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Spiders after someone accidentally walks through their home
in reply to 10-volt

Me when I try to figure out weather a spork should go in the fork shelf of spoon shelf




Just got MS-DOS 6.22 and Windows for Workgroups 3.11 installed in a VM with no sighted assistance whatsoever. I believe I have audio working in DOS, however I'm not sure how to test it. Now I'm trying to get audio in Windows. CC @datajake1999 and anyone else interested.
in reply to Khronos

@khronos I need a screen reader for WFW 3.11, and I need to figure out why there's no! Audio! In! DOS!
in reply to Seedy of Chucky

I don't know if there was a scren reader for windows 3.x. My first experience with Windows was with win95 and Asaw.


Question for anyone who knows Spanish well. I listen to a podcast where two Mexican Spanish teachers talk to each other. They record it to let learners practice listening. They speak slowly and clearly. One host always pronounces the j sound like a y, though, which isn't something I've ever heard of. During an English bit where they talk about Patreon, for instance, he pronounces "join" as "yoin". Is this a regional thing? His co-host doesn't do this.
in reply to Alex Hall

My Spanish is close to zero, but I did hear from native speakers that this is the thing. Even in Spain, notwithstanding other countries that use Spanish, this difference is regional. Say, in the phrase “coffee to go” (café para llevar in Spanish) the word “Llevar” can be pronounced as “Jevar” or as “Yevar”.
This entry was edited (1 month ago)



"The U.S. Commerce Department on Monday proposed prohibiting key Chinese software and hardware in connected vehicles on American roads due to national security concerns"
Tesla auto-crash software still allowed


Seeing with AI | The Prompt with Microsoft's Chief Questions Officer Trevor Noah featuring Saqib Shake youtube.com/watch?v=vCsg-Sbb5v…
#accessibility #ai



discussion elsenet is bringing back fun memories of work travel and...interesting memories of work travel policies 😂

"why are you galavanting around the Netherlands when the event is in Amsterdam?" "because our hotel max rates don't actually allow me to book a hotel in Amsterdam" 🤣



time to install a third gnome runtime weighing hundreds of mb for like two of six GTK applications.
This entry was edited (1 month ago)


Could you do me a favour? Could you tell me something nice that happened to you recently? I’d love to hear about that. 🥰


Hello everyone, I’m Maartje De Meulder. After spending years on X, I’ve decided to give Mastodon a try.

I’m a senior researcher at the University of Applied Sciences Utrecht and I split my time mainly between Belgium, the Netherlands, and Norway.

I’ll be mostly posting about all things language, disability, and technologies, and how they intersect, along with navigating academia. 



#introduction #deaf #disability #academia



Department of Justice Adopts Access Board’s Minimum Standards for Accessible Medical Diagnostic Equipment equipmentlink.org/blog/?p=5643


Protect your future today with Quantum Safe Communication. Quantum-proof your data before it's too late. #Purism #CyberSecurity
puri.sm/posts/quantum-safe-com…

in reply to Kari'boka

Yeah, I'm using XMPP long before Matrix entered the stage and it's good. But for more advanced work, Matrix is providing features, that XMPP dosn't have, like formatting code and text markdown like or organizations for multiple rooms and so on....


Some Kaspersky customers receive surprise forced-update to new antivirus software

techcrunch.com/2024/09/23/some…

Security software indistinguishable from malware.



Yesterday I discovered that the new Sonos app requires you to physically scroll through every part of the terms screen before you can press the accept button. On iOS, VoiceOver's scrolling method skips through most of it, so you just have to go to the top and manually pass through a bunch of one-finger scrolls. The whole thing is one block of text, so you can't tell how far it's scrolled until you get to the bottom. I have no Sonos products and was just trying to troubleshoot this with a friend, but I am suitably horrified. This is the first thing the app presents after downloading it for the first time, and most VO users wouldn't be able to do it, leaving the rest of the app (and possibly your devices) unusable. I'm not sure what could convince me to buy a Sonos product at this point. I used to just find them too expensive to justify—now I don't think I'd buy them if they were all 75% off. #Accessibility


You know you're getting old when it requires three people to find someone with good enough vision to read the tiny little bolt code at Home Depot 👓
in reply to AI6YR Ben

Same with cooking instructions on food containers. Guys, don’t use white font size 3 text on a gray background. Don’t know how many times I’ve not purchased something because I can’t figure out what the brilliant marketing team has rendered unreadable.


Food, meat, beer

Sensitive content



Honored to have had a chance to speak at (the very well-attended very well-run) #matrixconf this year. Great (and livestreamed!) talks, a good audience, a proper indoor masking policy and CO2 monitors on every floor live-updated, exactly what a modern conf should be in every respect.


“I’m going to buy him a copy of the Mythical Man Month. Actually I’m going to buy him two copies so he can read it twice as fast.”

— Unknown

#Q4TD #Quote #Quotes q4td.blogspot.com/2024/09/im-g…



Disingenuous rule making:

If China can do these evil things with their proprietary cars, then so can U.S. and Japanese cars.

