@realn2s oh wow, ja, DeepL war lange Zeit die beste Option. Krasso.
Noch ein Highlight
"access cards must visibly worn will"
Meister Yoda Grüßen lässt
Original: Zutrittskarten müssen sichtbar getragen werden
@realn2s oh wow, ja, DeepL war lange Zeit die beste Option. Krasso.
Noch ein Highlight
"access cards must visibly worn will"
Meister Yoda Grüßen lässt
Original: Zutrittskarten müssen sichtbar getragen werden
Auch Faultiere nutzen Mastodon: @greenpeace_de #rp26
@Sascha Aber eigentlich eher #GotoSocial 😜 @gotosocial @greenpeace_de
That was a promo for the livestream that will eventually be Episode 79 -- which episode are you looking at?
@emilymbender @alex Oh, I see. I was looking at the latest episode and didn't realise that the episode is still upcoming. Thank you for clarifying.
A native of Fukushima Prefecture who moved to Kumamoto Prefecture, one farmer said the earthquakes his two home prefectures experienced galvanized him to contribute to regional revitalization. https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2026/05/18/japan/society/fukushima-kumamoto-farmer/?utm_medium=Social&utm_source=mastodon #japan #society #fukushima #kumamoto #earthquakes #agriculture #rurallife
I just spoke on the phone with one of my clients, and they asked me an interesting question: What do I use SPAs for in 2026?
Components, yes, okay, but can you answer this question from an architectural perspective? The only use case I can think of is content that changes a lot.
@matuzo Applications: i.e. using the web browser not as a content reader but as a content builder were the user interactions are the root of the content to be displayed. This requires two things which are (IMHO) better handled by SPAs:
1. synchronize states between components
2. generate DOM element based on interactions + data fetching
Typical use cases:
- image edition like penpot.app
- interactive data exploration (massive data)
Its more and more common to mix both SPA and static site, is this divide still a thing? We (@ouestware) usually create a static web site for all contents pages (using @astro) and add one SPA in there for exploration if needed.
> what prevents #Ofcom from choosing to add false positives to it?
The independent third party which runs it, on an international basis, is unlikely to want to lose its credibility by being used for political purposes, rather than genuine non-consensual intimate image abuse, I'd have thought.
@neil @kkarhan @ret But the people running the hash database don't get to see the images.
There is nothing I can see that would prevent bad actors uploading hashes of any old images they want to get blocked.
Except that there might be complaints from services that use the hash database when their users complain about false positives.
The Ofcom recommended hash database seems to be closely linked to Meta, too. Which might be concerning.
I've posted an open letter to #MayorMamdani's newly created Office of Mass Engagement urging that “mass engagement” mean more than better public-input collection.
The post argues for an open-source, federated civic infrastructure (that expands beyond the narrow social-posting scope much of the #Fediverse still reproduces): locally grounded civic commons for mutual aid, public memory, deliberation, collaboration, accountability, and community self-organization.
https://seizethemeans.communitarium.org/baslow/mass-engagement-is-not-mass-intake
Mix'n'match is now an OpenRefine endpoint:
https://codeberg.org/magnusmanske/mixnmatch_rs/src/branch/main/docs/reconcile-api.md
CC @tibhannover
I shaved. I look like 5 years younger.
Leaving home in ~30 minutes. Last minute "what the fuck am I leaving home" panic sets in, and I'm looking through everything.
Why am I only just now finding out a weasel rode a woodpecker. This should be a much bigger part of my life.
Weasel Rides Woodpecker in Viral Photo
@TheBreadmonkey Everybody is doing gigs in this economy, I guess.
then it just plays up the idea of "staying silent", with no actual cryptographic or anonymity requirements for "silent"....but the best is easily the very beginning:
WireGuard does away with these layering separations
not a joke?
the tunnel simply works.
you can't say this for a secure protocol
Key exchanges, connections, disconnections, reconnections, discovery, and so forth happen behind the scenes transparently and reliably, and the administrator does not need to worry about
these details.
press x to doubt
It is important to stress, however, that the layering of IPsec is correct and sound;
wasn't ipsec responsible for one of the vulns last week
everything is in the right place
with IPsec, to academic perfection. But, as often happens with correctness of abstraction, there is a profound lack of usability,
really? because my correct abstractions are profoundly usable
@mastodonmigration Ridicule and a dollar won't buy a up of coffee (or many AI tokens)
True. He's not going to chsnge. Never-the-less it is good for him to be confronted with how deeply unpopular his bullshit is. If nothing else it encourages others to oppose it.
