@New_scientist@feeds.twtxt.net No, Google does not predict this. āGoogle AIā has been self-promoting like this for decades. Remember when they used to brag that they could predict the onset of flu season weeks before it started? That silently went away because they got it badly wrong many times and people caught on to how bad their āpredictionsā actually were.
They canāt stop themselves. Anything about AI coming out of big tech companies these days is marketing, not real, and certainly not science.
I think Iām like a battery and I have maybe a hundred units of energy every day and every time I go up and down the stairs here one unit is drained from me.
hereās my old web page at Brandeis University
Coevolutionary algorithms typically explore domains in which no single evaluation function is present or known. For the purpose of selecting which individuals to maintain and vary, they instead rely on the outcomes of interactions between evolving entities.
Iāve been using variations of that same phrasing for a very long timeāI wrote that web page circa 2005 maybe?
podman works with TLS. It does not have the "--docker" siwtch so you have to remove that and use the exact replacement commands that were in that github comment.
@prologic@twtxt.net hmm, bummer. I was hoping that translating the docker commands to podman syntax would work but it looks like itās more subtle than that. Thanks for trying!
The weird thing was I wasnāt getting errors like that on my end when I tried it. podman thought the connection was created, and it set it as the default. But I donāt think it was sending anything over the wire. When I have more time to tinker with it maybe Iāll play around and see if I can figure out whatās up.
@prologic@twtxt.net I donāt get your objection. dockerd is 96M and has to run all the time. You canāt use docker without it running, so you have to count both. docker + dockerd is 131M, which is over 3x the size of podman. Plus you have this daemon running all the time, which eats system resources podman doesnāt use, and docker fucks with your network configuration right on install, which podman doesnāt do unless you tell it to.
Thatās way fat as far as Iām concerned.
As far as corporate goes, podman is free and open source software, the end. docker is a company with a pricing model. It was founded as a startup, which suggests to me that, like almost all startups, they are seeking an exit and if they ever face troubles in generating that exit theyāll throw out all niceties and abuse their users (see Reddit, the drama with spyware in Audacity, 10,000 other examples). Sure you can use it free for many purposes, and the container bits are open source, but that doesnāt change that itās always been a corporate entity, that they can change their policies at any time, that they can spy on you if they want, etc etc etc.
Thatās way too corporate as far as Iām concerned.
I mean, all of this might not matter to you, and thatās fine! Nothing wrong with that. But you canāt have an alternate realityāthese things I said are just facts. You can find them on Wikipedia or docker.com for that matter.
Solar Panel Placement
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@New_scientist@feeds.twtxt.net hello @prologic@twtxt.net hereās another feed thatās spewing multiple copies of the same post. This one above is repeated 8 times. @awesome-scala-weekly@feeds.twtxt.net now has 13 copies of each post every week. This definitely looks like a bug in whatever code is generating these feeds, because the source feeds donāt have multiple copies of the original posts:
- Has 8 copies of the above post: https://feeds.twtxt.net/New_scientist/twtxt.txt
- Has only 1 copy of the above post: https://www.newscientist.com/feed/home/
I forget whether I filed an issue on this before, but can you tell me where I should do that?
New kitchen time I think.
Iām playing around with snac2, which I think @stigatle@yarn.stigatle.no mentioned on here, and I have to say itās extremely easy to set up and itās been pretty straightforward so far. I wanted to experiment with having a presence on the Fediverse without going through the process of picking Mastodon vs. Gnu Social vs. Friendica vs. ā¦, and I wanted to self-host instead of picking an instance of one of those. For now Iām abucci@buc.ci, but no guarantees that will remain stable; Iām just testing for the time being.
What I see here is that when I was reading your .txt, the timestamp was like 40 minutes later than current time. Say itās 1pm and that twt is timed on 1.40pm
No idea why, perhaps your server has a wrong Timezone, or your twtxt tool is doing some timezome conversion?
Time to add
<meta name=āgooglebotā content=ānoindex,nofollowā>
to everything I guess.
An official FBI document dated January 2021, obtained by the American association āProperty of Peopleā through the Freedom of Information Act.

