@DiverDoc @worldhistoryfacts @histodons this is a great poster, I'm gonna consider getting a print for the wall. https://www.loc.gov/item/98518433/
A 1937 poster demonizing jaywalking. In the early 20th century, it became clear that the proliferation of cars was dangerous for pedestrians. In order to make city streets easier for drivers to navigate, auto companies invented the crime of "jaywalking" ("jay was slang for "fool") in order to get pedestrians out of the streets. It was successful. Soon, after streets went from being places of commerce and communication to the domain of automobiles.
@finity @RabBrucesSpider1 there's this one, but it's opt in https://botsin.space/@PleaseCaption
@lazzarello nice! Yeah I've been wondering how they can afford to do any support, but they seem to be able to. And the instance isn't totally anemic either...
@acjay @finity I hope so, I've submitted a change to the codebase to add exactly that :) https://github.com/mastodon/mastodon/pull/21679
@dynaml @kmkurn @RabBrucesSpider1 yeah, maybe just, "corrective suggestion"
@lazzarello if you're just looking for a virtual private server that runs all the time you might do better with something like they discuss here: https://lowendtalk.com/
I found TNA Hosting through there, and now have a $5/month VPS that's just fine for many use cases. I find Google/AWS cloud VPS's better for short term, or quick scaling.
@finity @RabBrucesSpider1 it would also be cool if pictures could be edited to add it, or if people could propose Alt text
@acjay @RabBrucesSpider1 I was just thinking that... Probably an even better solution - and the feature could default to "on". Right after I posted above I remembered I posted a picture yesterday without alt text... Definitely accidentally.
Pecan Pie
I should've included an image description... This is a picture of a perfect pecan pie on a counter with a coffee mug in the background that says "accio coffee".
I do like it here on Mastodon, but the huge influx of people from Twitter means there are far fewer image descriptions than from even a couple of weeks ago. I’d love to tell every one of them about this, but quite frankly there are so many I don’t have the patience. I’d dearly love it if apps could block posts unless an image description was added to every photo, but I suppose that’s too much to hope for. I’m feeling really excluded from so many conversations. It’s getting as bad as Twitter.
@cyberlibrarian on my instance (qoto) I don't have that button, but I can add hashtag follows through settings and they do work.
@RabBrucesSpider1 maybe we need a Culture Bot. Something that automatically responds to posts that don't have alt text, or that seem to include non-CW politics text, etc.
@acjay I've thought it would be great to have a way for other instances to know what your home instance is... So that if you're browsing on another when when you hit "follow" or "reply" it can automatically use your home instance URL. A browser extension might be necessary for that, but it would be great to have something that could work with just existing browser features. I'm not sure if any cross-domain data stores exist, that don't rely on a trusted third party.
Hacking isn't like watchdogs, it's more like that montage/timelapse scene in Hackers where they're just reading code and drinking soda for hours and hours.
It can be frustrating and time-consuming and a lot of it is just research, but that's part of what makes the payoff so great.
I mention this because I recently got a #FlipperZero and I was looking at the discord communities and seeing a lot of very green folks there.
Frankly, I think one of the best things about the Flipper Zero is the fact that it makes a lot of these protocols more accesible to new #Hackers and #Makers than ever before! So it's a bit disheartening to also see how many people are there looking at it as more of a 'prank' device or a gimmick to impress their friends and who seem to have no interest in actually learning anything.
Don't get me wrong, there's a LOT to learn when it comes to a device like this. I don't expect a newcomer to jump in headfirst and start programming firmware, soldering up new modules, and generating bruteforce playlists in python. I'd be happy if people were just _curious_ about some of the things they were playing around with on the flipper and picked one or two of those things to look at.
The flipper, brilliantly, stores (almost?) all the captured data in various text formats, so newcomers can capture their tap card and then see the raw data in a text file that they can easily edit and experiment with sans coding.
Luckily, I can see that even amongst this demographic that there are people who have started to dive deeper. What may have started as a desire for a shiny gadget to chase tiktok prestige is turning some of these youngsters towards the dark arts, and I think that is absolutely a new positive.
Hacking _is_ a montage. It's hours, days, months of research. It's trial and error, educated guesses, and experiments. Hacking isn't a tour, it's unguided exploration.
Sure, it can be frustrating and time-consuming, I don't think we'd want it any other way.
Computer science guy, electrical engineer, US Air Force officer, jogger, likes teaching programming, aka KC0BFV.
Likes programming in: Rust, Python, JavaScript, C
Reluctantly uses: Roku's BrightScript, C++, anything