drunk driver crashed into the transformer and took out our power in winter it would have taken out both anyway. That actually caused a power surge that destroyed our transfer switch which is another problem that having two services wouldn't have solved. We did have diesel backup generators though

We didn't even have diverse entrances into the building for our fiber for a long long time either. But we were definitely a datacenter. (my brother still works there; nothing has really changed except increased bandwidth)

I have never heard of any rules or regulations that require a "datacenter" to have two buildings and independent power. Sounds like something someone made up...

in reply to feld

@uriel there are different "Tiers" of datacenters though, which is probably what people get confused about:

copy/pasted definitions from the first search hit:

Tier 1: A data center with a single path for power and cooling, and no backup components. This tier has an expected uptime of 99.671% per year.

Tier 2: A data center with a single path for power and cooling, and some redundant and backup components. This tier offers an expected uptime of 99.741% per year.

Tier 3: A data center with multiple paths for power and cooling, and redundant systems that allow the staff to work on the setup without taking it offline. This tier has an expected uptime of 99.982% per year.

Tier 4: A completely fault-tolerant data center with redundancy for every component. This tier comes with an expected uptime of 99.995% per year.

We would have been a Tier 2

Alright, so. I am done having my ability to do my job inhibited by my screen reader not being able to handle the fact that I have a lot of text coming into my terminal at once very frequently. So, @NVAccess what's it going to take to get this prioritized on the roadmap? Personally speaking I would up my donation to $50 a month at least to fix this, it genuinely takes so much away from my daily productivity as a professional software engineer. Others feel free to join in, maybe money talks where lots of your users don't.

reshared this

in reply to Quin

Hi, I just experienced with Codex. It's genuinely prohibiting my work with NVDA and Windows because by the time Codex reaches 30% context window left at the status line, NVDA freezes for 2 or 3 minutes at a time with how it redraws the terminal screen. I need to control+C my work and restart the session with the unique Codex ID again to get it to behave. Then It'll work for say, 5 or 6 more commands, but then the Codex output, which includes thinking and commands run, really janks NVDA performance. Quite frankly this is unacceptable and a huge daily irritation that needs a prioritized fix. @NVAccess
This entry was edited (1 week ago)
in reply to Brandon

@serrebi Think there was a reason I stopped using it. Maybe because of no paste command? Not sure. Maybe it does it have it, will definitely give it a go. I think Window titles too, with the console host it didn't write the title of my SSH host into the window's title bar? I know there was a reason I switched away from it to terminal though. @TheQuinbox @NVAccess
in reply to Jage

@Jage Yeah, old terminal does work a lot better but you lose the ability of scrolling. That's what it was, that's right. Now I know. So if I want to copy more than the last page of text to the clipboard with NVDA +F9 to NVDA and F10 (markers), I cannot with the older console host. It only will show you the page up / page down scrollbar whereas the newer terminal lets NVDA read the entire text buffer. Sigh. What a trade-off. @TheQuinbox @NVAccess
in reply to Brandon

@serrebi Ahahaha try to do a dir/b in your \window\system32 directory with that addon and watch NVDA horribly, horribly lag, can't even alt+tab away until like 10 seconds later. Wow. So it essentially reintroduces much of the same lag but maybe not as bad. The problem for me is that a lot of build commands in dev environments generate noisy output like that. Codex for sure can, not to mention it having a countdown timer that updates along with the output. Toolchains like cmake, various linters, Node, all of it can really generate output similar to a dir/b on your system32. I know it's a lot of fast scrolling output, but I do think in those cases NVDA should know that a bunch of text is coming in and only refresh buffer on a timed interval you can set, say, every 3 seconds it reads the last line but ignores any incoming text from refreshing it until no new pieces are scrolling into the terminal. I know that's a lot of refactor but ultimately it will need to happen. @Jage @TheQuinbox @NVAccess
in reply to Brandon

Hey, I appreciate you trying and giving ideas for this, it helps still :) The add-on at least makes the older console host better and I didn't even know of it until now, so that's somethin'. There's just more work @NVAccess will need to put into making this better because as much as there were tried UIA improvements to the terminal experience it's clear that this needs to be a bigger refactor. Not one mention of "terminal" or "console" on nvaccess.org/post/nvda-roadmap… - why? @Jage @TheQuinbox
This entry was edited (1 week ago)