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in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

@me Yep. And biometrics quickly turns into surveillance, because your face is the same no matter where you go. The key is not isolated to the lock.

Jonathan Lamothe reshared this.


Sleeping in a dormitory on a chair, tucked inside a metal tube, surrounded by combustible liquids and telling us it's glamorous really is a fabulous coup for marketing. Well done airlines.

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in reply to Anon Opin

Speak for yourself! I fly economy class with the rest of us plebs. We demanded lower fares, and we got what we wanted.

It's a win-win tacit agreement between us plebs and the airlines.

The rubes are the _business class_ flyers, who are fooled into thinking they've gotten some sort of glamorous superior option, when in reality it's barely better than economy class.

Business class fares let the airlines make more money while saving us plebs some money, so we accept it fine.



meta, Friendica, CWs
I love that #Friendica gives me the option to automatically collapse (effectively CW-ing) all of a specific account's posts if I feel they underuse them. It's better than unfollowing, gives me the ability to choose whether or not I have the mental bandwidth to engage at a given time, and doesn't require them to share my opinions on what should/shouldn't be CW'd.

Darcy Casselman reshared this.


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I love reading ancient cuneiform tablets. Classics such as "Fuck you, this copper sucks." (Ea Nasir), "I should get more new clothes, my dad's employee gets new clothes twice a month and it's embarrassing.", and of course "The sesame harvest will die β€” let nobody say I did not warn you!", which is absolutely a set up for "Per my last clay tablet.".

Social media & email may be part of the problem. But if we're still like this when we have to carve our petty bullshit into clay then it's clear that we're the problem. It's us.



more culty Mormon stuff

So when I was mormon and got my endowment, I was given temple garments (special underwear) that I was instructed to wear day and night. I was also told never to show them to anyone (especially non-members).

At the time, I was a convert to the church living at home with my non-mormon family. Once a week, I used to smuggle them down to the laundry room to wash them without anyone seeing them.

I was eventually told by a priesthood leader that this was unnecessary, but still...

#NotACult #ExMormon #apostake

in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

more culty Mormon stuff

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in reply to Shae Erisson

more culty Mormon stuff
@Shae Erisson Sorry, I meant that keeping them hidden from my family was optional. I just wasn't to put them on display.
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

more culty Mormon stuff

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in reply to Mx. Luna Corbden

more culty Mormon stuff

@Mx. Luna Corbden Bishop Roulette strikes again!

But yeah. The temple worker who gave me my garments laid down the law.



The trouble with making satirical posts is that it's not always obvious that they're satire. I'm learning that it's often better just not to.

(Or maybe I just suck at satire. I don't know.)



culty (Mormon) stuff

A while ago my old temple clothing turned up. Just had an interesting conversation with Katy that made me realize something I hadn't before.

There's a specific bag that the church sells to put your temple clothing in. As far as I know, there's no rule saying you have to use it, but a lot of mormons do. I never really thought about it, but it's totally a dog whistle/status symbol. To an outsider, it's just a pretty ordinary (cheap looking) bag. To a mormon who's had their endowment, it screams "I'm worthy to go to the temple."

#NotACult #exmormon #apostake

in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

culty (Mormon) stuff

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Finally getting around to writing a UI for my password manager that sucks less.


Due to poor planning on my part, I'm going to run out of coffee before more discretionary funding becomes available.

Boo.

Unknown parent

friendica (DFRN) - Link to source
Jonathan Lamothe

@Todd on :mastodon: ain I'll survive. I'm not out quite yet, and I can switch to tea for a few days.

At least all the essentials are covered.

@E
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

Looks like I had just enough to mix up another pitcher of cold brew. I'll probably have enough after all.


The fun part about having a partner who's just starting to get into anime is explaining what "fan service" is.

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in reply to Shae Erisson

@shapr
Unexpectedly? One of the first things I learned was that my parents wouldn't let me watch the cartoons my older brothers watched.

That reason was explicit lewdness and graphic violent views of the world. Pretty sure when I got to violate those rules, my first intro was Akira. Not a huge fan of fan service, I'm in for the bleak apocalyptic stories.

in reply to Shae Erisson

@shapr
If anyone hasn't seen Red Line yet, you're missing out terribly. Even if a racing anime sounds boring, don't skip it.
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

@TanekRune
Next question, how do I get subtitles for media that doesn't already include them?
I have much to learn!
in reply to Shae Erisson

@Shae Erisson @TanekRune I've found that most media already has subtitles, bit there's always opensubtitles.org

Unfortunately, the subtitle files often need a little tweaking to get the synchronization right.

in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

@shapr

What they said. I'm quite technologically repressed due to being addicted mostly to the chatroom side of the internet, unfortunately.

