Bored this Sunday? Use your downtime to learn How to Synth! Dive into the wonderful world of making weird synthesizer noises with my simple, hands-on guide. Still a work in progress, but there's plenty there to get you started!
Bored this Sunday? Use your downtime to learn How to Synth! Dive into the wonderful world of making weird synthesizer noises with my simple, hands-on guide. Still a work in progress, but there's plenty there to get you started!
Паглядзіце дакументалку пра НРМ.
youtu.be/e49klkZZHXw?si=NE1GHO…
Гэта сапраўднае кіно пра культавы беларускі гурт NRM. Яны пачыналі на аскепках свабоды і Мроі, вялі партызаншчыну і запісвалі найвядомейшыя песні ў гісторыі ...YouTube
> we used to drink in the office and datacenter regularly
did you guys ever get too rekt and start pulling ethernet cables out for 1000ms at a time? that's the sort of thing i would possibly consider. "oops latency, burp"
feld likes this.
They killed Ian Watkins lol
Shiv vs Pedo Prisoner
for you hax0rs: Google "AI" is currently vulnerable to prompt injection by "ASCII smuggling"—this is when you convert ASCII to Unicode tag characters, rendering them invisible to the user but visible to the LLM. here's how it's done:
gist.github.com/Shadow0ps/a7dc…
here's someone using this to make Google Calendar display spoofed information about a meeting:
firetail.ai/blog/ghosts-in-the…
others say summarising functions were affected too, so I wonder if you can add tag texts to your website and poison the Google so-called "AI summary" anti-feature.
ChatGPT filters out tag character but, usefully, Google is refusing to, so unless they get a backlash this might be a fun exploit to explore: pivot-to-ai.com/2025/10/11/goo…
Researcher Viktor Markopoulos discovers ASCII Smuggling bypasses human audit via Unicode, enabling enterprise identity spoofing and data poisoning on Gemini & Grok.Alan Fagan (FireTail)
Well, well, I guess this had to happen eventually. Got my first music offer rejected by a film studio working on a documentary because "we got this covered by AI, but thank you very much for your kind offer."
The rejection itself doesn't really make me sad, this is perfectly normal and especially now the competition is huge. What makes me sad though is that this is a pretty big name in the industry, so it'll only get worse from here on. I sincerely hope I'm wrong.
Let’s uncover the secrets of the NATO phonetic alphabet! 🌏 And you can get an exclusive NordVPN deal + 4 months extra here → https://nordvpn.com/robwordsvpn...YouTube
For people working with media and PR, it's quite easy to spot AI generated press releases. AI output is wordy, repeating to the point of annoying. Without human revision, it's hard to read.
But even before the AI era, many press releases are full of jargons that are quite difficult to read.
The reason is simple and cleverly pointed out by this article I read on PR News Releaser: “Think Like a Reader” is the Best Press Release Strategy -- ... they’re written for the wrong audience... disconnect between what companies want to say and what readers actually want to read.
How true is that.
Even highly educated people would appreciate a press release written in simple words and clear explanations, not just generic self-praising, self-promotion sentences.
The article also provide clever strategies on how to convince your boss that writing to the reader is the right way to compose a press release. Check it out.
Most press releases die when its online or land in inboxes. They sit unread, unshared, and ultimately ineffective—not because they lack newsworthy information…News PR (PR News Releaser)
The Register reports: Over the past two years, the open source curl project has been flooded with bogus bug reports generated by AI models.developers.slashdot.org
Sonic is gonna get some knuckles
scworld.com/news/sonicwall-con…
A deeper analysis found that all the firewall configurations were compromised, not just 5% of users as first reported.Steve Zurier (SC Media)
RE: infosec.exchange/@codinghorror…
One guard always tells the truth.
The other guard always lies.
I am being slightly disingenuous here.
Some of the many advantages of LLMs over SO is that the LLM is friendly and fast.
That's why Kids Today™ prefer Discord to forums. Someone replies immediately. You don't have to wait for an answer and check back.
LLMs are rarely rude. It can be terrifying to make yourself vulnerable and admit in public you don't know something basic. Especially when humans are mean and judgemental.
Encryption is a human right.
Everyone knows the weekends are the best time to push important updates, right?
From Jeep Wrangler forum: Did anyone else have a loss of drive power after today's OTA Uconnect update?
