Discussions about digital sovereignty are 🔥

Which countries lead the way?

@nextcloud created an Index ranking countries based on the relative presence of self-hosted tools across key application areas.

1. Finland 🇫🇮
2. Germany 🇩🇪
3. The Netherlands 🇳🇱

dsi.nextcloud.com/index.php

😡 "A Canadian company is providing the muscle for a new Florida detention centre dubbed “Alligator Alcatraz” — & the Canadian govt isn’t ruling out working with the security giant in the future. …

Quebec-based GardaWorld, which has reportedly been awarded a US$8-million contract for work on the U.S. detention site, has also been awarded > $100 million in Canadian government contracts since Carney won the Liberal leadership in March …"

- Rachel Gilmore in @thetyee
mstdn.ca/@thetyee/114993478472…


“This wishy-washy stance when it comes to jaw-dropping cruelty tied to the U.S. is yet another stroke in an increasingly clear portrait: one of PM Mark Carney with his elbows firmly planted to his sides when it comes to big business.”

@r.gilmore’s first column with The Tyee.

thetyee.ca/Opinion/2025/08/08/…


“This wishy-washy stance when it comes to jaw-dropping cruelty tied to the U.S. is yet another stroke in an increasingly clear portrait: one of PM Mark Carney with his elbows firmly planted to his sides when it comes to big business.”

@r.gilmore’s first column with The Tyee.

thetyee.ca/Opinion/2025/08/08/…

Trump’s tariffs are bringing in tens of billions a month. What’s the government doing with all that money? - CNN apple.news/A6TBEs7dcRfqhJH8Hul…

ICYMI: earlier this week I wrote a blog post disclosing my tech stack… arguing that anyone who writes about technology should be transparent about the tools they use.

TL;DR: I’m doing well on the software front. Hardware? Not so much: 🍎

🔗: news.elenarossini.com/technofe…

Well, a few hours after publishing it, Tim Cook’s latest capitulation to the Authoritarian-in-Chief made front page news everywhere.

I can safely say my next laptop will be from @frameworkcomputer

#resist

Your inbox should be as private as your practice.

We had the privilege to chat with Matthias Baenz, a seasoned tax lawyer about why secure communication is non-negotiable in the legal field, and why he chose Tuta to protect his clients’ confidentiality.

🔐 Read the full story: tuta.com/blog/interview-why-ta…

#Tuta #LegalTech #PrivacyFirst #SecureEmail #ClientConfidentiality

in reply to Archos

Netušil jsem, že Svijany dělají nealko. Jednu dobu dělali slušné pivo, ale údajně to šlo poslední dobou do kopru. Navíc majitel je babišonek. denikn.cz/644208/majitel-pivov…

Now that my one joke post about how there are only seven posts on LinkedIn has comfortably done better numbers than everything else I'd ever put on that godforsaken cringe factory of a website combined, I can only conclude that what people really want from LinkedIn is a momentary respite from LinkedIn.

mastodon.social/@mhoye/1149602…

in reply to mhoye

my uneducated guess is that people want to get some form of recognition they don’t get at work (or elsewhere?) and treat LinkedIn praise as transactional. If I like their post, surely they will like mine?

There’s also the fact that your boss is in the room. They will see who and what you like, and what you write.

LinkedIn has the same vibe as the watercooler in the company of The All Seeing Eye or Sauron.

#GNOME #Desktop #a11y:
Über Fortschritte bei der #Barrierefreiheit berichtet @ktn@social.heise.de von der @gnome@floss.social Konferenz.

heise.de/news/Linux-Desktop-Gn…
#OpenSource #Linux

I sometimes think about text-to-speech in comparison to visual text rendering. For the latter, there's a whole suite of different solutions, from segmented LCDs (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Segmente…) to monospace bitmap fonts to proportional vector (e.g. TrueType) fonts. And somewhere in the current genAI boom, I'm sure someone is generating something that looks like handwriting. But in TTS, the industry largely jumped to generating human-sounding speech from human voices as soon as they could.
in reply to Arkadiusz Świętnicki🇵🇱

@nuno_nuno I'll be adding accessibility support for VoiceOver, Switch Control, Voice Control, Reduce Motion, and more, but – and this is a massive but – it will never be a great VoiceOver experience. Some tasks are things like "look through 500 lines of binary gibberish to find GPS coordinates at the end," and I don't think that can be exposed to VoiceOver in any meaningful way.

Random pop song that just popped in my head: "Try" by Pink. youtube.com/watch?v=yTCDVfMz15… Not anything particularly special, just that a random phrase made me think of it, and I think it's a good song.

400 years to Proxima Centauri means velocity of roughly 1% of c. To accelerate to that, then decelerate, takes energy on the order of 1-2% of the ship's rest mass.

Ship is 36 miles (50km) long.

So it obviously masses many gigatonnes (1 cubic kilometer of water—0.15 the density of steel—masses 1 billion tonnes). Conservatively this masses 10-100gt.

Fusion bomb yield is about 2% of the payload mass. Our current 10,000 H-bombs probably contain 1000kg of fuel.

/1
spacey.space/@nyrath/114992789…

in reply to Charlie Stross

@nyrath Upshot: I think this thing will take 100-1000 years of our current worldwide civilizational energy budget to propel.

