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I'm thrilled to announce my first blog post on my homepage. Finally, after months of setting my site up, I now have acquired ✨content✨. In this one I share my experience as a volunteer for the matrix conference 2024. Thank you again for this opportunity @matrix @plainschwarz
10/10 would do it again

arti-s.com/post/volunteering-m…

This entry was edited (22 hours ago)


The History of Radio!

youtube.com/watch?v=HGT0D780rj…


in reply to Robin Frost

Oh, my heavens, I certainly remember him from WCAU back in the '80s. Thank you for alerting us.
in reply to David Goldfield

@DavidGoldfield Yes that one made me sad he was a very nice person so say all I know who met him.


[Podcast] AppleVis Extra 101: Future Echoes - In conversation with the team behind Echo Vision smart glasses applevis.com/podcasts/applevis…


Did you know undergrads at Oxford in 1335 were solving homework problems about objects moving with constant acceleration? This blew my mind.

As I explained yesterday, medieval scientists were deeply confused about the connection between force and velocity: it took Newton to realize force is proportional to 𝑎𝑐𝑐𝑒𝑙𝑒𝑟𝑎𝑡𝑖𝑜𝑛. But in the early 1300s, a group of researchers called the Oxford Calculators made huge progress in understanding objects that move with changing velocity.

They discovered something called the Mean Speed Theorem: an object moving at constant acceleration over some period of time goes just as far as if it were moving uniformly with the velocity it had at the middle instant of its motion!

That's really cool. But it gets better. They gave homework problems called 'sophisms' to the students of Merton College at Oxford. And in 1335, one of them named William Heytesbury wrote a book called 𝑅𝑢𝑙𝑒𝑠 𝑓𝑜𝑟 𝑆𝑜𝑙𝑣𝑖𝑛𝑔 𝑆𝑜𝑝ℎ𝑖𝑠𝑚𝑠, which gives us a look at what these problems were like. Some of them required students to know the Mean Speed Theorem!

Later in the 1300s, Nicolas Oresmus in Paris gave a picture proof of the Mean Speed Theorem. For example, he pointed out that the triangle ACG below has the same area as the rectangle ACFD.

Why did it take so long for Galileo to rediscover this stuff? How did the knowledge of the Oxford Calculators get lost?

plato.stanford.edu/entries/nic…
plato.stanford.edu/entries/hey…
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxford_C…

This entry was edited (22 hours ago)


From my Newsletter:

Mastering Git: Hidden Commands Every Developer Should Know

code.likeagirl.io/mastering-gi…



btw, the way the commodore 64 mastodon client (which is called "MOStodon", very clever...) works is you host a server on another computer using a python script and connect to the computer like you would with a BBS, which is pretty neat. it would be cool if someone made a web proxy that worked similarly


How to Upgrade to Fedora 41 from Fedora 40 linuxtoday.com/blog/how-to-upg…


If you were in the #Dropbox #layoff today (or just otherwise on the #jobhunt):

I’m currently #hiring a Sr. Software Engineer with a strong focus on #Golang/Containerization and several engineers with #DevRel experience. All are remote positions within Americas time zones.

If that’s not you, I also offer LinkedIn profile optimization for fedi friends at no charge.

Here to help :blobfoxheartcute:



#XDC2024: The individual videos for each talk from this year's XDC are now available on our YouTube channel: youtube.com/xorgfoundation
This entry was edited (1 day ago)


I honestly couldn’t tell if this was a joke but it did make me want to bike past doing a loud monologue



who called it creating a new python package manager and not reinventing the wheel

reshared this



TFW you write lava in you D&D notes and realize you may have mispelled Java. Not really.

#dnd5e





Very often drivers yell at me something like "go ride a bike way". It's often on a road where there is no bike way nearby and there is no legal restriction for me riding the road.
But when there is a restriction for motorized vehicles, nobody cares. Like literally every day on this road.
That's what #cycling in #Prague looks like.


humor negro, negrísimo, la curiosidá mató al gato

Sensitive content

in reply to Marcos Simental 🇲🇽

humor negro, negrísimo, la curiosidá mató al gato

Sensitive content



The media just conceded on #CBC their relentless push to expel Justin Trudeau has failed. Can we now get back to the business of the whole foreign interference thing and how the leader of the opposition won’t get a security clearance while he has foreign agents in his cabinet*?
#cdnpoli #Canada



#fabulamurina (mouse story) 323
Minimus oculos rotundos et os subridens in peponi insculpit (Minimus carves round eyes and a smiling mouth into a pumpkin). Silvius cupit cultellum tractare, sed tata eum vetat (Silvius wants to handle the knife, but Daddy forbids him).

in reply to daniel:// stenberg://

Watch out for diamonds or other gemstones in the older layers near the bottom, from the digital mesoproterozoic age.
in reply to daniel:// stenberg://

Really the best visualization of this dataset so far!

