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I have youtube videos I want to listen to when I don't have eyes to spare. YouTube.com does some unholy mobile code that causes it to stop when you turn off your screen, even in your browser. Sometimes this can be bypassed by viewing in Firefox Mobile in desktop mode, but sometimes this just doesn't work. The Piped.video interface not only has no qualms about continuing playing when your screen is off, it offers an audio-only option so, presumably, I'm not streaming high-payload video data! Another win for over the greed.

Just saw on someone on #Reddit using #ChatGPT to answer a user's question — they didn't disclose it but it was painfully obvious.

Very on-brand, as a large portion of Reddit's user base consists of people who are confidently wrong about everything.

Still, I miss the times before #AI, when being wrong at least required some effort.

Have you ever had two keys randomly swap places on your keyboard? Only if your is this cool orys.us/uN

@dekkzz76@emacs.ch been around for many fortnights, would you say? Just another case of

Twice in two days I've had problems (solutions?) with . Once was a site we thought was failing to display search results, and we found an errant over-matching `display: hidden` in the style. The other was while implementing a goog autocomplete and I mistook "not loading the data" with "forgot to make usable styles."

org-agenda-fortnight-view. When did this happen!? It so happens that some of my schedule makes more sense that way, though.

I just recently discovered `gnus-summary-next-unread-article`, default to `N` and hops from the end of one mail group (like my webdev email) to the next unread in any other group. Great addition to my workflow!

@christian Thanks! I hope you enjoy those. I found that some of them were not in my feed reader yet, so was glad to add some

I used to listen to through Google, then through Spotify, then Spotify Lite, and now I just love listening to them raw through and the RSS feed ( on my pc, on my phone). There are tradeoffs -- can't share as easily, don't have playlists of them, can't cast. But I also don't have things getting paused accidentally by the service or by others on my account (there are no accounts at all!), and I don't need to worry about things tracking/sharing my listening data. At least, not for podcasts. It's the way podcasts were meant to be!

@christian Yeah, it's about a 3-hour round trip daily, with frequent delays.

Here are the ones on my list right now; Syntax is the one I listen to most often.

- The CSS Podcast thecsspodcast.libsyn.com/rss

- ClojureStream Podcast feeds.soundcloud.com/users/sou

- Clojurians Podcast anchor.fm/s/7ec55fac/podcast/r

- Foojay.io, the Friends Of OpenJDK! feeds.buzzsprout.com/2011989.r

- JavaScript Jabber feeds.redcircle.com/a4faed6e-a

- Software Unscripted feeds.resonaterecordings.com/s

- Syntax. Tasty Treats feed.syntax.fm/rss

- The ReadME Podcast feeds.simplecast.com/ioCY0vfY

@christian I listen to podcasts during my commute -- around 15 hours per week. I have categories for tech, marriage, faith, news with shows I really enjoy in each of them

There's yet another "AI will kill us all! It poses a risk of extinction!" letter going around, and I just… Y'all i am just so fucking tired.

CAPITALISM poses risk of extinction (climate change, right the fuck now).

WHITE SUPREMACY poses risk of extinction (genocide, eugenics).

HEGEMONY poses risk of extinction (nuclear FUCKING WAR).

And whatever "risk of extinction" "AI" poses, it poses because it is BUILT FROM THOSE EXTREMELY HUMAN VALUES.

Even if you stopped every "AI" project running, RIGHT THIS SECOND, those values would still kill us. And no matter how long you "pause" your "AI" projects, if you don't address those values? Then when you start your "AI" back up? You'll KEEP BUILDING THOSE SAME VALUES IN.

This is not hard. At this point, as much as it pains me to say it, it's not even novel. And yet you're still not fucking getting it.

I'm so goddam tired.

@rml @joel @mykhaylo

Since you are from the arts this may seem less relevant to you, but I suspect that the is the most mature and well-developed virtual machine out there. I know, at least, it has had the most man-hours pumped into it of any of them, with decades of very good programmers. Now things like Graal make it blindingly fast for many products

@mykhaylo @rml @joel OpenJDK. I have been programming Clojure for years and have never touched Sun/Oracle/Whoever "official" JDK. Great discussion about the tradeoffs of being a hosted langage (though it got a little sidetracked in the middle with "Clojure's useful distinctions") clojureverse.org/t/benefits-of

@publicvoit @Joel confirming just works; I click "accept" and it does its thing and sends the response. Composing them is not something I've ever done in any client, so I can't speak to that.

@dekkzz76@emacs.ch Yeah. It's when you are using a TV for one of your monitors.

Nah; I made that up. It was a typo :)

It's a beauty of open source that I thought, "with my three streens and multiple emacs windows per frame, it would be great to blink the modeline which one has received my focus." A short function later and boom; done!

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