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Tak když mám konečně po dlouhé době volno a chci vyrazit na kolo, tak mě chytnou záda. #wtf
#wtf
in reply to Archos

tak to je čas dnes sednout na kolo s cruiser řídítky a jet o 10 kmh pomalejc 🙂 ale to silnička člověk asi slyšet nechce :D
in reply to cozechcescelo

@cozechcescelo
Já mám jen silničku, v plánu ještě jedno kolo je, ale musím chvíli vydržet.
in reply to Archos

ja, prave proto, aby me nechytly venku zada, jsem jel indoor. Sice me ted nebolej zada, zato me boli neco uplne jinyho.


X is deprecated, migrate to

  • Mastodon (40%, 8 votes)
  • Wayland (60%, 12 votes)
20 voters. Poll end: in 3 weeks

in reply to Sylvia

Heh! Needed to read that 3 times to get it 🤣 Migrated many years ago already :awesome:


I got my new Ableton Move yesterday. The other one gets returned on Monday. So, for the short time I can do it, I put both of them on the floor, linked them together using Ableton Link, made a crappy complimentary sequence on both of them, and recorded this silly thing.
in reply to Patrick Perdue

lol, considered getting one of those for my partner but wasn't sure how accessible the tools were particularly if you're on Mac but Windows. Very nifty though
This entry was edited (4 days ago)
in reply to Tamas G

It doesn't matter too much, since the screen reader is currently web-based. It does work a little better out-of-the-box with Voiceover on either Mac or iOS compared to NVDA, but thanks to some code from @tspivey that makes interrupting of regions way, way nicer, I prefer using it with NVDA now. No idea how Jaws does it.
I tried it with Talkback/Google Chrome, and it's much less nice there.
This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to Tamas G

@Tamasg I don't think it matters? The screen reader output is done via webpage ARIA Live Regions, so if you can get Mac to do that in a timely fashion, you're good to go as far as I know.
in reply to Timothy Wynn

@twynn oooh yeah, I heard the 34-minute overview Onj did on it, quite impressive but also a bit steep from say, a standard stylophone or something much more simple like a synth/looping device as such. Although the flexibility of pads and track layouts being so easy to make are both tempting upsides so for sure considering them the more I hear of it, like that production too.
in reply to Tamas G

Speaking of the Stylophone:
I got one of those for Christmas a few years ago, and was disappointed to discover that it is not a true synth anymore like the originals. It now plays tiny little samples and has aliasing. BOOOOOO!
This entry was edited (3 days ago)


Jak dostat na Mastodon jiné uživatele, než programátory? #anketa #ankety

  • geneticky modifikované catgirls (30%, 11 votes)
  • programátorky? (19%, 7 votes)
  • zrovnoprávníme umělou inteligenci! (2%, 1 vote)
  • je potřeba efektivněji kazit mládež (27%, 10 votes)
  • vytvořit spekulativní .social bublinu (5%, 2 votes)
  • propagace Mastodonu na Tiktoku (25%, 9 votes)
  • samolepky v hospodách na WC (47%, 17 votes)
  • je to marný (22%, 8 votes)
  • mě to takhle vyhovuje (36%, 13 votes)
36 voters. Poll end: 1 day ago

This entry was edited (4 days ago)
in reply to xChaos

@xChaos Já, diagnostikovaný jakožto coder, se počítám mezi programátory taky?


Almost done preparing the @loops Android APK!

While we'll target the Google Play Store for Android users, I would love to also support F-Droid with the goal to get into @IzzyOnDroid

That means I'll have to open source the mobile app, but that is already a goal

Laugh all you want, there are few open source TikTok alternatives because few see beyond monetization and when removed, you are left with pure creativity and community-driven content.

Excited to see what we'll build together!

#loops

in reply to IzzyOnDroid ✅

The APK is currently 34MB, but I can slim that down further.

It was over 160MB earlier this evening 😅

in reply to dansup

160 MB 🙈 Yeah, those 34 MB are more like it. Well, we'll cross that bridge when we come to it. I'm confident now that the size won't be a show-stopper, thanks!


Grass is pretty amazing.

