Coming up in October! #LibreOffice x UbuCon Asia 2023 – in Surakarta, Indonesia. Join us there: blog.documentfoundation.org/bl… #conference #foss #opensource

I have just read the Interview with Georg Romer from University Hospital Münster in "Süddeutsche Zeitung" titled "Wait and See is Not an Option!"

He is a child and young adult psychiatrist. The interview is really very long.

But the gist is that this Georg Romer is really one of the Saints that we wish for.

The questions asked by the newspaper were great, mentioning all the controversy in society, asking tough questions (but in a very respectful manner), asking things like "what about the impression that transition numbers just exploded and that this is 'fashionable' at the moment" and so on.

During the interview Alexander Knote from LMU Munich was also mentioned aht Georg Romer was asked why he refused to talk / discuss with Alexander Knote.

In essence, A. Knote says that "coming out as trans gender has become fashionable among the AFAB." He then continues to prove that by showing that in Germany 85% of trans gender people AFAB trans men.

Georg Romer takes that as data and looks at "why is that so" in a different way. He analyses the societal environment and comes to the conlusing that the actual number of trans woman is significantly higher than the 15% but the fact that trans women have a significantly higher chance of being discriminated against, hated, or even experience violence is the actual reason why we don't see more trans women coming out. And yes, contrary to A. Knote, Georg Romer has scientific data on that.

A few machine translated excerpts:
---
Some of your colleagues report that young people are becoming more and more demanding and doctors are called transphobic if they do not immediately accept being trans as given without question. Do you experience that too?

Not at all. If we want to avoid an escalation of sensitivities in the doctor-patient relationship, it starts with ourselves. We must understand and respect that there is already a long history of discrimination, pathologization and bullying of trans people in medicine at every first encounter. I think the young people immediately feel the attitude and agenda with which they are met.

So it is the responsibility of the doctors how well the young people cooperate?

We doctors have to get away from the idea that we define whether someone is trans or not. It starts with the speech in the waiting room. I always ask first of all with which name someone would like to be addressed. With this, I do not determine anything for the future, but I signal: I see you, I respect you, I listen to you.
...
---
At the end he says:
I also think of a sentence in a letter that the mother of a 13-year-old trans boy once wrote to us: Without the treatment, we would steal the boy's youth. Every person deserves the chance to remember a happy youth for the rest of their lives. If we force young people to live through these years in the wrong sex, then this hardship of the children is in every class photo, in every memory of a school trip that you still had to experience in the old sex. People who only begin their transition as adults often eras these years of youth in their memory. That's very sad. A coherent identity, even in youth, contributes to the happiness of life.
---
The interview is here: if you can get it free and want to read it in your language, I guess you need a machine translation

sueddeutsche.de/projekte/artik…

#Trans #YoungTrans #TransPride

This entry was edited (2 years ago)

I haven't posted music in a bit so... A while ago, when I was figuring out Surge XT accessibility, I thought I should make some Psytrance. The problem was... I had no idea how to make psytrance. I ended up with this... and decided to leave it there. I still don't know how to make psytrance. Surge, however, is awesome. I definitely did not leave *it* there.

Jamie Teh reshared this.

My husband had to wait for 6 years to capture this view of #TheNeedles.

Taken as the #moon set at 4.30 am last summer. This shot is only possible a couple of times each year. He almost had it in 2016 but it was slightly too breezy and the telephoto lens couldn't keep in focus.

It causes controversy as some think it's fake, I promise you that it is not. It involved much research, persistence and luck with the weather! It's the cover shot on our 2024 calendar #IsleofWight #photography

10 Amazing Prompts That Demonstrate The Capabilities of ChatGPT to Improve The Lives of People With Disabilities | Aaron Di Blasi | Top Tech Tidbits
toptechtidbits.com/163.html

Here are 10 innovative prompts aimed at demonstrating the capabilities of ChatGPT to improve the lives of people with various disabilities. Copy and paste any of these prompts into ChatGPT.

“While monitoring the traffic of our own corporate Wi-Fi network, we noticed suspicious activity that originated from several iOS-based phones. Since it is impossible to inspect modern iOS devices from the inside, we created offline backups of the devices, inspected them and discovered traces of compromise.”

