To jsem netušil, že mi kamarád tak podrobně luxuje stravu. Ten detail na konci není chyba v záznamu...ano, vyválel jsem se 🤦
#cyklistika
Mimochodem, jak jsme před časem s @mireeek zmiňovali #strava, má někdo zájem se tam (s)družit?

Whoa! I really need a new phone. This is as warm as it is summer, and it most definitely is not anymore. Because I am wearing a top, and it's quite cold now. It might get warmer, though, but autumn is definitely here. Still need a new phone. It's ghost typing sometimes, or not responding. Although I can't see any visible signs of swelling, to be fair. Maybe my case's rubber thing is just, crooked but it should take the phone's shape. I should try fitting it into my older case and see how that goes in the long run. Decisions... More like me not wanting to spend money, and although the battery is at 83% it's barely acceptable. It's gotten issues even before being at 80% at this point, with one or 2 new os versions supported, I think it's new phone time. I dislike my bank numbers going down, but it is what it is.

📣 Do-It-Blind (DIB) online Besprechung am Montag, 22. September, um 19:00 Uhr. Du bist eingeladen! bbb.metalab.at/rooms/joh-szv-o… Wöchentlich am Montag besprechen wir neue Formen der digitalen und inklusiven Zusammenarbeit. Mach mit! 🛠️ #make #blind #inklusion

There'll be #LibreOffice-focused talks at the Open Source Conference 2025 in Luxembourg, on October 1: blog.documentfoundation.org/bl… #foss #OpenSource
in reply to Eugene

Thanks, this could be added to the documentation if you feel like writing a pull request for it. :)
I am surprised it took so long to build the rust dependency. There are also some C dependencies used by pyrofork (the telegram lib we use), so it's probably not 100% rust's fault.
I am also surprised you had to install so many py313-xxx dependencies, since you end up calling `pip`, this should take care of installing them. (but I don't know anything about netbsd, so I may be wrong)
in reply to Nicoco

@nicoco
> I am surprised it took so long to build the rust dependency. There are also some C dependencies used by pyrofork

Aha, this probably describes why I had two peaks on the graph. The first is 30 minute building of Rust dependency, which I saw in the console. And the second, lower, for 20 minutes was for some C dependency, when I was away from the console. At least, looks like so.

It was so long because I an have Intel Atom N2800 CPU and 2 Gb RAM in this machine :drgn_hyper:

Also this was a reason to preinstall some python dependencies (and dependencies of dependencies) from NetBSD packages — I tried to reduce time in pip, downloading and preparing everything :drgn_blush_giggle:

in reply to Nicoco

I recheck this and yes — pip reinstall some packages, when it need another versions, which don't match with versions from NetBSD repo. But most of the packages just reused — pip writes that "requirement already satisfied" (see the screenshot №1).

And it writes one compliant — at the end of installation, about possible system break after it was running from root user (on the screenshot №2)

P.S. As I see pip downloads only: slidgram, pyrofork, slidge, slidge-style-parser, pyaes, pymedia-pyrofork, PySocks, tgcrypto-pyrofork, python-magic, slixmpp, thumbhash, aiodns, pyasn1, pyasn1_modules, pycares.

This entry was edited (4 weeks ago)

Току-що разбрах, че`апъл риселърите дават грешна информация за рам паметта в етикетите на продуктите си. Браво, поздравления на тях. Само, че не ми се пише обратна връзка точно в почивния ми ден от работа. Ще пиша утре. Така де, освен ако айфон еър няма намаление на рам паметта за ЕС, не виждам защо ще напишат това: Смартфон Apple iPhone Air, 8GB, 256GB, Light Gold - MG2N4ZD/A
in reply to aaron

Oh? I thought they do. Maybe. But you might be right. I watched the event, so if they mentioned something there, but then I've watched so many videos after, that I don't remember who said what anymore. I might be buying that air though, one camera only is appealing to me, plus good thin, light phone, so it'll be an upgrade from my 13 pro, which is really badly about to kick the bucket do to battery.

well well, 5th time is the charm. I ran Mist world without Sapi and the NVDA speech dispatcher shim, and also had to do some work with SSL certs, and then boom. Wine32 can launch Mist World (even portable!) I practically copied a lot of techniques from Audiogames manager, like lowering the Heap size. Boom. Now it's in Linux. If only I had a good Linux masto client, hmm.