On my drive home I abruptly had absolutely no acceleration, the gear indicator on the dash started flashing, the power mode indicator disappeared, an alert said shift into park and press the brake + start button, and the check engine light and red wrench lights came on. I was still able to steer and brake with power steering and brakes for maybe 30 seconds before those went out too. After putting it into park and pressing the brake and start button it started back up and I could drive it normally for a little bit, but it happened two more times on my 1.5 mi drive home.
Source: x.com/StephenGutowski/status/1…
More here: jlwranglerforums.com/forum/thr…
and here: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4…
Did anyone else have a loss of drive power after today's OTA Uconnect update? On my drive home I abruptly had absolutely no acceleration, the gear indicator on the dash started flashing, the...JesseT (Jeep Wrangler Forums (JL / JLU) -- Rubicon, 4xe, 392, Sahara, Sport - JLwranglerforums.com)
Oops, forgot to let our followers here know that we released 0.87.1 last week! This version includes a fix for a small bug that crept into 0.87.0 that prevented syncing of weightlifting workouts on Garmins.
But the bigger news is that we also managed to get reproducible builds at F-Droid in place in time for this release!
As usual, more details in our blog post: gadgetbridge.org/blog/release-…
You mention that you're publishing both your self-signed and the F-Droid signed build on F-Droid? Do you have more details about how that works and what you had to do to set that up?
I've wanted to have Catima be RB on F-Droid without breaking existing updates for quite a while, but I didn't really manage to make any progress when trying to talk to the @fdroidorg team, so I'd love to know how you got this working :)
My apps (#TinyWeatherForecastGermany & #imagepipe) are reproducible on #izzydroid , but I never switched on #fdroid ...
We're looking for interesting questions around @matrix , its history, its technology, statistics and fun facts for The #MatrixConf2025 Pub [quizzz]!
Do you have suggestions? Please share them with the conference team in the following form: forms.gle/6tbry4Zdzb1fYVfx5 or contact us at #events-wg:matrix.org
Do you have any good [matrix] history, stat or fun questions to ask during the Unconference Pub [quizzz] ? It should be nice to play within a crowd of multiple people guessing the correct answer.Google Docs
The missile defense system. Anus Tangerinus want us to join, so we can pay for it. It's not to protect us.
Our PM is an appeaser. Like Chamberlain.
Matt Campbell reshared this.
@menelion The part I find the most distressing is when someone has a really good idea, and then they try to get AI to do it, the AI claims to have implemented their idea (but hasn't: it can't), and then they think there's a problem with the idea.
These systems are the polar opposite of creativity.
You are partially correct, but this is an oversimplification of how an AI model, for example a LLM works. It can, and does, use data that it got during its training phase, but that's not the entire story, otherwise it'd be called a database that regurgitates what it was trained on. On top of the trained data there's zero-shot learning, for example to figure out a dialect of a language it hasn't been trained on, based on statistical probability of weights from the trained data, as well as combine existing patterns into new patterns, thus coming up with new things, which are arguably part of creativity.
What it can't do though is, and this is very likely what you mean, it can't go outside it's pre-trained patterns. For example, if you have a model that was trained on dragons and another model that was trained on motorcycles, if you combine those two models, they can come up with a story where a dragon rides a motorcycle, even though that story has not been part of its training data. What it can't do is come up with a new programming language because that specific pattern does not exist. So the other part of creativity where you'd think outside the box is a no go. But a lot of people's boxes are different and they are very likely not as vast as what the models were trained on, and that's how an AI model can be inspiring.
This is why a lot of composers feel that AI is basically going to take over eventually, because they will have such a vast amount of patterns that a director, trailer library editor, or other content creator will be satisfied with the AI's results. The model's box will be larger than any human's.
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@erion @menelion Most of the generative capabilities of an LLM come from linear algebra (interpolation), and statistical grammar compression. We can bound the capabilities of a model by considering everything that can be achieved using these tools: I've never seen this approach overestimate what a model is capable of.
"Zero-shot learning" only works as far as the input can be sensibly embedded in the parameter space. Many things, such as most mathematics, can't be viewed this way.
It never will, because modern LLMs are far more capable.
They rely on non-linear activation functions (like ReLU, GELU, etc.) after the linear transformations. If the network were purely linear, it could only learn linear relationships, regardless of its depth. The non-linearities are what allow the network to learn complex, non-linear mappings and interactions between inputs.
There's also scaling, arguably an internal world model, being context-aware (which is definitely not something linear). If anything, this would underestimate a model.