This document summarizes the possibilities for legal access to data from nine instant messaging services: iMessage, Line, Signal, Telegram, Threema, Viber, WeChat, WhatsApp and Wickr. For each software, different judicial methods are explored, such as subpoena, search warrant, active collection of communications metadata (āPen Registerā) or connection data retention law (ā18 USC§2703ā). Here, in essence, is the information the FBI says it can retrieve:
Apple iMessage: basic subscriber data; in the case of an iPhone user, investigators may be able to get their hands on message content if the user uses iCloud to synchronize iMessage messages or to back up data on their phone.
Line: account data (image, username, e-mail address, phone number, Line ID, creation date, usage data, etc.); if the user has not activated end-to-end encryption, investigators can retrieve the texts of exchanges over a seven-day period, but not other data (audio, video, images, location).
Signal: date and time of account creation and date of last connection.
Telegram: IP address and phone number for investigations into confirmed terrorists, otherwise nothing.
Threema: cryptographic fingerprint of phone number and e-mail address, push service tokens if used, public key, account creation date, last connection date.
Viber: account data and IP address used to create the account; investigators can also access message history (date, time, source, destination).
WeChat: basic data such as name, phone number, e-mail and IP address, but only for non-Chinese users.
WhatsApp: the targeted personās basic data, address book and contacts who have the targeted person in their address book; it is possible to collect message metadata in real time (āPen Registerā); message content can be retrieved via iCloud backups.
Wickr: Date and time of account creation, types of terminal on which the application is installed, date of last connection, number of messages exchanged, external identifiers associated with the account (e-mail addresses, telephone numbers), avatar image, data linked to adding or deleting.
TL;DR Signal is the messaging system that provides the least information to investigators.
I never paid a lot of attention to Ben Shapiro before, but what he says is so transparently asinine it boggles the senses. You really have to have a Fox-addled mind to believe that the search for the submersible was completely faked and that the powers-that-be knew the entire time that it had imploded. To believe that a vast conspiracy among hundreds, thousands (?) of people from several countries and spanning several days was orchestrated to lie to the public in order toā¦..uh, achieve what exactly? āUndermine institutional credibilityā? What does that even mean?
This is āthe moon landing was fakedā levels of conspiracy theory.

Boy, the quality of Time is fallen from when it was the Time of its Time to being nearly the Time of our Time!
How Ukraineās dam collapse could become the countryās āChernobylā | Time
Chernobyl is in Ukraine you assholes š
Crypto collapse? Get in loser, weāre pivoting to AI ā Attack of the 50 Foot Blockchain
Someone on here gave me a hard time when I suggested that the crypto grifters were pivoting to AI after crypto collapsed. But, they were and they still are.
@stigatle@yarn.stigatle.no I think I understand NATOās hesitation, but at the same time if this drags on and on for years then it causes massive loss of life and is even more dangerous for everyone. If that nuclear power plant melts down, whether because Russia causes it directly or because of an āaccidentā, then all of Europe can be blanketed with fallout. The longer this goes on, the more likely that possibility (and worse ones!) becomes.
That is scary to be so close to Russia. I hope youāre doing OK.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de wow. Iād trade crow sounds for car sounds, or jet sounds, or leaf blower sounds, or lawn mower sounds, orā¦..100% of the time.
As far as fighting the birds goes, maybe theyāre right, but probably itād be better to re-balance the ecosystem so that crows arenāt so dominant? At least there are things to try. When it comes to reducing how much air travel people use, it takes a terrorist attack or a pandemic to affect it.
Erlang Solutions: How ChatGPT improved my Elixir code. Some hacks are included.
I have been working as an Elixir developer for quite some time and recently came across the ChatGPT model. I want to share some of my experience interacting with it.
During my leisure hours, I am developing an open-source Elixir initiative, Crawly, that facilitates the extraction of structured data from the internet.
Here I want to demonstrate how ⦠ā Read more
@abucci@anthony.buc.ci buuuuut it show when winter!
In the time scale viewed from the planets perspective, the climate has changed many many times.. The issue is whether that change that will inevitability come is hospitable to us meat bags. Or if we are doomed to take part in the next mass extinction event.
@mckinley@twtxt.net Yeah, thatās more clear. š
Systems that are on all the time donāt benefit as much from at-rest encryption, anyway.
Right, especially not if itās ācloud storageā. š (Weāre only doing it on our backup servers, which are ārealā hardware.)

This guy is just such an idiot lol.
