I just had s̶e̶x̶ the best mango lassi of my life.

And it actually could be improved, so I get to keep working on this 🥳

I wish I could've made a glass of this for @skinnylatte and the guy from that TikTok reel going feral in praise of the mango. From an amateur to two connoisseurs, what an honour that would've been for me. This is the good stuff worth waiting a whole year for. I feel reborn, you guys ✨

#MakanApaToday #HomeCooking

Woman allegedly tried to drown Palestinian-American girl, aged 3

The US’s largest Muslim civil liberties and advocacy organization is calling for #hate #crime charges to be filed against a Texas woman accused of 🔸trying to drown a three-year-old Palestinian-American girl 🔸while saying that the child’s mother wasn’t really American.

For now, the suspect in the case has been booked on counts of attempted murder and injury to a child.

The case dates back to 19 May, when police in Euless, Texas,
were called to an apartment complex swimming pool where there had been reports of a disturbance between two women, according to the local NBC affiliate.

Witnesses told police “a woman who was very intoxicated had tried to drown a child and argued with the child’s mother”, said a police news release reviewed by CNN.

The child’s mother told police that the alleged attacker
– since identified as 42-year-old Elizabeth Wolf
– questioned where she was from and whether the two children playing in the pool were hers, police said.
Wolf also made statements about the mother not being an American, police added.
In a news release on Friday, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (Cair) said the child’s mother wore a hijab and modest swimwear,
and she was watching her children play in the shallow end of the pool when Wolf approached her.

“The alleged attacker reportedly approached the mother with racist interrogations then
jumped into the swimming pool and
grabbed the children to the deep end of the pool to allegedly drown them,”
the statement said, adding that the mother’s six-year-old son was able to escape but her three-year-old daughter was unable to do the same.

“The alleged attacker snatched off the mother’s head scarf and used it to beat the mother as well as kicking her
to keep her away while forcing her daughter’s head underwater,”

theguardian.com/us-news/articl…

Vor 2 Wochen habe ich mir neue Kopfhörer gekauft. Modulare Over-Ear Kopfhörer von Repeat. Das Versprechen dieses jungen niederländischen Start-Up ist, dass man hier seine letzten Kopfhörer erwirbt. Durch die modulare Bauweise lassen sich einzelne kaputte Module einfach austauschen, ohne gleich die ganzen Kopfhörer wechseln zu müssen. Für einen Aufpreis kann man zu den Kopfhörern die lebenslange Reperatur dazu kaufen. So geht nachhaltiges Design.
Das wichtigste aber, der Klang begeistert.

#unboxing

Habe diese Woche festgestellt, dass hier in der Nähe neue Signal-Anforderungsgeräte angebaut wurden.
Ich kenne mich mit sowas absolut nicht aus, habe mich über die Symbole auf der Seite gewundert und hatte eine Theorie die eine kleine Recherche bestätigte:
Auf der Seite sind Überwegsymbole nach DIN 32981 verbaut (es ist ein crossguide EK533 von Langmatz).
Faszinierend!
#Barrierefreiheit

There’s a reason why tech-savvy users love Fastmail!

Web Developer Domenic uses personal domains, rules, folders, and custom themes to organize his inbox.

Check out our blog to learn more:

fastmail.com/blog/get-the-best…

🧵 In 2020, I nearly died from mysterious industrial chemical exposure at my apartment. Later, in 2023, I discovered my employer was dumping toxic waste into the apartment windows from their Skunkworks semiconductor fab next-door. I tipped off the US EPA, who sent their env cops to raid Apple's plant in Aug of 2023. The US EPA finally released the report of their enforcement inspections & sent me a copy on Friday. 💀 ⬇️

reshared this

in reply to Ashley M. Gjøvik, JD

Finally, lets talk about Apple's factory exhaust into the ambient air next to thousands of homes and two public parks.

Much of Apple's solvent exhaust was vented out "as is" (unabated) from the main system.

The illegal solvent treatment tank exhaust did go through the untested carbon boxes, but then it was released out of a tiny vent pointed *down* at the building. Any gases heavier then air would be directed to the ground level to pool into toxic vapor plumes.

There were no permits.

in reply to Ashley M. Gjøvik, JD

My civil lawsuit against Apple includes 2 toxic tort claims for what theyre doing at this factory. I alleged Nuisance + Ultrahazardous Activities. The US Judge is letting me proceed with both claims.
casetext.com/case/gjovik-v-app…

Apple can keep flailing around, but we're in US court now & they will be forced to face the music. I'm also waiting to hear from US Dept of Labor Judge if I can add RCRA, Clean Air Act, & TSCA retaliation claims.

Finally, its also possible DOJ could pursue criminal charges.

NV Access are very pleased to announce the release of NVDA 2024.2! Please download from: nvaccess.org/post/nvda-2024-2/

Highlights include Sound Split, numerous new keystrokes, new Braille mode & other features, updates to eSpeak, LibLouis & other dependencies & programs.

#NVDA #NVDAsr #ScreenReader #A11y #Accessibility #New #Release #FOSS #Update #NewVersion

This entry was edited (1 year ago)

reshared this

in reply to NV Access

Right, the key conflict with P is caused by the screen wrapping addon. It doesn't have any keystrokes you can edit in input gestures that ican see, so this is an odd one, but I've contacted the author. I haven't had the control key problem for a while, and I'm not getting anywhere with what's causing my menu update debug entries at all. It seems to be when *any* addon is running.