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Investigating the seahorse emoji doom loop using logitlens.vgel.me
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@erion A model having "a hundred or more layers" doesn't make anything I said less true. "Chain-of-thought reasoning" isn't reasoning. I absolutely can dismiss claims of "a model's intelligence", because I have not once lost this argument when concrete evidence has come into play, and people have been saying for years that I should.
Can you give me an example of something you think a "smaller model that came out in the last year" can do, that you think I would predict it can't?
Take a Gemma model for example, say 2b. Any linear prediction will not be able to predict how emergent capabilities will behave when faced with a complex task, simply because they don't work linearly, especially after crossing a scale threshold, rather than improving with each additional parameter.
You can see this as Gemma 2b can outperform larger models, which for you should not be possible. The model's intelligence is not a simple, additive function of its vector size, but a complex product of the billions of highly non-linear interactions created by the full architecture, making a purely linear prediction inadequate.
Humor me. I'd love to know for example how you can predict architectural efficiency and training alignment, which are both necessary to measure a model's intelligence accurately.
I am sure the quality of the linear space for example can be a good indication, but it's not enough.
It's not totally wrong, but I feel like maybe it's a slight oversimplification. LLMs don't just outright copy the training data, that's why it's called generative AI. That doesn't mean they will never reproduce anything in the training set, but they are very good at synthesizing multiple concepts from that data and turning them into something that technically didn't exist before.
If you look at something like Suno, which is using an LLM architecture under the hood, you're able to upload audio and have the model try to "cover" that material. If I upload myself playing a chord progression/melody that I made up, the model is able to use it's vast amount of training data to reproduce that chord progression/melody in whatever style.
It would be really important for everyone to read about the theory of appeasement and how it has *never* worked.
--
The catastrophes of World War II and the Holocaust have shaped the world’s understanding of appeasement. The diplomatic strategy is often seen as both a practical and a moral failure.
Today, based on archival documents, we know that appeasing Hitler was almost certainly destined to fail. Hitler and the Nazis were intent upon waging an offensive war and conquering territory. But it is important to remember that those who condemn Chamberlain often speak with the benefit of hindsight. Chamberlain, who died in 1940, could not possibly have foreseen the scale of atrocities committed by the Nazis and others during World War II.
---
We have the hindsight today. Let's not make the same mistakes.
encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content…
In the 1930s, Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and the British government pursued a policy of appeasement towards Nazi Germany to avoid war. Learn more.Holocaust Encyclopedia
It's been a while since we had a good missing Doctor Who episodes rumour - and this time, it might not be a rumour...Alex Skerratt (Lovarzi Blog)
During last 3 months I am using VDO ninja for all my remote interwiev and podcast recordings. here is my article about it from the blind perspective, focused on accessibility and audio.
Have You Ever Wanted to Record an Interview or Podcast Online? You’ve probably faced a few challenges:
How to transmit audio in the highest possible quality?
How to connect in a way that doesn’t burden your guest with installing software?
And how to record everything, ideally into separate tracks?
The solution to these problems is offered by the open-source tool VDO Ninja.
It’s an open-source web application that uses WebRTC technology. It allows you to create a P2P connection between participants in an audio or video call and gives you control over various transmission parameters.
You can decide whether the room will include video, what and when will be recorded, and much more.
In terms of accessibility, the interface is fairly easy to get used to — and all parameters can be adjusted directly in the URL address when joining.
All you need is a web browser, either on a computer or smartphone.
The basic principle is similar to using MS Teams, Google Meet, and similar services.
All participants join the same room via a link.
However, VDO Ninja distinguishes between two main types of participants: Guests and the Director.
While the guest has limited control, the director can, for example, change the guest’s input audio device (the change still must be confirmed by the guest).
VDO Ninja works in most browsers, but I’ve found Google Chrome to be the most reliable.
Firefox, for some reason, doesn’t display all available audio devices, and when recording multiple tracks, it refuses to download several files simultaneously.
Let’s imagine we’re going to record our podcast, for example, Blindrevue.
We can connect using a link like this:
https://vdo.ninja/?director=Blindrevue&novideo=1&proaudio=1&label=Ondro&autostart=1&videomute=1&showdirector=1&autorecord&sm=0&beep
For guests, we can send a link like this:
https://vdo.ninja/?room=Blindrevue&novideo=1&proaudio=1&label&autostart=1&videomute=1&webcam
label=Peter
or label=Marek
.
