Skip to main content



Ok, this is pretty cool. I have had my BT speak since mid july, but I never really tried the pandora player until today. Its not bad at all. Simple player. As far as I can tell, it does not have a thumb up/thumb function, but truly, it does not matter to me. My days of creating pandora stations have long passed. Now, its purely for that trip down memory lane. I like it. @BlazieTech


My sister brought me some chocolate cake for my birthday today it was yummy!


New blog post: "Web components are okay" nolanlawson.com/2024/09/28/web…

Lord help me, I've entered the web components discourse. Trying to be a peacemaker though!

reshared this

in reply to Matt Campbell

@matt Yeah, I sort of feel this way about what I did with Pinafore. It was almost an experiment in making the most hyper-optimized SPA I could, a scorched-earth approach to perf optimizations. But it was also a one-man show, and bound to a particular framework, so it wasn't necessarily going to be maintainable long-term. I'm curious how Semaphore/Enafore have held up since then.

At the end of the day, perf is just one virtue among others, and has to be weighed accordingly.

in reply to Nolan Lawson

Well I'm still happily using Semaphore, but don't know what I might be missing compared to other clients.


THe Discord quick switcher makes absolutely no sense to me.

I don't know how one could design an algorithm that always produces the wrong result, but Discord has clearly managed to do so.



So, one of the common scam texts we seem to get here is something about a USPS package that can't be delivered due to incorrect address information or something of the sort. The freaking weird thing is, these scammers can't even be bothered to obtain a U.S. voip number for outbound texting, which results in texts coming from random country codes, E.G. +63, talking about this. Given USPS is a service run by the U.S. government and is only national, this is such a trivial red flag that I wonder why they even bother. Pretending to be UPS makes more sense at least, as that one's international. But even so, numbers in the same country of origin as your recipient, guys! It likely isn't *that* hard!
in reply to x0

This might be intentional, just as bad grammar in Nigerian Prince scams is.

If you're the kind of person to notice this, you're unlikely to go through the whole process and gets scammed. Hence, it is not worth wasting any effort on you, and it's better to eliminate you from the scam prospect pipeline as soon as possible.




I've finally had the time to watch the first episode of the second series of Misfits & Magic on Dropout, and I was thoroughly unprepared for the level of chaos they are setting up


What's the appropriate modern way to write the term in English?

  • manpage (34%, 298 votes)
  • man page (60%, 527 votes)
  • man-page (4%, 41 votes)
866 voters. Poll end: 1 month ago

in reply to daniel:// stenberg://

$ man man

[...]
Guidelines for writing man pages can be found in mdoc(7).
[...]

This entry was edited (1 month ago)


I wish there was a way to make Xcode / VoiceOver stop saying the word “new line” at the end of each new line. It’s confusing, disorienting and unnecessarily verbose. I was hoping I could get VoiceOver “ignore” this in the “punctuation” section, but I can’t figure out if there is a way to do that.
This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to victor tsaran

You have to make a punctuation scheme based on some, and then add the punctuation you actually need


I am considering creating a small, professional Web site to document my research, accessibility-related work, and other interests. I can write HTML; I have a Web server configured, and I can maintain files under Git revision control.
What I now want is a set of predefined style sheets that will take care of the visual layout, conforming to all of the applicable accessibility guidance (font selection, layout for mobile and desktop environments, reflow, etc.). The plan would be to write correct HTML, and for the presentation to be handled automatically - in the first instance, for static content.
What are others using and recommending nowadays? There are various CSS collections on GitHub, for example.
#CSS #WebAccessibility #Accessibility


Thanks everyone for bringing me back to the way of truth, I mean, structured properties in logs. It's not only optimal, but easy and beautiful also (yes, one more praising post to #CSharp).
in reply to André Polykanine

I haven't kept up on your journey (I've seen several of the posts, though). If nobody has linked you yet, this blog post by Ben Foster (not sure if he's on the Fediverse) was a huge help for me when I started with Serilog: benfoster.io/blog/serilog-best…


Clothing sizes are like the metric vs. imperial discussion, but there's like 6 commonly used systems, also the definition of all units depend on what product you're using and what brand you're buying from.

“Oh yeah, this Ikea table is supposed to be one metre wide but actually the Ikea brand uses a rather small centimetre so it's like 92 SI centimetres.”