- Thereās no such mass migration to āthe southā. Tons of people are leaving Mississippi, Louisiana, Virginia, and New Mexico for instance. I donāt know enough about the states with net influxes like Texas and Florida but I suspect they have policies that make it attractive for people to move there
- Not everybody is able to take account of long-term trends when they make housing decisions. There are financial reasons, family reasons, educational reasons, etc that impact such decisions
- But of course, most laughably, cheap energy is fast becoming a thing of the past, and so the problem isnāt āsolvedā by cheap energy, itās just kicked down the road. And ffs, cheap energy is literally causing the very heating that he pretends air conditioning will āsolveāālike āsolvingā your drinking problem by staying drunk all the time
This oversimplification to drive some kind of political point is so embarrassing coming from someone who pretends to be a university professor. It sounds like a teenage doofus from a 1980s movie talking. He well knows all these things, but he decides to present these views anyway.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de I was visiting Germany once, and saw a guy try to load his bicycle onto the bike racks they have on the front of city buses. There were rules about when you could do that, which were posted on the bus stop sign, and I guess the guy thought this was a time when he could do that. But no, the bus driver disagreed. The bus driver got off the bus with a rule book, flipped it open to what I guess were the rules about bikes on the bus, and showed him the rules. The guy pointed at the sign, the bus driver said no and pointed at the book, and they went back and forth for I donāt know how long. It felt a lot like these videos lol
š£ Outage Notification: On Tuesday 23rd May 2023 between 7.30am to 5pm, there will be an outage of undefined length with no known start time due to planned power meter upgrades on the premises by the energy company.
You know, itās one of those things where they give you a ~12hr window š¤¦āāļø I will post here again once the technician is on-site and power down. I will power back up as soon as the work is complete.
According to the information Iāve received, the outage should be no more than ~1-2hrs.
Apologies for any inconvenience š¤
@stigatle@yarn.stigatle.no @prologic@twtxt.net @eldersnake@we.loveprivacy.club I love VR too, and I wonder a lot whether it can help people with accessibility challenges, like low vision.
But Metaās approach from the beginning almost seemed like a joke? My first thought was āare they trolling us?ā Thereās open source metaverse software like Vircadia that looks better than Metaās demos (avatars have legs in Vircadia, ffs) and can already do virtual co-working. Vircadia developers hold their meetings within Vircadia, and there are virtual whiteboards and walls where you can run video feeds, calendars and web browsers. What is Meta spending all that money doing, if their visuals look so weak, and their co-working affordances arenāt there?
On top of that, Meta didnāt seem to put any kind of effort into moderating the content. There are already stories of bad things happening in Horizon Worlds, like gangs forming and harassing people off of it. Imagine what thatād look like if 1 billion people were using it the way Meta says they want.
Then, there are plenty of technical challenges left, like people feeling motion sickness or disoriented after using a headset for a long period of time. I havenāt heard announcements from Meta that theyāre working on these or have made any advances in these.
All around, it never sounded serious to me, despite how much money Meta seems to be throwing at it. For something with so much promise, and so many obvious challenges to attack first that Meta seems to be ignoring, what are they even doing?
I have no interest in doing anything about it, even if I had the time (which I donāt), but these kind of thing happen all day every day to countless people. My silly blog post isnāt worth getting up in arms about, but there are artists and other creators who pour countless hours, heart and soul into their work, only to have it taken in exactly this way. Thatās one of the reasons Iām so extremely negative about the spate of āAIā tools that have popped up recently. They are powered by theft.
Thereās a link to the blog post, but they extracted a summary in hopes of keeping people in Google properties (something theyāve been called out on many times).
I was never contacted to ask if I was OK with Google extracting a summary of my blog post and sticking it on the web site. There is a very clear copyright designation at the bottom of each page, including that one. So, by putting their own brand over my text, they violated my copyright. Straightforward theft right there.
Went to the barber shop today. Got a nice talk and, surprisingly, my first ācontractā to 3D print something. So, I spent the last hour reading about QR codes, versions and patterns and rescue data to embed an image in the centre of the code. Then it took me some time to convert it from a PNG to an SVG to an STL, so I can put it into Tinkercad to design the new plate. I now have a baseplate, a backplate with the QRCode & two smaller plates which I have to glue into placeholders on the backplate.
@prologic@twtxt.net @carsten@yarn.zn80.net
There is (I assure you there will be, donāt know what it is yetā¦) a price to be paid for this convenience.