I was out at the farm, doing the regular fall chores and prepping beds for garlic, when my glasses lens fell out. The screw is, of course, gone. But I need my glasses to drive. Enter a natural material that's abundant, strong, flexible and able to hold a knot.

It got me home. Thanks, grass.
#grass #nature #AnyLandingYouWalkAwayFrom

in reply to Ian Rose

#eyegrasses Day 4 update

(To be read in the voice of German filmmaker Werner Hertzog)

At first, I found the blade of grass to be a simple solution to a problem. A satisfying answer to a question asked by circumstance. Then it became, I admit, something of an amusement. That was a fool's error. Now it is not me who laughs at the grass, but the grass which laughs cruelly at me. It sees me, and by extension all of humanity, stripped of our modern contrivances, naked before it, and it mocks us.

in reply to Ian Rose

The end of an era. On September 24, I used a blade of fresh grass to temporarily mend my glasses after one of the screws fell out in a hay field. I just hoped it would last the day.

Today, 39 days later, it finally started to slip, and I put a metal screw back into the hole. Thank you, blade of grass. You served me incredibly well. Amazing stuff, grass.

#eyegrasses #AllGoodThings



"ChatGPT-5 won’t be coming in 2025, according to Sam Altman – but superintelligence is ‘achievable’ with today’s hardware"

let's make Skynet finally 😎💀

in reply to Fred Brooker

SA mi príde ešte väčšia sľubotechna než Melón a to už je dosť čo povedať.


in reply to David Goldfield

I tried to subscribe to the podcast, but Pocket Casts wouldn't let me. It said that the file I importedwas invalid. I used the feed provided on the page linked in your post. Are you subscribed to it?
in reply to Jessica Dail

@KE8UPE I'm not subscribed to that podcast. I would reach out to the original provider since I just distribute the posts as they are written.



Welcome to the RB family, Soul Searching 🥳

apt.izzysoft.de/packages/com.g…

Soul Searching is an offline music application for Android 8 and above. It's a rework of the native mobile application Sweet Music using Jetpack Compose.

This was quite a journey fighting compression algorithms (Fedora using zlib-ng instead of zlib), but thanks to joint efforts and hard work of the author (thanks entername74!), it was finally made RB :awesome:

Btw: 313 apps / 26% now 😉

#reproducibleBuilds #IzzyOnDroid



Is My Smartphone or Smart Device Listening In on Me? askleo.com/is-my-smartphone-or…


Save on Litter-Robot Bundles for Cyber Monday and the Rest of December cnet.com/deals/save-on-litter-…


Blind Fedi, do you know of any accessible platform for hosting realtime trivia/quizzes? I was asked by someone who wants to organize trivia nights mainly for blind people over Zoom and have no experience with such services. The participation process is more important in terms of having to be accessible because the organizer will be sighted. Boosts appreciated #a11y #accessibility

reshared this

in reply to Sean Randall

@cachondo Huh I didn’t think of that, but the simplest solutions are the best. It wouldn’t be super flashy but worst case I’m pretty sure it would do what they want. :)
in reply to Pitermach

If they want something more substantial let me know and I can see about modifying a shared whiteboard I have kicking around






When you visit somewhere exotic, is there a standard souvenir that you try to buy, to remind you of that place? Stickers, lapel pins, spoons, beer mats, tea towels, postcard books?

For me it's dictionaries. This turned out to be not so wise a choice when I visited six European countries in 2015.

in reply to Cat Lady Kydia Music

It’s surprising and disappointing how many souvenir shops have Xmas ornaments that are themed to the location, but then I check the label and it’s made in China. 😑
in reply to Cat Lady Kydia Music

@KydiaMusic I always try to buy from someone that is actively making what they are selling. It’s more authentic and supporting people that need the money.


