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Slack started doing this thing recently where if they detect that your onblur focus (like with NVDA) has moved relative to your keyboard focus to a different form, your focus gets jumped back to the point of that last keyboard-focused item. This is actually not bad, at first disorienting, but it does solve the issue whereby if you're editing a message and exit focus mode, you can end up in the wrong edit field when finding yourself again if you're not careful, so, I'll take it.
in reply to Tamas G

I suppose if you got used to it for the used case it would be OK. I usually hate this when it happens. Let me make my own decisions :-) but it might be beneficial for inside of Slack for all I know.


[interviewing for the position of UX Designer at Ryanair]
interviewer: tell me about your last role
me: I added 7 screens to the checkout flow and single-handedly reduced customer satisfaction by 63%
interviewer: [gasping excitedly] when can you start


pet death

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Women only, a quick question: How bad is the reply guy problem on Mastodon? (Please boost for a good sample.)

  • No problem (22%, 274 votes)
  • Happens a little (49%, 611 votes)
  • Significant (21%, 263 votes)
  • Huge (6%, 79 votes)
1227 voters. Poll end: 4 weeks ago

reshared this



Ich musste feststellen, dass es auch Musiker gibt, die bei der Erwähnung eines veganen Produktes ausrasten, aber nicht vor Freude. Und das nur, weil das Musikhaus Thomann, lt. Wikipedia „der umsatzstärkste Musikalienhändler weltweit“, eine vegane Konzertgitarre ins Sortiment aufgenommen und dies bei Facebook beworben hat. Und ich habe wie so oft den Fehler begangen, die Kommentare zu lesen.

Es zeigt sich schnell, dass Musiker in der Tat kreativer sind als Kommentierende, die unter einen Beitrag über Veganismus Sachen posten wie „Darauf erstmal ein Steak!“. Musiker schreiben „Als nächstes will ich ein Drumset das nur aus Knochen, Fell, Fleisch und Blut hergestellt wird!!“.

Generell ist die Ahnungslosigkeit allerdings genauso hoch wie bei anderen kontroversen Themen. Was denn an einer Gitarre nicht vegan sein könne, fragen einige. Nun, dass die Instrumente nicht aus Hack gemacht sind, dürfte klar sein. Dafür kommen z. B. Perlmutt-Einlagen, Knochen, Schellack und Leim mit tierischen Bestandteilen zum Einsatz. Die von einigen Kommentierenden erwähnten Saiten aus Katzendarm werden dagegen bei Konzertgitarren schon lange durch Nylon-Saiten ersetzt. Es fehlt also auch hier das Wissen, wo überall tierische Bestandteile verarbeitet werden. Es sei denn, es geht darum, einer vegan lebenden Person Heuchelei zu unterstellen, dann ist klar, dass ein Smartphone nicht vegan ist.

Ansonsten gibt es zur veganen Gitarre Kommentare wie „WTF? Are you serious?“, „Jetzt fangt bloß ned a no mit dem Scheiß da o!!!“, „Noch bescheuerter geht’s nicht mehr…“ und „Auch ein Baum ist ein Lebewesen…!! Aber okay, wer es braucht….“. Die Pflanzenversteher dürfen ja nicht fehlen, die zwar kein Problem damit haben, dass für ihr Essen leidensfähige Lebewesen getötet werden, aber Empathie für gefällte Bäume entwickeln.

Kommen wir zur Gitarre selbst. Bereits 2020 hatte der Berliner Gitarrenbauer Armin Hanika eine vegane Konzertgitarre für den American Guitar Shop, auch in Berlin ansässig, gebaut. Das Hanika Vegan Modell 50MF ist dort noch immer erhältlich. Und auch Thomann ist nicht erst gestern auf den Zug aufgesprungen, sondern bereits im September 2023 mit dem Modell Hanika H-Thomann KEF Vegan. Wenn ich mir die Arbeiten von Armin Hanika anschaue, habe ich keine Zweifel, dass die vegane Gitarre mit den herkömmlich gebauten Modellen mithalten kann. Leider gibt es bei beiden Shops keine Kundenbewertungen.

