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'I cannot tell you when the current mania will end and this bubble will burst. If I could, you’d be reading this in my $100,000 per month subscribers-only trading strategy newsletter and not a public blog. What I can tell you is that computers cannot think, and that the problems of the current instantation of the nebulously defined field of “AI” will not all be solved within “5 to 20 years”.'

blog.glyph.im/2024/05/grand-un

“Have you got anything to declare?”
“Yeah, five imported functions and one global variable. It’s an array, hope that’s alright”

now that we've concluded that other species we share this planet with use language amongst themselves similarly to how we use language it makes me wonder if any of them use language for the enjoyment of riffing on language quirks the way we do.

do crows meme about the crow equivalent of jorts? has a crow ever uttered "shiny thing wife, shiny thing life" to raucous laughter?

I really do wonder.

Ever wanted to see what every(?) Lenovo BIOS is like for the last 10 years? Useful+Strangely Lenovo have you covered with a simulator for a shockingly huge amount of models: https://download.lenovo.com/bsco/index.html#/textsimulator/ThinkPad%20T430%20(2347,2342,2344,2345,2349,2350,2351)

Useful I guess if you want to use it blind?

I have the impression that software quality strongly correlates with the usefulness of error messages

I find this fascinating because it creates a sort of strange reversal of power dynamics; the thief is in control of the funds, and the operator, which may well be a wealthy corporation, typically has to publicly admit the hack, and ask and/or beg for the hacker to contact them to negotiate.

It's one of the few things about cryptocurrency that actually feel cyberpunk.

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One of the few fascinating outcomes of the cryptocurrency world is the somewhat-established practice of "hack bounties", where someone hacks an insecure exchange or whatever, steals the funds, and then negotiates to return most-but-not-all of the funds in exchange for not being prosecuted, leaving them with a partial 'bounty' for having found the issue.

This negotiation process succeeds with impressive regularity.

our lawyers ask you to please scroll to the bottom of this unreasonably tiny box that displays the terms of service before selecting “i agree” so that we can pretend you’ve read it

open-source hardware meta, Prusa 

This is an excerpt from the Hackaday article on the new (proprietary) Prusa printer:

"While the lack of design files for these new Prusa printers is unfortunate on a philosophical level, it’s hard to argue that they’re any less repairable, upgradable, or hackable than their predecessors."

This is not meant as a slight against Hackaday, since their point does make sense and I've left out the context. But I do want to draw attention to the phrasing for a moment: "it's hard to argue that..."

This is *exactly* how it works, how companies close up previously open systems. That it's hard to argue is *not* a good thing - instead, it's the crucial property that makes it possible to close things up in the first place.

If you have a reputation for open-source things, you're not going to suddenly close up everything, that would draw way too much attention and ire from the community. What you do instead, is to gradually close little bits, while assuring people that they can keep doing what they were doing.

You keep nominally offering them the *benefits* of open-source, or at least the appearance of those benefits, but without offering them the thing that *guarantees* those benefits. Then you start slowly chipping away at those benefits, only ever reducing the benefits for a small group without enough sway to speak out against it.

Sure, you still get the STLs, you can still print replacement parts! You can no longer modify the designs to create your own modified version, but hey, only a few people did that anyway, so what's the harm, right? Not like those few people can raise enough of a stink.

By segmenting the group of "people who are losing their benefits" into small enough chunks each time, you can eventually close down the entire thing, without ever pissing off enough people *at once* for it to be a risk to your business. Coordinating activist actions across years is very difficult, after all, so you just need to make sure that one group lost interest before pissing off the next one.

I cannot predict the future of Prusa, and it's possible that they end up being the exception to this process, but it's unlikely. Usually this is how it goes.

The moral of the story here is: if something is taken away from you, and it is "hard to argue" that it really harms you, that is *especially* the moment where you need to be paying attention, because it's often deliberate.

I published a card game on the Internet, called Future Invaders.

It's entirely free to play, you just have to print your copy at home.

A solid year of work went into it, I hope you'll give it a try and enjoy it !

Check out its website, it's fully featured and should answer all your questions.

futureinvaders.com/

#futureinvaders#card #game #games #cardgame #boardgame #scifi #space

Anyone have suggestions on how to suppress hunger pangs that doesn't involve food or copious amounts of water?

Open to suggestions, because if I drink any more water I'm gonna be sick.

Kinda crazy I'm about to go to the local movie theater to see a full length award winning movie made (almost?) 100% in Blender.

15 years ago people would have laughed at the idea that this would ever happen.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flow_(20

Five juvenile ravens moved into town during a recent cold spell. They’re a little bit too boisterous to capture easily in groups but will pose for you occasionally. I have an unreasonable liking for the one with the autofocus mishap. And bonus starlings

hey fedi, do you have the link to that funny warning sign generator?

At least a fair amount of people followed the practice of "do not tell people to use NixOS without mentioning its problems or without a concrete offer of help", so it's less bad than it could have been. But some folks... didn't do that.

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