re: tech waste
and CI providers are especially complicit in this too. for example, unless they've changed this recently (I doubt it), CircleCI "caches" data by effectively zipping it up and dumping it into some external store, which is almost certainly just S3 buckets
instead of, you know, saving the data on the machines that are actually running things (which takes 0 seconds), they compress it and externally upload it to some completely different place, which can take a long-ass time. it's very often slower to cache things than to just redo them, since the time to compress everything up and fling it across the earth is greater than the time to just recompute everything again
like, there are so many ways to solve this problem. but they're extremely disinterested in solving this problem, since it doesn't make them any money. fuck Circle in particular, but I doubt the likes of GH actions, Travis, and other providers are much better
has like, anyone tested migration from instance1.example to instance1.example but to a different username?
yes, same instance. not different. and also like, merging accounts. like both accounts have followers.
(note: migration also includes more than just mastodon being involved, so info about how other fedi software treats it is definitely wanted)
long, thinking back to high school (a good one!), brief reference to ableism elsewhere
Was reminded today of one particular special-education high school that I went to, which will probably forever stick in my memory as The School That Got It Right.
Tiny school - 3 classes (~7 students each) total, that was the entire school. Located in a temporary building, former daycare. It was specifically a HAVO/VWO ("higher level") special education school, which were a novelty at the time, as previously only "lower level" VMBO (vocational) schools existed in special education. But that's a topic for another time.
Being an experimental school, they had a lot of leeway in how to run the place (for a Dutch school anyway), and oh man, did they make use of that. It was with some distance the most pleasant high school I've ever seen or been to.
Like I said, the classes were small. They were also in a fixed location; you were in the same classroom all day, every day, unlike regular high school in NL, and with the same teacher. You always had the same table, with a crate next to it containing all of your books.
There were no lectures, and there was effectively no homework. Every day you would get a list of "stuff to do", basically a list of book chapters and assignments to complete and read. If you completed it before the end of the day, you had no homework - this was easily doable if you made even a slight effort. I've never had homework, despite my ADHD.
It was entirely self-directed; you'd go through it yourself, at your own pace. If you got stuck, you'd talk to the teacher, and they would explain it to you 1-on-1 until you understood it, however long that took. Practically everyone passed every year as a result.
And keep in mind that this was special education; there were students with severe mental health issues, learning disabilities, and so on! And they were extremely good at dealing with them.
As is common in such schools, mental breakdowns of students happen sometimes. We're talking "throwing things through windows" and such here. The common procedure at the time was to basically lock someone in a room in isolation, until they calmed down. But not at this school.
They had an isolation room, sure, but it wasn't locked - you would be explicitly told that they'd bring you to the room, but that you could come back whenever you wanted, whenever you felt up to it. The janitor would be waiting outside to help you if you needed it. Unlike the forced-isolation rooms, here students actually calmed down, because they weren't trapped (imagine that!) - it was used as a support mechanism, instead of a punishment.
And that theme continued throughout; they did not punish for 'misbehaviour', instead you collected 'points' for every part of the day that you did not cause issues for others. You could then exchange those points for personal rewards (like playing online games on one of the computers, once all your work for the day was done), or collective rewards for the whole class (snacks, even an extra school trip). This successfully shifted the atmosphere to be positive instead of negative.
Students started doing better and better throughout their time there, pretty much universally, including the kids who would've been considered 'hopeless' in other schools.
They were also very flexible in terms of personal accommodations; I had trouble focusing in the morning, and so they told me that I could come to school an hour later. There was a couch in the hallways in case you needed to escape the classroom for a bit and relax. And so on. They were incredibly supportive.
This is the only school I've ever truly felt comfortable in, that I was excited to go to, and the only school where I was genuinely learning things.
And it has taught me a lot about how much the right environment can do for people.
sci-fi musing, apocalypse
A "fun" apocalypse idea: a bacteria that feeds on fr4 (the stuff circuit boards are made from) Created in a lab to help with the e-waste problem but some how gets out. No complex electronics left afterwards, fragile webs of copper and components left that collapse and short out under their own weight.