“The spyware also quietly transmits private information to remote servers: microphone recordings, photos from instant messengers, geolocation and data about a number of other activities of the owner of the infected device”

😩 😩 😩

eugene.kaspersky.com/2023/06/0…

in reply to André Polykanine

@menelion so, thanks for you interest, I'm happy to add any app I can. To understand, project is mostly just a pet project for some technologies and experimenting a bit with SEO. It's super slim and it's direction is not quite clear - going in a opendata or eventually having cheap paid app. This as a preface for contributing. I could go either way. I don't have the admin public yet. In general I need name, links to the stores and the WKT-String of geo coordinates for each region the app covers

Today's #AudioMo is more of a #Music thing actually, and comes from #Jamulus which is an online realtime jamming tool to allow people in different places to make music with each other. In this instance, Alf, the bass player is a few hundred miles from me also in the UK, Martin (guitar) is in The Netherlands, Phil (other guitarist) is near brighton, Mag (drummer) is in Germany and I'm playing Rhodes in London.
This perspective was captured by Alf.
For more information about Jamulus, check out jamulus.io.

André Polykanine reshared this.

One way to put an amazing new audio interface through its paces is to record a demo and review of it. So here you go, this is my take on the Audient Evo 16 and it’s brilliant #accessibility features.
pnc.st/s/the-blind-podmaker/b5…

When Big Tech spies on their own customers, something is wrong.

Protect your privacy now! 💪

Check out #Tutanota - the email service with 100% encryption and 0% tracking. 🥰

theguardian.com/technology/202…

Here at Accessible Android, we have made it possible for you to submit your own content on all things Android and accessibility. With that in mind, Dominic Doyle submitted a guide to setting up a Samsung Galaxy phone for the first time: erisilebilirandroid.com/how-to…

So torhungrig wollen wir die Wölfinnen 🐺 auch sehen.

Im Finale der UEFA Women's Champions League treffen die Damen des VfL Wolfsburg auf den FC Barcelona. Können sie sich ihren dritten Henkelpott sichern?

Jetzt live im #sportstudio #UWCLfinal
zdf.de/sport/sportstudio-live/…

Looks like my dogpiling on Google hit the news.

> “I’m not a fan of Google’s approach,” extension developer and researcher Wladimir Palant wrote in an email. In the days before Chrome, when Firefox had a bigger piece of the browser share, real people reviewed extensions before making them available in the Mozilla marketplace. Google took a different approach by using an automated review process, which Firefox then copied.

> “As automated reviews are frequently missing malicious extensions and Google is very slow to react to reports (in fact, they rarely react at all), this leaves users in a very sad place,” Palant said.

arstechnica.com/information-te…

Some of my followers have asked about Computers for the Blind. They are a non-profit organization that refurbishes donated computers, installs accessibility software, and then sell those computers at an affordable price to blind or visually impaired individuals. You can read more about them here.
computersfortheblind.org/about…
in reply to Rosalín Anne

Blind friends: Do you need a new laptop? Are you receiving SSI benefits? Computers for the Blind is running a special right now. I just called them. If you can show your SSI award letter for 2023 to this organization, they will give you $150 off any laptop in their lineup. This means that you, or an authorized recipient, can purchase a laptop for as little as $50. And their top of the line laptop, which comes with 16 gb of ram, would only be $300. No special on desktops, but remember that desktops are repairable. Those start at $200. So if you buy a desktop and a part dies, you'd be replacing the part that dies instead of the entire desktop. I think this is a great choice for SSI recipients. Even without the special, I still think this is a great option for those who are employed but making a reduced income. The price list for their computers can be found here.
computersfortheblind.org/src/d…
Or, go here to apply to purchase a computer. Remember to fax your award letter to Computers for the Blind before attempting to purchase using the $150 off special offer.
computersfortheblind.org/appli…

@libreoffice

I was wondering if the #libreoffice team had some projects about #AI integration.

MS Office is working hard on this topic.

-- fr --
Je me demandais si l'équipe de #libreoffice avait des projets d'intrégation de l' #ia.

MS Office avance bien sur ce sujet.

#opensource
#calc
#writer
#Impress

libreoffice.org/