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This Gridfinity thing is pretty cool

*looks at printer whose waking hours are beginning to compete with mine*

the hardest problem in computer science is gender dysphoria

making playlists is just wear-levelling for getting bored of songs

re: computer 

@PJB @schratze Still took them awfully long to add a "move window to other activity" button, though. The old "check on one activity, uncheck on the other" was pretty bad...

computer 

@schratze it honestly feels like Plasma is the only desktop environment (across all OSes) that is made by the same people that use all its features regularly.

Je vecht het beste terug tegen Complotdenkers, wappies, fascisten en QAnonisten, door geen content meer aan te leveren aan Twitter. Door nog een redelijk geluid te laten horen, lijkt het alsof dat medium nog enige waarde heeft. Dat is waarom ik ben gestopt met posten daaro.

re: computer 

@schratze What really surprised me is that it actually manages decently well to restore different Firefox windows on the correct workspace/"activity" after a reboot. Not 100% perfect, but it at least *tries*

Yeah, sex is great, but have you ever had huge chunks of supports and rafts come off cleanly, in a single solid unit?

#3DPrinting

FOR THE LAST FERSTINKIN' TIME! SAYING THAT YOU HAVE PRIVILEGE DOES NOT MEAN YOU SHOULD FEEL GUILTY, IT MEANS YOU SHOULD ACKNOWLEDGE THAT SOCIETY IS UNJUST IN WAYS THAT FAVOR YOU AND THAT YOU HAVE AN OBLIGATION TO FIGHT FOR IT TO BE JUST FOR EVERYBODY

GROW UP AND GET TO WORK

Oh, that was a new one.

Got an email from PayPal about a suspicious payment request. I verified the email came from PayPal, but went into PayPal itself to check. Sure enough, suspicious request, and the note indicated it had been flagged, with a number to call.

I called.

And while I was on the call, went to the PayPal "Contact" link... and realized it was a different number.

The attacker was using the INVOICE NOTE to phish for details.

Hoping I didn't expose to much before I figured it out.

My most controversial #cybersecurity opinion is that giving #security bugs human-recognizable names (aka branding them) was one of the more important advances in the field in the last decade 😋

re: meta, inherent power imbalance associated with technology 

@forestjohnson I'm not sure I'd agree that we've ever actually reached that point with literacy either. Two things that immediately come to mind:

- Your writing implements are going to be manufactured by someone else, and very few people know how to manufacture writing implements that are equivalently practical/durable. And that practicality matters, because...

- Just because "everybody is literate" it doesn't mean that everybody is *equally* literate. Even if you ignore the practical factors like writing implement quality, in today's society there are *vast* differences between eg. people's ability to convincingly argue, their access to publishing, and so on.

I would say that there absolutely is still a significant power imbalance on matters of writing and literacy; the baseline is just high enough that it's less obvious.

meta, power imbalance, addendum 

(This *should* go without saying, but none of this is meant to imply that fedi culture is perfect as it is, or that there aren't real eg. racism issues. It just means that those are social issues, not technical issues.)

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meta, power imbalance 

I think that what bothers me about the "there's a power imbalance between who can host an instance and who can't and that's why fedi is unsustainable" argument, is that it doesn't acknowledge that *this is true for every alternative too*.

This isn't a problem of Mastodon or fedi specifically. It is a problem of technology in general, a problem that even predates computers. It holds true for any infrastructure that involves technical complexity. Once it becomes a specialization, there's a power imbalance.

Even if you just look at social media sites - how is this any different for Twitter, Cohost, and so on? There's still the same admin vs. user power imbalance, just now you don't even get to choose who is the admin, and there's no real accountability because the cost of leaving is social exclusion.

I'm not convinced that this problem (of power imbalance in technical complexity) is actually solvable, and I also don't think that it's a useful *goal* to try and solve it - it feels to me like the same old 'rugged individualism' in a new coat of progressive-sounding paint.

The more useful goal here would be to *acknowledge* that those power imbalances exist, and try to erase or at least minimize their impact through building healthy communities and trust relationships. Not by replacing it with a centralized silo that has the same problems but worse.

(And no, P2P isn't a solution either. There's still a power imbalance between developer and user there.)

re: adhd meds, thoughts 

@ardaxi @ShadowJonathan@tech.lgbt Similar here, and to add a data point: meds have helped me to get a better grip on how to deal with these issues *without* them

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