google, firefox, browser development, and comments of mild impending doom
There is a realistic chance that Google's funding of Firefox/Mozilla through default search engine deals will be struck down by a court in the current antitrust case.
If that happens, I do not think Mozilla can survive financially on their own, at least not at the scale they are operating at right now, despite their half-assed attempts at "creating other revenue streams" over the years. I also question the maintainability of their existing browser codebase.
So. If you've been contemplating whether to start building a new browser engine... now's the time to start. This is your advance warning. Make sure it's one you don't need millions of dollars for to maintain.
It's going to take a while, most likely, for all of this stuff to go through the courts, so there's time. But building a browser engine is a big task, too, and ideally it should be started *before* things implode over at Mozilla.
Mix CD offer, discussion of a deceased friend
I want to send YOU a free mix CD, and here's why:
Years ago, I knew a guy online, who went by the handle The Rev. He was a good guy who died too young, and I still miss him.
The thing is, he did a little cool thing, on occassion; he'd put up a post on his blog offering to send out mix CDs. I love that I have a little something to remember him by. It's a tradition that's worth bringing back.
Recently, I've been thinking; hey, I have a couple CD burners, and a stack of unused CD-Rs that are probably still fine, and I'm not scrimping for every penny so much that postage would be a problem. So, I'm thinking maybe I'll do this! I'm currently in the process of putting a track listing together.
If anyone would be interested, either reply below, or DM me, or contact me through my site. If you can give me a UK postal address, I will try to send out a CD, no charge. If you're outside the UK or don't feel comfortable giving me an address, that's cool, I'll give a link to grab the tracks online instead.
This is a while-stocks-last kinda offer, but while this post is up, the offer is on, and I would love for you to take me up on it! Boosts are also welcome.
And if anyone else thinks this is cool and would like to carry on the tradition, now or in the future, I think that would be wonderful! May I suggest we use the following tag for it:
Love you Owen.
what hidden ableism can look like
Here's an example of what hidden #ableism can look like, that wouldn't be obvious to spot:
There's a social convention to do something a certain way. Pointing out how it works is considered rude, or otherwise socially undesirable. If you do not participate, you are disadvantaged or left out entirely.
This means you cannot ask for disability accommodations. If you *do*, you will be considered rude, get extra scrutiny, and so on - not even for being disabled, but for pointing out the social convention out loud. If you *don't* ask, you get left out entirely, because you are unable to participate on the usual terms.
Meanwhile, everybody else feels that the social convention "works", because they've never had issues with it, and they don't get why you can't just ask for help. They may not even realize that the social convention *exists*, and just go along with it because that's how they learned it.
Ableism takes many forms. This is just one example that is easily missed.
It occurs to me that there seems to be a big difference between how I think about "human nature", vs. how a lot of other people do.
When people bring up "human nature", whether their view of it is correct or not, they almost always do so from a perspective of "this is how human nature will ruin any attempts at improvement".
Whereas I think of it as "this is how traits of human nature can be relied upon to shape a culture that lasts and perpetuates itself". Which seems to be a much more useful interpretation to me?
I guess I should define the context a bit more: I'm trying to solve the 'holy grail' of theming, namely "how do you simultaneously allow applications to design custom controls that work best for their usecase, while also allowing end users to personalize their whole system in a genuinely expressive (and mostly consistent) way, that can be shared between people?"
(Unspoken part: without restricting the theme engine to recoloring and such only, and still allowing for structural changes)
Thinking about software theming and the distinction between style themes (how the UI looks) and structural themes (how the UI is arranged and organized), how these are really two separate things from each other, and how recognizing that separation may allow for designing a theming system that can apply a custom theme across arbitrary applications of arbitrary purpose
Most dutch millers are volunteers, and we are no exception. One of the logs of walnut on our terrain has sprouted a branch, and it would be nice if we can give the owner not only his ordered planks, but a new tree sapling as well.
So I taped a plastic bag the base of the green branches, filled it with a mixture of soil and compost, and watered it. I really hope that roots will develop.
It occurs to me that there seems to be a big difference between how I think about "human nature", vs. how a lot of other people do.
When people bring up "human nature", whether their view of it is correct or not, they almost always do so from a perspective of "this is how human nature will ruin any attempts at improvement".
Whereas I think of it as "this is how traits of human nature can be relied upon to shape a culture that lasts and perpetuates itself". Which seems to be a much more useful interpretation to me?
I recently had a customer survey that uses Net Promoter Score. I assume they've encounted problems before, because it came with a careful explaination that anything scored below a 9 "will be seen as a need for us to improve our service".
This led to my general impression of how culture affects this sort of scoring...
People in the US are looking at what's happening in Venezuela like “Oh, my God! It's so terrible over there! What are they doing?"
Has one person stopped to look at what Venezuela would have been like if the US wasn't trying to undermine the Venezuelan government at every turn?
Like, what do y'all think the CIA does all day?
CW-boost: transphobia, evidence that the Cass Report was malicious
food (vegan), low-salt bread recipe
Success! Some small adjustments need to be made (forgot to add water in the oven so the crust was too tough, and the liquid ratio was too high in the dough mixture and I needed to adjust that later), but overall I'm very satisfied with the result.
The outcome: a roughly 600 gram bread containing only 2 grams of salt, yet at about 0.3/100gr salt, it tastes slightly nicer than your typical supermarket bread in NL (which is usually around 1/100gr salt), and has a much nicer texture. Without using potassium salt, and therefore kidney-disease-friendly!
The original recipe:
- 2gr dry yeast
- 2gr salt
- 350ml lukewarm water
- 400gr flour
- 1 teaspoon ground fennel
- 2 teaspoons ground cumin
- 2 tablespoons cooking olive oil
- 2 tablespoons oat flakes
- 1 tablespoon peeled sunflower seeds
- 1 teaspoon broken flaxseed
- a bunch of pumpkin seeds
Mix all at once, *except* for the pumpkin seeds, knead thoroughly, let sit in bowl overnight at room temperature (would've been around 10 hours for me), *do not* add sugar or use an oven (dough proofing is deliberately slow).
Next morning, flatten and fold like you usually would with bread. Add some cuts at the top, make a bit wet, and add some pumpkin seeds on top until it looks nice.
Let sit for an hour, then bake it for 40 minutes in a preheated 200C (convection) oven. Add an ovenproof bowl of water in the oven, to keep the environment humid. Beware that it will increase significantly in height!
(Picture is missing the top, because uh, well, see previous post - but the rest of the bread was salvageable, and still nice!)
Technical debt collector and general hype-hater. Early 30s, non-binary, ND, poly, relationship anarchist, generally queer.
- No alt text (request) = no boost.
- Boosts OK for all boostable posts.
- DMs are open.
- Flirting welcome, but be explicit if you want something out of it!
- The devil doesn't need an advocate; no combative arguing in my mentions.
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.