Why the heck is there a call to bash and install dependencies / npm install embedded in the FAA's TFR pages? (Updated: amused to learn, informally, there's already a ticket filed against this one at the FAA).
view-source:tfr.faa.gov/tfr3/?page=detail_…
Been thinking a lot lately about the deep tension between abstraction and context.
What do I mean by "abstraction" and "context"?
Abstraction to me, fundamentally, is separation. Distance. It's that which can be lifted up out of its context and sent far away. A software library. A bylaw. A statistic. Containerization. Commodification. Securitization.
Whereas "context" is embedded & embodied. Relational. It is tied to a moment in time, a particular place, a person, a feeling. It's closeness.
La tradition moderne veut que les enfants se déguisent avec des costumes effrayants et aillent sonner aux portes en demandant des friandises.
fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hallowee…
Héritage de la fête religieuse celtique de Samain, cette fête est introduite en Amérique du Nord au XIXème siècle après l'arrivée massive d'émigrants fuyant la Grande famine en Irlande 🇮🇪.
Elle est aujourd'hui célébrée dans de nombreux pays.
Hey @delta! Reading this delta.chat/en/2025-05-22-brows… got me thinking. I live in Firefox but miss Chrome’s one-click “Install PWA as app”. What about a Tauri-based helper + a Firefox extension that wraps a PWA into a desktop app in one step? Hosting stays light: the PWA is cached; relays/self-hosted instances can serve the client. Keeps control with admins. Interested? 👍🏻
#Firefox #PWA #Tauri #DeltaChat #FOSS #OpenSource #SelfHosting #WebExtensions
Delta Chat: Delta Chat Desktop, but running inside of Firefox 🦊
As part of the project to port Delta Chat Desktop from Electron to Tauri1, we’ll showcase a setup where our Desktop app runs in Firefox and does not depend on Electron or Chromium anymore. This vid...delta.chat
Also this browser version is not standalone, it still requires one server instance per user that runs deltachat/chatmail core. Ideally it would be just a PWA, but for that #chatmail core needs to be compiled to, and work in wasm: support.delta.chat/t/what-woul…
deltachat-desktop/packages/target-tauri at main · deltachat/deltachat-desktop
Decentralized private messenger with chat-shared tools and games for Desktop - deltachat/deltachat-desktopGitHub
Liberbyte joins the Foundation, a Fractal Halloween update, threads coming to Extera - this and more happened This Week in Matrix!
TWIM or treat over at matrix.org/blog/2025/10/31/thi…
This Week in Matrix 2025-10-31
Matrix, the open protocol for secure decentralised communicationsThib (matrix.org)
Age Verification, Estimation, Assurance, Oh My! A Guide to the Terminology
If you've been following the wave of age-gating laws sweeping across the country and the globe, you've probably noticed that lawmakers, tech companies, and advocates all seem to be using different terms for what sounds like the same thing.Electronic Frontier Foundation
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Source: WMBD/WYZZ
share.newsbreak.com/fpfg9cs0
More Americans blame Trump, GOP for shutdown: Washington Post poll - NewsBreak
Poll: Trump, GOP lawmakers to blame for shutdown, 45% saysNewsBreak
Excited about going to my first @w3c #TPAC in Kobe Japan. I will be co-hosting a breakout group on Web Sustainability Guidelines #WSG — November 12th, 08:30 JST
w3.org/events/meetings/f7fcc7e…
More about the WSG here:
w3c.github.io/sustainableweb-w…
#W3C #sustainability #GreenWeb #WebSustainability
12 November 2025 | Sustainable Web IG Update for the Web Sustainability Guidelines | Calendar
The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is an international community where Member organizations, a full-time staff, and the public work together to develop Web standards.W3C
Happy Halloween! Need a scary game? How about a hindsight horror tale of a looming Y2K apocalypse ruled over by digital eldritch gods?
The Shadow Over Cyberspace is a full-length visual novel for free. No ads, no MTX, we just gave it away because why not. fictionfactorygames.com/cybers…
The Shadow Over Cyberspace by Fiction Factory Games
A modempunk horror story from the creators of Arcade Spirits.fictionfactorygames.com
Zach Bennoui reshared this.
