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Air Canada has this cool system now where there are no human employees at the check in counter at all, and instead you register your baggage with a little touch screen and place it on a conveyor belt, and then the touch screen displays an error, and there's nothing you can do because there are no fucking human employees present to deal with it

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in reply to mcc

air canada: we are not happy until you are not happy.


New app added to the Accessible Android apps directory: Hermit Browser accessible accessibleandroid.com/app/herm… #Android #App



Fable Raises $25m in Series B Funding to Protect Digital globenewswire.com/news-release…



Now that I have a new and improved screenshot workflow, I’m pondering whether to add more to the book. The low-vision chapter is already the most visual chapter of the whole damn thing. Maybe I just like playing with screenshot frames and image shortcuts.



Vždy keď vám pristane takáto chobotina v inboxe, môžete si ťukať na čelo, že veď predsa na takúto hlúposť nemôže nikto naletieť... Ibaže, ak by to tak bolo, nespamovali by nás tým už celé roky. Takže pozor - dajte vedieť napr. aj svojim rodičom, či starým rodičom, že toto je chobotina nonplusultra, možnože to potrebujú počuť.


celkom sa mi dnes podarilo upratať a aj vypratať izbu od krabíc spolu so starou tv z rohu izby, začal som okupovať komoru.. aj to lepšie vyzerá
This entry was edited (4 days ago)


Anybody remember the Toronto free ISP that would serve up ads in exchange of the free internet? This is back in 2000-ish. Nothing like dialing up on a 56k modem, only to be slowed down by ads.


I need to write about something that’s painful to put out there for me, but I need to because I know there are other people also in my position. Also apologies for the thread. I’ve seen a huge amount of calls in the past day for people to cancel their #AmazonPrime in response to the #WaPo chickening out and not endorsing Kamala Harris. In principle, I do not disagree. At all. But for me, there’s one huge, and ultimately insurmountable, problem. #Amazon has become a necessity for me. (1/3)
in reply to Kevin LaRose He/Him

Not only do I agree with you but I think this whole issue is just stupid. We live in a free society: if the owner of a newspaper doesn't want his paper to endorse a certain candidate, that's his right. Personally, I rely on news services for news and not for them to tell me who I should vote for or who they endorse. In spite of the fact that we live in a country that supposedly values freedom, you'll find yourself criticized and persecuted if you don't publicly hold to certain opinions or support certain candidates. I say to hell with all of that. Kevin, keep buying from Amazon if that's what you need to do. I know that I will.
This entry was edited (5 days ago)


Welcome to the RB family, Privacy Lock 🥳

apt.izzysoft.de/packages/com.p…

Privacy Lock offers an extra layer of security on top of Android’s built-in features – like "shake to lock". Its next release should show the "green shield".

#reproducibleBuilds #IzzyOnDroid



Whoop! It's officially Winter time in the UK... Sunset at 4:54PM today.

Bring on the log fires, candlelit evenings, home-made stews and soups, weekends making Christmas cake and duck confit, roast chestnuts, baggy jumpers and extra fluffy socks!

#HappyThoughts



This is the Mac Mini’s big moment theverge.com/2024/10/27/242788…


Five new iPad mini 7 upgrades you might’ve missed 9to5mac.com/2024/10/27/five-ip…


Just had my first Starbucks coffee in nearly 10 years. I remember why I liked it, but I also remember why I gave it up. $7 for a large White Chocolate Mocha is a bit steep. It was good, but not what I want to pay on a regular basis.
in reply to Kevin

Yeah, honestly, Starbucks is suuper expensive here. I can have a whole week worth of coffee if I make my own, compared to their prices.


When you're using NVDA and forget what screen reader you are using. Yeah, that's the stuff!
in reply to Scary Martin

I struggled in my last workplace because I'd be seeing 9 or 10 students individually over a given day sometimes. I'd move from NVDA to JAWS to SuperNova, iOS to android to Keysoft and back, and then you got the odd student who were themselves in transition so would bring a different device on a different day.
in reply to Scary Martin

Or, when you use Windows but forget you're using windows and try to do something that's only working on Mac. Yeah, that's also the stuff. LOL

in reply to Day Garwood

@daygar well that's a very accepting and nicely broad definition of being deserving.
shame the history of almost every religion doesn't see the leaders living up to those standards.
As a message, I am all for a lot of religious communication. But I'm afraid the reality is often and very sadly harder to accept.
in reply to Sean Randall

@cachondo I agree. History has given just about every religion a bad name. While I admire their enthusiasm, their discernment is something else entirely. But only God truly knows and can therefore judge our hearts and intentions.


Poster at a church hall. Spot the odd one out in the “Individual Liberty” quadrant.
This entry was edited (5 days ago)
in reply to “Scary Will”

outside of the Pound sign as a religious symbol, the Star of David with a cross inside is Messianic Judaism, which is an offshoot of US Evangelical Christians


7 essential password rules to follow in 2024, according to security experts zdnet.com/article/7-essential-…

Khronos reshared this.



Hearing Aids May Reduce Risk of Developing Parkinson’s Disease hearingreview.com/inside-heari…


The compact point and shoot market collapsed because of smart phones

Me looking at cheap smart phone picture: 🤮

(over processed splotch. and no need to pixel peep to see it)

in reply to Hubert Figuière

non withstanding that they have made it very hard to download the pictures to save them. Apple or Android, regardless of the price.
in reply to Hubert Figuière

What is nice is when the camera vendors use that small footprint to do something that is still challenging with a phone.