For anyone looking into Redline, Tubi had it free for a while and either the subtitled or dubbed versions seemed great for voice acting.



medical

Well, booked my first appointment with the new doctor today. Haven't had my records transferred because I don't have $200 just sitting around for the digitization fee at the moment. Hopefully he'll be willing to renew my #ADHD meds using the previous prescripiton bottles as sufficient evidence of their necessity. I really don't want to jump through those hoops again.

It's not like I'll die without them or anything, but my life will get a lot harder.

#ADHD
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

medical

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in reply to Shae Erisson

medical

@Shae Erisson I do plan to eventually pay the fee to have the records transferred. That should help quite a bit. It's just that the supply of meds won't hold out that long.

I should've gotten my act together sooner to take care of this, but you know... ADHD. πŸ™ƒ




Tried the whole green/blue test that people have been talking about. Problem was that it kept giving me colours that were neither. I couldn't answer the questions.
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

For me, turquoise is green.

You should answer the questions as if those where your only two color words, so that any color they can possibly show you is either "green" or "blue".

But, *of course* most of the colors they showed me I would *actually* describe as "cyan", a common color from my CGA roots.


Jonathan Lamothe reshared this.


β€œWe created a self-opening fridge with an AI camera that tracks what you put in and take out.”

Please for the love of any and all deities I am PROSTRATE on the floor begging you for fair energy prices and accessible public transport I do not need a fridge incorrectly guessing what is in my 17 Tupperware containers and refusing to open because I haven’t paid my monthly Β£24.99 subscription of β€œFridge Door Lock Plus” :neofox_melt_sob: :neofox_melt_sob: :neofox_melt_sob:

in reply to Lukito

Oh well thank fuck for that. Another one of humanity’s problems checked off.
in reply to Lukito

There's a level of fanaticism with Big Tech cramming AI into everything, you'd almost think they are disconnected from humanity.
in reply to Lukito

And lo, the Singularity was achieved by technologists vanishing recursively up their own arseholes.
in reply to Lukito

I'm going to hang on to my old just-a-refigerator until it can no longer be duct-taped together. It will probably last as long as our destructive profiteering excuse for a civilisation.
in reply to sunflowerinrain

@sunflowerinrain Ours had an issue a couple of years ago and thank all the deities we were able to get it fixed because it was impossible to find anything new that wasn't awful. And the repair person told us some choice things about the new fridges too.

Was the same thing all over again when our washing machine went. All these "smart" features now that will certainly break and no way to make it do what I actually want. At least it isn't collecting all our data. Supposedly.

@lukito



I just put a loaf of #sourdough bread that I've been working on all day in the oven. Just realized that I forgot the salt.

I've made this mistake once before. It'll still be edible, but damn it makes me angry with myself.

in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

I do that - I’ve taken to weighing out the salt at the same time as the other ingredients and putting it in cup on top of the bowl while the flour autolyses. That means I HAVE to move it before kneading. That _generally_ works…

Jonathan Lamothe reshared this.


The untimely demise of an image upscaler: lcamtuf.substack.com/p/random-…

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Jonathan Lamothe reshared this.


If you hear a scream across the internet right now, it is the sound I am making while reading the Internet Archive v. Hachette Books appeal, which IA has lost: wired.com/story/internet-archi…
This entry was edited (7 months ago)
in reply to evacide

it is only a matter of time before people who do not use computers successfully ban their use by the public.
in reply to evacide

In the UK, libraries which are part of the public lending right (PLR) scheme share book loan data with the PLR registrar that's used to calculate payments to eligible book contributors (authors).


USB Floppy Drive


!retrocomputing
Came across an old USB floppy drive. I plugged it into my machine and it shows up, but I can't tell it it's actually working or not. When plugged in, it sounds like it's continuously reading, so I kind of want to test it. Can you even buy floppy disks any more?

That said, if I don't have any disks, I guess the question of whether or not it works is moot anyways.

don't like this

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in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

I occasionally find 3.5" floppy disks at the local thrift stores. There are usually new old stock disks on ebay too.

