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On Friday the Government of Canada released this position paper on Digital Sovereignty.
canada.ca/en/government/system…
I would love to know what people think.
We wanted to provide an update on the abrupt loss of Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) funding that occurred in April, which represents 90% of the Braille and Talking Book Library’s operating budget.
Taking this moment to slow clap for all the idiot blind people who voted for Trump a second time. This is what you gave us. So much winning! I hope you're happy.
Über die letzten Sonntage habe ich mal einen kleinen #Kopfhörer #Test gemacht.
Zum Vergleich hörte ich immer wieder #Infidels.
Das ist für mich eine der schönsten Platten von Bob #Dylan.
Musikalisch gefällt mir das darin zu hörende (wohl?) elektronische Schlagzeug, aber auch manche Gittarrenakkorde.
Und besonders sprechen mich bei Dylan natürlich so Zeilen an, wie
"Standing on the waters casting your bread" oder "Take the motherless children off the street and place them at the feet of a harlot" und und und...
Aber, ja, Kopfhörer 😉
AKG K 530 LTD: Verwaschener diffuser Klang, das Schlagzeug kommt überhaupt nicht akzentuiert.
#JBL 650 BT: Nicht schlecht, aber ich fühle mich etwas eingesperrt.
#Beyerdynamic DT 770 M: Habe ich jahrelang beruflich in Studios benutzt, empfinde seinen Klang jetzt aber regelrecht hohl wie in einer kleinen Kammer. Wahrscheinlich umsomehr, weil ich unmittelbar vorher diesen probierte:
Die absolute Überraschung! Der wohl 30 Jahre alte
#AKG 240
Durchsichtig, akzentuiert, nicht nur gute Stereobreite sondern irgendwie ausgewogen rundum lokalisierbare Klänge, Welten entfernt von DT 770. Klar ein wenig Bass muss man per EQ dazugeben.
Natürlich ist das immer subjektiv. Und seit ich schwer erkrankt war, traue ich nicht mehr wirklich dem, was ich meine zu hören. Es kann von so vielen Faktoren abhängen, wie man akustisch wahrnimmt.
Aber es war für mich eine Überraschung, mit dem ältesten Kopfhörer, den ich hier zu Verfügung habe, ein so frisches Klangbild erleben zu können. Wahrscheinlich hat er damals so um die 240 D-Mark gekostet...inzwischen sind die Alu-Sticker mit der Typbezeichnung abgefallen... aber der Klang 👌
#Audio #Musik #ZurFeierDesSonntags #WhoKnowsTheJokerman?
Time to introduce my last new project for this year:
«Zeroform» ... is a tool for generating minimalistic, self-hostable forms, with a twist: It can generate both static (html/css/js) and/or dynamic (php augmented) online forms.
My main motivation for zeroform is to create tooling that helps me gather more precise feedback while designing and developing (especially) #faircamp and #hyper8, and to do this in a way that reflects the values of those projects: Independence, simplicity, minimalism, freedom from maintenance, absence of tracking, etc.
Basically you start with a thought, put it down as a plaintext blueprint of the form/questionnaire/doodle/survey you have in mind, zeroform turns it into finished code and design, you can upload it, use it as long as its useful/needed, and then you can just delete it.
Think of it as your own google forms, without bigtech, without dependence on any infrastructure besides the cheapest of hosting plans, commissioned and decommisioned in a mere minute.
I'm now one week into the project, since today I'm developing in the open at codeberg.org/simonrepp/zerofor…, and I will put it to use in the next days already! I have roughly one more week reserved until the end of the year for making this usable for the general public - I'll announce when it's ready. ʕ◜0ᴥ0ʔ
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#CancelSpotify #NoFascism
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I'm cleaning my RAM every 1 to 2 hours just because closing apps won't return it to baseline, my SSD gets chewed through like a mouse chewing through a bag on the Hungarian farm. 1 GB every 2 hours? Seriously Windows 11 what the fuck are you logging?
Worse yet, unlike in Windows 10, I noticed this tied to my ram cleaning , on Win11 I think something gets written to disk when caches are perged like that. I don't know. A lot of problems I'm facing, ot to mention I'd have a way less leaky search box on Windows 10. So, Windows 10, here I come again. You're the better option, Windows 11 is like the Windows Vista to the Windows Xp of the 10. Ha. Almost. It starts up just as fast as Windows 10, I'll give it that, but it sure doesn't clean RAM and not over time spiral it up way faster than Windows 10 ever could.
@systeemkabouter@maljaars.net @libreoffice Same here - thanks a lot for this great piece of software!
[Follows link]
"To read more please pay us some money!"
[Closes window, never looks back]
Hay una cosa que me encanta de @delta y es que te permita usar tu propia clave GPG de cifrado, o exportar la que te crea si no le proporcionas una propia.
Creo que XMPP debería implantar algo así, me parece vital tener el control de la claves y además mejoraría la "sincronización" entre dispositivos
please note that we use #OpenPGP and not GnuPG/GPG. See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pretty_G… for more details.
While exporting private keys is supported, importing private keys is not supported because our security audits don't cover all kinds of key material, but the modern algorithms we chose in collaboration with experts. We only want to support a *subset* of OpenPGP to be able to give similar assurances as Signal about cryptographic security outcomes.
Verbose, rich live regions are a sign an author has not tested with browsers, screen readers, and users. This post has an example that I see too often in the wild.
