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@foone For their competitors, finding a slogan has never been easier:
"Better safe than Sauron"

Governments play a key role in unlocking industrial electrification and overcoming the barriers.

What can policy makers do to help scale up industrial electrification?

Our new piece for the World Economic Forum.

weforum.org/agenda/2024/04/gov

Recently places like @SIDN (Dutch national operator of .NL) have been claiming that nobody in Europe can deliver their computer needs, and that they are therefore forced to outsource operations to American cloud providers. Meanwhile our own IT industry denies this. Here I delve into what's going on, and how Europe is being Cloud Naïve instead of Cloud Native.

berthub.eu/articles/posts/clou

Loops is a new platform for sharing short videos, and it's open source + federated using #ActivityPub

We're really excited to share this sneak peek that showcases the new onboarding flow and discovery features (Connect Mastodon) and look forward to the upcoming beta release!

Are you ready for #Loops ?

Just imagine. You’re in one of the EU’s most significant cities. Lines to the second and third cities of the country, to Switzerland, Italy and Spain start here. Both regular lines and high speed.

And what do you do?

Let half the platforms - former autorail at Paris Bercy - simply rot and not be used. There’s place for at least 6 platforms there.

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Andrew "bunnie" Huang will give a webinar about his project IRIS (Infra-Red, In-Situ) inspection of silicon. A project to facilitate the non-destructive verification of silicon chips.
He'll give a short talk about the project but will leave most of the time for a Q&A as he is interested to hear what people think about IRIS.
Bunnie is an open hardware hacker, and an activist for digital rights.
Join us Thursday May 2, 11.00 CEST. nlnet.nl/events/20240502/index

#openhardware #NGIZERO #NGI #opensource

@rakyll Even worse, the bus is generally not a bus, but some kind of pimped-up snake oil salesmen chariot, with spinning rims RGB underbody strips and all, driven by an unapologetic sociopath (but he's obnoxious and has a strong jawline so tech commentators label him "genius"), pulled by a pair of doped up horses on the brink of death.

offf, this story about how Google made google search into a pile of seagull shit hits me hard:

https://www.wheresyoured.at/the-men-who-killed-google/

Around the time of this story, I was living through a similar situation in my work life (on a much smaller scope, of course,
WordPress.com first, Tumblr later).

Back in 2019, working on WordPress, I started finding myself, almost weekly, arguing against people who wanted to take the product we were working at and made it worse if that mean they could squeeze 0.1% more revenue from it

The 0.1% figure is not even a random number: I remember this speciffic A/B test on
WordPress.com that was declared a success and shipped to 100% of the users because it increased the free-to-paid conversion by 0.1%. Soon after it was released, I found out that as a side effect, it increased the churn of free users by 20 something %,so I called for an urgent rollback and removal of the change. So I was promptly explained that we didn't care about free-users churn, because finance had calculated the average long-term value of the free users to be something like $2 per year, and the increase in conversion was bigger than what we could get from them.

Everything became about growth hacking. Everything became thinly-veiled dark patterns. In our private dev slack channels, we joked that since it was impossible to make it smaller or less conspicuous, the next thing the growth team was going to ask us to do was to make the 'free plan' button flee away from the mouse pointer when the user tried to click it. We kept making our product worse, we kept consciously crippling the cheaper versions so we could force people to move to the more expensive options.

Back then I was the lead of one of the two dev divisions working on
WordPress.com, so my job was mainly to discuss what we were going to be doing, when and how. And I was getting drained by a constant state of fight against a constant wave of shit they wanted us to build. So much than by the end of 2020, the CEO quietly told me to follow the growth team plans and shut up or step down.

So I requested to move to tumblr, because I thought the pastures were greener over there. But it was all the same: Adding login walls to what we were pretending to be "the last bastion of the free internet", cramping in embarrasingly obvious money-making schemes disguised as features, and making them silently opt-out instead of opt-in so the less people the possible would deactivate them, having to fend off the pressure from the CEO to make everything algorithmic timelines because, you know, tiktok makes a lot of money and why aren't we, etc etc.