Of course it couldn't just eat fr4 it would have to eat the solder mask, and ink, and so on too. Would probably work better as a fungus or something that creates spores to get around.
Your phone would be fine as a mostly waterproof sealed unit, but a data center or telephone exchange would be fucked with all the air intakes.
#mutualAid
please prioritize these friends! their deadlines are imminent. please share widely and on other platforms. many are feeling hopeless/desperate about their situations and have barely gotten the help they need this month 😭...please dont let them slip thru the cracks, i beg you 🙏
octo needs urgent help moving out of her abusive parents' house, with vet bills, & with monthly expenses. (1617/3594) DUE TODAY:
https://ko-fi.com/queeroctopuss/goal?g=0
https://donate.stripe.com/14k6p1bMg32QfEA6os
mahtheyzhawey is a disabled parent and #artist that needs help paying for rent and utilities. (520/1660) DUE TOMORROW:
PayPal.me/kiagbear
Cashapp/Venmo: kiagbear
https://linktr.ee/mahtheyzhawey
moo is disabled & unable to work or get benefits. he needs help getting food for the month, his abusive parents steal his food. (0/250) needed ASAP:
https://cash.me/$melaninpony
https://paypal.me/melaninpony
https://linksta.cc/@melaniemoo
@mutualaid @mastodonforharris #MutualAidRequest #Mastodon4Harris #MastodonForHarris #disability #trans #queer #LGBTQIA #DisabilityMutualAid
wayland development
Wayfire, meanwhile, is telling me my ack_configure serial is invalid, even though it is the serial that it sent me in the configure event.
At least it gives me an error message instead of quietly doing the wrong thing, but the error message doesn't actually tell me *why* it is invalid...
@foone The smallest one I know of is https://fpx.oxplot.com/
It's configured by blinking lights on your screen to a light sensor on the board
wayland development
Seriously, this has baffled me for several days now. I can't find any possible explanation for this behaviour, and nobody seems to have written anything about it anywhere either...
fedi meta, anarchism
I'm seeing the exact same failure mode happen with fedi that I've seen for a lot of 'anarchist' movements - they proclaim that "nobody is in charge", and then fail to identify that someone *is* in fact informally in charge (who shouldn't be) but they're just not taking responsibility.
Perhaps we should be making a point of saying "nobody SHOULD be in charge of fedi" instead of "nobody is in charge of fedi", to help people understand that "nobody is in charge" is a goal that needs to constantly be defended, rather than one that has been magically achieved?
Like, "nobody is in charge" *is* a good model to aim for, but it does require actual work to keep it that way because some people will try to take power by any means necessary, it's not something you just proclaim and then you're done.
I just realized what I hate about modern chat: it's not a small window on the screen anymore, it's *the whole screen*.
Discord (et al) is barely usable in a small window, whereas AOL Instant Messenger was *very* usable in a small window as you went about your browsing.
For me, smaller window = fewer distractions.
You can't change these systems without explicitly dismantling white supremacy. That's something that White Americans don't want to contend with. Because so many other parts of life seem to magically bend around their wants and desires, they get confused about the parts that don't. This is a big problem for White liberals especially. They really thought they were fixing police brutality in 2020 by just exclaiming loudly that they wanted it to stop. But white supremacy is not under your control.
What I'm saying is that a lot of American Exceptionalism™ is based on sacrificing people. It is a very long tradition. And up until very recently, Black people were the default sacrifice. That was our explicit role in White American society. As soon as you understand that, a lot of American history starts to make way more sense.
And today starts to make more sense too. This is an America we're it's not so easy to designate groups for sacrifice. And we are finding it harder to get things done.
People like to think about racism as if it's full of malicious intent. But often it's much more banal. Most of the time it's nothing more than "if somebody has to get hurt, let it be them. Because who's gonna complain about that am I right?"
What's wild is once you actually start paying attention, you find out what we mean by "systemic". There's a story like this in every major city. Once somebody figured out this particular strategy of getting infrastructure built in a way that white constituents would accept, it spread all over.
We talk about how white supremacy requires a visible and identifiable underclass. Part of it is so that there is always a designated sacrifice so you can get what you want.
https://urbanists.social/@getalifemike/113052876190442664
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.