@dentangle@chaos.social Some arguments can be made about not dogfooding your own website, but the ticket systems for a lot of providers directly integrate with their e-mail system and so an outage of the e-mail system would also affect ability to communicate with customers *directly*. Plus if e-mail isn't your core business, there's deliverability to worry about.
I'm sure other architectural choices are a possibility, just trying to illustrate reasons why one might decide to host their e-mail off site that aren't just "lack of confidence".
None of that excuses the Cloudflare part, of course.
@dentangle@chaos.social The one legitimate reason I can think of is this being a result of the "do not host your own site on your own infrastructure" policy that a lot of providers follow (as then you cannot communicate with customers during infra outages); and Cloudflare being seen as an additional availability safeguard.
(Whether it actually is one is, uh, very much in question, but I know that that's a widely-held belief...)
@Heidentweet Oh yeah, that should definitely be read in scarequotes voice 🙂
@q extracting vectors from obscure PDFs on the Wayback Machine is one of my hobbies
Also, you know what speaker is typically used for speaker mode, which some people - like me - need to be able to make *any* call at all?
Exactly.
Don't. Even. Publish. Stuff. That. ONLY. Supports. Dark. Mode.
I mean, I know a LOT of people love dark mode, and given the benefits that darkening interfaces provides... I get it.
But there are some people (like me) who may be visually impaired. Astigmatism, for example, can make reading text that is white on dark a real PITA. An effect known as "halation" occurs, where each letter behaves as if it were a flashlight, gaining its own halo of light and making all text read more blurry than normal.
No matter how good your glasses are, astigmatism still causes you to see a little blurry—it's something you get used to. But this damn effect makes all the text read as if you don't have your glasses on, or even worse, leading to much more tired eyes or even pain.
For everyone's sake, if you really care about accessibility, respect user preferences. If you want a dark interface by default, offer a light version if the user specifies it (in web design, this would be prefers-color-scheme: light). The same goes for light interfaces.
“Study finds 94% of business spreadsheets have critical errors”
https://phys.org/news/2024-08-business-spreadsheets-critical-errors.html
this_is_fine.gif 😬
@baldur Probably doesn't help how so many people refuse to acknowledge that spreadsheets can indeed be a legitimate form of programming...
Good to see more research into this and how to address it.
This is a must read for people who want to protect our planet and also explore space.
Tl;dr SpaceX has been illegally polluting the landscape around Starbase, which is built near wetlands and the gulf of Mexico.
This is the exclusive report many journalists (and I’ll be one later) are basing articles.
https://www.cnbc.com/2024/08/12/spacex-repeatedly-polluted-waters-in-texas-tceq-epa-found.html
@schratze considering a variant of all those podcast ads that go 'for the price of a cup of coffee'
For the price of less than 1/10th of a car society could buy me a stairlift. Or a wheelchair.
@ct_bergstrom The cynic in me suspects that they are very well aware of this, but since basically the only thing LLMs can do is generate plausible text, they deliberately redefined the goal of science as something to which "generating plausible text" seems like the answer.
Wouldn't be the first time that the LLM crowd (or the cryptocurrency crowd with which it has a lot of overlap, for that matter) pulls something like this. Just redefine the problem so that you are the solution.
thoughts on FOSS ethics and history
@slightlyoff Oops, I forgot there was a part 1 of that series 😅
@freakazoid I don't have any links, unfortunately - this is entirely original armchair research so to say, running across too many unexplained things over the years that I can only really explain by rolling in these two factors as the explanation.
So it's certainly not a proven theory, just something that pops up Suspiciously Often as a thought, which for me is often a sign that there's something there (even if it isn't always exactly what I was expecting)
A question came into focus for me yesterday: is the success of Open Source for early-in-career folks building portfolios a contributor to frontend's ethical dessication?
OSS is "software for me, incidentally for thee"; does introducing that ethos to young programmers keep us from driving home the lesson that when you get paid to write code, your responsibilities are to users and customers?
In the process of moving to @joepie91. This account will stay active for the foreseeable future! But please also follow the other one.
Technical debt collector and general hype-hater. Early 30s, non-binary, ND, poly, relationship anarchist, generally queer.
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Sometimes horny on main (behind CW), very much into kink (bondage, freeuse, CNC, and other stuff), and believe it or not, very much a submissive bottom :p
My spoons are limited, so I may not always have the energy to respond to messages.
Strong views about abolishing oppression, hierarchy, agency, and self-governance - but I also trust people by default and give them room to grow, unless they give me reason not to. That all also applies to technology and how it's built.