Deliberately undermining one of the most powerful tools against the threat of global pandemics from novel emerging infectious diseases is not only evil — it’s stunningly shortsighted zero-sum thinking that puts the US population at risk as well.
https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/usa-covid-propaganda/
In UI circles you sometimes see a (usually derogatory) label of "hover tunnel" given to a UI widget, like a clickless contextual menu, which requires you hover over an element then continue to hover over specific elements in order to keep the widget active. I would like to propose the term "Reverse Hover Tunnel" for the current YouTube front page, where you must move the mouse in strict and meticulous paths to avoid it beginning to autoplay random crap, possibly forever showing it as 10% watched
“Generative AI Is Not Going To Build Your Engineering Team For You - Stack Overflow”
> By not hiring and training up junior engineers, we are cannibalizing our own future. We need to stop doing that.
Any industry that stops hiring entry-level workers is in for a very, very bad time a decade down the line.
Good piece on the #HungaTonga eruption and it's (tiny to non-existent) impact on our climate from @andrewdessler .
I think my biggest takeaway from the attribution work is that (some) people will do almost anything to avoid accepting human emissions are driving climate change. https://open.substack.com/pub/theclimatebrink/p/the-real-lesson-of-the-hunga-tonga
Microsoft really needs to clean up their management teams for Windows.
It would really not be that hard for Windows to be good, trustable OS.
That they fuck up this hard is really just a cycle of absurd incompetence that seems to wave over every other Windows release.
Somehow competent product managers make it in after every fucked up release and then after a while things repeat.
I participated in an expert meeting at the Ministry for Agriculture on the use of wood for energy & products. Good that such meetings are being held.
But it's mind-boggling every time how very deep the differences in perspective, assessment & recommendations run btw scientists, & with industry, biomass interest groups, NGOs.
The seductive pull of "But it grows back! Therefore it's green!" remains strong. Someone said "let's not consider forests a CO2 museum". But a plantation is not a forest.
"Saving the First Draft of History:
When news sites suddenly shut down and former URLs are sold to the highest bidder, saving a publisher's archive becomes a time-consuming and rigorous full-time job in the digital age."
nice piece featuring @mark of the Internet Archive Wayback Machine!
https://niemanreports.org/articles/saving-the-first-draft-of-history/
HandBrake now supports encoding to FFV1, the professional digital preservation video codec! All it took was a suggestion in a Github issue, and the maintainers were happy to include it. Now if some of you #digipres colleagues would test that it works as intended, that would be even better. https://github.com/HandBrake/HandBrake/releases/tag/1.8.0 #handbrake #ffv1
All over Tallinn there are these app controlled bike racks. But I don’t want to have to download an app to park a bike. And I don’t think it even fits a Birdy, let alone a cargo bike. And the regular racks are poor…
Massive leak at #Google confirms what we have all known for years, just how much is tracked, stored, and monetized.
Even clearer now how Chrome tracks and reports EVERYTHING you do. For heavens' sake delete it now and move to Firefox
Also they've outright lied for years about their data collection and search practices.
Looks like 'Don't be evil' wasn't enough. ;)
https://www.theverge.com/2024/5/28/24166177/google-search-ranking-algorithm-leak-documents-link-seo
Just, get off Google products already!
https://www.optoutproject.net/the-best-non-google-search-engine/
*This guy is attempting to categoriza common AI search blunders, and it's interesting that most of them are not about LLM "halliucination," they're about AI's lack of common-sense context
@gerrymcgovern I wish Postman was still there to read his take on the topic. Looks like we're "Amusing ourselves to death" in new and inconceivably powerful ways. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amusing_Ourselves_to_Death
*Well, we're ten years into the future of that prediction, and the future today is about even older people, in even bigger cities, even more afraid of the sky
@onelson I wouldn't have guessed that every media company is ultimately owned by The Pirate Bay, good to know. 😉
The story goes extremely deep on Stark Industries, a UK company serving as a global proxy for Russian attacks, not to mention global criminal enterprises. Totally fascinating.
@rsf92 @pluralistic I spent 15 years, from 2005 to 2020, working with my neighbors to build a fiber network in our rural town (Plainfield, Mass. pop. 600) in western Massachusetts. Most of that time was dealing with funding and regulatory issues, but by the time everyone stayed home to avoid the pandemic in 2020, working with the local municipal gas/electric/fiber department in the city of Westfield we had the network in place and most of the homes installed. 1 Gbps for $85, symmetrical, uncapped. It meant that while families in other towns were driving to library parking lots so their kids could use the WiFi to do their schoolwork, in our town they had faster broadband in their homes.
4 years later and we have not had to change prices. We are now interconnected with 5 neighboring towns in a mesh to share diverse backhaul paths and get increased economies of scale. We are building a stabilization fund to cover insurance deductibles, equipment replacement, and upgrades, and we are keeping more dollars in the regional economy instead of having it siphoned off to Verizon shareholders.
Extremely online electronics engineer, PhD in #microelectronics (low-power digital systems architecture), #LoRa pioneer.
Co-founded a #hackerspace, co-founded an industrial #company, interested in #manufacturing (traditional and distributed), frugal innovation, durable and resilient sociotechnical systems.