They have played us for absolute fools



Has anyone else who subscribes to certain mailing lists populated by screen reader users noticed all the elementary spelling mistakes that are pronounced perfectly by text to speech, but which are clearly evident to anyone reading visually or, in my case, with a Braille display? This is basic, primary and secondary school-level literacy education gone wrong. It should be of concern to educators, and it may be symptomatic of educational deficits that could limit employment opportunities. If i were an employer, I would be reluctant to choose someone who couldn't write English correctly, especially if doing so were a job requirement, as it often is.
It's time to stop people from falling through the system without acquiring basic literacy skills.

reshared this

in reply to Jason J.G. White

@FreakyFwoof This is why I tell people for my job Braille is a must. As a court reporter, I must make sure things look professional. To be fair, on email lists and anything I do on the phone, sometimes mistakes happen but they're due to Braille mistranslation.
in reply to Eden Linnea

@Eden_Linnea @FreakyFwoof I make mistakes as well. They're usually just typing errors that anyone could make. I sometimes use dictation on a phone if I don't have access to a QWERTY keyboard. However, almost all writing is done on a laptop, and reviewed with a Braille display.
The examiners of my Ph.D. thesis identified, as best I can remember, three or four textual errors - mostly capitalization, as I remember. There were one or two errors discovered later that they didn't find. The thesis was written and edited with both text to speech and a Braille display (operating simultaneously), and completely reviewed with the Braille display, then typeset with LaTeX. 224 pages of main text, if I remember rightly.


My precious sleep has been shortened by an hour because the Government has once again interfered with the fundamental forces of time.
On Planet Mosen, there would be know messing with time at all. But if we must do it, vote for me, and I will move the implementation of daylight saving so that it happens at 9 AM on a Monday.
in reply to Jonathan Mosen

Indeed, daylight saving time is terrible. thanks God, our government in Brazil ended it some years ago, but now, there is a government that follows another ideological orientation and wants to bring it back. Praying...


So here's a little device I would love someone to come up with. Thing is, I could really use one in about ten days or so, which ain't gonna happen. Tagging @matt here, as I'm about to use Remote Incident Manager as an example.
The device would be called the RIMBook and would run a custom distro of Linux called RIMux. It would have just enough CPU, memory, and disk to have a decent screen reader and RIM. The screen reader would be used to get you connected to RIM and start controlling another machine you already have. This, in fact, is the entire purpose of the RIMBook, a sort of dummy computer used to control another computer somewhere else. The point here is, you probably have to do some sort of log in to start controlling the other machine, so if your RIMBook gets lost, stolen, left behind somewhere, etc. you're out the money, but there's no personal info left behind. And oh yes, your purchase of a RIMBook includes a license to use RIM on that machine to gain remote, unattended access to one of your other machines.
in reply to Jayson Smith

So, I get the nerdy cool factor of having a tightly optimized OS underlying the remote access client. But really, if you have a relatively inexpensive Windows laptop and enable BitLocker encryption on it, then you don't leave behind any personal information if the laptop gets lost.
in reply to Matt Campbell

I *am* tempted to attempt a port of the controller side of RIM to Linux within 10 days. But I think with all the other things I'm doing right now, I'd be over-extending myself.
in reply to Matt Campbell

Hypothetically, if I were to deliver a completed system image or even just a package for a stock Linux distro within 10 days, do you already have a spare laptop you'd put it on? Better still if you already have one that's known to work well with a particular distro.
in reply to Matt Campbell

LOL I have a spare laptop around here I'm not really using for much, though it's never run Linux as far as I know. It's a Dell Latitude E6420.
in reply to Jayson Smith

As tempting as this project is, what I really should say is, just enable BitLocker on that laptop and run RIM on Windows. I mean, we probably wouldn't even jump on a project of this size in such a tight time frame for one of our enterprise customers. So I shouldn't really consider doing it just because you nerdsniped me.
in reply to Matt Campbell

Oh yeah I totally get it. I was basically using RIM as an example simply because it's the remote access including remote audio solution with which I'm most familiar.
in reply to Matt Campbell

Well if you want a real nerdsnipe, I'm sure you'd love to get RIM going on a Z-machine running on an Apple II using Textalker…except we both know that would be totally impossible on either platform, never mind using both of them.
in reply to Jayson Smith