Exactly prologic, and thatās why Iām negative about these sorts of things. Iām almost 50, Iāve been around this tech hype cycle a bunch of times. Look at what happened with Facebook. When it first appeared, people loved it and signed up and shared incredibly detailed information about themselves on it. Facebook made it very easy and convenient for almost anyone, even people who had limited understanding of the internet or computers, to get connected with their friends and family. And now here we are today, where 80% of people in surveys say they donāt trust Facebook with their private data, where they think Facebook commits crimes and should be broken up or at least taken to task in a big way, etc etc etc. Facebook has been fined many billions of dollars and faces endless federal lawsuits in the US alone for its horrible practices. Yet Facebook is still exploitative. Itās a societal cancer.
All signs suggest this generative AI stuff is going to go exactly the same way. That is the inevitable course of these things in the present climate, because the tech sector is largely run by sociopathic billionaires, because the tech sector is not regulated in any meaningful way, and because the tech press / tech media has no scruples. Some new tech thing generates hype, people get excited and sign up to use it, then when the people who own the tech think they have a critical mass of users, they clamp everything down and start doing whatever it is they wanted to do from the start. Theyāll break laws, steal your shit, cause mass suffering, who knows what. They wonāt stop until they are stopped by mass protest from us, and the government action that follows.
Thatās a huge price to pay for a little bit of convenience, a price we pay and continue to pay for decades. We all know better by now. Why do we keep doing this to ourselves? It doesnāt make sense. Itās insane.
I have to write so many emails to so many idiots who have no idea what they are doing
So it sounds to me like the pressure is to reduce how much time you waste on idiots, which to my mind is a very good reason to use a text generator! I guess in that case you donāt mind too much whether the company making the AI owns your prompt text?
Iād really like to see tools like this that you can run on your desktop or phone, so they donāt send your hard work off to someone else and give a company a chance to take it from you.
Started with

a concept sketch of a full body end-time factory worker on a distant planet, cyberpunk light brown suite, (badass), looking up at the viewer, 2d, line drawing, (pencil sketch:0.3), (caricature:0.2), watercolor city sketch,
Negative prompt: EasyNegativ, bad-hands-5, 3d, photo, naked, sexy, disproportionate, ugly
Steps: 20, Sampler: Euler a, CFG scale: 7, Seed: 2479087078, Face restoration: GFPGAN, Size: 512x768, Model hash: 2ee2a2bf90, Model: mimic_v10, Denoising strength: 0.7, Hires upscale: 1.5, Hires upscaler: Latent
@prologic@twtxt.net Iām a bit of a GPU junkie (š³) and I have 3, 2019-era GPUs lying around. One of these days when I have Free Time⢠Iāll put those together into some kind of clusterā¦.
On LinkedIn I see a lot of posts aimed at software developers along the lines of āIf youāre not using these AI tools (X,Y,Z) youāre going to be left behind.ā
Two things about that:
- No youāre not. If you have good soft skills (good communication, show up on time, general time management) then youāre already in excellent shape. No AI can do that stuff, and for that alone no AI can replace people
- This rhetoric is coming directly from the billionaires who are laying off tech people by the 100s of thousands as part of the class war theyāve been conducting against all working people since the 1940s. They want you to believe that you have to scramble and claw over one another to learn the āAIā that theyāre forcing onto the world, so that you stop honing the skills that matter (see #1) and are easier to obsolete later. Donāt fall for it. Itās far from clear how this will shake out once governments get off their asses and start regulating this stuff, by the wayāmost of these āAIā tools are blatantly breaking copyright and other IP laws, and some day thatāll catch up with them.
That said, it is helpful to know thy enemy.
Linguistics Gossip
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I played around with parsers. This time I experimented with parser combinators for twt message text tokenization. Basically, extract mentions, subjects, URLs, media and regular text. Itās kinda nice, although my solution is not completely elegant, I have to say. Especially my communication protocol between different steps for intermediate results is really ugly. Not sure about performance, I reckon a hand-written state machine parser would be quite a bit faster. I need to write a second parser and then benchmark them.
lexer.go and newparser.go resemble the parser combinators: https://git.isobeef.org/lyse/tt2/-/commit/4d481acad0213771fe5804917576388f51c340c0 Itās far from finished yet.