I picked up an Olympus TG-6 some time back, and love it. Maybe it just scratches my particular itches: robust, waterproof (50', more with housing), and does beautiful macro shots out of the box.



Apple wins a battle (and $250) in its smartwatch patent fight with Masimo theverge.com/2024/10/25/242798…




Microsoft Office 2024 is now on Amazon, no subscription needed pcworld.com/article/2498611/mi…


Digital Technology and Sustainability with Ishmael Burdeau.

In this episode, Millie Cave interviews Ishmael Burdeau, Sustainability Business Architect at the UK government's DWP, to explore the environmental impacts of digital technology.

civilserviceenvironmentnetwork…

#podcast #sustainability



Removing contributors "because lawyers" without even explaining. Maybe you should ask more from your lawyers. They are the one being overpaid.
in reply to Hubert Figuière

Serge works for a Russian defense contractor that is on the US sanctions list. As a US entity, the Linux Foundation is following the law here. Blame the state of the world...
in reply to Fabrice Desré

@fabrice The reason that was posted SIX days later should have been attached to the patch, and IMHO there is no excuse. But who am I to criticize.



I fixed it. I just had to connect to toastsoft, not local host.


The #unitedkingdom military won’t have to be the commandants of Israel’s new concentration camps for #Gaza because private #UK military contractors — who will be accountable to no one but their shareholders — will run the private prisons.


looks like Debian's zipalign package is completely broken in testing/unstable. good thing I wrote my own, better version :3

github.com/obfusk/reproducible…

(it's so good tencent ported it to python 2 and violated the GPL (fixed now))



"Researchers say an AI-powered transcription tool used in hospitals invents things no one ever said
Image
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Tech behemoth OpenAI has touted its artificial intelligence-powered transcription tool Whisper as having near “human level robustness and accuracy.”

But Whisper has a major flaw: It is prone to making up chunks of text or even entire sentences, according to interviews with more than a dozen software engineers, developers and academic researchers. Those experts said some of the invented text — known in the industry as hallucinations — can include racial commentary, violent rhetoric and even imagined medical treatments…"
apnews.com/article/ai-artifici…



Comida, carne.

Sensitive content



Aurora Australis, captured at the southern tip of Africa where two oceans meet 🌌

📸 - Kyle Goetsch: threads.net/@kylegoetschphotog…

This entry was edited (5 days ago)


Hey, welcome @SimmerVigor on mastodon. Meddler in QUIC at the IETF and cloudflare.


Viete čo robím celý víkend... ležím pijem čaj a hrám Age of Empires Mobile. :kekw:
This entry was edited (5 days ago)


Eleven years ago, the only long-lived #libcurl fork I am aware of was made: daniel.haxx.se/blog/2013/10/27…

It existed for several years, but it seems to be completely gone now.



My instance has moved from 1 to 2,000 characters. I rarely hit the old limit. I love writing and am a very wordy guy, but I managed on twitter. hell: I managed with SMS in the 1990's.

I think this is also the first time I have actually started a post with the phrase 'my instance'.
Not sure how I feel about that, either. On the one hand, it's just here, working, and I'm not giving it a second thought.
On the other, I feel I should be paying toward its upkeep.

in reply to Sean Randall

A 1 character instance? WOW! That's fantast... oh... never mind.
in reply to Patrick Perdue

@BorrisInABox haha yes, I could have perhaps used some of those extra characters to add a few 0s in there!


decomplexifying #curl

daniel.haxx.se/blog/2024/10/27…

#curl
in reply to daniel:// stenberg://

I'm sure you're aware of the caveats but using function length may not be the best metric to measure complexity. What I'm about to write is therefore likely nothing new to you but I'm doing it nevertheless because there are many voices in the software engineering space that apply a naive law of "long function bad, short function good".

While splitting a function into smaller parts may improve readability to some degree, it rarely decreases the mental capacity needed to understand it. I'd argue that it's quite often even the opposite if the code is well-structured:
Blocks can be used efficiently to mimic a function that is specific to a use case, relatively short and not reusable. A separate function would introduce overhead in form of its signature and disruption of the reader's flow because its location is elsewhere in the code. The block can easily be shoved into a function when it becomes larger or when it can be re-used.

in reply to Lenny

@f09fa681 as a general rule, I still think longer is worse than shorter.
in reply to daniel:// stenberg://

As a general rule of thumb, I agree, I think.

When it comes to reducing complexity, what I'd want is to keep mental capacity needed in an acceptable range. In that regard, I'd e.g. value minimising the amount, scope and lifetime of variables within a function over function length. These metrics are likely much harder to provide but maybe they would be a neat addition next to the cyclomatic complexity.

in reply to Lenny

@f09fa681 I would also add making sure symbol names are short, readable and not easily mixed up. Hard to measure with a tool...
in reply to daniel:// stenberg://

@f09fa681 Kinda agree when we exclude functions extracted/refactored that contain only one call. While a complex call with a GOOD name of the function might be considered helpful, I tend to find it harmful as it is a context switch while reading code, for only one line/call. So it can turn bad if everything is wrapped in small functions - having unreadable code, and slipping right through the metric.