Today I am at #OpenAlt. Listening @marcel_kolaja speaking about technologies and regulations
This entry was edited (4 days ago)



Published some notes on Docling, a rather nice MIT licensed Python PDF document / table extraction library from IBM simonwillison.net/2024/Nov/3/d…
in reply to Simon Willison

How does the Markdown output from Docling compare with the HTML that you've gotten out of Gemini for PDF documents? Does Docling do a good job of recognizing headings, lists, etc.?
in reply to Matt Campbell

@matt I tried it on two documents so far and it looked reasonable, but I've not done a remotely robust comparison of it yet


—¡Todos los políticos son iguales!
—Vale, pues vamos a votar a los comunistas.
—No, a esos no.

in reply to David Kredba

Moc hezká fotka, sice taková pražská klasika, ale to se neokouká a s mlhou to je ještě větší paráda.



I must not trust polls.
Polls are the mind-killer.
Polls are the little-deaths that bring both false hope and false doom.
I will ignore the polls.
I will permit them to pass over me and through me.
And when they have gone past, I will turn the inner eye to see their path.
Where the polls have gone there will be nothing.
Only votes will remain.

Or something.
#uspol



My mom's workaholic tendencies are rubbing off on me :(


Wouldn't it be great if screen reader vendors like @freedomscientific or @NVAccess could somehow offer ElevenLabs voices for their products, even if it meant users paying for an optional subscription. That would be truly amazing. Would something like this require an AI PC?
This entry was edited (4 days ago)
in reply to David Goldfield

I'd love this possibility, provided the voices could be responsive enough. I use Vocalizer Nathan for JAWS and all of my iToys; enjoy having that consistency across all of my devices. Nathan is one of the better options available for both windows and Apple stuff, at least to my ears, but he's definitely got some pronunciation quirks that seemingly can't be fixed by pronunciation editors. So yes, if something more realistic and pleasant became available, I'd be interested for sure.



At one point in "The hero of ages" by Brandon Sanderson, Vin "says Lately I feel like my life is a book written in a language I don't know how to read." Oh God, how I feel this one.
in reply to Justin Ekis

You ready for wind and trooth? I can indentify with kal so damn much!
in reply to Carlos Blanco

@cublanco Not quite ready. trying to finish rereading everything before release day. I'm expecting quite a lot of cosmere crossover in Wind and truth. I know what you mean about kal. I really identify with Renarin.
in reply to Justin Ekis

I had completely forgotten just how incredibly beautiful the end of "The hero of ages" was. Sanderson is going to have a storming hard time ever topping that! Wow!
This entry was edited (2 days ago)


I am blown away by the ElevenLabs reader. It lacks many of the capabilities of Voice Dream Reader but for reading text files it's absolutely amazing. There are definite ways in which this app could be improved but as a basic text reader it's phenomenal.
in reply to David Goldfield

Yes, this applies to other languages as well, like for Portuguese here in Brazil.


For any of you lucky devils who got to play with Windows 3.1 what was it like? I wanna play with it but the last time I tried to install a virtual machine I couldn’t get speech working.
in reply to The Evil Chocolate Cookie

You'll definitely need a very early screen reader version to use Win3.1. For JAWS, I believe you'll need v1.0 or v2.0 as I think V3 dropped support for Win3.1. It was usable but I didn't really enjoy using it. It wasn't until Windows 95 came out when I really began enjoying using Windows.
This entry was edited (4 days ago)
in reply to David Goldfield

@DavidGoldfield I don’t intend on using it for anything serious, mainly because it just flat up probably couldn’t do it. I’m just a nerd and I want something to poke around with. I was thinking virtual machine that way if I blow it up. I just blow it up and I can rebuild it in like three clicks.