Simply open the link in a browser.
In our case, the director automatically streams audio to everyone else.
Participants also join by opening their link in a browser.
If a nickname was predefined, they’ll only be asked for permission to access their microphone and camera.
Otherwise, they’ll also be prompted to enter their name.
Usually, the browser will display a permission warning.
Press F6 to focus on it, then Tab through available options and allow access.
The page contains several useful buttons:
To change your audio devices:
Each guest appears as a separate landmark on the page.
You can navigate between them quickly (e.g., using D with NVDA).
Useful controls include:
Under Audio settings, you can:
Our URL parameters define automatic recording for all participants.
Recordings are saved in your Downloads folder, and progress can be checked with Ctrl+J.
Each participant’s recording is a separate file.
For editing, import them into separate tracks in your DAW and synchronize them manually.
VDO Ninja doesn’t support single-track recording, but you can use Reaper or APP2Clap with a virtual audio device.
To simplify synchronization:
autorecord
.&autorecord
, reload the page, and confirm rejoining.
To start recording manually:
In this article, I’ve covered only a few features and URL parameters.
For more details, check the VDO Ninja Documentation.
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A win32 app to capture audio from specific processes to an audio file - masonasons/AudioCaptureGitHub
ondrosik likes this.
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LB: SaaS is real! it means it's run at a large enough scale that someone who gives remotely a shit carries a pager and fixes it and remotely maintains it
we live in a society, the problem is abusive tech companies running non commodity services with no data portability or real regulations in general. the solution is not computer prepperism (self hosting)! we live in a society.
hyperindividualism temptations come from society not working properly
For those new Fedizens arriving from #Bluesky, here’s a little introduction to our lord and saviour, John Mastodon.
And remember to always, and I mean always, add #AltText to your images!
John Mastodon (ft. Andre Louis[@Onj])
~ Dgar
“When the darkness fell on blue
In the year of twenty-two
The chanting started to ring true
The call went out to me and you
Join Mastodon
Join Mastodon
How could they have ever known
Their words were forming sacred tones
The ancient forces in the stone
The summoning of flesh and bone
John Mastodon
John Mastodon
John Mastodon, they love their mum
They have alt-text written on
The tattoo on their arm
Of a hairy pachyderm
John Mastodon
John Mastodon
Join Mastodon x8
The chants grew loud as we watched on
The coming of the chosen one
They emerged triumphant from
The ancient portal of Gargron
John Mastodon
John Mastodon
Linking people across the earth
They lead them to the Fediverse
Their admin army show their worth
Shouting loudly in their mirth
Join Mastodon
Join Mastodon
John Mastodon, they’re the one
Who takes the corporate socials on
They give their code to everyone
For every platform you might run
John Mastodon
Join Mastodon
Join Mastodon x8
Sweating blood and guts and tears
And fighting bots and billionaires
An artist and engineer
With indie songs in his ears
John Mastodon
John Mastodon
Ditch the birds and book of faces
Leave behind the corporations.
Tooting old computer cases
Open source on all our bases
Join Mastodon
Join Mastodon
John Mastodon knows all the tricks
Of every distro of Linux
They stay engaged in politics
They fought an army of Fediverse chicks
John Mastodon
John Mastodon”
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NAS, which is short for Network Attached Storage, is pronounced by many as "Nazz". If you're taking that approach, though, wouldn't it be more correct to pronounce it like "Nuss?" The first A sound in attached isn't the short A, and storage doesn't start with a Z.
Maybe I'm just over-complicating things as usual.
I was recently looking at Framework for a new x86 laptop, as I believed the company to be reasonably aligned with my values (e.g. pro-repair, pro-FOSS, pro-humanity). But others have warned me that they are now supporting Hyprland, Omarchy, etc. They support these projects led by people who hold alt-right views, in the name of building a “big tent” coalition.
The problem, however, is that building a “big tent” coalition, by design, requires some form of value alignment.
community.frame.work/t/framewo…
Alpine is a “big tent”, for example, but people who want to harm members of our community aren’t welcome.
This isn’t hard.
Needless to say, I won’t be buying a Framework laptop anytime soon, which makes me sad.
We support open source software (and hardware), and partner with developers and maintainers across the ecosystem. We deliberately create a big tent, because we want open source software to win.Framework Community
André Polykanine
in reply to Aleś Karoza • • •