Today, we're launching SlopStop: Community-driven AI slop detection in Kagi Search.
Join our collective defense against AI-generated spam and content farms:
Today, we're launching SlopStop: Community-driven AI slop detection in Kagi Search.
Join our collective defense against AI-generated spam and content farms:
Here is a thing I've been wondering about:
Let's for the moment say that generative AI is Absolute Evil. No wiggle room, it's just straight up bad for EVERY use case.
Can all you smart AI hating people out there come up with good tools to help fill the gap?
Like, if using AI to generate code is bad, can we make programming languages or paradigms that lower the bar to entry and make it possible for more people to be empowered to create their own programs?
I feel like there are smart people making some very good points all around, but I can't help but wonder if all this negative energy is being mis-directed.
I feel like more people USED to have that vision. Remember Hypercard? Or Visual BASIC?
Where have all the tools like this that enable and empower gone?
There is an issue for reporting keystroke conflicts here: github.com/nvaccess/nvda/issue…
And just last week I discovered the "Check Input Gesturs" add-on which I mentioned in In-Process which does report conflicts: nvaccess.org/post/in-process-1…
But in terms of a standard layer system, I'm not sure if we have a request or anything for that currently?
Is your feature request related to a problem? Please describe. Please refer to NVDA Group topic, NVDA and NVDA Shortcut Key Collision Avoidance - Does this exist?, for more information and the comm...britechguy (GitHub)
*Big* update on public.monster 😎
What are you waiting for? Get in there, sib! 🌈
If you checked it out on day 1, take a look, improvements galore! 🎉
📁 New super-powered file manager 💥
👤 /experimental/ profile manager 🧨
🚪 Oh yeah, a log-out link! Nice! 🌴
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Thinking about how it'd be possible to compress strings in the FreeBSD kernel. There are lots of strings that are rarely used, and also, they would compress very well. They are usually ASCII and have lots of similarities (e.g. starting with "%s :", or all the printf format specifications).
The difficulty is how to make it happen and have the decompression happen transparently with minimal overhead and impact.
as you can tell I'm VERY active on Reddit since then, lol
Ah well, still pop on for certain specific topics but definitely not my go-to place anymore. Not even sure if it's Reddit's fault so much as having lower tolerance for human bullshit anymore. 🤷♂️
@feld `zfs replace` still requires the incoming drive not to be smaller.
I still partition the drives.
‼️Hay que acabar con la impunidad de #Israel.
Por eso denunciamos ante la Audiencia Nacional el asalto a la Flotilla de la Libertad y la detención ilegal de sus tripulación, además de las torturas que padecieron y otros delitos.
#PalestinaVencerá🇵🇸✊
Ich war gerade mit Cookie in der Tierklinik beim Augenarzt, weil sie beim letzten Mal ja mit dem rechten Auge nichts gesehen hat...
Die Tierklinik hat uns jetzt an die tierärztliche Hochschule in Hannover überwiesen. Rechtes Auge blind, oberflächlich ist kein Grund erkennbar. Jetzt Ultraschall, ggf. MRT und Elektroretinogramm... Ich will lieber nicht wissen, was das kostet 😵💫
Nachtrag: Und natürlich hoffe ich am meisten, dass meine Maus nichts Schlimmes hat 🥺❤️
Has anyone else noticed that YouTube has hidden the "skip to next video" button in a bunch of contexts? (in the mini player on desktop, in the big player for the first 30 seconds of the video?)
I'm so sick of updates to UI that clearly aren't about the user and instead are trying to get the user to consume content the way that the company wants.
Adversarial design.
Here's an excellent write-up summing up the state of #GameAccessibility in the last 5 years by Grant Stoner. To say it was a rollercoaster of emotions is an understatement. We had incredible innovation and progress in games like The Last of Us or Forza, but for all of those we also had many disappointments that either came tantalizingly close but weren't accessible to some groups of people like totally blind gamers, or just straight up didn't really offer any accessibility features but still got a lot of praise and awards. We also lost some very good people. The industry is also undergoing some difficult times with way too many layoffs. And yet, I'm optimistic we’ll still see some wonderful things in the future. If this year is anything to go by, even if there won't be as many accessible Tripple-A releases, we're also seeing a rise in accessibility mods becoming more frequent. Ultimately what sums up these last 5 years, and probably the future as well is the last paragraph Grant wrote: "
> How do you explain the past five years of accessibility? Both Xbox and PlayStation are fixtures within the disabled community. They uplift us, highlight our work, and give us opportunities to be better advocates. And in equal measure they frustrate us, casting us aside in perplexing moments of grief and frustration. If anything, these five years are a testament to disabled perseverance in an industry that still struggles to fully welcome us."
polygon.com/ps5-xbox-series-x-…
As we mark five years of PS5 and Series X, it’s a fitting moment to examine the highs and lows of accessibility.Grant Stoner (Polygon.com)
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Because of how the timezone selection page works now - the selection is confirmed on the map widget or by automatic selection (which obviously does not work), it...GitLab
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RE: floss.social/@IzzyOnDroid/1155…
As it worked so well last time, may we ask you again? Some entries are still open, some new ones were added. And to help you find apps you might be interested in verifying, their names (or what they do) are/is now highlighted in bold letters.