I recently completed the #DoctorWho novel "The Time Travelers" by Simon Guerrier. It's an original first Doctr novel with Ian, Barbara and Susan as the companions, likely taking place after the TV episode "Planet of Giants."
I absolutely loved this book for several reasons. First, it's a fact that many Doctor Who episodes of this era were simpler compared to many of the newer stories. I've always wanted to see a story with the first Doctor that was a bit more complex than what we got in the TV series and this book definitely does this, with time travel paradoxes being the central theme and how changes to history can create alternate timelines.
One of the things that has always annoyed me about Doctor Who, whether we're talking about the TV series, audio dramas or the books, is that no matter how interesting the plot is when the story starts out it more often than not winds up being about some alien being or race intent on taking over the planet/galaxy,universe, etc. You have such a broad canvas to work with, a series about an alien who can travel anywhere in time and space, and it often deals with yet another alien invasion. Don't get me wrong; I love a good Dalek or Cybermen story as much as any Whovian and I'm not saying this concept should be done away with. However, the stories which don't deal with an alien invasion are always memorable and refreshing to me and "the Time Travelers" is one such book, without a single menacing alien anywhere to be found. There are exceptions with references to a certain alien race taking up residence on a portion of Earth in an alternate timeline but this is hardly dealt with and I somehow missed it during my reading of the novel.
We also have a tasteful and reallistic exploration of Ian and Barbara's relationship, something which was not explored on the TV series but which was definitely acknowledged on a Big Finish audio. There's also a brief exploration of the fact that Susan is an alien and a certain aspect of her alien nature is briefly explored. This book, along with listening to some of the missing first Doctor TV stories, has given me a renewed appreciation of the original Doctor, along with the original companions.
Parts of the book did confuse me and, on occasion, I would pause and say, "OK, so what just happened?" However, that's OK; it was nice to have such weird and complex action dealing with alternate timelines in a first Doctor novel and I still highly recommend this book. I wish we had more first Doctor stories like this one.
This entry was edited (4 days ago)


The most recent Jerry Rig Everything video is deep, profound, poignant and worth a watch.
Americans, vote. Please, just vote.
youtu.be/nZftVjs-JdY?si=9mqKyU…


Perhaps it's a certain day, but I feel like capitulating as far as Meta glasses go. I mean, as a toy, they are fine., but I still can do so much more with my phone, and what's more important, get a higher quality feedback than what I get from Meta's AI. Oh yeah, the glasses are still cool for recording and listening to the music. Let's hope Apple will soon come up with their own... :)
in reply to Léonie Watson

@tink @JonathanMosen Leonie, I think it really dependss on the use case. How often do you travel on your own? I think the audio quality is quite nice for such a tiny form factor. You can take videos up to three minutes long with stereo audio as part of them. Meta AI is rather underwhelming, at least for my taste. I don't know why it is so. Perhaps Meta is saving resources given the wide use of glasses. (1/2)
in reply to victor tsaran

Of course, the integration with Insta, FB and Whatsapp may be important if you use these services. You cannot use Siri, etc. I'd say you should consider ordering them and trying out for yourself though. You can always return them. (2/2)
in reply to victor tsaran

You can use Siri if the glasses are paired to an iPhone. Both input and output for Siri are with the glasses when they are paired.
in reply to Jonathan Mosen

@JonathanMosen Thanks a lot. I stand corrected. I just don’t know why it did not occur to me to try Siri with the glasses on. I was just pulling out my phone every time I wanted to interact with Siri. O well, live and learn! Thanks a lot!
in reply to victor tsaran

@JonathanMosen That only works if your phone itself is listening and can hear you. In many cases, that won't be true; e.g. phone in pocket or bag. It is possible for Bluetooth headsets to invoke Siri themselves, but the Meta glasses don't seem to have a way to do that. I suspect that may be deliberate in order to drive traffic to the Meta assistant.
in reply to Jamie Teh

@jcsteh Interesting, I've not picked up on this because I have my iPhone in my pocket and it always just works when I use the invocation word.
in reply to Jonathan Mosen

@JonathanMosen Fascinating. Normally the wake word doesn't work if the iPhone's proximity sensor senses something. I guess it doesn't when it's in your pocket? It does here, heh.
in reply to Jamie Teh

@JonathanMosen Ah. Do you have Settings -> Accessibility -> Siri -> Always listen for Siri turned on by any chance? I don't. Turning that on might help this.
in reply to Jamie Teh

@jcsteh No I can honestly say it has always worked in my pocket. Glad to have such a cool, cooperative pocket! 📱No, the always listen setting is off.
in reply to Jonathan Mosen

@JonathanMosen Well, at least turning that setting on might help those of us with less cooperative pockets. I'll have to try it out.
in reply to Jamie Teh

