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Amikke boosted

Question: Why do most programmers/developers use a dark theme while writing software/code?

Answer: Because light attracts bugs.

rant about the English language 

It's unfortunate that the #1 international language ended up being English. With its complete pronunciation anarchy it's impossible to tell someone over writing how to pronounce something, or in some cases even describe a sound, without digging up example words. And even that isn't foolproof since they fail at consistently pronouncing their own language and the same written word can have completely different pronunciation depending on accent.

Every single other European language I know of would be better. Yes, even French, they write 4x what they read, but at least they do it fairly consistently. No "ghoti" situations. No cases where an adult sees a written word and isn't sure how to pronounce it.

In some better timeline the US ended up speaking Spanish and a whole class of worldwide communication problems was avoided.

Amikke boosted

Bad idea: an external floppy drive that can appear as a mass storage device of arbitrary size. The way it works is it has a little screen, and you use that to configure how big you want it to be, then it formats the proper number of 3.5" floppy disks.
Then when the PC tries to read a sector that's not on the current disk, the display will just prompt you to insert disk #47 or whatever.

Amikke boosted

Made a dumb website so I wouldn't ever have to Google "tm symbol" again.

symbol.wtf

Amikke boosted

my new burger restaurant concept is inspired by modern software. the options for mayo are "yes" and "maybe later", and if you pick maybe later, the chef stands at your table with a squeezy bottle, threatening to add mayo to your burger when you least expect it

Amikke boosted
Amikke boosted

I completed all four digits for my clock! It runs surprisingly smooth. The transition from 23:59 to 0 moves the most parts, so I expect that to have the most friction.

Amikke boosted

:siren: BREAKING NEWS :siren:  

Meta Platforms Inc. has announced it has purchased the competing social media giant, Mastodon LLC with plans to rebrand the eponymous 'Mastodon Network' into a wider 'Threadiverse'

This move comes as a shock both to shareholders and existing users. When asked for comment on the acquisition, Mastodon founder and CEO, John Mastodon was quoted as saying "OH GOD, I'M GONNA MASTADOOOOON!"

Read full article >> goatse.cx

Congratulations fedi, I've now seen so many twitter-tier "capitalism bad" takes that "capitalism" is now my second filter ever.

Amikke boosted
Amikke boosted

Hey everyone!

I'm working on a video to see what the Linux community (or at least people who follow me) actually use.

So, I created a little form, hosted on my Nextcloud (hopefully it's up to the task...)

It's only up for 2 days, so don't hesitate to share it around, it will help me "touch grass" and see if my preconceived notions are confirmed, or invalidated!

nextcloud.thelinuxexp.com/inde

Of course, it's all anonymous, no personal data, it's just for the purposes of creating the video.

Amikke boosted
Amikke boosted

TIL that some CCTV systems will have a tummy ache if you happen to expose them to a QR encoded antivirus test string.

revk.uk/2020/01/eicar-test-qr.

Amikke boosted

Pleased to report that I am now receiving only 12 copies of every delete message from threads.net. A remarkable improvement!

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Amikke boosted

Countries, where Police force commander in-chief fired a 90mm anti-tank grenade launcher in Police Headquarters

Amikke boosted

It is so cringe when i hear people hijack general less descriptive terms like "neurodivergent" to mean really silly arbitrary things like adhd and autism... we already have descriptive terms and that word already means something useful before you bastardized it.

Amikke boosted

Decentralized identifiers (DIDs) can be divided into 3 categories, depending on where the authority resides:

- Secret key (did:key, did:pkh).
- Server (did:web).
- Blockchain (hundreds of them).

With a #DID derived from a secret key you can truly own your identity. Unfortunately, key rotation is not supported, and if you lose your key, you lose everything. This can be partially mitigated with distributed key generation techniques that make key recovery possible if only M of N shards are available, but they are complicated.

Servers can rotate keys, but they can also suddenly disappear, and again you lose everything.

Blockchain-based systems support key rotation and don't have a single point of failure (if done right). Sometimes they are called "servers with superpowers". However, popular ones are not suitable for the job because writing to them is very expensive and their clients need powerful computing devices and a lot of storage.

Is there a way around that? Yes. Blockchains can be very lightweight and they don't actually need a cryptocurrency, miners or stakers in order to work. There is a simple consensus algorithm known as Proof of authority, and one of the Fediverse competitors, Bluesky, seems to be planning to build such system:

https://github.com/did-method-plc/did-method-plc

>We are actively hoping to replace it with or evolve it into something less centralized - likely a permissioned DID consortium.

They are afraid to say the B-word, but "permissioned consortium" is exactly what it is. Of course, their identity #blockchain doesn't have to be the only one in existence. I think in the future we might see quite a lot of "identity cooperatives" of different shapes and sizes. Perhaps even a universal client, curl for identity, can be developed.

Amikke boosted

USA to ban Tik Tok as fears of china copying dances intensifies.

#TikTok

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All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.