Ich finde es sehr gut, dass in vielen Bereichen mittlerweile tierische Inhaltsstoffe ersetzt werden, das Unverständnis einiger – online wie offline – ist jedoch immer groß. Was denn bitte an Weichspüler nicht vegan sein könne oder an Rotwein? Warum gibt es vegane Holzkohle? Müssen Veganer immer Fleischprodukte nachbauen? Das darf dann aber nicht „veganer Leberkäse“ heißen! Es ist noch ein sehr langer Weg bis zu der Erkenntnis, dass Veganismus kein Trend ist, keine Sekte oder Religion, sondern die Zukunft.

vgngth.de/2024/07/22/die-vegan…

#Gitarre #Veganismus



Recently while catching up on posts, I came across a thread stating that it was a fact that listening to an audiobook counts as reading. The post was couched in a highly dogmatic way which suggested there wasn’t much room for debate, so I chose not to contribute.
However, having taken a day to think about it, I’m concerned about leaving this view unchallenged because I genuinely believe that it is potentially harmful to the education, and therefore the economic prospects, of young blind people.
The first point I want to make is that there is absolutely nothing wrong with enjoying a great audiobook. A good narrator can make a book come to life. I don’t believe an audiobook is inferior. Although I don’t listen to many audiobooks anymore just as a matter of choice, I do opt for an audiobook when someone is reading their own autobiography. That’s because rather than read the book, I would rather listen to someone reading their own book to me.
But when I choose to listen to an audiobook, I am no more reading the book than my grandchild is reading it when I read a book to her. She is being entertained, in some cases she is gaining valuable knowledge, but she is not reading it, she is being read to. There is benefit in this. It could be enhancing her aural language skills.
You may be thinking that this is all pointless semantics. But the reason I’m raising it is that the “audiobooks are reading” argument has been used to deprive blind kids of true literacy. To me, true literacy is the ability to write something down and read it back. Braille is the only viable means of true literacy a blind person has. For all the good that technology has done, when talking computers came on the scene and audiobooks became more abundant, some teachers and more than a few public policy practitioner decided that these developments meant that we didn’t need to teach blind kids to read anymore. It was a means of short-changing blind kids, of not allocating the necessary funding and resources to give them a good start in life. It was disgraceful. No parent of a sighted child would tolerate being told that their kid didn’t need to read because they could just listen to audio instead.
The result was that many people who had so much to offer the world were deprived of the right to read. It is often these professionals and policy makers who want blind people to believe that listening is the same as reading.
These kids who missed out on the opportunity to read became adults with fewer employment prospects. We know that the unemployment rate of Braille readers is far closer to the unemployment rate of the population as a whole, compared with those blind people who haven’t had the opportunity to read Braille. And in a sad irony, these kids, some of whom grew up to be parents, were not given the tools to read bedtime stories to their kids when they eventually became parents. Putting on an audiobook for a child is nothing like the personal bonding that comes from a parent reading a story to a child.
Some of those kids who missed out on literacy took the brave step of learning Braille as an adult, but they know they will find it difficult to achieve the same speed they would have if they had learned Braille as a child. It is a tragedy.
While there has been a recovery, this sort of story is not yet completely in the past. It is still happening to some kids today.
Enjoy those audiobooks. I certainly do. But let’s also ensure that every blind child has the right to read by not playing into the narrative that listening to a book read by someone else is the same as reading one yourself.

reshared this

in reply to Jonathan Mosen

Thank you for sharing your perspective. As the author of the post I assume is being referenced, I'd like to provide some context:

Recently, I've encountered several elitist viewpoints on this subject, using phrases like quote "the proper way" unquote to consume literature. I strongly disagree with any implication that there are right and wrong ways to educate and entertain oneself through books.

However, I acknowledge that my post could have made its scope clearer, and you're not the only one to mention how this view is weaponized in educational settings. Regardless of the reasons, making counterproductive and lazy decisions on behalf of disabled students is unacceptable.

I hold certain educators and educational systems responsible for the fact that blind and low-vision students too often leave school with subpar literacy levels. While they may justify their approaches with certain rhetoric, it's their actions and agendas that are at fault—whether rooted in ignorance, misguided attempts to compensate for lack of funding, or other reasons. However, the rhetoric itself shouldn't be automatically blamed for how people choose to interpret and misuse it.

As for the differences in brain activity between different consumption methods, some studies suggest that in adults, listening and reading by sight or touch aren't as different as commonly thought. I notice you've received responses stating the opposite, but I don't have the expertise to state one position over another.

Semantics aside, I think we can agree that consuming material that educates and uplifts is more important than ever, regardless of how people choose to do so.

in reply to James Scholes

@jscholes Thanks James. I’m not particularly interested in which part of the brain certain activities trigger, it’s irrelevant to the point I was making which was all about how we as blind people are set up to maximise our participation in society. True literacy increases our chances of having a good life, and I appreciate you acknowledging the harm these professionals are doing by depriving blind kids of the skills that are a fundamental human right.