@thomasfuchs Great, now I need to remove the Generated By Human badge from my blog, because even the phrase "by human" is degenerate.
Grève massive en Corée, dans les usines de semi-conducteurs de Samsung. 45000 travailleuses et travailleurs ont prévenu qu’ils arrêteraient de travailler à partir du 21 mai, pour 18 jours ; ils demandent une répartition plus juste des bénéfices de l’entreprise, qui profite du boom des commandes de matériel pour construire des datacenters pour l’IA (un concurrent, SK Hynix, offre des bonus annuels bien plus élevés que ce que Samsung a consenti à la fin des négociations avec son syndicat).
Soutien aux travailleuses et travailleurs, puissent-ils avoir gain de cause à la hauteur de leurs attentes, et puisse leur action ralentir la marche forcée que l’industrie de l’IA impose au reste du monde.
https://fortune.com/2026/05/17/labor-strike-samsung-ai-hbm-chips-dividend-revolution-memory/
@joachim il faut dire que le droit du travail est minimal en Corée du sud, on ne peut qu'encourager les travailleurs à promouvoir une vie décente
The government’s baseless criminal charges against journalist Georgia Fort are discouraging her from speaking to sources.
The charges against Fort and other journalists arrested for covering the Minnesota church protest must be dropped immediately.
@brainofdane@hachyderm.io This happened with the FT-991A here at my QTH, with a fair to midland outdoor antenna that's just a few feet off the ground. It's on the same frequency as a local repeater here (Portales, NM) and that's the only reason I happened to hear it. I thought that there was no way it would hear me on the 5 watts I usually use for local QSO's, so I cranked it all the way up to 50 watts and was able to hit it. Then I went down on power in increments and got all the way down to as low as my radio can go, which is 5. I was surprised I could still open the repeater at that low power at this distance with the somewhat compromised antenna I use. It was just too bad there seemed to be nobody around to talk to.
@arth ah yeah, that’s a crazy shot from portables even though everything is flat out there. The few times I’ve tried VHF/UHF in Brownfield, repeaters and calling channels were dead. Doesn’t seem to be much activity out on the caprock.
Sascha Lobo: Ich will, dass deutsche Unternehmen den Tech-Faschismus prägen, nicht die vom Ausländer.
Is okay, Opa. Zivi kommt gleich.
Und klar. Immer brav innerhalb von drei Sätzen zum "KI" Thema kommen. Es wollen Keynotes verkauft werden!
The Exact Workout Routine an 83-Year-Old Marine Veteran Uses to Stay in Peak Condition
https://www.mensjournal.com/health-fitness/harry-king-83-year-old-trainer-fitness-advice-for-seniors-workout-routine-longevity?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Fitness @fitness-mensjournal
the wireguard paper was cited by blake3 https://www.wireguard.com/papers/wireguard.pdf but not as an example of good crypto, and it might even be backhanded? the protocol seems incredibly half-assed:
The responder maintains a secret random value that changes every two minutes
updating my secret random value on a precise schedule? likely generating my "secret" "random" value at precise intervals?
While the public key of the responder itself is not secret, it is sufficiently secret within this attack model
(literally no attack model, just buzzwords every other sentence)
Computing Curve25519 point multiplication is CPU intensive
this remarkable claim is then provided as the sole basis for a "cpu exhaustion attack"????
then it just plays up the idea of "staying silent", with no actual cryptographic or anonymity requirements for "silent"....but the best is easily the very beginning:
WireGuard does away with these layering separations
not a joke?
the tunnel simply works.
you can't say this for a secure protocol
Key exchanges, connections, disconnections, reconnections, discovery, and so forth happen behind the scenes transparently and reliably, and the administrator does not need to worry about
these details.
press x to doubt
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