in reply to daniel:// stenberg://

Jo, decades of ignoring security and now complaining about the interests of the technical dept. I’m so sick and tired of all the complaints about “uhhh, ohhh, security….” from everywhere. If everybody would have done their job from beginning, instead of just hacking shit together (MVP, PoC, move fast and break things bullshit), then we would not have this problem. So stop complaining about security and do your job, or leave it!
in reply to David Malone

@dwmalone sure!
program.why2025.org/why2025/ta…

viem že tu je nonstop benzínka vzdušnou čiarou asi do kilometra ale je na výpadovke/okruhu/diaľnici nevím tak že idem o tretej ráno génius.. odôvodnil som si to že robím aj väčšie kktiny, toto som odfotil a celý som doškriabný malinčím ostnaté drôty okolo Audi ma nezastavili #Dubravka

edit: tou istou cestou som sa vrátil naspäť bez piva

This entry was edited (4 months ago)

I'm excited to announce that #Convo, my #XMPP messaging app for #KaiOS has received a grant from @nlnet, or, more specifically, @NGIZero! 🎉 🤸

nlnet.nl/project/Convo/

I can now turn what began as a quick project made in a providential three weeks of free time into an app that can...actually do basic things like add contacts 😅

More importantly, it'll make the open and standardised messaging protocol available to a mobile platform where few large players have dared to tread 👟

#NLnet #NGIzero

reshared this

Oh look, a new #xmpp client for the web that actually looks good 🚀

--

GitHub - iquercorb/xows: Lightweight and modern XMPP over WebSocket Web client.

github.com/iquercorb/xows?tab=…

#xmpp

reshared this

in reply to The Linux Foundation

this is incredibly blatant propaganda and every time you post shit like this it reminds me how divorced the linux foundation is from linux users. the GDPR is the bare fucking minimum protocol necessary to support for citizens to be able to trust corporations for things that otherwise would have to be restricted to much more highly regulated entities like the government itself
in reply to Laurent Bercot

The thing is, whenever @linuxfoundation takes up a position like this, people need a gentile reminder of whose interests the foundation represents:

linuxfoundation.org/about/memb…

#GDPR #LinuxFoundation

in reply to The Linux Foundation

So, what you’re saying is that we should not have laws that protect normal people from having their data farmed in ways that would make even the stasi blush?

It’s funny in a very sad way that something called the Linux foundation is having this extremely corporate boot licking message, considering that a good share of Linux desktop users are that to get away from the corporate spying.

#AndroidAppRain at apt.izzysoft.de/fdroid today brings you 13 updated apps and 1 umbrella: 6 apps have been removed, as they were outdated, unmaintained for years, and…

* TauonRemote: proprietary dependencies
* LibreHome: close to no downloads, doubtful to still work with up-to-date servers
* qBittorrent-Controller: GMS, Ads
* AudioSpeedup: close to no downloads
* Lamp: still experimental
* SimpleReminder: close to no downloads

RB status: 681 apps (51.7%)

#IzzyOnDroid

What we're reading:

"Asked to generate intervention plans for struggling students, AI teacher assistants recommended more punitive measures for hypothetical students with Black-coded names and more supportive approaches for students the platforms perceived as white, a new study shows."

We know that educators are bombarded with (VC-funded) hype about AI tools as magical solutions. Please don't take these claims at face value and do your own due diligence. 1/4

chalkbeat.org/2025/08/06/ai-te…

@education @edutooters

#Education #Educators #Edutooters #Teachers #Teaching #EdTech

This entry was edited (4 months ago)
in reply to Michael Jack

yes, so with the simple method of getting your VPS provider to assign additional static IPs to your VPS and Proxy ARP, you can "teleport" the static IP to your home over the WireGuard tunnel. The IP is not actually assigned to any interfaces on the VPS and you get to avoid NAT, needing X-Forwarded-For, etc. All your server logs will have the real public IPs 🤠

Plus you can leverage the VPS provider's DDoS protection 😎 (you also gain that with NAT or reverse proxying, but it's another good reason to not use your home ISP's public IP directly)

Another advantage of either design is that you could have multiple internet connections at home for redundancy. The WireGuard tunnel is perfect for this. I do this with a hotspot that has unlimited data. I'll be moving next week and changing ISPs but none of my network configuration for my servers needs to change. I'll keep the same IPs because they're ~in the cloud~ 🙃

At #Zürich #Zurich airport #ZRH apparently they require a boarding pass OR your passport just to connect to the so called "free WiFi".