I am looking forward to going to the @w3c 's #TPAC in Kobe Japan. I will be hosting a breakout group on #ARRM — Accessibility Roles and Responsibilities Mapping — November 12th, 16:15 JST w3.org/events/meetings/76eeff8…
More about ARRM here:
w3.org/WAI/planning/arrm/
Accessibility Roles and Responsibilities Mapping (ARRM)
ARRM helps you assign responsibilities for digital accessibility to appropriate roles (UX designer, content creator, developer) early in projects.W3C Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI) (Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI))
Please share your 3PB on Btrfs experiences!
bsd.network/@dexter/1154616704…
Michael Dexter (@dexter@bsd.network)
#PointOfOrder What is the largest array you have built with #Btrfs? [ ] 500TB [ ] 1PB [ ] 2PB [ ] >3PBBSD Network
It’s been 10 years since we celebrated the 10th anniversary of the integration of #ZFS into #Solaris: blogs.oracle.com/oracle-system…
Happy 20th Birthday ZFS!
Great post from @Jdm2 about his getting away from WhatsApp and looking into #deltachat
write.as/jdm2/deltachat-y-arca…
We also just reposted his invitation to a Puerto Rico group, because we think the way this group is instigated is exactly right: ask for people to drop into a DM, or like with the borken.social Fediverse instance: show an invite link only for authenticated users 🎯
Non-public invites maintain some privacy and sense of joiners and brings e2ee messaging to instance communities.
feld likes this.
Abrimos un canal de Puerto Rico en Deltachat para probar las aplicaciones.
Si estás en boriken.social, aparecerá el enlace en un anuncio arriba.
Si no lo estás, escribeme un DM y te invito.
Коазиция — не правящая коалиция из-за недостаточного размера, но и не оппозиция
#Словотворчество (с) Маша Литвин, что услышала это в каком-то подкасте, но не помнит в каком (о ситуации с Кнессетом)
Sooo, is that going to work?
"A federal judge in Rhode Island on Friday blocked President Donald Trump's administration from suspending all food aid for millions of Americans amid the ongoing government shutdown and directed it to use contingency funds to pay for the benefits."
yahoo.com/news/articles/us-jud…
#Politics #USPolitics #USPol #SNAP
> OpenAI eyes $1T IPO
> Nvidia is now worth $5T, or two Canadas
why do these people want to start the Greatest Depression so badly?
Arduino Rap?
"MIDI-triggered robots strike and vibrate glass bottles, coffee mugs, plastic wrap and a pizza box to make futuristic music out of the present's refuse and rubbish."
clipping., the only hip hop group to win a Hugo. Tiny Desk concert.
Zítra nám držte palce. Čeká nás první velká streamovací akce. Ve spolupráci s @openalt budeme streamovat přednášky ze všech 7 místností konference #OpenAlt.
Pokud budete mít čas a nějaká přednáška v programu vás zaujme, zkuste se mrknout. Při sledování videa jej zároveň sdílíte s ostatními diváky jako u torrentu (pokud nejste na mobilním zařízení) a každý peer se tak počítá!
Konference OpenAlt - 2025
Devatenáctý ročník konference o otevřeném softwaru a datech, IT bezpečnosti, DIY a IoT.OpenAlt z.s.
Peter Vágner likes this.
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Here's a short video about my cloudless, portable, small, low-resource "smart thermostat". It doesn't need an internet connection and uses MQTT. Here, it's directly driving a relay.
It's running on a Raspberry Pi Zero W, powered by NetBSD, in read-only mode.
I used it for years and it's time to go back to it, cloudless and local.
#RunBSD #NetBSD #IoT #OwnYourDevices #OwnYourData #Cloudless
I wonder if this is perhaps a fundamental difference in design between some of the EU and US equipment.
