@papa@mastodon.sdf.org @sir
Here's a quick history of copyright law:
The Statute of Anne (1710) was the first government-regulated act in the western world and it boiled down to a pact with the printing guilds trading monopoly for censorship.
The U.S. constitution (1787) tried to salvage the idea by granting congress the power "to promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts". ("useful Arts" meaning maps ant the like)
That's why the Copyright Act of 1790 only protects "maps, charts, and books" but not things like music or newspapers.
Also, it was intentionally designed to allow American to ignore foreign copyrights and that was key to the U.S. becoming the cultural juggernaut that it is today.
(On a side-note, Hollywood is in California because it was beyond the reach of Thomas Edison's patent lawyers.)
From what I remember, the modern scope of copyright involved a chain of legal goalpost-moving where they first managed to argue that a book of sheet music was a book and thus managed to get rid of the "musical compositions aren't protected" and then managed to argue that, because a piece of sheet music is protected, a recording of that sheet music should also be protected.
Examples of things still not copyrightable include clothing designs, jokes, and recipes.
@papa@mastodon.sdf.org @sir
I remember reading that 90%+ of revenue is made within something like the first 10 years and the rest peters off at a rate which makes it not worth the cultural hit to protect.
Beyond that, bear in mind that copyright was never intended to protect fiction or music or the like.
@sir I used to act that way.
These days, I'm so massively behind on the DRM-free games and used novels I've collected that it'd feel wrong to shun what I paid (almost nothing) for to pirate something instead.
(It also lets me feel satisfaction in knowing that companies can't whine about piracy being why they didn't get my money, because I neither pirated nor paid for whatever it is they're unwilling to offer on my terms.)
@obi For whatever reason, I find that switching a UI from dark-on-light to light-on-dark makes it more of a strain to recognize letter shapes with the same font at the same size.
(Except for the terminal, where UI configurations are so built around the assumption of the intuitive meanings of and contrast relationships between various colors that, aside from cranking up the brightness on the blue to improve the readability, I can't find any way to improve it beyond trying different fonts.)
@obi It allows you to merge the entire public contents of another instance's local timeline (specifically, whichever toots they expose through their whole-instance RSS feed) into either Home or a custom list of your choosing.
As for how you use it, hit the gear icon, choose "Follows and subscriptions" from the sidebar, choose the "Domain subscribes" sub-entry that appears in the sidebar, hit the Add button, and it'll ask for you a domain and a list to merge it into.
I just ran across an interesting and highly detailed blog post from 2014 about the Intel x87 fsin instruction.
https://randomascii.wordpress.com/2014/10/09/intel-underestimates-error-bounds-by-1-3-quintillion/
No big surprise that it's from Bruce Dawson's blog. I really need to do an archive trawl of it some day.
@yohanandiamond I found a long Unix & Linux Stack Exchange answer which explains what a mess things are with echo and extensions to printf and why it's generally a good idea to stick to the POSIX-specifed subset of printf:
@normandc @brandon @DonMcCollough@fosstodon.org @elfio
Around the same price as a brand-new keyboard with model F switches.
(CA$400 for the giant retro one, US$370 for the new ultra-compact one. Can't remember if the eBay price I'm remembering is before or after shipping.)
Economies of scale aside, the Model M switches *were* specifically designed to be cost-reduced versions of the Model F switches.
(And the Model F switches were designed to approximate the feel of IBM Selectric typewriters.)
AFAICT, %q is specific to the CLI printf, so things like dash and BusyBox probably error out because their printf(1) just hands off to glibc's printf(3).
It wouldn't surprise me if the same implementation decision is also at play in all the non-GNU, non-Zsh stuff on the BSDs, macOS, and Solaris.
(After all, it *is* kind of nonsensical and counter-intuitive to have two separate implementations of printf formatting in the same userland rather than just putting %q into glibc.)
1. %q is GNU- and zsh-specific
It's in GNU /usr/bin/printf and bash/zsh builtins, but busybox printf and dash's builtin error out and it's not in the FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, DragonFly BSD, macOS, or Solaris printf manpages.
2. printf(1) isn't just "available in most systems", POSIX requires it:
https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/printf.html
3. printf actually is a builtin under busybox, dash, bash, and zsh… but only zsh makes `which` a builtin:
% which printf
printf: shell built-in command
@matt I use Audacious (currently with the GTK+ 2.x interface because the Qt5 interface hasn't re-implemented global hotkeys and I don't feel like binding a dozen different things through xbindkeys and audtool) because it's the right balance of a UI that I can customize to be minimal and an unbeatable set of bundled format-support plugins.
QMMP is the runner-up I'd choose and it's essentially Audacious's Qt-based competitor from before Audacious supported Qt as a frontend option.
@Krypton @lucasdondo@fosstodon.org
The point is to disincentivize collecting the information.
@nextcloud I can't help but this of this quote:
You [should] not examine legislation in the light of the benefits it will convey if properly administered, but in the light of the wrongs it would do and the harm it would cause if improperly administered -- Lyndon Johnson, former President of the U.S.
@Gina I'm more a Melee fan. Once I got used to it, the original and Brawl felt too slow-paced.
Still, N64 FTW. At the moment, I'm trying to regain my old skills to beat Grunty in Banjo-Kazooie and beat the first Wizpig race in Diddy Kong Racing. Then, on to Banjo-Tooie.
(Emulated with the help of USB controller adapters. My N64 has an un-diagnosed reset problem.)
@fsf I'm about to get back to playing https://endless-sky.github.io/
It's a GPLv3'd Escape Velocity clone still actively soliciting and receiving new content and *very* addictive.
@normandc @brandon @DonMcCollough@fosstodon.org @elfio
...though I can only assume I'm a glutton for punishment because, if I could afford to spend $400 on a keyboard, I'd snag one of the IBM 6110347 keyboards that turn up on eBay periodically and hook it up via an adapter and some key remapping.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p_JTZo2rKmw
(The closest you can get to a US101 or US104 layout in Model F switches, given that https://www.modelfkeyboards.com/ only does ultra compact layouts.)
@normandc @brandon @DonMcCollough@fosstodon.org @elfio
I stick to standard US 104 (anglophone Canadian here), but I think I know the feeling because Unicomp stopped making a proper US 104 layout for buckling spring boards back in 2013.
https://www.pckeyboard.com/mm5/graphics/ProductNews7-25-13.pdf
(I had to set an eBay watch to get my current keyboard plus the couple of spares I eventually managed to snag at a reasonable price. One of these days, I'm planning to buy a box of replacement parts.)
@obi I'm very big on having a unified interface for things, so, when my choice was between here and fosstodon, the killer feature for here was "Domain Subscriptions".
Full-text searches, a raised character limit, bookmarking, keyword searches, instance ticker banners, in-timeline subscribe/follow buttons, and a light theme with non-fixed-width columns were also part of my decision though.
Linux user, open-source enthusiast, science buff, and retro-hobbyist who occasionally reviews fanfiction.