The USB floppy drives usually only support IBM formatted disks and are useless for data recovery. For any other formats, a Greaseweazle will come in very handy.

in reply to cmnybo

Yes, was about to post Greaseweazle. That and whatever scavenged drive sounds like the way to go in general. I don't have one yet just because it costs the right amount to go on my gift wishlist, lol.
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

I picked up an Amiga at a yard sale and found floppy disks on Amazon. I didn't bother buying any and instead bought a gotek floppy disk emulator.

retrocomputing reshared this.


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A reminder from someone who’s been around the block more than a couple times: when you see a PDF or ePub on the Internet that you think you might want to read eventually, go ahead and download it, and squirrel it away for the future. The Internet is not, in fact, forever, and Capitalism will eventually take away anything it can’t rent out to you.
in reply to mos_8502 πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦

co-signed. the nice thing about these formats is they're self-contained and will keep working forever.
in reply to Irenes (many)

we're also still very fond of text files.

it used to be quite common for people to write up, say, videogame walkthroughs, or gender transition how-tos, or any sort of information somebody had personally put together, in a single long text file. a quarter of a meg was on the larger end of what you'd see, size-wise (when it's just text, that is a LOT), but not uncommon.

in reply to mos_8502 πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦

Data sheets for parts you play with. Manuals for everything you buy. Pirated magazines. I don’t care what it is, if it interests you, save it. Don’t rely on centralized, lawsuit prone services to survive the onslaught of rent seekers.

Shannon Prickett reshared this.

in reply to mos_8502 πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦

Mass data storage is fairly cheap these days, even if backup methods are lagging behind. Go ahead and file away that datasheet under β€œDocuments/Datasheets/Company Name/TGS17362.pdf” or however you want to organize your shit.
in reply to mos_8502 πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦

I recommend people to investigate used enterprise storage.

If it passes badblocks & SMART checking (don't rely on that too much, manufacturers do silly things), it is likely to work just fine, and depending on one's location it is possible to acquire triple-redundant 10TB for less than buying a single 10TB drive new would cost.

in reply to LisPi

@lispi314 I just want an affordable LTO-5 or higher drive. I'm really bloody poor, the cost of those things is more than my car is worth.
in reply to mos_8502 πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦

Unfortunately, you're pretty much out of luck.

The used ones are not a good idea (despite looking cheaper), they're often messed up in a number of ways. 😿

in reply to LisPi

@lispi314 Yeah. I have considered one of those external USB3-to-SATA cradles you drop a hard drive into, to use regular old SATA hard drives as "backup cartridges" of a sort -- divide the space in each drive 70/30 between "data" and "parity" (.par2 files) partitions, and use good old tar right to the raw partition block device.
in reply to mos_8502 πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦

If you ever get to the point of thinking about multi-drive enclosures/cradles though, don't go for USB.

At that point, anything less than SAS (an expander card & breakout cables in an old computer case can do the job quite well) will inevitably prove frustrating through all sorts of annoying issues.

in reply to LisPi

@lispi314 I have a two-drive RAID-1 box into which I had planned to stick a couple of ~10TB drives when I could afford them, but that's not really "backup" as much as "hold this stuff that doesn't need to be on my main NVME SSD RAID right now".
in reply to mos_8502 πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦

Conventional Hardware & Software RAID has also been exclusively for stuff where you don't care about integrity ever since 520B sectors have stopped being used. (Those 8 additional bytes were for integrity-checking features.)

Now, such features are implemented instead in modern filesystems since awareness of the data structuring is necessary for sane & reliable recovery (conventional RAID assumes that the drive firmware will both detect *and* notify of errors, which is incredibly optimistic in a setting where general pessimism is the sane attitude).

in reply to LisPi

@lispi314 @brouhaha

1. TIL about 520/528B drives. According to one forum post they might even go back to the 70s ("someone on the Internet said it, it must be true!")

2. Integrity checking features? You mean extra space for higher-level checks besides the (40 or so) extra error correction bits used to protect the 512 bytes of data?

I.e. the wrong data could be correctly written to disk. ECC won't catch that during a read, but the extra 8 bytes could.

in reply to William D. Jones

Yes, there were several sector sizes beyonda 512, in increments of four bytes. This is, from the driver's point of view, extra user data, unrelated to the driver's own internal error control.
The amount of ECC the drive
adds is unspecified, but even before drives switched to 4K sectors with "512 emulation", the size of ECC was typically much higher than in early 5ΒΌ ESDI/SCSI/ATA drives.
1/
This entry was edited (7 months ago)
in reply to πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ haxadecimal