Maybe it's only older equipment in the US that doesn't do this and Honeywell had to build it into the thermostat to cover themselves legally?
yep exactly
I removed the Nest at this place I'm renting and put in a ZWave Honeywell, thought it was defective at first because it wasn't turning on the AC but it was just a safety thing and made me wait like 15 minutes before it would turn on the compressor the first time
on an unrelated note kids these days dont remember when a wet floor or frayed Xmas light could literally send you to Jesus same day delivery or flash fry the cat and burn the damn house down.
GFCI AFCI combo outlets save lives and their inventor deserves a Nobel prize.
The clock's ticking for MySQL 8.0 as end of life looms
: Percona says more than half of installs remain on version set to lose support in 2026Lindsay Clark (The Register)
One for your bookmarks... 🫣



Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •What concerns me is how society privileges and emphasizes the abstract over the contextual.
Some examples of this:
STEM vs the Humanities: Employers and society in general tend to favor and admire people with STEM backgrounds over humanities backgrounds. Even within STEM, the "hard sciences" are seen as more valuable than the "soft sciences", where hardness and softness are largely judged by how much abstraction they require (with, for example, physics and math being seen as very 'hard').
Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •Securities Fraud: As Matt Levine likes to say, "Everything Is Securities Fraud". Why?
"When a company harms some class of people in some bad but essentially non-monetary way, it is hard to quantify the damages as money; when a company harms its shareholders, you can just see how much the stock went down."
The more measurable - that is, the most abstractable - the harm, the more likely you are to get justice for it.
Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •Even within the financial industry, a highly abstract domain, securities stand out as especially abstract and thus valuable:
Patrick Mackenzie writes:
"I think our level of awareness is less than where it should be at the moment. Partially this is for Seeing Like A State style reasons. Securities are so legible . They have conveniently surveillable mark-to-market prices and trade continuously. [...] Loans, on the other hand, remain quite illegible."
bitsaboutmoney.com/archive/dep…
Deposit franchises as natural hedges
Patrick McKenzie (patio11) (Bits about Money)Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •Speaking of Seeing Like a State, that book is full of examples of overvaluing abstraction and legibility - and it also shows that this preference is nothing new.
For example, Scott documents the rise of fiscal forestry:
"The early modern European state, even before the development of scientific forestry, viewed its forests primarily through the fiscal lens of revenue needs. [...] Missing, of course, were all those trees, bushes, and plants holding little or no potential for state revenue."
Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •In Germany, this "fiscal lens" was imposed on the forest itself. "To this end, the underbrush was cleared, the number of species was reduced (often to monoculture), and plantings were done simultaneously and in straight rows on large tracts. The German forest became the archetype for imposing on disorderly nature the neatly arranged constructs of science."
The neat and orderly nature of the German forests mean unskilled (and thus cheaper) labor crews could carry out maintenance and logging.
Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •Yields were more uniform and easy to turn into standardized products. The forests were easier to study scientifically: "Now that the more complex old-growth forest had been replaced by a forest in which many variables were held constant, it was a far simpler matter to examine the effects of such variables."
These abstracted German forests were better for many human purposes, but worse in one crucial way—they could not survive. Germans had to invent a new term: waldsterben, or "forest death".
Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •Given the long growth cycles of trees, it took nearly a century for the fact that the forests were dying to become clear. Or perhaps I should say, "clear to the people in charge". Who knows what the plants and the animals and the people who relied on the forest knew?
This is a recurrent problem with abstraction. Because it is inherently more visible than the contextual, and because it is more likely to be wielded by those in power, it can be hard to alter.
Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •Ideally, the abstract is valued in equal measure to the contextual. Just as abstractions can help make the contexts of our individual lives better, so can feedback from individuals and contexts about issues with the abstractions make the abstraction better.
But we do not value abstraction and context equally. And so the forests die.
Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •As someone in tech, I am particularly concerned with how tech perpetuates this dynamic.
The tech industry constantly tries to commoditize human needs, replacing real relationships in all their complexity and interdependency with context-less, ephemeral "relationships" mediated by apps. Instead of asking a neighbor or a new friend for help fixing a broken screen door, we hire someone on TaskRabbit. Instead of asking someone we know to cook us something when we're sick, we order a meal online.
Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •The Amish are remarkable for their care in determining what technologies they'll adopt. This applies to engineering innovations like cars and televisions, but also to new social technologies. For example, starting in 1955, the Amish refused to pay Social Security taxes.
"The Amish objected to participating, in part on the basis that they believed they were religiously obligated to take care of each other and should not be transferring that obligation to the state." - David Friedman
Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •Of course, money itself is itself an abstraction, one with tremendous impact on social relationships over the millennia.
I'm going to quote extensively from Aaron Bady's review of David Graeber's Debt (thenewinquiry.com/blog/david-g…)
"Is in the very nature of a question like “What do I owe my parents?” that there is not and can never be a final, numerically answer. It is a question that we re-visit and re-negotiate every minute we are with them; obligation and love form an endless Möbius strip"
David Graeber's Debt: My First 5,000 Words
The New InquiryShauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •If money is an abstraction that tends to replace human relationships, capitalism is a way of structuring a society that rewards and accelerates that replacement—and modern, highly financialized capitalism the most extreme version of that.
See again Matt Levine's contention that everything is securities fraud—at the rate we're going, maybe someday soon, it will be.
Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •I'm going to pause here - there's a dozen different directions I could go with this and I'm not sure which one to take. 😂
Wait let me try a poll, let's see if anyone fills it out.
Where should I take this thread?
- Abstraction v Context on the left (38%, 5 votes)
- Psychological drives behind preferring abstraction (30%, 4 votes)
- How power influences abstraction vs context (61%, 8 votes)
- Ideas for centering context when building tech (61%, 8 votes)
13 voters. Poll end: in 2 daysmodulux
in reply to Shauna GM • • •That's an interesting take. I'll admit my default is towards abstraction and while I can see that it has its issues, I can see the issues in context more glaringly. Context has high variance. If you're well-embedded in a good community with plenty of people willing to help you, outcomes will probably be better than depending on an average bureaucracy. But a lot of people aren't. Vulnerable people who are unlikable or friendless or lonely, without systems to take care of them, simply don't get the help they need.
This was most starkly brought to my mind by a post I read recently, remarking that some disabled people aren't allowed to be unlikable, because if they are, it may mean death to them (less dramatically, not eating that day, not being helped to the toilet, etc).
I think my society tends to prefer contextual, individual solutions. Until recently, nursing homes were seen as family failure, for example. Having seen what this can do to people (abandonment, care burden) it's very hard for me not to come on the side of abstraction.
But it's totally fair to remind us that it also has its costs.
Apologies if this is too wordy or takes things in a different direction from which you were thinking.
Shauna GM
in reply to modulux • • •@modulux
No need to apologize - I enjoy when people engage with my ideas, even if they have differing opinions.
And I'm not sure we disagree here. This thread is focused on the failure modes of abstraction but there are failure modes in over-valuing context too.
Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •@modulux
That said, some people (including myself!) have a tendency to see the failure modes of context and think "we can fix this with abstraction!" And sometimes this is true, but sometimes it's not, and what you actually need is to improve things at the context level.
To use your nursing home example: yes, institutional and societal support is so important in reducing unequal care burdens but also professional nurses cannot actually replace the experience of being cared for by loved ones.
Shauna GM
in reply to Shauna GM • • •@modulux
You write: "If you're well-embedded in a good community with plenty of people willing to help you, outcomes will probably be better than depending on an average bureaucracy. But a lot of people aren't."
100% true. But "good community" and "well-embedded" and "people willing to help you" are all dynamic, changeable things. And if we only focus on abstract solutions instead of asking what's failing at the relational level, we miss the opportunity to change them.
modulux
in reply to Shauna GM • • •Right, that's certainly true. If that can be improved, it's very much worth working on it. I just think it's very hard to improve; people have been doing context since forever. And it's even harder to improve it at scale precisely because it's so variable.
But there are things that can help. People having fewer working hours comes to mind. Being less afraid of strangers. That sort of thing. And yes, that's all worth doing.