Hackers (1995) is a film I somehow never saw until now—wild, considering I lived through the real events it riffs on. Only 30 years later did I finally sit down to watch it.

This is a film I should’ve been more familiar with, seeing how it really cuts close to home. And I know some of you might find it unlikely that Hackers has real-world connections, but I’m telling you the truth.

The whole thing about free long distance was real. Back then we called it blue boxing. And in 1988, a young university student released what wasn’t exactly a virus but came to be known as the Morris Worm. It shut down a big chunk of the early internet. So while the movie exaggerates with a 12-year-old wunderkind, the inspiration was there.

Several characters were analogues to real people. Joey was based on a guy known as Fry Guy. And I’m pretty sure Nikon, the Black hacker in the movie, was based on John Threat—who in the 80s and 90s went by the handle Corrupt. I actually know John—great guy.

And yes, a lot of cybercrime investigations were really handled by the Secret Service. People forget their original purview was financial crime. Protecting the president came later.

So I’m shocked it took me until yesterday to actually see this movie. I remember it being a big deal—it touched youth culture and fashion. But let me tell you, hackers didn’t dress like that. Not before the movie came out. We were computer science nerds in labs. Nobody thought hacking or phreaking was cool.

Then overnight, with the movie’s leopard prints, fur, and pink neon side holsters, suddenly computer nerds were “the coolest kids in school.” Angelina Jolie helped with that one—plenty of girls suddenly wanted to get into computer science.

The plot is simple. A bunch of teenagers access file systems remotely, one stumbles onto something bigger, and suddenly they’re caught in a cyber-security conspiracy. The tagline nailed it: “Their only crime was curiosity.”

But the bad guy? Come on. A multimillion-dollar corporation hires as its CSO a dude who insists on being called “The Plague”? And the Secret Service wants to work with him instead of arrest him? No CSO walks into a boardroom with a skateboard and demands everyone call him by his hacker handle. That is the most unbelievable part of the movie.

Well, that and the hacking itself. Real hacking is just terminals and text. In Hackers, it’s skyscraper file systems and sci-fi UIs. Fun to look at, but nothing like reality. Same with the VR headset The Plague uses. VR existed in the 90s, but it sucked. Cool as an idea, but nobody was actually doing anything with it.

Same goes for the laptops. In 1995, laptops didn’t have the horsepower or fast built-in modems for serious hacking—if they had modems at all. They were impractical bricks.

What the movie did predict, though, were translucent machines. Those became all the rage later with Apple’s iMacs. In the 90s, our machines were beige or sometimes black—never cool, never translucent. So that influence stuck.

Other details are hilarious in retrospect. At the end, all the kids run to phone booths to hack. Why? Anonymity? Not really—now people can see you standing in a booth, typing furiously.

I used to mess with phone booths as a kid, routing calls around the world just because I could. That was phreaking. And one of the characters even goes by “Phreak”—spelled with a PH—which is a nod to that world. But almost never did I bring a laptop into a phone booth, not with them being so heavy and lacking battery power.

I realize I’m not treating this as just a movie. Hard to do, because this was my life. I’ve been in the tech industry for decades, and watching this is like a cop watching Bad Boys or a doctor watching House. It’s a story first, accuracy second. They wanted hacking to look cool.

My life wasn’t that cool. I didn’t have Angelina Jolie hanging off my arm. No woman has ever been impressed with my technical skills. Trivia skills once got me laid—technical skills, never.