@cr1901 @lispi314
The extra "tag bytes" were mostly intended for file systems that wanted additional metadata associated with the sector, as done e.g. on the Xerox Alto, Apple Lisa and early Macintosh, and IBM AS/400. This could include an identifier for the containing file and offset, but could also be used for filesystem-level error detection.
2/
in reply to πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ haxadecimal

@cr1901 @lispi314
It is not unknown for drives to erroneously write to the wrong sector, and when the victim sector is read later, the drive will return that _wrong_ content with no error indication. Using the tag in such a way as to detect this kind of error is obviously useful for the filesystem or RAID layer. In the case of RAID redundancy it may be correctable, but otherwise it's still desirable to report an error rather than blindly proceed with invalid data.
3/
in reply to πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ haxadecimal

As someone already pointed out, some modern filesystems provide this level of checking without requiring oversize sectors. Back in the ancient days when multiprecosion integer division was extremely slow, it was important for the actual file data to be stored in power of two units, but today there is negligible performance penalty if a filesystem only stores 496 bytes of a file in every 512 byte sector, or even lowrr percentage overhead for a 4K sector.
4/
This entry was edited (7 months ago)
in reply to πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦ haxadecimal

@cr1901 @lispi314
To this day, enterprise-grade HDDs (SAS) and even some enterprise SSDs (SAS, NVMe) support reformatting to those slightly larger sector sizes.
I'm not aware of any substantial current usage other than IBM System/I, formerly AS/400.
5/
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

@mos_8502 :verified: Oh, you already said that...


Mass data storage is fairly cheap these days, even if backup methods are lagging behind. Go ahead and file away that datasheet under β€œDocuments/Datasheets/Company Name/TGS17362.pdf” or however you want to organize your shit.



I love making (and subsequently eating) #sourdough bread, but it takes so long to make.
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

Sometimes I just want bread now, and I can't convince my starter to be quick enough. At least the process doesn't take that much physical effort.
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

@justinto This one is essentially what I do, but I also add in grated cheese both into the batter and on top of the batter once it’s in the loaf pan. But the cheese isn’t needed.

kingarthurbaking.com/recipes/c…


Jonathan Lamothe reshared this.


Until yesterday, I had no idea that the Osmonds were an actual rock band! And those boys had chops!

What kind of bizarro world do we live in where they made a song like this? This is unreal!

youtube.com/watch?v=oDbIjD7Scq…

Jonathan Lamothe reshared this.

in reply to Chris Trottier

And then Donnie & Marie went in to do their own thing for awhile: youtu.be/Uy2GcnuWnbU


There's a family member that Katy and I had cut ties with about a year ago because he's toxic. Today Katy extended an olive branch and we were immediately reminded why we made that decision in the first place.

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in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

Ugh, I'm sorry.

Toxic family is hard to endure, hard to break away from, and hard to be reminded why we broke away from them in the first place.

in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

I’m sorry to hear that. I’ve been there and done that β€” and it’s more difficult than many people realize. But cutting that kind of toxicity out of your life is necessary sometimes.


Jonathan Lamothe reshared this.


#terrypratchett

Source of the post:
serialephemera.tumblr.com/post…

This entry was edited (7 months ago)

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in reply to Amalia Zeichnerin

As I like to say, hatred is a precious part of us. Those who control your hatred control you. Don't let them take control. Protect your hatred, cultivate it, hate carefully and deliberately. They'll never see it coming.


I've been working through some #soroban exercises try to actually become reasonably proficient in its use. Interestingly enough, I'm doing much better with multiplicaiton/divison than I am with the addition/subtraction questions, but that's because the latter involve summing a column of values rather than just multiplying two numbers. There are more places to screw up.

Still, these questions seem designed to deliberately screw me up with things like multiple carries, changing the value on a rod just to immediately revert that change, etc.

Still, it's probably that way for a reason.



meta

I don't want this place to be a "Twitter replacement". I came here (in the pre-Musk era) because I wanted something better* than Twitter. The fedi certainly has its shortcomings, and we need to work to improve it (especially regarding the treatment of marginalized people), but Twitter should not be the yardstick we measure ourselves by.

* "Better" is of course subjective.


Jonathan Lamothe reshared this.


Dear everyone on the Fediverse who posts anything political...

If you're not going to put your post behind a "political" content warning, then please at the very least use FULL NAMES instead of nick names like "Orange man" or "Kama" or "Vice Daddy" or whatever.

It makes it hard for those who are trying to filter out political content from their feed.

Thanks.