The first attempt in parser.go doesnāt work as my backtracking is not accounted for, I noticed only later, that I have to do that. With twt message texts there is no real error in parsing. Just regular text as a āfallbackā. So it works a bit differently than parsing a real language. No error reporting required, except maybe for debugging. My goal was to port my Python code as closely as possible. But then the runes in the string gave me a bit of a headache, so I thought I just build myself a nice reader abstraction. When I noticed the missing backtracking, I then decided to give parser combinators a try instead of improving on my look ahead reader. It only later occurred to me, that I could have just used a rune slice instead of a string. With that, porting the Python code should have been straightforward.
Yeah, all this doesnāt probably make sense, unless you look at the code. And even then, you have to learn the ropes a bit. Sorry for the noise. :-)
My Favorite Things
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Presents for Biologists
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I needed something to help with a morning schedule for two kiddos. It highlights the current 5-minute block as it goes. I think this was my first time reaching for JavaScript for a personal project. https://sidequest.club/stages.html
@prologic@twtxt.net I get the worry of privacy. But I think there is some value in the data being collected. Do I think that Russ is up there scheming new ways to discover what packages you use in internal projects for targeting ads?? Probably not.
Go has always been driven by usage data. Look at modules. There was need for having repeatable builds so various package tool chains were made and evolved into what we have today. Generics took time and seeing pain points where they would provide value. They werenāt done just so it could be checked off on a box of features. Some languages seem to do that to the extreme.
Whenever changes are made to the language there are extensive searches across public modules for where the change might cause issues or could be improved with the change. The fs embed and strings.Cut come to mind.
I think its good that the language maintainers are using what metrics they have to guide where to focus time and energy. Some of the other languages could use it. So time and effort isnāt wasted in maintaining something that has little impact.
The economics of the āspyingā are to improve the product and ecosystem. Is it āspyingā when a municipality uses water usage metrics in neighborhoods to forecast need of new water projects? Or is it to discover your shower habits for nefarious reasons?
Only Serifs
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Iāve never liked the idea of having everything displayed all of the time for all of history.
And I still donāt: Search and Bookmarks are better tools for this IMO.
From a technical perspective however, we will not introduce any CGO dependencies into yarnd ā It makes portability harder.
Also I hate SQL š
@prologic@twtxt.net that worked.. But took crazy long time
New Yearās Eve 2023
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@prologic@twtxt.net see where its used maybe that can help.
https://github.com/sour-is/ev/blob/main/app/peerfinder/http.go#L153
This is an upsert. So I pass a streamID which is like a globally unique id for the object. And then see how the type of the parameter in the function is used to infer the generic type. In the function it will create a new *Info and populate it from the datastore to pass to the function. The func will do its modifications and if it returns a nil error it will commit the changes.
The PA type contract ensures that the type fulfills the Aggregate interface and is a pointer to type at compile time.
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org anyone willing to copy/paste security related things without understanding are gonna have a bad time.
Solar System Model
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$name$ and then dispatch the hashing or checking to its specific format.
Circling back to the IsPreferred method. A hasher can define its own IsPreferred method that will be called to check if the current hash meets the complexity requirements. This is good for updating the password hashes to be more secure over time.
func (p *Passwd) IsPreferred(hash string) bool {
_, algo := p.getAlgo(hash)
if algo != nil && algo == p.d {
// if the algorithm defines its own check for preference.
if ck, ok := algo.(interface{ IsPreferred(string) bool }); ok {
return ck.IsPreferred(hash)
}
return true
}
return false
}
https://github.com/sour-is/go-passwd/blob/main/passwd.go#L62-L74
example: https://github.com/sour-is/go-passwd/blob/main/pkg/argon2/argon2.go#L104-L133
JUHU! Finally! The new NAS runs. Oh boy what a process. First I had to restart and redow everything three times. Sometimes things are not sooo super obvious and then you really mess up. Who decided at Asustor that you cannot move home folders off of the Volume 1? And Why are the Asustor apps so bad? Beside that, the machine, the NAS, is really nice. Updraded to 16GB RAM and I finally have NGINX PROXY MANAGER running. Now I can setup all services with nice names!
` `` `
@movq@uninformativ.de yeah.. i rewrote it a few times because i thought there was something breaking.. but was mistaken
though now i am seeing a weird cache corruption.. that seems to come and go.

St. Pete Run Fest - Half Marathon: 13.29 miles, 00:09:35 average pace, 02:07:25 duration
it rained pretty hard for a bit.
had some trouble breathing at the end too. some discrepancies with chip time but whatever. i had a blast for my first HM!
#running #race