I found myself in a place where building something good that people enjoy using was no longer a priority, but tricking people into generating more money for the company was. And when I looked around me, I could see that happening everywhere else, not only in my company. Experiencing the start of the enshittification years from inside wasn't easy.

And, as in the article, the people who decided to turn the shit-metter up to 200%, have a name, in every case. And these people, no matter if they are called Sundar and Prabhakar or Matt and Mark, are destroying the internet. These people are milllionaires, or billionaries, and are destroying our shared, common spaces to squeeze some extra cash from us.

That's why the fediverse and its principles are important. Because that's how we take back internet from their dirty hands. That's how we make internet resilient against them. That's how we build the commons.

Early call to gauge interest: Who's seriously interested in attending a paid training on oscilloscope probing theory and practice, some time in the early summer at my lab just outside Seattle? It will be a one-day, in-person event including 4+ hours of lecture and lots of hands-on lab time for everyone on some very nice equipment (16 GHz oscilloscope, 28 Gbps BERT, multiple VNAs, and more).

I've done a few test runs with friends and I think I've finally got it refined to the point I'll be ready to do the class for paying students in the near future. Course notes are open source github.com/azonenberg/electron so you can take all the notes home after, you're mostly paying for the in-person instruction and lab access.

It will cover many different kinds of probe ranging from the classic passive R-C divider probe up to modern double digit GHz active differential probes, pros and cons of each design, non-idealities and limitations, and how to get the most out of your measurements.

This will be an in-person event hosted out of my lab with a very limited class size, 4-6 students, to ensure everyone gets enough lab time. Special introductory pricing of $1000/seat for industry professionals. If you're a student/hobbyist and would love to attend but can't afford the full price, ping me and I'll try to make something work out.

I'm tentatively shooting for the weekend of June 8th or 15th, but subject to change based on student availability etc. I plan to make this a regular thing so if more than one class worth of people are interested it will happen again for sure.

This will be a COVID-safe event, masks are (at minimum) strongly encouraged, and may be mandated if anyone attending has specific health concerns. The lab is a "cleanishroom" (engineered for very clean air with multiple HEPA filters etc, but not ISO 14644-1 certified) and additional portable filtration units will be present in the classroom.

‘Where can you hide from pollution?’: cancer rises 30% in #Beirut as diesel generators poison city - theguardian.com/global-develop "#Lebanon’s economy and electricity system are broken and much power is now generated locally, with devastating effects on air quality and health" grim

Big tech: Move fast and break things!
Everyone: ok, we've broken basically everything now. What's the next step?
Big tech: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Everyone: 😬

I forgot to post these tiles I saw at the train station yesterday

We urgently need more @emf sponsors - if we do not secure more, we will have to make tough decisions.

Tickets cover base costs, but sponsors pay for lovely things like our free childcare and talk transcription. Every little helps!

Find out more here: emfcamp.org/sponsor

If being chronically ill has taught me anything it's that dynamic "in the background" measurement with a high sampling rate is pretty vital for getting insight into a very unpredictable crisis event

All the teeth bared attitudes about measurement in software kind of obscured that for me and I am coming back to the things I KNOW are true about this

What gets represented in our models of the world as the base rate of key events in our world, that matters

TYPEWRITER ARTIST

You definitely didn’t know about such capabilities of a typewriter.

It turns out that with its help you can not only print text, but also create pictures . The main thing is to think everything through in advance and be patient.
#AureFreePress

Occasionally another friend tests and validates my "put a temperature data logger in your fridge" campaign. Today someone found their fridge at SIXTEEN DEGREES.

Most UK fridges have terrible thermostats and over-temperature alarms are rare. I am convinced this is responsible for a vast amount of food waste.

elk.zone/chaos.social/@jonty/1

So, why are so many executives and investors overlooking this very basic reality that code produced is code which must be maintained, and that an acceleration of code produced thanks to gen AI means ~more risk~, not just more $$$?

I have friends who are Principal Engineers asking themselves this very question right now.

And in response, I point us to the classic Upton Sinclair quote:
“It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it.”

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