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"human nature", optimistic spin 

@toffy Kind of a related thing is that it's always fascinating to me when people talk about how nobody can be trusted, because people are fundamentally selfish and if they were trusted then they would ruin it for everyone etc. etc.

And then I look at things like this, where as you say every important system in the world is relying on multiple practically unmonitored points of failure and would be trivial to fuck up if people really were untrustworthy... and yet they keep running without issues for decades at a time.

In a weird way, it's a source of optimism for me.

it's very funny that like, every critical service in the world has multiple single points of failure that could explode at any moment

My current employer is imposing sexist clothing rules as a reaction to me wearing gender non-conforming clothes so now I am looking for potential new employers in the Netherlands or remote. I prefer smaller non-corporate organisations and working with free open-source software. I studied computer science and have about ten years experience in software development and system administration. I am familiar with many different technologies and can pick up new things quickly. #FediHire #GetFediHired

the Crowdstrike outage, politics 

The news in NL: "the ATMs are still working, so it is still possible to withdraw money and pay in cash."

Yes, we've been trying to tell you this. But you insisted that digital payments were the future and anyone using cash is suspicious, remember?

@astra_underscore Wasn't it a fuckup on the side of Crowdstrike, rather than on the side of Microsoft?

@silvermoon82@strangeobject.space The problem, I imagine, is that there's not always someone available on-site near the physical hardware to plug in said flash key - it instead being managed remotely.

That works fine if occasionally a single server fails and it takes a few days before it can be replaced (you just fall over to another one), but not if everything goes down at once.

"no politics in tech" commentary, slightly doom-y 

Something that I don't think a lot of "no politics in my tech" people realize, is that their favourite tech pastimes (like DIY computer building and lots of other kinds of tinkering) are always just one stab of capitalism away from ceasing to exist, and there is nothing they can do about it as a single individual, as long as they don't recognize the underlying power dynamics

Someone has finally been done in modern times for *checks notes* "Handling a Salmon under Suspicious Circumstances"

bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cd1740

Is this a good time to mention British nuclear submarines run Windows?

Not to mention that Fridays are the day off for a ton of Middle Eastern and North African countries, so you're also ruining the weekend for them.

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Dear Crowdstrike, and all Americans:

Please stop deploying on Thursdays. They are our Fridays.

Love,
UTC+everyone.

Tip for software companies. Your stock price can't crash when you release a bad update if your update manyages to take out the stock exchanges

annoyed at FOSS, money, enshittification 

FOSS doesn't seem to be "allowed" to be good. once it becomes good, it gets bought and locked behind a paywall.

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And I guess that’s my wider point: these small things can feel like luxuries because they don’t save much time or effort - but cognitive load is a limited resource too, and lowering the threshold of effort a little can be the difference between doing something and not doing it at all

I once ran my own personal URL shortener but eventually killed it because it wasn't that useful, but I kept the links working, and in fact they still work _to this day_ because I converted them from a dynamic PHP web application to a little list of nginx URL redirects.

Google have comparatively infinite budget and can't figure out how to be a respectful web citizen.

EDIT: Yes, I know full well that Google are not *intending* to be respectful. You don’t need to tell me for the seventeenth time.
social.kernel.org/objects/3912

devlog, programming language design (#3) 

A brief sneak peek of what I'm working on :) This is very early days, of course! And it doesn't do very much yet. The syntax also still needs some work.

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Ah joy ... Google is turning off its URL shortener and breaking every link that ever used it:

https://developers.googleblog.com/en/google-url-shortener-links-will-no-longer-be-available/

A quick search on lore.kernel.org:

https://lore.kernel.org/all/?q=goo.gl%2F

...turns up about 19,000 messages with affected links. That's a lot of history that is going to become harder (or impossible) to find.

@clarfonthey @corbet Sort of; URLTeam (part of ArchiveTeam) has been continuously archiving link shorteners: wiki.archiveteam.org/index.php, and although not a part of the Internet Archive, the crawls *do* end up there I believe

this week's expenditures on shareware preservation:

$4 for this canadian craptacular assortment of public domain and shareware games for Windows 3.1 and 95! admittedly, i was only interested in it because it featured a cockroach carrying a bindle on the front cover:
dialup.cafe/@vga256/1127588356

as it turns out, blessed were the many who got to witness this incredible Visual Basic 3 interface in its day. 🙏

although that has to be the most ominous sounding splash screen for a CD i've ever seen, like you're going to meet certain doom if you click through.

i've archived the CD image, and scans of the jewel case over at IA:
archive.org/details/bestofwin9

enjoy!

#retrocomputing #softwarePreservation #gamePreservation #shareware #dosgaming #win31

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