Right. I still think about trying to get a Z-machine running on an Apple II using Textalker. Maybe using the Beyond Z-Machine implementation, which I recently came across in 4am's Pitch Dark package.
in reply to Matt Campbell

I'm actually surprised no one in the blind community seemingly figured out a way to run Infocom games under Textalker during the time when they were a going concern. Or at least if they did, no mention of such ever made it into BAUD, AppleTalk, the Raised Dot newsletters, etc. that I know of.
in reply to Jayson Smith

The only thing I ever came across was using a command built into the original Infocom Apple II interpreter to send output to a device that could connect to a serial port. But that doesn't give you interruption of speech, screen review, etc.
in reply to Matt Campbell

Right. And by the time Textalker-GS came on the scene, Infocom was no more, and their last four releases (Zork Zero, Shogun, Journey, Arthur) were in the graphical Z6 format.
in reply to Jayson Smith

I tried to boot one of the Infocom disks under Textalker GS, using that feature that lets you boot from another disk with Textalker GS still running. At least in MAME, using the older version of Textalker GS that works in an emulator, it failed badly.
in reply to Matt Campbell

On a different topic, I've always sort of wondered what a real Z-machine I.E. a Z-machine implemented as an actual piece of hardware would look like. Obviously it'd need a keyboard and a screen, but what would be the game storage medium? One person on ifMUD years ago suggested the games would be on featureless white cubes such as found in Spellbreaker. And what about save storage?
in reply to Jayson Smith

It makes sense. On the Apple II, the Infocom disks had their own boot loader that loaded the interpreter and then read the story from the disk starting at track 3. It was the only way to squeeze a possibly 128K Z-machine 3 story onto a 140K floppy.
in reply to Matt Campbell

How about RIM for ChromeOS one day? I think plenty of sighted people in the tech industry use cheap Chromebooks for this exact use case.
in reply to James Scholes

@jscholes A web app version of the controller side of RIM is something we're looking into. The main difficulty, though this is perhaps less important for sighted controllers, is keyboard input.
in reply to Matt Campbell

@jscholes What about having a controller on iOS, or on the Raspberry Pi? That would be tiny and nothing would be more portable. A RIM image for the pi would be very interesting.
in reply to Tech Singer

@techsinger @jscholes Raspberry Pi would be doable, though I can't make any promises about if or when we might dedicate resources to that. On iOS, the main challenge would be full keyboard input, especially passing screen reader commands to the target.
in reply to Matt Campbell

@jscholes I agree with you on the difficulty of screen reader commands on iOS. I have been able to do this with VNC, but it requires running autohotkey on the remote side to map the right alt to capslock. Jump Desktop then sends that key, so it works, but this isn't really workable for most people. If you turn off voiceover, it's more or less usable, but I wouldn't like to be in sales for it. As for the Pi, keep in mind that you will have a great deal of power over the controller environment. You can just boot the thing, select your wireless network and machine, and be up and running.
in reply to Matt Campbell

Oh yeah and I also have a Mac Mini I purchased in 2014 or so that I'm not using, I think it still has Yosemity on it, no idea how modern it can go. And yeah I have that old Mac Mini purchased in 2008 with a busted (lightning fried) Ethernet port. IIRC it has Snow Leopard maybe? but because of the busted Ethernet Apple doesn't think it's legitimate or something.
in reply to Jayson Smith

Unfortunately RIM won't work on the 2014 Mac. It would have been much harder to port RIM to Mac without the built-in system audio capture support that Apple introduced in macOS Ventura.
in reply to Matt Campbell

To be honest, if something like this actually existed and could run on ancient hardware, I actually have a few old XP machines, one from 2007, another from 2004, which I'd throw it on. Then when we leave this house for the last time I'd just go off and leave it behind, since we're junking those machines anyway.
in reply to Jayson Smith

I'd probably buy this, so long as I could expand it to 2/3 machines.


Well that was fun. I just went to throw out the garbage and was accosted by a short heavily-accented fellow. He kept wanting to talk to me about Leejus and how Leejus could help people like me. How Leejus loved me. He wouldn't stop. Even followed me to my door. He gave me a little pamphlet. Got my wife to look at it. First thing it says on it: Even in the dark, light will shine. The irony of giving this to a blind guy. Lololol!