I find it confusing that only even years like 2000, 2002, etc. are listed. Did you skip every 2nd year? If data for each two years is accumulated please write "2000-2001" in the key.

in reply to Daniel Böhmer

@dboehmer as said in the top, they are two-year segments. It's just a limit I decided on to keep the number of fields reasonable.
in reply to daniel:// stenberg://

Oh, I didn’t see/read this bit 🙈 Maybe that’s an indicator that this might be too subtle …
in reply to Daniel Böhmer

@dboehmer I wanted to keep the labels simple to reduce the amount of text, as it quickly becomes "heavy" otherwise. But yeah, I'll think of how to improve it.
in reply to daniel:// stenberg://

May a make two (edit: three) suggestions:

a) write "2000 f." for 2000–2001 like common for giving page numbers in citations.
(I just learned that "f." is for giving someone’s birthdate in Swedish 😁 )
en.wiktionary.org/wiki/f.#Adje…

b) Use "≤" or "≥" mathematical operators. As the key is most probably read from the top to the bottom maybe give the lower number year instead like
- ≥ 2023
- ≥ 2021
- ≥ 2019
- …
- < 2000

c) short form 2000/01 to 2023/24

This entry was edited (10 hours ago)
in reply to daniel:// stenberg://

You’re so quick! I find this better than take 4, for sure.

If you want to minimize text space I’d consider this the optimal solution.

But to be honest I think it’s a bit too technical even—for software people. it takes a moment to understand this means each color represents two years …

More than ½ h after posting my suggestions I tend to think option C (that I added to the post) might be the most common notation: just "2023/24". Don’t you think? At least Germans use that a lot.

This entry was edited (10 hours ago)
in reply to Daniel Böhmer

@dboehmer unfortunately I think that version gets too messy, probably because too many numbers. Without being crystal clear what it means. I think I'll stick with the ≥ for now.
in reply to daniel:// stenberg://

@dboehmer for me, reading the graph part makes everything very clear. Like, the year number is just a point in time, at the transition between two years (e. g. black covers 2010-2012).

It would also be possible to work with dashes, like saying "up to 2002", though that needs a different numbering then:

- 2000
- 2002
- 2004
...



"Matt Mullenweg says Automattic is ‘very short-staffed’ amid WordPress vs. WP Engine drama"

MAYBE THAT IS THE CONSEQUENCE OF YOU DIPSHIT FIRING EVERYONE WHO'S NOT A FUCKING SYCOPHANT?

Goddammit. What a dumbass.

techcrunch.com/2024/10/30/matt…



"A good sysadmin always carries around a few feet of fiber. If he ever gets lost, he simply drops the fiber on the ground, waits ten minutes, then asks the backhoe operator for directions."


Congrats to the @thunderbird team and especially @cketti on the Thunderbird Android release! 🎉

It's been a while since the Prototypefund [1] days and me complaining about the white icon background during 36C3 and being responsible for the pink icon background about an hour later [2]. (Which caused a steady supply of angry users after this was released as a stable version 1.5 y later.)

Sorry but not sorry😅.

[1] prototypefund.de/project/jmap-…
[2] github.com/thunderbird/thunder…

This entry was edited (22 hours ago)


Question for #screenreader users: do text emotes like kaomoji generally cause your tools to read out noise or annoying nonsense, or does it just not pronounce it? I am wondering whether it's okay to use them or whether I should go back to good old emoji (that, to my knowledge, get properly read out).

Like this one:
˚‧º·(˚ ˃̣̣̥᷄⌓˂̣̣̥᷅ )‧º·˚

#accessibility #totallyblind

in reply to NV Access

@NVAccess That's very enlightening, thank you! I suppose it's not really a solvable problem with dictionaries, because as opposed to standard smileys like colon and uppercase D - this one :D - Kaomoji are very, very varied and can be personalized.

