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R. A. Dehi boosted

@manniac Jack Dorsey's using Nostr, a scuttlebutt like decentralized protocol. iris.to/jack@cash.app

So Android 14 won't permit installation of apps whose Target SDK is Android 6 or below. Termux has been unable to update its app in the Google Play Store since 2020 because the Play Store demanded Target SDK level of 29 or above, which is Android 10: wiki.termux.com/wiki/Termux_Go

Maybe around Android 18, Termux will stop working even if install it with F-Droid.

This is very correct. Until last year you could infer a lot about the provenance of a text from its internal structure; you no longer can.

R. A. Dehi boosted

@xabean @tab2space @diazona @monro I use calibre to protect my kindle from tampering and information disclosure, and run without Wifi. It’s lovely.

R. A. Dehi boosted

Why did I choose SourceHut as codeforge to self-host?

A few reasons:

* I *thought* it'd be simpler, though now I find it could do with better packaging.

* You can collaborate without signing up! (Be keen to explore a passkeys technique, in addition to eMail)

* I have a vested interest in questioning the value of silos, since they're who tends to break my browser.

* It outputs reasonable HTML markup. Pre-CSS3 Grid Twitter Bootstrap era, but still! Should work well in Rhapsode & Haphaestus!

R. A. Dehi boosted

@lauren Close-up of ant's face requires, charitably, 100 μm resolution. Can't orbit below about 200 km; 300-800 km is much more common. 100 μm at 200 km is 0.5 nanoradians. To get an Airy spot diameter 1.22 λ/d of 0.5 nanoradians with blue light of λ = 450 nm, you need d = 1.22 · 450 nm / 0.5 nanoradians = 1100 meters. Is not plausible that either US or China has a spy satellite currently in orbit with an 1100-meter-diameter mirror, much less a fleet of them.

Additionally to neither country having the requisite rockets to launch a satellite the size of a small town yet, would be 19 arc minutes in diameter when it passed overhead, two thirds of the visual diameter of the sun or moon. Wouldn't help moving it to a higher orbit because the mirror would have to be proportionally bigger.

Photos you see of cities on Google Maps "satellite view" are mostly aerial photos, not satellite photos, for this reason.

R. A. Dehi boosted

Object capability based security and micro kernels are the old future returned.

It was never completely gone, of course. I’ve been tracking projects like the Genode OS framework for years, but all of a sudden I’m seeing hardware, university projects, big tech projects, and really exciting software platforms left right and centre.

Permission to dream of a better world of computing once more?
#capabilites #microkernel #future #past #tech

R. A. Dehi boosted

Intel is the first big tech to go beyond layoffs and institute broad pay cuts. Annual bonuses paused, 401K match halved, merit increases on hold and actual pay cut by 5% to 15%.

On a positive note, shareholders can still expect a quarterly dividend. 🥲

semianalysis.com/p/intel-cuts-

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R. A. Dehi boosted

@radehi @mjgardner @ownlifeful

This <notes.secretsauce.net/notes/20> covers a lot of the cases.

Generalised ufuncs are a core part of the PDL::PP language meaning that every function by default does broadcasting and does it the same way: e.g., <gist.github.com/zmughal/fd7996>. No need for something like `numpy.vectorize` as all functions already broadcast every matching args' dims in C.

Probably not as important as the other points, but PDL doesn't have a limit to the number of dimensions (no `MAX_DIMS`).

R. A. Dehi boosted

@internetarchive blog says: "We have observed some confusion about the Internet Archive’s removal of links to a BBC documentary about Indian PM Narendra Modi (“India: the Modi Question”). Internet Archive can confirm that it has removed links in response to DMCA takedown requests from the BBC."

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R. A. Dehi boosted

".text" sections don't contain text. ".data" contains some but not all data. ".bss" stands for block started by symbol, a directive in one particular assembler for the IBM 704 (1954!) that just.. stuck around.

Object files are files but neither are nor contain objects (in the modern sense). Core dumps are memory dump but they've not been dumps of (magnetic) core memory since the 70s.

There are segments and sections, which mean slightly different things in every format.

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R. A. Dehi boosted

Apparently people don't just like emulated calculators in the browser - they love it, and want more.

So come enjoy the CALCULATOR DRAWER, a dozen plus emulated calculators and (where I could find them) the manuals. Get calculating!

archive.org/details/calculator

R. A. Dehi boosted

well, i guess it's time to actually search for a job

tef.computer/ is my "please hire me, this is what i've done before" website, but the tl;dr is that i'm an experienced backend engineer with some sre, dba, and security bits for flavour

i'm ideally looking for remote work in us timezones, even though i work in the uk, and i'm especially looking for adhd friendly employers

and frankly, i'm really looking for coding/ic work, rather than yaml janitoring or k8s babysitting

R. A. Dehi boosted

The OI!STER, an STM32L5 Target Board with a QFP48 clamshell socket aimed at debugging and glitching MCUs.

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R. A. Dehi boosted

Read my lips:

An audio show that can only be played in an Apple player on an Apple device is not a podcast.

An audio show that can only be played in Spotify is not a podcast.

Repeat ad nauseam for any other proprietary audio show platforms.

A #podcast is an #RSS feed with enclosures of audio files which are playable across the whole ecosystem of podcast players.

Any reporter who reports on exclusive audio shows and calls them “podcasts” are doing a grave disservice to their audience.

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R. A. Dehi boosted

The results of the meta-analyses suggest a definitive association between the protective role of vitamin D and ICU hospitalization. mdpi.com/1424-8247/16/1/130

Those who know anything about the matter are aware that every writer, from Epicurus to Bentham, who maintained the theory of utility, meant by it, not something to be contradistinguished from pleasure, but pleasure itself, together with exemption from pain; and instead of opposing the useful to the agreeable or the ornamental, have always declared that the useful means these, among other things. Yet the common herd, including the herd of writers, not only in newspapers and periodicals, but in books of weight and pretension, are perpetually falling into this shallow mistake. Having caught up the word utilitarian, while knowing nothing whatever about it but its sound, they habitually express by it the rejection, or the neglect, of pleasure in some of its forms; of beauty, of ornament, or of amusement.

—Mill

R. A. Dehi boosted

What's really strange about adjusting to Mastodon is the stuff that is forcibly broken on corporate sites I just *don't have to worry about* here. Subtle stuff.

You can just *copy links* here. You don't have to de-obfuscate them first like on Twitter or Google News.

I use Twitter in a pathological way because I suspect they're gathering metrics on which features I use. I'm afraid to even load certain iffy features in case it helps Twitter conclude users like it. Here I can just like… do stuff.

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