Small change, huge improvement. They replaced and moved this single streetlamp on one of main #Prague #bike ways A22. Originally there used to be the old lamp with bulky base placed almost in the middle of the road. It used to be very uncomfortable and sometimes dangerous place as it is just behind a turn and two cyclists couldn't pass each other here. Now it's fixed. 👏🚲

If the Canadian government wanted to do something nice for me, the absolute best single thing they could do for me¹ is cap UPS's import/brokerage fees at the amount I would have had to pay in self clearance. Or at self clearance levels plus ten percent.

Or just fucking make self clearance possible in downtown Toronto without spending $10 and two hours to take the train to Pearson. Please. I am dying

¹ I mean short of something really expensive like OHIP covering medication.

This entry was edited (6 hours ago)
in reply to James Scholes

@sclower The preview doesn't show anything either, and ironically they picked the episode Holoship which starts with the crew watching a movie. The BBC did this in a really cool way with Faulty Towers where they had one of the characters occasionally interject with descriptive commentary while staying in-character. Could have been fun to see how something like that could have worked with red dwarf

Soooo viele Daten, so viele Behörden, so viele Websites…

warum also nicht 'ne kleine Pest sein und Behinderten beim Melden von Barrieren helfen, indem man das alles massiv vereinfacht und dann noch mit Profis drüberschaut? Und alles das öffentlich zugänglich, damit sich nie wieder jemand rausreden kann? Könnte ja Behörden überlasten und Durchsetzungsstellen was zu tun geben.

2026. #sneakpeek

This entry was edited (7 hours ago)

Thunderbird Pro is getting closer to its Early Bird release! Find out what that means and what it includes in our latest update.

#Thunderbird #ThunderbirdPro #Thundermail #OpenSource

blog.thunderbird.net/2025/11/t…

Reversing the Reversal?: Government Puts Privacy Invasive Lawful Access Back on the Agenda
michaelgeist.ca/2025/11/revers…

Never do this. NEVER

Remember the pain of being held back by 2.6.32 ??

canonical.com/blog/canonical-e…

in reply to feld

I don't think glibc maintainers care about compatibility considering their constant ABI breakage. New features? Maybe. But as I've said, this might stop some developers from trying out the new shiny things which I consider a good thing. Or if they want to use it, hide it behind #ifdef and supply an alternative. What this does isn't hold back improvement, it forces writing portable code again which everybody forgot in the last 5-10 years. And I'm getting tired of having to package some random new library from a year ago whose version must be from the last 3 months and the Python version must be _latest_ for a piece of software to even consider building itself. Examples: HomeAssistant, Gitea and much more.

This is also mostly a non-issue for open source software where you can always patch it to work on older libc, or make multiple packages if you are the developer. The developer might not want to do it, but maybe the distro maintainers want to which is also fine. And pre-built binaries without source will always suffer since glibc ABI compatibility barely exists.

Finally, NVAccess has agreed to separate links from the adjacent non-link text and display them on separate lines as a toggleable option. It’s still unclear when this will be implemented, but it's a good step forward in my opinion. I opened this issue in April 2020, and many users really want it.
Their comment states:
"We appreciate the constructive community feedback. We've triaged this issue, meaning we would accept this feature as a toggleable option."
github.com/nvaccess/nvda/issue…
@NVAccess
This entry was edited (17 hours ago)

Mental note of an idea before I forget and never tell anyone: @thunderbird should adopt and dig in deep on being the best in class mobile and desktop client for #DeltaChat in addition to being an email and RSS reader. Compete on simplicity and features against closed, commercial Messangers, not just corporate email. Thank you for your attention to this matter.

cc: @delta

in reply to Tim Chambers

you are 6 years late :) We already invited the Thunderbird core team for two days of discussing joint futures in 2019. For several reasons (pandemic disruption among them) they didn't follow up much. Maybe they also believed, like many others, that instant messaging via email can not work? In any case, they recently integrated a Matrix client, but TB's chat interface remains very bare bone. Should they revise their approach, we'd be happy to collaborate.

If any Jaws home users were wondering if they're missing out on AI Web page summaries, from my testing, the answer is no. These summaries are pretty good if you are a beginner, they give you an overview of important links, how to navigate the page, remind about potentially useful shortcuts, and so on. From my testing on several large forum topics, these summaries do not summarize the text content itself, They just briefly mention what it is about.

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A worrying number of influential people seem to have forgotten how bubbles work. When the bubble starts to burst it won’t first manifest in Nvidia’s results, but in smaller loss-making AI start-ups struggling to secure the investor funding they need to keep operating. This will slowly propagate to larger loss-making AI companies, and the collapse will be well underway by the time it shows up in Nvidia’s results.

Dear Diary, or whatever passes for it these days:

I'm currently sitting in a park. It's a lovely spring day, with a gentle breeze. The birds are chirping, the air smells clean, and there are some kids playing. It's peaceful. Perhaps it's too peaceful.

I feel like I'm supposed to disturb that peace, perhaps by blowing something up, or setting the grass on fire. I feel like, if I don't do this, everything will remain unbalanced.
Is this normal?

Written by me on this very keyboard in a #WeirdDream

This entry was edited (7 hours ago)

Question for my tecnical friends.

Let's say you are creating a project that requires it be protected by a captcha. You have to use a captcha, and there is no way around this. Please don't reply with statements like. Captcha are bad, or don't use a captcha. Thanks. With that being said.

Which captcha service would you recommend and why?

The captcha needs to have an accessibility component or an alternative option for solving, and needs to be simple to integrate.

Free/low cost is probably preferred.

This entry was edited (9 hours ago)

In and around 2023, Roy and Rianne Schestowitz were subject to a horrific campaign of online harassment. Unfortunately they blamed me for it, and in turn wrote and published an astonishing array of articles making false accusations against me. Last year, I sued them in the high court in London. In turn, they countersued me for harassment. The case was heard last month and I'm pleased to say that the counterclaim was dismissed and I prevailed in my case. The court awarded me £70,000 in damages.

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