Time for that "Looking for work!" post, I guess!
Unfortunately, my current role is impacted by Amazon's move to mandatory co-location for teams, and my family is far too settled in Brooklyn to move away now. So after 7 years at Amazon, I'm starting the search.
I'm looking for a new role as a Front-end engineer/Design technologist/UX Engineer. I like design systems. And CSS. And accessibility. Love those things.
linkedin.com/in/heather-buchel…
#getfedihired #remotework #remote #tech #techcareers
Heather Buchel - Amazon | LinkedIn
Experience: Amazon · Education: Lansing Community College · Location: Brooklyn · 299 connections on LinkedIn. View Heather Buchel’s profile on LinkedIn, a professional community of 1 billion members.Heather Buchel (www.linkedin.com)
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Ok, the bots are officially better at those CAPTCHA images than me, with a large margin. Clearly, they know where that motorcycle stops and consequently which squares should be checked - I don’t.
each time I get asked feedback about a website that asked me to solve a captcha, I give the lowest rating possible and explain why.
With a little luck somebody will read it.
When we lived in Vancouver, we would Skytrain to the airport every time we traveled.
Should we transit to the airport for our next flight? Oh right, we need to walk + take three different buses to get to Ottawa airport.
But Quebec city hasn't been promising to extend the metro to the airport for DECADES.
They are building the *second* station right now. What happened to the first? It was stuck in the cowardice of the Governments and their glossy report on our dime.
I don't know that throwing soup at a famous painting, knowing it's behind glass and will be perfectly safe, is a super effective form of climate protest.
But it is sinister how many liberals will laugh and say they had it coming when they get 2 years in prison for something they acknowledge was trivial.
Aurea has released version 1.5, featuring several exciting new updates:
- GNOME 47 support
- Hot reload banner when metainfo is edited
- Open metainfo file using Aurea
- Reload banner using <F5>
- Add Norwegian translations
- Blueprint 0.14.0
flathub.org/apps/io.github.cle…
#GNOME #Flathub #Libadwaita #GTK
A new beta for Fractal, message pinning in Element X, and c++ bindings for vodozemac. That and more happened This Week In Matrix!
Alright, finally got a new laptop.
(the old one was still plenty quick, I don't think it's even 10 years old - but I just cannae cope with a display that's only 768 miserly pixels tall)
Got me a Lenovo X1 Thinkpad Yoga, 'cause I do miss my old draw-on-the-screen Tecra M4. 1440 pixels tall. Still only 16:10, the new 3:2 laptops are still too expensive for my tastes, but we're finally moving in the right direction (vertically).
Anyway it turned up today and I'm optimistic even though I have some grumbles; the screen's reflective as hell and there's absolutely no reason for this thing to be as thin and flimsy as it is, but I guess that's just the modern way, all hardware now feels like it needs a pat on the shoulder and a nice big sandwich.
Anyway on my old convertibles, you've swivel the screen 180 degrees perpendicular to the base and then fold it down. With this one, you just open it as normal, and then KEEP opening it, until the back of the screen is flush with the back of the base.
Unexpected problem that I really should have anticipated: this way of going to tablet mode means the keyboard and touchpad are now on the back, and there's no way to pick this thing up without pressing a bunch of keys.
I'm about to install an OS, will whatever flavour of ubuntu be clever enough to disable keyboard and mouse when this thing's folded all the way open?
Every time I booted up it'd pop up some notification about the onscreen keyboard being misconfigured, with a suggestion on how to fix it that was Extremely Linux (bollock about with some file that it's telling me to mess with (well why the hell can't it mess with it itself)) and looked too exhausting to be worth the effort to fix vs just closing the notification each time
The top panel, which I'd set to auto-hide, would open every time I rotated the screen
They're still doing that ridiculous thing where every app starts with a K and has a blue icon and they expect you to find the program you want in an alphabetical list
At some point the screen magnifier started opening by itself on every boot despite not being in my list of startup applications, and when I searched for how to stop that from happening I got some more Extremely Linux chatter about how you could modify some configuration file and disable it and this was for accessibility, well fair enough but surely, SURELY the best way to do this would be "Pop up the magnifier once and just ASK ME if I want it to pop up every time, and if I say yes, stick it in the list of startup applications, and if I say no, then... don't do that?"
Loads of other stuff too minor to bring up, but generally lots of little embuggerances that add up to me trying Mint with Cinammon and finding it to be, well, Fine.
Screen scaling works, touchscreen controls work, scrolling was upside down but there's a checkbox you can untick to not have the scrolling upside down, it's Generally Fine.
And honestly Generally Fine is what I want, KDE always feels cutting-edge and ahead of the competition and full of new ideas and exciting but also really glitchy and you have to mess around with it a whole bunch.
I want a boring desktop environment that gets out of the way of the programs I run on it, y'know?
probably soon be replaced with chagpt and a monthly subscription to be able to search my messages...
📖 ➡️ wired.com/story/internet-archi…
Microsoft details security/privacy overhaul for Windows Recall ahead of relaunch
Recall nearly launched as a scraper that stored all its data in plaintext.
arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/0…
github.com/workbenchdev/demos/…
Can't wait for a release!
I've been aware of the existence of gitlab.com/kop316/phosh-antisp… for quite a while, but didn't pay too much attention as I didn't need it... Until I did!
Thanks @kop316 for this now-mandatory piece of software ❤️🎉
#LinuxMobile #MobileLinux #LinuxOnMobile #Phosh #PhoshAntispam
Some vulnerability scanner is now (again) saying that #curl in Windows is vulnerable to some CVE.
The fun never stops.
Daniel's weekly report September 27, 2024
lists.haxx.se/pipermail/daniel…
feature window, NSSS, CI performance, boast, memcpy
It's time for Discussion Friday again~!
I woke up really hungry so in my quest to make everyone as hungry as I am, we're going to talk about food.
Does reading make you hungry? Have you read a particular good description of food or cooking in a c-novel* that made you salivate? Or perhaps you've read something that sounds absolutely atrocious (which makes you want to try it for Science). Did anything you read inspire you to cook, or seek that dish out?
Share them and let's make everyone hungry!
*feel free to very loosely interpret c-novel here for Discussion Friday, e.g., Chinese web-novels, Chinese novels, Chinese novellas/short stories, other language novels translated into Chinese, novels by Chinese (nationality or diaspora) published in non-Chinese language
Darl McBride has passed away. If you are a Linux fan/advocate/user of a certain age, that name probably stirs some feelings - none of them good.
The SCO debacle was a real eye-opener about the depths that people are willing to go to for money. There's cut-throat, take-no-prisoners business... and then there's outright shameless malfeasance.
It was, at least for me, the end of starry-eyed optimism that FOSS would change the world without being changed by it in return.
ARE YOU NOT SUPPOSED TO FIGHT FOR US?!?
Federal language watchdog urges anglos to fight François Legault on English education.
Raymond Théberge says the CAQ has gone too far by targeting English school boards and English universities.
montrealgazette.com/news/local… #cdnpoli #polcan #polQC #QCpoli #assnat #CAQASTROPHE
@hub
In at least the past 20 years, excluding Harper's #prorogation in 2008 to prevent the LPC-NDP-BQ coalition non-confidence motion to replace his government, in the year preceding the election Québec Parliament/Government has made efforts to enforce the use of French at the expense of its Anglophone population.
It seems a lamentable, but not unexpected, strategy re-used because it the parties in charge at the time keep getting away with it.
André Polykanine
in reply to Maryann Murad • • •