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You might object, "Sure it's not actionable for me, but if no one consumed the news, even important things wouldn't percolate through society!"

That is probably true, but we're so far from the point where the marginal consumption of additional news is a net positive that I don't think we're in any danger of an under-informed network here.

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It would be interesting to have a service that gives you summaries of the news from 6 or 12 months ago, with care taken to cover the general response and counter-narratives.

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I think more people should have this attitude (that you should not consume news):

econlib.org/archives/2011/03/t

I have talked to people who are genuinely distressed by things happening in the news and are afraid to miss something if they cut it out. But usually information in the news isn't *actionable* even if it's important.

Just finished speaking at Chicago's meetup Chipy.

One nice thing about virtual meetups — no waiting for the video to be processed and released!

Stream from my ChiPy talk is already up. Full meetup: youtu.be/8JFUgAJLoQE

My talk starts at ~41:53: youtu.be/8JFUgAJLoQE?t=2513

Slides: pganssle-talks.github.io/chipy

Saw this in my back yard on Monday.

Man, people around here really over-feed their dogs!

The pumpkins I carved for Halloween yesterday. My son picked the general designs and left me with the trivial detail of executing them. 😅

Not bad considering I can't remember the last time I carved a pumpkin. 😀

(Note the "Easter egg" shadow behind the kitty 😺)

The workbench has taken its rightful place as a work station for electronics and such (though some of the components migrate to the main desk if I need to program a microcontroller...)

This is likely the last picture of a tidy workbench I'll get for a while.

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"Bigger" here means 27" or 32". I probably would have upgraded long ago, but I find it hard to tell whether my day-to-day experience (using Linux and not playing games) would be significantly degraded by getting some of the drastically cheaper models available.

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Some steps in the evolution of my workstation:

1. Workbench as desk
2-3. Switched to standing desk
4. Added monitor arms

Next steps: Get at least one bigger monitor, setup up my cable management game.

Exciting announcement: I'll be giving a keynote talk at PyConf Hyderabad, which will place December 5-6th, 2020 (virtually, this year):

twitter.com/pyconfhyd/status/1

Tickets are available here: pyconf.hydpy.org/2020/

CfP is still open until November 8th: twitter.com/pyconfhyd/status/1

I am enthusiast as just a general nerd.

My interests in general are:





(Though it's been a bit since I've made it out to the forge lol )

Of course, there are legitimate reasons for this sort of dependency injection-style parameterization, but adding support for arbitrary interfaces broadens your "supported configuration surface" so much that usually it doesn't pass the YAGNI test — unless you need it for tests.

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That's obviously a pithy twitter-sized take, but I think most of the time when you have some highly parameterized class / function, you aren't doing it because you actually want to support an interface where someone supplies their own provider of some core language functionality.

You do it because it makes your testing easier, and you can nominally it allows you to test using only the public interface.

That sort of thing is a necessity in languages without monkey patching, but it seems like it's a considerably worse code smell than patching in tests.

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Listening to Anna-Lena Popkes on @TalkPython@twitter.com and I realized something I've never consciously understood: mocking is bad because it is tightly coupled to implementation details, but dependency injection solves this problem by promoting those details to be part of the public API.

In the book "Brooklyn", @builtbrooklyn@twitter.com says early aviator Calbraith Rodgers was "blogging all the way" on a cross-country flight.

I am kinda startled to find that I can't think of a non-anachronistic verb to describe what he was doing: sending regular dispatches for publication.

Citation: google.com/books/edition/Brook

# Remote Timelines

I wanted to take a minute to explain QOTOs Remote timeline feature, specifically the new aspect we just released on the advanced interface: Domain Favourites.

This feature allows you to pull up a column which is identical to the local timeline of a remote instance, thus addressing the need for users to have multiple accounts across multiple instances. You can be here on QOTO and see the remote timeline as a separate feed just as if you were on the remote instance itself! For example attached to this post is what the Koyu.space remote timeline looks like from QOTO.org.

**Note:** This feature can not and does not bypass security permissions. If a user has blocked you you wont see that users posts in the remote timeline either.

There are several ways to pull up or switch between remote timelines, and you can have several remote timelines up at the same time or even combine them in a single column.

One way to do this is with the QOTO lists feature. Here you can create lists that are either collections of people you wish to follow in their own timeline, or a list of domains where you wish to follow the remote local timeline of the whole domain. Create the lists you want then open your lists and switch between them to view the various timelines you define.

You can also go into your settings and under preferences there is a subsection called "Favourite domains", you can add domains there as well. If you do this the domain will show up on the main navigation bar and you can select it with fewer clicks than through the list menu. There is also a Favourite Tags section in preferences that works much the same way.

You can also pull up the remote local timeline of an instance from a posted status itself. Simply click the three dots on a post from any user from the desired domain and one of the options will be to open the remote timeline for that domain.

That is all there is to it, enjoy!

Another election year where I can find basically no information about any of the judges running for office.

You would think that they would have some sort of at least rudimentary campaign information, such that you could know like... their positions on issues and their track record as judges?

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