Passport data just to use a #WiFi? What is next? ID check to post something on Instagram?

Come on, a WiFi is a commodity like a power socket.
The whole useless infrastructure with those kiosks, connection to boarding pass validators and the printer to print out vouchers - and this in 2025.

📸 : @strigohabro

This entry was edited (4 months ago)

Dream come true yesterday!

I got to talk to a packed room of normal (non technical people) at the local library about how important it is to upcycle computers, and how Linux can save the world in this respect.

Thanks to all the people who showed up, supported, donated laptops and listened. We even gave away 9 free laptops at the event.

Library said it was the most well attended event they've had! So will be many more of these in the future. :)

#nixos #Linux #Cosmic #system76

Spoiler: there’s no treasonous conspiracy .

I read every word of the Gabbard Files so you don’t have to. The arguments — when compared to the evidence, timelines, 3 prior investigations, and 3 prior meta-investigations — indicate either breathtakingly bad faith or astonishingly low reading comprehension. You decide.

lawfaremedia.org/article/from-…

Detroit front yard food pantry overwhelmed with donations after community learns of need

What an amazing woman to provide this space in her front yard like that in the first place.

It sucks that there's even this deep need in the first place, but it's heartening to see how people can come together.

youtube.com/watch?v=OrERFal5vt… #GoodNews #Detroit

Ok, VOLlama 0.6.0 finally supports speech via screen reader on Windows only. I changed to NSSpeechSynthesizer on Mac which means you can use default voice set in the system settings > Accessibility > Spoken Content.
github.com/chigkim/VOLlama/rel…
@danestange @mcourcel @FreakyFwoof @pixelate
in reply to feld

@phnt Basically what I'm learning from this is that people who are most vocal about these AI models not getting things correct with seemingly basic requests have never hired a tradesman to do a task. Talk to any general contractor and they will tell you hilarious stories where they've had to have work ripped out and redone because it wasn't done right.

We have released Tusky 30 🥳 Highlights:

* New reporting flow
* Improved image editor
* Support for onion services
* Dialog to not lose poll that's being created
* New UnifiedPush connector
* Technical improvements (16KB page size)

Fixes:
* Sometimes wrong thread would open
* Layout tweaks
* Harder to lose a draft when switching apps

See changelog here:
codeberg.org/tusky/Tusky/src/b…

#tusky #tuskyapp

This entry was edited (4 months ago)

Among currently available ARM64 single-board computers, which one has the simplest and most fully open boot process? The Raspberry Pi family has boot handled by the VideoCore, a whole other processor running its own RTOS during and after boot. Other ARM64 boards, like the Rockchip RK3566-based Quartz64 that I own, have a Rockchip version of ARM Trusted Firmware (which IIUC runs continuously at a higher privilege level) as a blob. Is there any ARM64 board that avoids both of these?

Peter Vágner reshared this.

in reply to Matt Campbell

I'm a month late but:
Rockchip RK3399 (e.g. Pine64 ROCKPro64) has zero blobs. As in, both DDR init and ATF are open (former in mainline u-boot, latter in mainline ATF).

RK3588 (e.g. Radxa ROCK 5B+) has open mainline ATF, but closed DDR init (runs once at boot) at the moment.

K3576 (e.g. Radxa ROCK 4D) also has open mainline ATF, but closed DDR init.

RK3566 *does* have something in ATF but I've heard it has problems. Closed DDR init as well though.