I think @JonathanMosen may enjoy hearing that AI-generated story! mastodon.social/@chikim/113216…
This entry was edited (1 month ago)


The three stages of finding out that old games still exist and are on steam. Like emergency 2:

1. Oh I loved that game as a kid! I need it!
2. That's so beautiful!
3. God damn it! How do I get this stupid monkey into the cage??!

Or Disney Hercules:

1. How did they get this onto steam?? I need it!
2. Like I remember it! So great!
3. Fuck you, you damn Titan and your shitty collision box!

in reply to Mr. DrogDrog

but sometimes it's so satisfying when you still know how to play the game by heart/muscle memory even though you haven't played it in 15/20 years.
in reply to Bubu

@Bubu the only games I replay are story games where this does not matter and challenge games where you need to know how to play it... I even suck at tetris but also in hades when placing it aside for a month 🫠

@mrdrogdrog



We know — and our rulers certainly know — that if we are to have any hope of preserving even a limited version of today’s complex modern society, greenhouse gas emissions MUST go down, swiftly and urgently.

But instead, emissions continue going up and up and up. It is literally suicidal.

So, WHY haven't we stopped burning fossil fuels?

Because there are profits to be made. Huge, massive, irresistibly tempting profits.

In a sane world, these actions would be seen as criminal.

Perpetrators like fossil fuel executives, their financiers, and the politicians who enable them, would be arrested, charged, tried, and convicted, with assets forfeited to pay for mitigation and reparations.

But we do not live in a sane world.

#Politics #Economics #Environment #Climate #ClimateChange #ClimateJustice #Capitalism #BusinessAsUsual #Degrowth



Blade Dancer from the Dungeon World Class Warfare expansion is such an awesome class for dex builds


My iPhone 16 Pro records videos in the Camera app always in mono, no matter what settings I choose. Is there someone who can confirm / deny? For now I will blame it on #iOS beta 18.1 until I hear that I am the only one who has this experience.
#ios


Nemám rád jeseň / zimu. To počasie v našich končinách ma zabíja.
Chcel som, naivne, urobiť správnu vec a šľahnúť si kombo vakcínu covid+chrípka...
U obvoďáka? Zabudnite. Pekne cez ten šialený registračný formulár... len aby som zistil, že sa očkuje IBA v Banskej Bystrici!

A potom budú pindať do telky, ako sa ľudia nechcú očkovať a nie je záujem. #štátibaomylom



@libreoffice Conference 2024
Workshop Introduction to LibreOffice Development

Gerrit for code reviews
Presenter: Xisco Faulí, TDF staff, quality assurance Engineer

Workshop Registration:
conference.libreoffice.org/202…

#libreoffice
#libreofficeconference2024
#thedocumentfoundation




Tiny Mastodon Tip About Boosts :mastodon: :boost_ok:!

First, yes! You should absolutely boost the posts that you like on Mastodon! :neocat_heart:

Boosting (reposting) is a very important feature on Mastodon! Because there are no algorithm to push content in your timeline, it is what others post and repost that you see chronologically.

Boosting keeps Mastodon alive!
Do it! Boost it! :boost_ok: :blobcatrainbow:

That being said,
if you personally get annoyed by someone else's boosts, know that you have options:

1. Everyone should enable the "Group boosts in timelines" option. You can find it from the browser interface in "Preferences" > "Other" at the very top. This will hide new boosts for posts that have been recently boosted :ablobslurp:

2. You can hide all of someone's boosts without hiding their original posts. Go to the person's profile, select the 3-dot "Menu" button (in the browser interface, this will vary per mobile app), and select "Hide boosts from [handle]" :blobcatthinksmart:

3. You can mute someone's posts temporarily (boosts and originals). On the same "Menu", select "Mute [handle]" then "Show options." You can select between 24 hours, 7 days, or 30 days 🤐

4. Know also that you are more likely to notice someone boosting a post repeatedly if you follow few people. Because there are no algorithm here, it is also a good idea to follow more people. Especially if you find your timeline too quiet :acongablob:

5. Don't forget to boost the posts that you like! :awesome:

#TinyMastodonTip #Mastodon #Fediverse



😲 OMG, Audio Overview feature on NotebookLM is wild! It basically creates a podcast with two AI generated voices based on the source documents you upload. Definitely try if you haven't yet. #LLM #ML #AI blog.google/technology/ai/note…
#AI #ML #llm
in reply to Chi Kim