Late "Jeopardy!" host Alex Trebek to be honored with new Forever stamp - CBS News cbsnews.com/news/jeopardy-host… cbsnews.com/news/jeopardy-host…

Excuse me while I go ugly-cry: “Gilead’s experimental twice-yearly medicine to prevent HIV was 100% effective in a late-stage trial, the company said Thursday.”

cnbc.com/2024/06/20/gilead-pre…

This could be useful to some people.
No support, only for info.

As background, I was needing to schedule a task regularly so as to work with the StationPlaylist Track Tool via command line parameters.
The Track Tool is very useful to process files for use on a radio station. If you don't use StationPlaylist, still keep reading.

First I tried the Windows Task Scheduler. Everything worked, except that the computer would freeze while the task (which is fairly intensive) was taking place.
Then I tried System Scheduler:
splinterware.com/products/sche…

Not only does it work perfectly, but it has very accessible dialogs and list view controls, plenty of shortcut keys, and more. I was very pleased at the way it works.

Of course you can schedule a task to undertake the kind of activity I was wanting to do. The list of tasks not only shows the title but when it was last run, something essential for what I was trying to achieve as I needed to monitor it.

You can also create periodic reminders or scheduled text notes. Those reminders can be snoozed for a period of time before the alert arrives again.
The tasks can be run manually or via the schedule. Manual was also very useful for my testing.
You can create desktop shortcuts for tasks if you did want to run them manually and regularly.

Not that I tried this, but you can also get it to action a series of keystrokes if needed when an application is focused. That was well outside the scope of what I was wanting to do.

Definitely worth giving it a try if you would like to. There is a free and paid version.

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Update on Newton, the Wayland-native accessibility project

There's incredibly good news for people who use accessibility tools on Linux, but who were facing serious, gamebreaking problems when trying to use Wayland. Matt Campbell, of the GNOME accessibility team, has been hard at work on an entirely new accessibility architecture for modern free desktops, and he's got some impre

osnews.com/story/139996/update…

#Wayland

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Donald Trump and his closest allies are preparing a radical reshaping of American government if he regains the White House. Here are some of his plans.
nytimes.com/interactive/2024/0…

Detecting hallucinations in large language models using semantic entropy
nature.com/articles/s41586-024…
#ycombinator

Fedora has been shipping with a broken screen reader for NINE YEARS but the real problem is me

ar.al/2024/06/23/fedora-has-be…

#fedora #accessibility #a11y #ableism #RedHat #IBM #Linux #OpenSource

reshared this

in reply to Aral Balkan

when you are harassing the people working on fixing it instead of directing your 40k followers toward funding those people then yes, you are the problem
social.treehouse.systems/@TheE…
in reply to Aral Balkan

It has long seemed to me that it would be prudent for corporations which derive their revenue from Linux to pool resources and invest in an accessibility effort. For example, they could support the current work of the GNOME Foundation, while educating their own software developers in accessibility and setting appropriate internal policies (e.g., proper testing, accessibility as a release requirement). This has never happened, however, suggesting to me that they'd all rather wait until the law compels them to change course. Meanwhile, very under-resourced, and dedicated, accessibility work continues. The regulatory environment is also changing for the better, e.g., the European Accessibility Act addresses "consumer" computers and operating systems, and it comes into effect next year.

To make up for #AudioMo day 21, here's a clip of a skype call that took place between myself and my friend Trenton Matthews. We were talking about impersonations, and his female impersonation led to him talking about birth control. Honestly, it's too funny and I crack up every time I hear this. I hope you enjoy this fun little clip. :)
Have an awesome day!

So cool! Can you please come to the US? :) ec.social-network.europa.eu/@E…


🛜 No data? No problem!

If you're travelling this summer and have used up your mobile data, or are in areas with poor connectivity, fear not!

#Wifi4EU is connecting people all over Europe:
🌐 Free access to secure and high-speed internet
🛜 93,000+ hotspots in municipalities across Europe
🏫 In parks, schools, libraries, health centres, museums and other public spaces.

Find the nearest hotspot & stay connected → europa.eu/!Yb6jbg


🛜 No data? No problem!

If you're travelling this summer and have used up your mobile data, or are in areas with poor connectivity, fear not!

#Wifi4EU is connecting people all over Europe:
🌐 Free access to secure and high-speed internet
🛜 93,000+ hotspots in municipalities across Europe
🏫 In parks, schools, libraries, health centres, museums and other public spaces.

Find the nearest hotspot & stay connected → europa.eu/!Yb6jbg

TIL: Depending on the rendering engine, fonts can include and run WebAssembly code. This can be used to program some intelligence into them, e.g. for complex ligatures in Arabic etc.

What would you do in 2024, armed with that knowledge?

That's right, embed an LLM in your font so that it can auto-complete sentences.

Søren Fuglede Jørgensen did just that, with llama.ttf.

fuglede.github.io/llama.ttf/

Check out the 15 minute video presentation for a demo of what it can do.

youtu.be/Q4bOyYctgFI

This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to Dillo browser

This page at the time of writing grades websites’ progressive enhancement based on their ability to work without JavaScript. Everything, not just JavaScript, should be progressive enhancements.

HTML elements already have progressive enhancement built-in. CSS, JS, and embedded content should be progressively enhanced too. The page should make sense without scripts and styles, alt-text should be available in the absence of embedded media, etc. We shouldn’t put scripting on a pedestal above everything else.

I suggest replacing references to JavaScript with references to non-HTML content. See also: “curlable” on the IndieWeb wiki.

A more minor piece of feedback: I’d suggest re-sizing the badges to 88-by-31 pixels if possible. It’s a very popular size for badges; at these dimensions, they would look good alongside others of the same size (examples from the W3C).


Originally posted on seirdy.one: See original (POSSE).