I am wondering whether some traditional machine learning classifier could be good at detecting what is and what isn't a smiley.

in reply to Lianna

Since Microsoft do definte a whole list of Kaomoji, if Unicode or someone even just defined descriptors for those, we could perhaps incorporate it as a starting point. Although as you say, as soon as you change one slightly, it will break that. So it may be something solveable with machine learning, perhaps as an NVDA add-on (there are several for image description and other things, so it would certainly fit) - definitely interesting!


Well, I went out for 2 minutes and was about to strangle one of the kids, so I went back in. I'm sorry, but a 9-year-old doesn't get to play blind games with me. My wife wasn't around, but she sure gave him a lecture when she came back out. I have tons of patience with kids, but when they try tricks, only because I'm blind? It angers me.
in reply to Scary Martin

lol that was one of the most common annoying ones for years in HS / college! Or when even people you thought were friends who wouldn't trick you would do the hiding one, trying to notice if you can sense their presence with your special super-sonic blind hearing. xD
This entry was edited (22 hours ago)
in reply to Tamas G

@Tamasg when people ask me how many fingers am I holding up, I just say one, and put up my middle finger, and say this one. lol. I wouldn't do that to a kid, but there you go.


Unlike iPhone 16 Models, Apple's M4 Macs Lack Wi-Fi 7 Support macrumors.com/2024/10/30/m4-ma…


Long post

Sensitive content

This entry was edited (23 hours ago)


#curl source code age, raw line numbers

Next I'll see if I can make a version where the early code stays at the bottom of the graph.

#curl
in reply to Jake Vossen

@jvossen I'm writing a tiny custom script for this that generates all the data, then I render graph from that using gnuplot. I have them all in a git repo, but I'm still polishing these ones.

Others have mentioned this existing tool for this: github.com/src-d/hercules



howtogeek.com/mistakes-beginne…

10 Beginner Linux Command Line Mistakes:

- Assuming You Know Your Location
- Reckless Use of Elevated Privileges
- Skipping Package Updates Before Installing
- Unintentionally Overwriting or Deleting Files
- Confusing Path Types
- Ignoring Built-in Help Resources
- Not Using Shortcuts to Speed Up Navigation
- Dismissing Error Messages and Logs
- Neglecting to Make Backups Before Making Changes

Each item above is explained in the article & how to avoid it.

#linux



> As CEO, I take full responsibility for this decision and the circumstances that led to it, and I’m truly sorry to those impacted by this change.

So you firing yourself?



Something worth reiterating: The fediverse consists of people, no algorithms here. Anything you see happens because someone took the time to interact with a post (e.g. boost) or typed out a post or a reply.

A lot of posts deserve attention, so don't be afraid to boost or favorite what you read Favoriting shows that someone out there actually read the post and liked it. Engagement is key.

Be kind and interact away!

Мира🇧🇬🇭🇺 reshared this.



Starlink Mini review: super compact and light, can be powered by a small power bank, installs quickly at new locations, but Wi-Fi range is sometimes a concern (Thomas Ricker/The Verge)

theverge.com/24275688/starlink…
techmeme.com/241030/p31#a24103…



Seamless migration from any VMware environment to Amazon FSx for NetApp ONTAP and Amazon EC2
aws.amazon.com/blogs/storage/s… #aws #blog
#blog #aws


Apple launches entry MacBook Pro 14-inch with M4 chip, 16GB RAM, new Center Stage camera, more 9to5mac.com/2024/10/30/apple-l…


How to Install Seafile Self-Hosted Cloud Storage on Debian 12 lxer.com/module/newswire/ext_l…


I've been recently tinkering with #Python to build myself a better RSS feed experience with Youtube and GitHub feeds.

hamatti.org/posts/i-built-cust…

#blogging



in Mac OS 15.1, I was casually reading system information app with VoiceOver. I navigated into the hardware overview text area, then back to the list, and chose "software." here's where things got strange. Arrowing around in the text area would read me the hardware overview in one single chunk, but listening to it upon focus read the new content. So I ask: What the heck is going on with VoiceOver?
What would cause the virtual buffer and focused content to go out of sync like this?
This entry was edited (1 day ago)