To anyone using Google Workspace and personal GMail, it puzzles me that on my personal GMail I can hit the enter key to open a conversation in my inbox, on the Workspace Google Mail I need to exit focus mode and use the k key for next link, then manually press it. What gives. Is it some obscure setting I didn't enable in my workspace version?
in reply to Tamas G

yeah ... that's been a thing for a long time. no idea why, just seems to be inconsistent between versions


Dear @savetz, I'm digging the Ted Nelson's archive searching for images around flatbed scanners -the object-. I found only a couple of images and in general -maybe I'm doing wrong- its easier find examples than hardware. In general, looking for help and advice to find interesting manuals or texts about the early years of home scanners. 🤓


A couple weeks ago I gave a talk at @djangocon about the finances of the Django Software Foundation. I wanted to give folks a high-level understanding of our current financial situation, and then imagine a world where we had a substantially-larger budget.

Here's a written version of this talk, with annotated slides, and expanded notes:

jacobian.org/2024/oct/8/dsf-on…

in reply to jacoBOOian 👻

This is really interesting. Do you know the name of the plot for the budget visualization? I'd like to make a similar one; doesn't look hard to draw but maybe there are tools?
in reply to Federico Mena Quintero

@federicomena it’s called a “Sankey chart”. I used sankeymatic.com/, exported to SVG and edited by hand (colors, fonts) in Inkscape.


Need to manage Linux passwords on the command line? No GUI, no problem! lxer.com/module/newswire/ext_l…


Hmm, why is it that none of the supposed “all-news” stations in the Tampa area are covering the storm? They all have regularly scheduled national stuff. I’d like some storm coverage, please, thank you!
in reply to Moop

Maybe some tv stations have it. The radio hasn't started picking it up yet that I know of.
in reply to Khronos

@khronos I’m not in the Tampa area, so I wouldn’t know how to get TV stations in that area, preferably on my computer, to record coverage. But good to know about those radio stations in your area. Do you know the call letters of those stations? So I can find them on ootunes and triode and keep an eye on when they go to coverage? I know, I’m a geek, archiving coverage is a hobby of mine, especially weather coverage.
in reply to Moop

I don't know the call letters yet. Have to look them up. #wfla is a #Tampa tv station I think.
in reply to Khronos

@khronos hmm, interesting, www.newson.us is a site where it appears you can watch local news from across the country. This might be interesting. Shame I can’t have audio hijack recorder record a session for each safari window, lol. Then I could record a whole bunch of stations, but nope, you can only record a session per app. For example, you record safari, it will record all audio playing in safari. I’ll just have to be a channel flipper and go between channels of the coverage.

Khronos reshared this.

in reply to Moop

They say that in my area of FL 105.1 and 105.9 in Orlando will be playing tv coverage at some point.


What is the hardest part about sky diving? The ground.

in reply to David Goldfield

What I especially liked about this post was the reference to quoting posts. About time.


jerf.org/iri/post/2024/not_abo… Alternative title: "Engineers are not fans of technologies."

I stopped being a fan of Python many years ago. Of course, these days I risk being a fan of Rust.



CELA Launches Accessible Commercial Audiobooks Project - Inclusive Publishing inclusivepublishing.org/news-a…


I want to get back into writing longer posts, as I did on my now dead live journal. That's such a weird phrase...
Anyway, on this instance I have 1000 characters. On my new instance I have 12000. Feel free to follow over there if you wish, I don't know what I'll talk about yet or if I'm simply wasting time, but it's a thing.
@Onj

WestphalDenn reshared this.

in reply to Andre Louis

I'm still trying to work out exactly what to use in place of my Goodreads for book reviews and someone said to look at writefreely.



This is the type of people the Americans pick to determine the fate of entire populations.

#Israel #Palestine #Lebanon



Did you miss the #AndroidAppRain at apt.izzysoft.de/fdroid a little? Well, get your capes out, I'm back from my vacation. So today, 19 updated and 7 added apps:

* QuickMDCapture: quickly create notes in Markdown format 🛡️
* Mock my GPS UnifiedNlp Backend: mock the GPS and Network location providers
* Mock Silently: mock the GPS and Network location providers
* IrisChat: IRC client 🛡️
* Grit: ToDo List and Habit Tracker 🛡️

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🚀 Phanpy byl aktualizován! 🎉
Právě jsme aktualizoval novou verzi Phanpy! 📢 Verze 2024.10.08
💬 Máte návrhy nebo jste našli chyby v překladu? Lokalizace ještě není kompletní, takže uvítáme jakékoliv návrhy na zlepšení a pomoc s překladem.
phanpy.cz
#Phanpy #Mastodon #Update #Localization #OpenSource


