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WebAssembly is useful in non-web context as a way to get a platform-independent executable of ~anything: xeiaso.net/blog/carcinization- (by @cadey)

I seems that the answer is (or at least was a year ago) no: socialhub.activitypub.rocks/t/

Weirdly enough Pleroma is claimed to implement it.

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Does implement client-server API?

I do what w3.org/TR/activitypub/#client- tells me to:
- I look up my own Actor object and look up its outbox (qoto.org/users/robryk/outbox in my case),
- I send a POST with appropriate 'Authorization: Bearer ...' header,

and then I get 404 (GETs on that URL do succeed and show a collection).

Is client-server activitypub something that is ~ever implemented?

Outer Wilds spoilers 

Also, the UI gets screwy (see video).

issues

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Outer Wilds spoilers 

Heh, if you fly away far enough, the sun goes supernova significantly later (at least a minute after it eats the Interloper). I guess (based on the map being screwy: e.g. Interloper appears well off its indicated orbit) that there's a floating point accuracy problem there.

is awesome.

(Please be sure to CW spoilers, and be aware I won't read them for at least a longish while.)

robryk boosted

@robryk@qoto.org Yes. You can measure temperature by observing a crystal oscillator's frequency drift (with a known reference clock). Hewlett-Packard made this lab instrument in the 1960s, with a resolution of .0001”C. AFAIK it's still a really precise method by today's standard, but it went out of favor as the crystal needs to have a special cut with linear temperature coefficient. See HP Journal Vol. 16, No.7, 1965. http://hparchive.com/Journals/HPJ-1965-03.pdf Linear Technology App Note 61 shows how to build your own, see page 13: https://www.analog.com/media/en/technical-documentation/application-notes/an61fa.pdf

Fun fact: This phenomenon has been used as a deanonymization attack against Tor. By observing the 24-hour drift of the system clock, one can determine the longitude of the target server, latitude can further be determined by the change in day length.
https://www.freehaven.net/anonbib/cache/HotOrNot.pdf

robryk boosted

#TIL Möbius resistor. Take a double-sided copper tape (with its top insulated from the bottom), and join the tape onto itself as a Möbius strip. Now you get an ideal current-sensing resistor with almost no parasitic inductance. The resistor behaves like two short-circuited microstrip transmission lines with continuous ground planes, with an input port always at the center. An extreme form of the "folding back the wire" technique for making non-inductive wire-wound resistors... Cool idea, but practically it probably isn't too useful... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M%C3%B6bius_resistor #electronics

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@freemo Our math rendering continues to do very weird things (the quoted post gets some expressions rendered into very tall boxes with superscripts at the top and with some white rectangles overlaid on top of everything).

Grant Lakeland  
Let \[ G = \left\langle a,b,c \mid a^2, b^2, c^2 \right\rangle \] and let H be the index 2 subgroup consisting of (reduced) words in a, b, c of eve...
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the thing that i'm still most pleased with:

LEXY'S LABYRINTH, a puzzle game that happens to 99% emulate CHIP'S CHALLENGE 1 and 2! a trademark of bridgestone media group

- more than 800 community levels
- can load stock CC1 or CC2 levels too (and CC1 is free on steam!)
- rewind and undo!
- works on a phone!
- built-in editor; share levels with just a link
- new art and soundtrack
- fixes for some glitchy behavior, but compat settings if you'd rather not
- dev tools with demo playback and more

How popular is en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cynefi?

I've learned about it a few days ago and I realized that the boundaries it describes are very often by people without explicit references to it, and the correlations it implies (e.g. that need for reasoning from first principles is strongly correlated with problems that are not precisely specified). Now I wonder if everyone learnt about it and uses it (and I just didn't get the memo) or if there's a different source for these ideas.

The reason I noticed that is that I find some of the consequences of that view of the world weird and/or suboptimal for good modeling of the world. In particular, I like well-specified problems where you need to reason from first principles. Also, I see a tendency in the environments that deal with things that Cynefin marks as "complicated" to _not_ make it easy to reason from first principles (by not caring about making the relevant first principles easy to specify).

(-adjacent, because cryptography is the area that seems to straddle complicated and complex) (well, if not that then what is the branch of philosophy that does the same to motivation that epistemology does to knowledge?)

robryk boosted

@ariadne Who is Natalie Nguyen? A quick Google search yields a French TV presenter, a history professor, and a few other people that I don't think treehouse.systems is referring to.

robryk boosted

So turns out setting up a self-hosted Mastodon instance on NixOS is fairly painless.

github.com/delroth/infra.delro is basically all that was involved, and the only reason why I even have to setup the nginx config myself is because I do the weird split-domain thing where mastodon-web runs on mastodon.delroth.net (but I want to be ).

Of course I'm sure the pain will be in the long run... hopefully not :)

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