Make the rule fair: ban proprietary cars.

(But it's not about being fair, it's about the U.S. wanting to preserve the ability to use domestic cars for spying, while preventing other countries from having that ability.)

tech.slashdot.org/story/24/09/…




My super secret hobby project is now public. It's a CI engine that let's me run CI on untrusted code without having to worry.

blog.liw.fi/posts/2024/ambient…

#continuousIntegration #CI #Ambient



Finally this journey begins! And with a surprise twist, too: Amsterdam’s number 1 tram.
in reply to Martin Hoffmann

But back to walking. I’m only down to 42nd street – it’s a long way to the tip of Manhattan at South Ferry. Well more than 42 blocks, in fact. There are plenty more streets south of 1st street but they are older than the grid and have names.
in reply to Martin Hoffmann

Turkey is promoting itself as a partner in sustainable development by driving gas-powered trucks with LED billboards through the already grid-locked streets of Manhattan. You can’t make this stuff up.


Ah, so US is going to ban connected cars. A good measure actually, and the rationale is conclusive. But why stop at those from China? Connected cars are a security and privacy nightmare, regardless of the country.

arstechnica.com/?p=2051655



NGI Assure, the program aimed at improving trust in our digital society, successfully concluded after its 4 year run.

[1]152 teams contributed to a more trustworthy & secure internet with their Free and Open Source projects. Thank you all!

We've made a book showcasing all the projects which you can download from the link below. There are also paper copies, so ask for those when you see us IRL.

[2][1] nlnet.nl/news/2024/20240919-NG…
[2] nlnet.nl/media/NGIAssure-bookl…
(1/2)

#FOSS #NGI #NGI0 #Trust #Security


in reply to hacknorris

XMPP because Discord is evil, IRC doesn't do what I need, and Matrix is slow and buggy.
All XMPP needs is a good client, and because I'm on Linux, I can use @dino (wish it was cross-platform, but that feels like asking for too much)

Of course I also use Matrix because that's what everyone else uses, but that doesn't mean I can't be annoyed with it :blobcatupsidedown:

@Dino


Of the currently available XMPP clients, @gajim stands out as the most feature rich. I did a round of trying out other xmpp software this week, and gajim still provides the most painless experience.



I didn't see this mentioned in my timeline. Today's Google Doodle honours Oskar Picht, who invented the brailler I used when learning Braille. What a nice surprise, as nowadays, I only see Perkins braillers mentioned in English texts.
Here is the text from Google: (1/2)

reshared this




20 years of Canonical #Ubuntu #Linux ubuntu.com/20years Long-time Linux user here, currently on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS. Daily driver for managing VMs, K8S, Docker, etc. on AWS and other providers. Ubuntu is a great intro to Linux, with a rich dev experience. Congrats to Canonical. Keep it up the good work.
This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to nixCraft 🐧

I remember when my university mate told me about weird Debian based distro which should be delivered to him for free, via post, on a CD...

We, Debian folks, tended to look from above, but started to accept it over time as viable alternative, especially if we wanted to get some newbie on board.

20 years... damn, seems like yesterday!
👍



Protip: if you don't know your email address, don't use mine to order your shit. Or maybe I shall cancel them all?
in reply to Hubert Figuière

I usually request a password reset and just close their account with a parting note along the lines of "some idiot used my email address and you blindly believed them instead of sending an confirmation link to the email address they gave you". Both parties failed, maybe they'll learn something. Even if probably not.
This entry was edited (1 month ago)


Some hot takes on APIs and protocols (and in particular #ActivityPub). Just summarizing some thoughts I've had

1. JSON-LD is completely unsuitable for a social networking protocol. Full stop.

2. The extension mechanism used by JSON-LD is neither necessary nor sufficient for dealing with the so-called "open world assumption"

3. The "open world assumption," as discussed, is not something that is desirable to support in practice

4. Your average person should not know or care about protocols

1/

in reply to Hrefna (DHC)

7. A resistance to non-AP protocols holds back fediverse development

8. The concept of "breaking changes" is essentially meaningless to AP today because mutually incompatible—such that not only that they can't communicate, but that there is no way to make them communicate—protocols can both be 100% AP "compliant"

9. The fact that no one implements AP correctly should be taken as a danger sign and as something that needs to be fixed, but the problem isn't with the implementers

3/

#ActivityPub

in reply to Hrefna (DHC)

10. The lack of good libraries or toolkits should be viewed as a significant and serious danger sign. The lack of ability to _create_ these libraries should further be viewed as a danger sign.

11. We should view any attempt to "refresh" AP in a way that is not backwards incompatible and that does not address the extension problem with suspicion (not as in it shouldn't be done, but in that we should not think that it will solve anything).

12. We need to ask "what is next"

4/4

#ActivityPub




From Hadley: Artificial Intelligence (AI) Wearables: Tuesday, September 24, 2:00 PM Eastern Time groups.io/g/tech-vi/message/78…