Still walking the entire repo, app by app, so the list might grow a bit more. And every little hint you can give, is valuable and helping us. So thanks to all who did – plus in advance to those who will! 🤗
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What we used to have: multiple specialty channels with a content we didn't choose at a high cost.
What we wanted: a streaming service with all the content easily accessible at a good price
What we got: many streaming services with not all the content spread out, at multiple times an over increasing price.
This still suck.
Das BVerfG bestätigt die Verurteilung eines Mannes wegen einer Sitzblockade in Freiburg. § 21 VersG sei eine verfassungsgemäße Schranke des Art. 8 GG.Legal Tribune Online
Like I said a few weeks ago -- petitioning Google, Apple, or any BigCo to "please, please, please let us get what we want" instead of what benefits the BigCos first is a losing strategy.
Their interests are simply too divergent from ours. The bigger they get, the less incentive they have to do what users consider the right thing, and the harder it is to have any leverage with them as a customer.
@jzb I'm still mad at Nokia and Mozilla. More so at Mozilla.
But the more I think about it the more I think there might have been a discussion in the board room we are not privy to. With a Gbully
It's even more important when we see that the oligarch of the mobile platform have chosen to side with fascism.
Outside of the USA, it's a real sovereignty issue, one ignored by the one in charge.
Google cancels plans to require Android application certification outside of the Play Store
Only a few months ago, Google announced it was going to require that all Android applications - even those installed outside of the Play Store - had to be verified. This led to a massive backlash, and it seems our protests and complaints have had effect:
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I'm not playing these kits using Komplete Kontrol yet, as there's no NKS available, so I don't know the names of the kits I'm using, but it's still fun and a...YouTube
národná téma 2025 ktorej krajiny? to nie je filter ale mlha na skle vo vnútri pred objektívom.. a to som si chcel robiť srandu 😂 #coffee
edit: dobrých päť minút som sa opúšťal ale beriem pozitívne a S26 je za rohom
edit1: mal sa rozbiť nie doňho zatekať 

Dnes jsem se dozvěděl, že v minulém roce nám EU směrnicí 2024/1438 vrátila "jahodovou marmeládu":
> Členské státy však mohou s ohledem na výrazy běžně používané spotřebiteli povolit, aby se na jejich území používal výraz ‚marmeláda‘ pro název výrobku ‚džem‘, s výjimkou džemu z citrusových plodů.
A MÉDIA O TOM MLČÍ! 😀
V této domácnosti se uznávají pouze marmelády z kdoulí.
(V této domácnosti jsem jen já a vlastně ani nemám moc rád kdoule.)
Matt Campbell
in reply to Feoh • • •Hypolite Petovan
in reply to Feoh • • •@Feoh What do you think more people creating their own programs would achieve, realistically?
I'm a programmer by training and by trade, and I didn't create the overwhelming majority of programs I use daily.
Let's take your premise around and reverse it: let's say that generative AIs are absolutely good. They don't draw from a corpus of stolen work nor draw hazardous amounts of electricity and water and produce correct programs. What good would it be for most people?
Jonathan Lamothe
in reply to Hypolite Petovan • • •@Hypolite Petovan @Feoh The majority of the code I've written never sees the light of day because it was some niche utility I wrote for a weirdly specific task that nobody else is ever going to give a crap about (highly customised scripts and stuff that wouldn't even make sense outside of my own personal system).
Programming is a useful tool to have in your toolbox, but most people can (and do) also generally get along quite well without it.
Hypolite Petovan
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe • • •Feoh
in reply to Hypolite Petovan • • •@hypolite @me So, I want to apologize for my extreme response.
I'll admit I'm a bit frustrated with:
Re-reading your post it seems I over-reacted and you weren't necessarily doing any of those things.
Hypolite Petovan
in reply to Feoh • • •@Feoh @Jonathan Lamothe Thank you for this. I am frequently equally frustrated in conversations about AI, specifically generative AIs based on Large Language models because the people who make any sort of claims about what they can or could do also are people with the least understanding of how it works technically.
The truth is that this crop of AI is engineered to fool us humans, including about their capabilities. Because that's the target model trainers have set for them. And it turns out machine learning systems are uncannily good at reaching their set goals, regardless of any other consideration.
And so you have people who use AIs casually who are rightfully bewildered by their apparent capabilities, while experts in their respective fields who try to use AIs to enhance their workflow end up dropping them for a variety of reasons (inaccuracy, lack of underlying understanding of the subject matter, loss of ownership of output, etc...).
Does this mean a fooling machine can't produce an accurate answers? Absolutely not, but it will make figuring out the inevitable inaccurate answers harder because it's already been so good at fooling the people who trained the model.
Even without considering the ethics (or mostly the lack thereof) of this current crop of AI, it cannot answer any need that isn't about fooling people at scale.
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