If you are using one of the *oma instances (Akkoma, Pleroma, etc): you can easily handle this spam wave without playing defederation whack-a-mole by doing the following:

  • Enable RejectNewlyCreatedAccountNotesPolicy and set the limit to at least one hour. Note that this is not without tradeoffs: users who migrate to new accounts will not be able to reach your instance until their account is old enough, and will often wonder what’s going on.
  • Enable HellthreadPolicy to limit the maximum number of mentions in a post before it stops notifying mentioned users, or before it’s rejected outright. Temporarily decrease the limit during a spam wave if you need to.
  • Enable KeywordPolicy and add strings commonly found in spam posts, such as domain names (followed by a slash, to reduce false positives from real users simply mentioning the domain without linking it), hashtags, and uncommon words. Look up the “Scunthorpe Problem” if you’re unfamiliar.

When the dust settles, depending on available spoons, I might go through the instances that haven’t cleaned up spam after multiple days. Those are likely abandoned and extra-vulnerable to future attacks and block evaders. On *oma, these defederations will not sever connections and are reversible.

#Spam #SpamWave #FediAdmin

Seirdy reshared this.

in reply to Seirdy

obligatory “Fedi needs a middleware like a WAF for filtering remote messages”.

cattle-grid looks like a good start, though it does tend to trigger false positives when scanning for auth-fetch block evaders.

in reply to Seirdy

technical FediMeta

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I can't wait for the announcement from Mozilla that they will discontinue the "Manifest V2" API for web extensions. I mean if you are now an ad tech company, Manifest V2 is against your mission.


📢 Po aktualizaci vypadá nové webové rozhraní opravdu skvěle! 😍
Malé upozornění: Možná budete muset zkontrolovat nastavení oznámení emailem v sekci předvolby, protože jsem měl po aktualizaci všechna oznámení automaticky zapnutá. 🔔
Doporučuji to zkontrolovat, pokud nechcete být zahlceni notifikacemi. 📬


Naše instance :arch: byla aktualizována na verzi 4.3
Jsou i novinky webového rozhraní 👍🏻
github.com/mastodon/mastodon/r…


Could Toronto-Montreal route be Canada's first high-speed rail?

dailyhive.com/montreal/toronto…

It lacks of ambition. I guess that the values.

Max 200kph? FFS this is not the 1960s.

When TGV opened in 1981, the cruise speed on the Paris Lyon was 260kph. Paris Lille was 300kph when I commuted on it 20 years ago.

I guess lots of gloss on the report.

in reply to Hubert Figuière

Via rail in Canada had a high speed train some years ago, but it kept running into cows at level crossings.
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/UAC_Tu…
in reply to Sam Oldman 🐀

@samloonie "some". Most of the population is now born after it ended service.

A proper high speed train wouldn't have level crossing.

in reply to Hubert Figuière

For sure. Cows would have a hard time getting up to elevated track. I think they were trying to do it on the cheap.
in reply to Sam Oldman 🐀

@samloonie th railroad were not interested in it. That's why VIA was created and remained a band-aid by still using the same badly maintained trackage on why the heavy freight has priority.

This is the root cause of the poor service. That and the lack of courage and ambition from politicians to do anything about it.

in reply to Hubert Figuière

it's is so ambitious that the 1964 Shinkansen 0 Series (ie the original Japanese "bullet train") had a max speed of 210 kph, with later model being faster.


American Water shuts down online services after #cyberattack

American Water is the largest water and wastewater treatment utility in the US…

OT systems not affected - so appears this only affects their IT systems. Suspected nation state activity (Russia).

(I encourage everyone sharing this with their friends because cyber attacks absolutely can have direct “real world” consequences.)

#cybersecurity #infosec #security

bleepingcomputer.com/news/secu…



For very good reasons, the .io TLD is going away.

Once this treaty is signed, the British Indian Ocean Territory will cease to exist. Various international bodies will update their records. In particular, the International Standard for Organization (ISO) will remove country code “IO” from its specification. The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA), which creates and delegates top-level domains, uses this specification to determine which top-level country domains should exist. Once IO is removed, the IANA will refuse to allow any new registrations with a .io domain. It will also automatically begin the process of retiring existing ones. (There is no official count of the number of extant .io domains.)


every.to/p/the-disappearance-o…

(H/t @mwl )

reshared this

in reply to Taggart

I don't think this is actually going to happen.

There's so much stuff relying on .io at this point that I won't be surprised if major DNS providers just sidestep ICAN and take matters into their own hands.

