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@skye mm i rly hope u can get everything sorted out,,, <3<3<3<3<3<3<3<3<3<3

re: tech advice re: shitpost 

@kescher @schratze can u take me off this thread

linux kernel dev help :boostsPorFavor:​ 

helo :blobcat:

i am trying to find a mentor to help me write a little ALSA/USB kernel driver for my little one-off diy midi interface thing and could use a mentor to figure out how to make it meow my midi commands.

i've touched C projects but the kernel's size is very intimidating so some guidance would go a long way!

:blobcat::boostsPorFavor:​​ :blobcat:

re: shitpost 

@schratze shitpost or cry for help?
gfkdk are you also having that autocomplete garbage?

today's gender: linux kernel module with mysterious outb() calls

things my psych says to me 

"professional context"

mei 🌒& boosted

International Women's Day, showing some love for trans women in technical spaces 

Happy international women's day.

About half the I interact with in an average week are . Trans women make my life and the spaces I hang out in online immeasurably better. They've rounded sharp corners and added a sense of emotional availability that men just tend not to do. They bring an air of femininity to a space that helps me feel like I don't need to do extra social work to balance things out myself.

It's really wonderful.

Last week, at the local hackerspace, I had a great chat about ethical alternative clothing shops with knowledge and nuance. These conversations rarely happen when I talk to men-- not because they don't care, but just because the topic is more complicated for feminine clothing than masculine. There's deeper changes to manufacturing processes than men's clothing silhouettes seem to feel, so less nuance (and digging) is necessary to achieve a pretty reasonable effect in comparison. Anyways, it was great, and it just felt very 'normal'. But I've also never had such a good fashion conversation in a technical space before, which is interesting because fashion is a highly technical art. This was, in a small way, revolutionary.

When spaces make femininity a comfortable thing to bring, they make everyone else feel more comfortable being a wider breadth of themselves. You see wider ranges of expression from everyone. Making women feel more comfortable often helps everyone feel more comfortable.

When spaces restrict those energies, everyone feels it. When I'd been in technical spaces without women, I used the phrase "caustic culture" a lot. The feeling of this pervasive, inescapable, slow ooze that just eats away at you little by little. Since then, I've spent a lot more time in spaces without that energy. I can't think of a single online technical space that doesn't feel caustic that hasn't had trans women in it. As a professor of mine once said, correlationdoes not imply causation, but it does often waggle its eyebrows at it.

So, happy international women's day to all the women everywhere, and especially to the trans women that've helped make the spaces I've been in so comfy. So many of you are leaders, and you are all wonderful and beautiful beings capable of immense gentility and soft strength. Celebrate yourself a bit today. 💙

computer++! (embedded dev) 

omg i just found out i can program the little cp2102 usb serial interface with this cute lil program,, yay!! 🌷🥹

computer & 🥺 

google translate's read source text thing reads emojis out.. ask me how i know dfigjiodfgj

(i was talking to someone with it and typed in a 🥺 expecting not to see it)

@elilla (i have tried it now it seems okay except adding a feed is a bit manual)

mei 🌒& boosted

just posting.. 

im just posting im just posting im just posting i swear..

@joepie91 i already have a lot of what I want UX wise to be comfortable, but an underlying philosophy I don't like is The Application: it is It's Own Thing though maybe it has some Apis, File Formats or Addons for you to hook into.

The Application cannot be scripted in a language I already enjoy, I cannot write a macro for it that does the weird thing I want (unless it's a text editor, then *maybe*)

i wish for an OS, a bit like TempleOS, where i can pop a terminal and do some esoteric thing. an OS where I can hook into my Element install easily and make it copy my stickers or whatnot from some other program's API with a bit of work.

i dont want to be a known usecase, i want to craft my own experience that suits me, but currently that takes hours or days of work and very specialized expertise. i've patched or configured just about every piece of software i regularly use where it was possible in a reasonable amount of effort, but we have no system-wide *Inspect Element* and it's a real shame for quite a few reasons.

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