Yep, it's quite a bit of fun! Looking forward to when you can change to different voices.
in reply to victor tsaran

@vick21 It would be great if they provide a transcript for users to edit and regenerate. Especially when you want to generate something for class materials, and if it outputs some misleading statements, you should be able to edit them to clarify or correct.
in reply to Chi Kim

BTW, I can’t quite figure out how to get rid of the old podcast and create a new one. Did you?
in reply to victor tsaran

@vick21 Yes, there's a button that brings menu for download, delete, playback speed etc. If you just delete the podcast, and you have an option to regenerate.
in reply to Chi Kim

But the button is not labeled, right?
This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to victor tsaran

@vick21 There's audio timeline slider, vo+left gets you to play/pause, then vo+left lands on the thing that says menu popup collapsed. If you open that menu, you can delete, download, etc. If you can't find the audio, there is open chat feed button, and it'll open a drop down for like create, faq, study guide, etc. You should be able to find audio overview.

Unknown parent

victor tsaran
Couldn’t agree more. I have difficulty understanding how and why some people can be so nasty to other people.
This entry was edited (1 month ago)


л3сн49 п0л9н4 п0лн4 ч3с7ныХ г3р038 8ы 370 п0н1м4373?


Still getting used to the idea that as a fully grown adult with my own money and a driver's license I can just... go and do whatever I need
in reply to Chris 🌱

I’ve been feeling like that since I got my license recently

I can go get shit, oh god

It’s so surreal to think about

in reply to Chris 🌱

As an adult living off my own money, I say the problem is finding time to enjoy it. haha


Slovami klasika, ak máte dosah na niekoho ešte stále uväzneného Štokholmským syndrómom u Melóna... dajte im vedieť, že #sktwitter na Mastodone ich očakáva... 😂

From: @hacks4pancakes
infosec.exchange/@hacks4pancak…



Ленточное хранилище для дома.
Такое бывает? Могу я купить старые кассеты и магнитофон и хранить на кассетах терабайты данных?
in reply to DearFox

Можете, пока кассеты не осыпятся. Если честно, считаю, что кассета была великолепной технологией в смысле «дёшево и доступно всем», но слава богам, что ей на смену пришли другие.


If someone proposed you, say, 100 GB of #NextCloud hosting to have your own private cloud for $3 or 3 € a month with unmetered bandwidth, full setup and tech support specifically tailored for #accessibility needs, would you consider it? #Boosts encouraged! Thanks!

  • Yes, I'm in! (32%, 33 votes)
  • I'd consider, but it's too expensive or too little storage for me (16%, 17 votes)
  • Not interested (15%, 16 votes)
  • I'm self-hosting it already for my needs (32%, 33 votes)
  • What is NextCloud? (Please reply if you selected this!) (2%, 2 votes)
101 voters. Poll end: 1 month ago

reshared this

in reply to Darrell Bowles

@vol4life8657 If you know what a cloud like OneDrive, Google Drive or iCloud is, then it's the same, but you don't pay to greater corporations, have your files safe and can be sure no one uses your files except for yourself.


#Tuvalu, likely first modern country to become uninhabitable, has new plan for keeping control of fishing rights even if its land disappears by #climatechange.

#LawOfTheSea treaty says sea territory, fishing rights only exist with reference to land territory, but is silent on what happens when land changes, disappears. Tuvalu has multi-pronged strategy to form intl consensus that sea borders remain if their land disappears.

reuters.com/investigations/sin… #geography @geography @geopolitics #ocean




Capitalism is corporation telling you got sold something while it's not, it's just a loan at their leisure and then can taketh away.

Exhibit: software, media.

Capitalism is also corporations convincing you to give them something for free and then selling it to others like it is theirs.

Exhibit: 23andMe, Facebook.



mrtě Čechů v Bratislavě mrtě.. Morava jak Čechy nevím co děláte cecky ty vole :kekw:
This entry was edited (1 month ago)


Some impressions from Boiling The Ocean yesterday and today! Lots of productive planning and hacking including on postmarketOS, GNOME OS, Papers, eSIM settings, local-first plans, and much more :)

#gnome #berlin #postmarketOS #boilingTheOcean

This entry was edited (1 month ago)


In other news, we have a slightly updated schedule for the few next days!

#boilingTheOcean #gnome #postmarketOS #localfirst #berlin

This entry was edited (1 month ago)

reshared this