@jcsteh @JonathanMosen Does the iPhone in pocket working with Siri have anything to do with hearing aids? They might act as headphones or something similar to having AirPods in.
in reply to Jonathan Mosen

@JonathanMosen @chinakow @jcsteh I tried summoning Siri from my phone in the pocket (without glasses on my face) and was not successful. However, when I put the glasses on, Siri seems to respond when the phone is in the proximity. Hmmm, interesting.
in reply to victor tsaran

@JonathanMosen @chinakow Heh, and earlier today I couldn't even get Siri to work with the glasses on even while physically holding the button on my phone, yet that has worked previously. 😕
in reply to Jamie Teh

@JonathanMosen @chinakow I just love how all of this tech works so reliably together. It's like these mega companies all get along swimmingly and the most important thing to them is that things work delightfully for users, regardless of walled gardens. Oh wait... sorry, must have been in an alternate universe there for a sec.
in reply to Jonathan Mosen

@JonathanMosen @jcsteh Still, Jonathan helped me in understanding that I can actually rely on Siri hearing me while in the pocket. As long as it works… :)
in reply to victor tsaran

@JonathanMosen Right, unless you're like me and your phone thinks it's covered when it's in your pocket, in which case you'll need to flip that option I mentioned.
in reply to Jamie Teh

@jcsteh @JonathanMosen Yep, Jamie, I guess I need to stand back and correct myself again. LOL I just took my iPhone father away from where I could not hear me and, sure enough, the Siri wake up words no longer worked. Meta stuff still worked as before. This sort of makes sense since the glasses were not tuned to understand Siri commands.
in reply to victor tsaran

@JonathanMosen Right, though it'd be nice if you could at least say "Hey Meta, phone assistant" or something.
in reply to victor tsaran

I travel a lot on my own, so the ability to use AIRA/WhatsApp for video calls using the glasses is the main appeal. You're right though, experimenting with a pair would be the best way to answer the question 😊
in reply to Charlotte Joanne

@Lottie @tink @JonathanMosen Ah, that’s a good point, but also a matter of taste. I wish there were not as big but a bit more stylish, like, say, some high-end Italian brands! lOL Having said that, Ray-ban is definitely a good compromise, especially considering the amazing tech built-in.


The Five Faces of Doctor Who, the multi-Doctor repeat season was broadcast 40 years ago today, on 2 November 1981. This fondly remembered run of repeats gave many fans the chance to enjoy stories from past Doctor’s that they’d never seen before for the first time! #DoctorWho
in reply to Paul Bowler

Considering its popularity, it's remarkable to me that the BBC rarely aired repeat episodes of #DoctorWho.
in reply to David Goldfield

@DavidGoldfield IKWYM, it still baffles me why they've never repeated the show on a regular basis, they seem to with just about everything else these days.


I have just downloaded the Reader from ElevenLabs. If you want a way to listen to audiobooks, get this app! Unlike Voice Dream Reader, I can't actually read what's on the screen with my Braille Display, but I love the voices and the way it reads. It is extremely accessible also.
in reply to Kelly Wickham

I've wanted to try the ElevenLabs Reader app for a while but after reading your post I decided to finally download it. I am very, very impressed. Thanks for reminding me about it. It's not perfect but for reading text and Epub files it's an improvement over Voice Dream Reader.
in reply to David Goldfield

@DavidGoldfield @technocounselor Have they improved VoiceOver accessibility? I was quite disappointed with that aspect when it was first released. On being free, based on a survey they sent me the other day, it looks like they are preparing to introduce a paid tier.


Has anyone here done any work on CSS parsers?

I am thinking of using github.com/keithamus/csslex as a base and going from there to learn more about CSS internals, but I admit I am Afraid of Doing Code Crimes and would like encouragment ha ha

in reply to Olu

not with that library in particular, but in librsvg I use a rust-based css lexer and parse properties with that. Writing the parsers is fun, a bit tricky sometimes. I do steal code from Servo from time to time. Happy to talk about it.


Oh the non believers among you re my toot about Woollybutt St!! I had to walk 5km there and back this . morning to bring you this .... It even has its own dedicated bus stop (@welshpixie)
This entry was edited (4 days ago)