ICAN isn't omniscient and omnipotent, if the majority of the world decides that they shouldn't be in charge of DNS any more and that we'd rather use a different set of root servers, their power basically goes away.

in reply to Mikołaj Hołysz

@miki
DNSSEC prevents a root server takeover of a zone.
This entry was edited (4 weeks ago)
in reply to Mikołaj Hołysz

@miki It's possible this won't go into effect for some reason, but the proposal of replacing ICANN/IANA with another governing body is certainly a bigger upheaval than the loss of a single TLD.
in reply to Taggart

You wouldn't even necessarily have to go through with it; a credible threat of it happening could motivate ICAN to do the right thing here.
in reply to Mikołaj Hołysz

A threat from? In the past it was from UN to take over both names and IP addresses management worldwide. See how much that happened... (new world conferences were created and exist today just for that history)
This entry was edited (4 weeks ago)
in reply to Taggart

You wouldn't even necessarily have to go through with it; a credible threat of it happening could motivate ICAN to do the right thing here.


NPR: Blood pressure readings are a key to evaluating your risk of cardiovascular disease. But a new study finds that even small missteps in how they are taken can significantly skew the results.#news #NPR npr.org/sections/shots-health-…
#News #NPR


#Mastodon 4.3 is out! 🎉 We've made notifications easier to manage and improved the look and feel of the whole app across the board. And that's just the tip of the iceberg! See what you can expect once your server upgrades:

blog.joinmastodon.org/2024/10/…



We should have domain name swap parties.


I am the proud owner of feygeleh.org, if you have a worthy need for such a lovely domain name, let me know. I have been squatting on that for roughly 15 years. #mazeldon


Over the last month, 51.39 TB of data was served by the #curl website.

14.05 billion requests

99.93% cache hitrate

About one million #curl tarball downloads (guesstimate based on object size downloads)

#curl





You might have noticed already: since a few weeks, #MapComplete has a totally new search experience.

If you search something, the matching locations are shown on the map. If it matches the name of a layer or a filter, you can also opt to show only this layer or to enable this filter. For examplr, on mapcomplete.org/food, one could search for 'sushi' to only see sushi restaurants and then for 'open now'. Or search with an emoji, such as 🍕🍟🥙 or 🍙

This entry was edited (4 weeks ago)


We are once again learning the perils of unmoderated/abandon fediverse instances today...
in reply to Merry Jerry 🎄🎅🕎⛄️❄️

when spammers discover the mountain of abandoned Hubzilla instances, the digital wildfires will last weeks.
in reply to Seirdy

correction: they already discovered them but they’re not directly pinging users, just posting porn and links to gambling sites.


We are officially in the 'fuck it' era of AI slop
- AI-generated images are used to convey whatever partisan message suits the moment regardless of truth
- for all the fear of deepfake-driven disinformation, proves fakes don't even need to be realistic
404media.co/hurricane-helene-a…


Good morning, North America. Good afternoon, Europe. Good evening, Australia. Oh happy day. My voice is finally back. I mean, it's been back, but now even the rasp is gone. I feel like a singer again. Wheeee! Also, if you order Walmart grocery delivery today and have to call for help, expect to be told that the hurricane is affecting everything. Yes, even if you're nowhere near it like TJ and me. Choose something else, if possible. Also, I'm so over the Voiceover crackling bug that's affecting my airPods. Thanks for being my fav part of social media, Masto.
in reply to Rosalin Kellyanna

I have the same bug and it doesn't happen everywhere,but in some apps it does. Soooo annoying! I hope your day is good, and you're well.


It's time for an update about #siteblocking in #Canada, because there have been some developments: We have one new order of a type that has become almost routine now, and one new order that's a little different, one that goes down that slippery slope many of us warned about when companies like Bell and Rogers first started seeking site blocking orders. 🧵👇🏼
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in reply to Andy Kaplan-Myrth

First, instead of each rights-holder blocking one sport at a time, this year all the major broadcasters teamed up and won a "multisports" order that requires listed ISPs to block sites that carry unlicensed streams of NHL, NBA, and soccer games. They've already gotten 3 updates, adding MLB and UFC into 2026.

#TekSavvy is included in this order. Our info page with the latest order is here: teksavvy.com/policies/internet…

Read the original decision here: canlii.ca/t/k5spw
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in reply to Andy Kaplan-Myrth

Second, now that site blocking orders are so well established to protect copyright, Indigo Books relied on them as a precedent to protect trademarks. They got an order requiring named ISPs to block access to the websites of the "Indigo Kills Kids" campaign. Since this order aims to block a website, it uses DNS blocking (like GoldTV), rather than the "dynamic" blocking orders used for streams.

#TekSavvy is not currently included in this order. Read the decision here: canlii.ca/t/k73h2
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