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Unknown parent

friendica (DFRN) - Link to source
Jonathan Lamothe
@DeadTOm :d20: Sometimes that's just what you have to do. Friendica (what I use) has an option to automatically collapse all of a given users' posts, essentially CWing them all. I don't know if Mastodon has this feature, but I've found it useful in cases where I don't want to completely unfollow.


Ah, jackhammer guy is back...

Yay. πŸ’€



I am neither for nor against AI, mostly because it's essentially a meaningless word. What does bother me is the number of people who are shoehorning it into their products because investors lose their minds and shovel boatloads of money at them.

It's not that I have a problem with fools taking other fools' money; I'm just really sick of them trying to sell me their magic beans.

in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

Better joke: AI is the word love in Chinese

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cult (Mormon) stuff

My father was going through a bunch of stuff in my old room and came across my old temple clothing (among some other of my stuff). He brought it over.

I wonder what I should do with it.



Why do people have to keep reinventing DRM? There's no good way to do it.

Just stop.



...and that's another thread ignored that I should've known better than to participate in in the first place.

One of these days I'll learn.


Jonathan Lamothe reshared this.


Your SSH honeypot fakes a Linux system and logs the threat actor's commands.

My SSH honeypot hijacks the threat actor's terminal to play the music video of Rick Astley's 1987 pop hit "Never Gonna Give You Up" while ignoring Ctrl-C.

We are not the same.

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special love to the people online who for some reason are finding buffer overflow exploits for scientific calculators
in reply to tera

@tera Your ideas intrigue me and I wish to learn more. Please subscribe me to your newsletter.
@tera


Thought we'd come up with a life hack to keep the dishes from piling up: just buy the minimum necessary, forcing them to be washed regularly.

This works until you accidentally break a dish. πŸ€¦β€β™‚οΈ

Edit: typo


Jonathan Lamothe reshared this.


I fear that people have become desensitized to seeing teachers asking for help with wishlists.

Each year we are inundated with teachers essentially begging for help. I see it & feel it too.

I am one of those teachers who would not be able to run a classroom without the kindness of strangers.

I apologize & thank you in a single message, because I know many are struggling too. A boost is equally appreciated.The students are back & I didn’t lose anyone over the summer!

amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/PRZB…

This entry was edited (7 months ago)

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in reply to SaltyGirl

@EdCates You have zero (read zero) reason to apologise. The folks in charge of implementing a system that leaves teachers in such a predicament should be the ones hanging their heads in shame (I won’t hold my breath).

You exemplify everything that’s good in the system despite the system. I hope your students know how lucky they are to have you.

πŸ’•

@Ed
in reply to Aral Balkan

@aral thank you for your kind words. The support you’ve shown to me has meant a lot. I do love being a teacher and I hope that real change comes soon.
in reply to SaltyGirl

Anytime πŸ˜€ (And if I ever miss one of your appeals, please feel free to ping me directly)

πŸ’•

PS. Me too (on the real change thing) πŸ˜€

in reply to SaltyGirl

Sometimes I think being a teacher in Norway is hard and unappreciated by the masses. (Hah, I first misspelled masses as "asses", and found it quite fitting)

Then I think of the working conditions of teachers in the US and realize things could be a lot worse..

I really hope the US finds a new way forward soon, a way where teachers don't need to beg strangers for help to get basic equipment to do their jobs, and get decent wages..


Jonathan Lamothe reshared this.


In my day we had buttons.
We had switches! Sliders!
And what do we have now? Glass rounded rectangles of various sizes.

"We can make it do haptic feedback."

No just put me out of my misery. Send me to the farm upstate. Your haptic feedback is a mockery of the elegance of the latching switches and potentiometers I have known.

Robotics is hard. Mechanical engineering is hard. The glass rounded rectangles are magical, yes, and lovely, but they also prisons for the imagination.

in reply to myrmepropagandist

Sometimes you get a button, but it's a 1-in-all deal.
Press and hold to turn on, press and hold longer to pair bluetooth, press once for play/pause, press long to turn off... Oh, you pressed it too long and now it's gone from on straight into BT pairing, or maybe off, I'm not sure.
Just press and hold till something happens again.
in reply to myrmepropagandist

I guess if they made a new version of the Bop-it toy it would just be an inert glass rectangle that doesn't do anything πŸ™

Jonathan Lamothe reshared this.


If you wish to see the world, the one that exists (AND the ones that don't), but hate travelling, books might be for you.

Jonathan Lamothe reshared this.

in reply to 🌻

I haven't read him but your toot made me think about him because here in Italy he's the example of a writer who "travelled" without leaving home (and made readers "travel" through his own books)

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