And at the other end? Congratulations: a colony of 2400 people is at least 3 orders of magnitude too small to sustain a self-training technology base able to service an autonomous space colony. (Because resupply with finished products is impossible at that range.)

TLDR: magic wands or scientific breakthroughs required.

/2 (end)

This entry was edited (4 months ago)

This is what 5 years of reforestation looks like ✨

Once cleared for a palm oil monoculture, this forest is now lush and diverse again.

Together with Leuser Conservation Forum, we’re restoring the Leuser ecosystem in Indonesia — supporting natural regeneration and planting native trees with local communities.

5 years of progress, powered by the Ecosia community 💚

#trees #reforestation #regreening

Looking for a new job? Got experience with C++? Join the #LibreOffice team: blog.documentfoundation.org/bl… #foss #OpenSource
in reply to LibreOffice

Intéressant : réadapter l'interface utilisateur avec les concepts Apple… Ça pourrait effectivement améliorer l'ergonomie, parce que calquer sur MS Office est un non sens ergonomique global (c'est fou que MS Office soit si populaire alors que son interface est une torture) (bon d'accord : c'est surtout parce que MS Office est imposé aux utilisateurs et que les pauvres n'ont jamais connu autre chose que cet instrument de torture !)

Just read @glyph's latest: blog.glyph.im/2025/08/the-best… and this part triggered a thread on my own experiences of reading with low vision:

> when you read a block of text, you are not consciously moving your eyes from word to word like you’re dragging a mouse cursor, repositioning continuously.

1/?

"…but the children!" they scream, and claim they want to protect them from e.g. Transgender folks. Now, someone run stats on a full year of child abuse cases. Interesting that those who scream have a pretty high number of cases – while those they want to protect them from, seem to have none at all.

whoismakingnews.com/

Projection? "Every accusation is a confession" shows pretty clearly there.

(unfortunately, that site depends on several Google services to show the graphs 😢)

in reply to Glyph

> when you read a block of text, you are not consciously moving your eyes from word to word like you’re dragging a mouse cursor, repositioning continuously.

When I read visually, I have to get my head close enough to the screen or page that I do in fact move it continuously back and forth. Or if I were to use a screen magnifier at a zoom level high enough that I could lean back, I would in fact be literally moving the mouse back and forth, or perhaps doing equivalent keyboard commands.

today is the one year anniversary for wcurl moving in with the curl project!

daniel.haxx.se/blog/2024/08/08…

in reply to daniel:// stenberg://

It was designed to be stateless and handle one-shot requests, but was mated to HTML, which may require multiple requests to retrieve the complete contents of a page. That right there was a step 1 design fail.

It lacks message IDs, which are common best practice and are used by every protocol underneath it, for many good reasons. That glaring lack, and the lack of well defined message lengths, has hindered all subsequent progress. Another step 1 design fail.

in reply to daniel:// stenberg://

you already said that HTTP/2 and /3 are more complex because they must include /1 so yes, it has hindered progress. The fact that /2 and /3 even need to exist shows that /1 was inadequate. And being used most doesn't mean it's best. Look at how much network bandwidth is wasted sending the same headers over and over on related requests. The percentage of network traffic that's pure overhead is insane, especially if accounted over all the years HTTP has been in use.
This entry was edited (4 months ago)
in reply to daniel:// stenberg://

@hyc In the last 30 years I've implemented several HTTP servers and HTTP clients for various purpose and I always considered it a simple protocol.

If you want to do something fancy, client and server can agree to do it. But for my rather simple applications, code just didn't need to care for these special cases and was simple.

Compared to that: Try to implement SMB, CIFS or ADS...

pinging you @DavidGoldfield as this sounds like something your community might like to hear about: "Are you passionate about accessibility in tech? The Open Source email client Thunderbird is starting a new Accessibility Standards & Compliance Committee, and we’re inviting one community member to be part of it.
We’re looking for someone who cares about inclusive design, development, or content and wants to make a real impact. You’d help review features, share ideas, and make sure accessibility stays front and center in how we build Thunderbird.
If that sounds like you, send an email to community@thunderbird.net with "Design Committee" in the subject line to request more information. We’d love to hear from you!
Let’s make email better for everyone." www.reddit.com/r/accessibility/comments/1mkdt8q/want_to_help_make_thunderbird_more_accessible/

Bloodywood is a band from New Delhi. They blend metal with traditional Indian folk instruments. It sounds hokey, but it’s done brilliantly.

This video for “Tadka” is badass. It’s a song about cooking, family, and respect for women/elders. It’s everything you wouldn’t expect from a metal song.

But it slays. If you love metal, get ready to move your body.

vid.northbound.online/w/bLrwik…

#Music #Metal #India #Traditional #Folk #Bloodywood #NewDelhi #BangYourHead #Tadka #Cooking

This entry was edited (4 months ago)

My article about the @gnome conference #GUADEC was translated to English (thanks God not by me 😜 ).

Linux desktop Gnome: Between financial difficulties and technical progress

heise.de/en/news/Linux-desktop…

#Flatpak #Gnome #Guadec2025 #OpenSource #FreeSoftware #LinuxDesktop

Over 20 communities in 4 continents around the world are celebrating the release of Debian 13 "trixie" with release parties. Check the list to find an event near you or organize one yourself and add it to the wiki: wiki.debian.org/ReleasePartyTr… . Let's come together to celebrate Debian 13! #Debian #Debian13 #trixie #DebianReleaseParty