Show newer

Every once in a while I am reminded of how fucked it is that we're almost forcibly moving all social and bureaucratic processes 'online', without ever recognizing that all those things that "nobody wants to host" and "nobody wants to be responsible for" are now just outright impossible, even though they were widespread and perfectly fine things to do 'offline' before.

(This may sound like it's referencing a specific thing but it's not - there are *so many* things that this applies to)

I think more applications should have the search menu that blender has. It's so good. If you can't remember where something is in the menu tree you just hit f3 (or space... depends on your bindings) and then type what you want to do. It's amazing.

(All of these are obviously subject to change as culture and expectations change, they're just the best summary that I can give of my current approach)

Show thread

My protest photo boosting policy, broadly:

- I will not boost photos that do not include descriptive text in either alt text, post body, or somewhere in the replies.
- I will not generally boost protest photos without CW; I sometimes make a case-by-base exception when the focus of the post is clearly on the solidarity and coming together, and not the world's misery.
- For photos that show faces, I will try to make a best guess on their context and consequences to decide whether to boost them. Depends on where they come from, pose, topic, and some other things.
- I am slightly (but only slightly) more lenient for photos from Dutch protests, as current protest and photography culture here are different.

Vandaag was er een sit-in protest op Nijmegen CS. Om iedereen eraan te herinneren dat de bezetting en onderdrukking van het Palestina al vele decennia duurt. En niet pas begon op 7 oktober. Foto-impressie in de post.

Okay, after reading this email, I can shut down my computer and change jobs:
'Dear colleague, the fact that our software does not function after 24 hours is perfectly expected. It depends on many dependencies, and we do not have complete control over all of them. For this reason, we suggest, as a standard practice, a service restart every 12 hours. This will ensure everything functions correctly.
And as a general recommendation, we always suggest restarting all services (if you are using Docker) or the entire server (if you are using a traditional setup) every 3 days, as systems tend to get bogged down over time and need to be optimized.'

#NoComment #IT #SysAdmin

@alterelefant @broadwaybabyto Tja, dan niet he. Maar dan ook straks niet gek opkijken als ze hier "ineens" wel verboden zijn, deal?

@alterelefant @broadwaybabyto You are missing the point. I live in NL. I am telling you that mask ban rhetoric is starting here as well. Instead of looking into it or inquiring, you... start arguing that they are not banned *right now* as if that means there is no problem?? How do you think mask bans in the US started, exactly?

CW-boost: description of psychological domestic abuse, reference to other types 

@Qyriad I think there is a lot of room to reconcile the two in principle, like through funding/payment methods that do not exactly map to "one user, one payment" (which is designed for proprietary systems after all); but I've long been disappointed by the lack of organized efforts to actually do so. New funding models aren't going to build themselves...

The only one that really comes to mind is OpenCollective. And I guess bug bounties, if I'm being extremely lenient.

really it's less that i "believe in open source" and more that, like open, not-paywalled access to scientific knowledge, i find the alternative kinda unconscionable

@rune I''m really fascinated by people just sort of... assuming that everyone agrees that "doesn't scale to massive audience" is a bug that needs fixing

Every time someone on fedi explains that lots of small instances "just doesn't scale" I smile and go "GOOD :BlobCatAngel: " in my head.

Is it a cool feature of fedi if it's expensive to have thousands and thousands of followers? Yep
Are there scaling problems for normal people who interact with a normal amount of people? Nope
Should we care? Nah

A comment I made to a friend about the value of learning to use nonproprietary tools:

"Having a box I'm told not to open makes me uneasy. I'd rather learn than worry."

@mynameistillian I've had relatively more success by pointing out "if it were just stealing, there wouldn't be a separate law for it, we already have a law for stealing" and often that's enough of a "wait hold on a moment" for someone to be more open to reconsidering

ranting, 'frontend', web development 

And to make this explicit, though I suspect it'd be implicitly understood by most: that means I want to learn more new things from women, non-binary creatures, Black folks, disabled folks, plural collectives, and so on, and so forth, everybody who tends to get drowned out of the Tech Discourse(tm).

Show thread

ranting, 'frontend', web development 

When I was younger, I used to enjoy reading articles about web development. About new CSS or browser features, novel ways of solving issues, browser compatibility things, and so on. Most of the sites and blogs with these articles were maintained by enthusiasts. There was so much cool stuff to discover and learn!

Now the whole "frontend" (what happened to "web development"? Not everything is a damn app) world has been taken over by fancy VC-funded startups so hard that you almost can't read an article about anything "frontend" without it trying to goad you into some proprietary service or "pattern" that's tailored around a specific company's offerings - and I can't even link most resources to others without implicitly advertising some tech company with a higher body count than some governments.

And if you manage to avoid *those*, you then end up on the Deep Philosophical Thoughts of Very Smart Men who have never in their lives looked at anything from the perspective of anyone besides themselves. And they probably are working for those *same fucking companies*, too.

This fucking sucks. I want to learn new things from other folks with nothing up their sleeves again. From enthusiasts who tinker and discover. Who might have a different perspective. And who actually enjoy the process.

Yeah uh I don't think I'll be buying a Yubikey again, if this is the grade of support to expect, what the fuck

Show thread

Man, the Yubikey software is some absolute hot garbage.

"Oh yeah to scan QR codes under Wayland you need to have gnome-screenshot installed [which doesn't work on anything other than GNOME] [because we couldn't be bothered to implement the screen capture protocol correctly]"

Show older
Pixietown

Small server part of the pixie.town infrastructure. Registration is closed.