“On ARIA and Experiential Design”
jamesscholes.com/2025/10/31/on…
I agree. @delta did a great job with this UX. Built upon the email protocol (with e2ee encryption added) they are just as decentralized and federated as email, or for that matter Mastodon. They are a great deal MORE decentralized than Signal or say, BlueSky now. But their UX did an excellent job "hiding" the complexity. Others decentralized/federated platforms should learn from this example! #deltachat
chaos.social/@delta/1154793927…
Group 1: "All these instructions on the internet say I need a computer or sometimes even two; who has that kind of money?"
Group 2: "I have sixteen fully operational laptop computers that I fished out of a dumpster that desperately need a good home, but no one will take them, so they're cluttering up my apartment."
It feels like some problems would be solved if these two groups could talk to each other, but somehow it never seems to work that way : (
#39c3 There will be NO #KinkyGeeks Play-Party!
kinkygeeks.de/2025/11/02/kinky…
39c3: Keine KinkyGeeks Play Party!
———ENGLISH VERSION BELOW——— Auf dem 39c3 wird es keine KinkyGeeks Play Party geben!Lil-Missy/m² (kinkygeeks.de)
After testing github.com/shazow/wifitui, I’m convinced it’s a great alternative to running nm-applet all the time.
For setups like mine (Slackware + Fluxbox + Alacritty + tmux), there’s no reason to keep a GTK applet sitting in memory just to manage Wi-Fi.
wifitui is a fast and friendly terminal Wi-Fi interface written in Go that works perfectly with NetworkManager or iwd — no GUI,
no clutter, and full keyboard control.
Now I only open it when I need to change networks, and the rest of the time my system stays lighter and cleaner — exactly how I like it.
Soon we’ll have a SlackBuild for wifitui on SlackBuilds.org :)
Created by @shazow@fosstodon.org
Fits perfectly with the Slackware spirit. 🖤🐧
#slackware #slackbuilds #wifitui #wifi
GitHub - shazow/wifitui: Fast featureful friendly wifi terminal UI. 🛜✨
Fast featureful friendly wifi terminal UI. 🛜✨. Contribute to shazow/wifitui development by creating an account on GitHub.GitHub
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Microsoft Removes “AI May Be Incorrect” Warning from Microsoft 365 Copilot — Here’s Why It Matters
The Quiet Disappearance of an AI Warning Artificial intelligence has become the backbone of modern digital work, and Microsoft 365 Copilot stands at the center of this transformation. But a quiet update is stirring debate in the enterprise world. The tech giant has decided to remove a once-prominent disclaimer — the small but important note reminding users that…
journa.host/@fulelo/1154798503…
Kriszta Satori (@fulelo@journa.host)
Andrew Mountbatten Windsor arranged a private tour of Buckingham Palace while the late Queen was in residence, for businessmen from a cryptocurrency mining firm Pegasus Group Holdings, which agreed to pay his ex-wife up to £1.4m, the BBC can reveal.Journa.host
monarchy is technically compatible with the rule of law if via the King's Consent they get to secretly lobby the government and get measures they don't like removed or watered down, e.g. how Buckingham Palace is still exempted from racial discrimination law, even if it is ostensibly no longer official policy that black or brown people are unfit for anything more exalted than cleaning toilets.
Then again, I tried to see if any Cabinet Minister or senior official was successfully prosecuted since WW2 for wrongdoing in office. The list goes on: Aberfan, Bloody Sunday, Hillsborough, tainted blood, Horizon, Grenfell, COVID PPE and so on, with no accountability for the Establishment, not just the Royals.
It's a bit like how the US Congress has basically legalized nearly all forms of corruption (the Supreme Court having done the rest). They can then unironically lecture other countries on corruption.
I studied Artificial Intelligence for four years, and I am not touching LLM AIs with a ten-foot pole.
It's not really about the insane electricity demands, the water usage, tho that's a good reason. It's not even, if I'm honest, about the disastrous effect on the sum of all human art and knowledge.
It's because a) I've studied enough AI to know it's a trick, a sort of linguistic illusion, and b) I've studied enough everything else to understand that I'm not immune to such illusions.
I think one of the reasons I never really got into retrocomputing - despite nerding out with a C64 or an Amiga sure did feel a lot more fun than computing in the current day - is that what made it feel so great back then was that it felt like I could just make out the contours of the future, and it looked like it would be amazing. So much creativity waiting to be unlocked! We'd make kinds of art not even conceived yet! We'd be making wonderful discoveries!
Now I live in that future, and it fucking sucks. The fruit of all those great discoveries have turned out to be mostly figuring out new ways to spy on people and manipulate them - and now, to declare all-out war against even the concept of human creativity. My C64 still runs (I no longer have a working Amiga), but playing around with it won't bring back that feeling of a promised future of wonders - all I see is that it turned out to become a present full of horrors instead.
I'm sure part of all this - from a purely personal perspective - is just that I've hit the point where I'm supposed to be having my regularly-scheduled midlife crisis. "Did I waste my entire life?" sure does feel to fit the stereotype. I've thought about trying to retrain to do something else, but I honestly have no idea what that could even be. I'm disabled, I'm getting old, and there's not a whole lot I can do that anyone would want to pay me for that isn't related to software development. (I'm currently an embedded dev; prior to that I taught CS at a community college for ten years.)
This week in 1969, the internet was born, and immediately glitched — only two of the five letters in the first computer-to-computer message were received
The foundations of internet communications were set 56 years ago, when 'LO' was transmitted from UCLA to SRI on the ARPANET.
#hardware
tomshardware.com/networking/th…
Kevin Russell
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