I can’t believe I waited 30 years to finally watch this film. I watched it with my kid. She liked it. Then she asked me if that’s really what the 90s were like. I had to tell her no. Sorry to disappoint you, kid. But yeah—what a trip.

@movies

This entry was edited (1 month ago)

Just thinking about how the money Canada spent on just one pipeline (TMX) could have bought every single Canadian an e-bike AND had billions left over.

Just let that sink in

Every adult and child, a free e-bike, and billions left over.

Instead we bought a pipeline.

Next we're gonna generationally invest in what? Solar? Micro-electric mobility? Battery tech? Agriculture? Health care? Kickstarting green industry?

Probably not. We're probably going to bankrupt the country for fossil fuel interests.

cbc.ca/news/politics/canada-ge…

#CDNPoli #fossilFuels

From charlie Angus:
MESSAGE TO #MAGA AMBASSADOR PETE HOEKSTRA
youtube.com/watch?v=88JhCxGbUF…
#USPOLI #fascism #authoritarianism #ElbowsUp
in reply to Darrell Hilliker 👨‍🦯♾️📡

Several machines:
1. Asus VivoBook S15, but with aluminum lid. bought two of them (actually one S15 for myself and one S14 for my wife) in 2019, still rocking. Good keyboard (S15 with numpad, S14 without but lighter and less bulky), quite a bearable sound card, doesn't spoil and influence USB sound (unlike a Dell I have).
2. Lenovo thinkPad. Reviewed by Jonathan Mosen and seen by my best friend, but needs to be chosen carefully, some generations are quite off performance-wise.
3. Framework: a modular DIY-style computer but can be ordered assembled already. Great keyboard, according to my best friend, a company with human face.

Amid Rise of RFK Jr., Officials Waver on Drinking Water Fluoridation — Even in the State Where It Started
---

As federal agencies review their guidance on fluoridation and the nation’s top health official calls fluoride “industrial waste,” state and local governments are pulling back on the practice, upending a decadeslong public health success story.
propublica.org/article/fluorid…

#News #Health #RFKJr #PublicHealth #Michigan #Water #Government

in reply to André Polykanine

@menelion
Vous posez d'importantes questions. Pour commencer par la fin, la tragédie de la Shoah est — évidemment ? — dans tous les esprits, et il n'est pas question d'en permettre une quelconque réplique. Du point de vue politique, je ne crois pas à la possibilité de la dissolution du Hamas, ni à l'effectivité de l'emprisonnement de ses chefs. Comme dans tout processus de paix, des ennemis jurés vont devoir se serrer la main et d'autres vont devoir veiller que personne n'essaye d'en croquer une ou deux au passage.

> Some of the selling in 1929, however, was not the usual stuff. The men featured in Sorkin’s book, usually Ivy League establishment WASPs, come across as smug, priggish and unshakably self-righteous. They engaged in behavior that you could not get away with today, and — frankly — that they knew was shady even then. Just one example: Elite investors and bankers would form investment pools to “paint the tape” by trading with one another to generate enthusiasm for a stock before selling into the froth.

Could not get away with today? You can see them trading back and forth to manipulate prices today. It was well documented for GME where it was blatant to try to control the price

Humans really will pack bond with anything won't they ?

mastodon.green/@gerrymcgovern/…

in reply to Quixoticgeek

The wild thing about what is being discovered about the mental health effects of LLM chatbots, is back when I was an extremely depressed grad student, I actually thought about making such a chatbot using the then start of the art statistical language generators, and concluded that it would be deeply harmful and unethical to actually make because of the Eliza effect and my own gut feeling on what that sort of thing would have done to my own precarious mental health at the time.

#AndroidAppRain at apt.izzysoft.de/fdroid/?radd=1… today brings you 13 updated and 1 added apps:

* Sensa Gram: Stream Android sensor data over UDP with minimal latency 🛡️

Further, 7 #Magisk modules have been updated at apt.izzysoft.de/magisk

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