A decade ago, a tribe of JS partisans took the web by the reins, forked HTML and JS syntax, and yeeted userland abstractions into the critical path because "a better user experience".
This was premised on the idea that everyone's CPUs/networks would get faster the way their top-end phones did.
They could not have been more wrong.
JS-first web development has been a planetary-scale exercise in the rich making life harder for the less well-off.
Back to optical jukeboxes we go!
[Cerebyte] wants to build palm-sized cartridges that can store 10,000TB of data.
[...]
This demo system comprises a single read-write rack for storage accessibility as well as several library racks. The firm used only commercial off-the-shelf equipment to build it.
As another wave of "suspected Flipper zero disrupting BTLE devices" is trending:
I probably qualify as an expert and I have DATA.
When you do BTLE connection spamming you are not only messing with phones, you're messing with health devices and Point-of-Sale terminals.
As someone who has spent the past ~1.5y of my life researching this exact topic:
If you're going to initiate connections with a radio (BTLE) the first and highest priority task is rate-limiting.
Connection spamming with a Flipper Zero (or other device) is objectively dangerous.
"But you're doing similar BTLE research, how can you say that?"
Because I took the time to understand the risks, mitigate them in a controlled environment for months, and collect data to make informed decisions. I also *broke* MY devices. But they were scoped to MY devices.
All of this to say, If you've written or using code for BTLE connection *spamming*:
You're a dangerous shitstain who is gonna get people hurt.
You're making the lives of people who are actually trying to collect data to enable informed decisions worse.
Log off. Touch grass.
I'm prepping for a 2024 conference talk on BTLE.
Please don't willingly get yourself include in the slide about "unethical conduct" ffs.
@hank @marcellerusu wait shit I read that wrong. My STT setup works but TTS is still raw, I just use a reader on my phone (ereader prestigio) and don't know what linux software to use yet.
@hank @marcellerusu Talon seems to be the way to go but I didn't uae it much yet cause it was daunting. I've liked slowly building my own scripts :P https://talonvoice.com/
@hank @marcellerusu I dunno if I'd say "Good" per se. It kinda works but I think I need to find a more accurate vosk model. I use Nerd Dictation with some custom scripts for making coding easier. https://github.com/RangerMauve/mauve-dictation
@Blue_Jersey Excellent thank you I'll check em out and see what my coworkers think 🙇
@mauve Unrelated, but I watched a video on a PeerTube instance the other day and was pleasantly surprised that it just worked? I downloaded most of it from other peers, uploaded a bunch, no buffering or video playback hiccups and looked great at 1080p. Pretty wild stuff.
Kind of astounding that mastodon has had complaints about newly followed accounts not having their posts loaded since 2016. https://github.com/mastodon/mastodon/issues/34
K I'll admit that some software is cool and a delight to use the Elisa music player on #KDE is awesome and does all the stuff I need consistently and efficiently. V thankful for their existence.
@ajroach42 What other ones have tried so far? I find ps4 comfy cause they're pretty light
Anyone else going to #Spintercon in #Montreal next week?
Hey we're a small group who put together a FREE programme of presentations around low-tech, permacomputing, collective tech practices, extraction, and ewaste.
Saturday 2 December, Amsterdam
https://whatis.permacomputing.net
Come and join us, listen to talks, ask questions, hang around and plot together about pmc and related practices.
with: Abdelrahman Hassan @cmos4040 @latentspace @l03s @marieverdeil @michal @neajul @praxeology Shailoh Phillips, Sunjoo Lee @unbinare
FOMO alert: nope it's not streamed and probably won't be recorded, *but* surely you know a lot of cool people around you doing connected things, what about you try to organise something local as well? See https://permacomputing.net/getting_started/
A bad thing about social media is this pattern where a person with expertise starts rebutting bad ideas, and it’s great, but over time it primes them to see everyone who doesn’t hold exactly their opinions as part of a horde of goons with terrible ideas, because that’s who they end up interacting with.
Eventually their online persona is, like, Truth Gladiator. And that’s so much less interesting and important to me than Thoughtful Person With Useful Perspectives.
i suppose this is how it's going to go:
1. google chrome bans ad blockers
2. users move to other browsers to surf the web
3. google, youtube, and a ton of other sites that depend on ad revenue dongle themselves to google chrome (and/or any browser that blocks ads)
4. community browsers spoof google chrome but block ads
5. websites try to detect fake chrome browsers
6. *tom & jerry chase sequence*
7. google becomes a huge fan of the idea of running only "trusted" apps on computers
@BigTittyBimbo Bars after restaurants closing can be a place to find em :P
Occult Enby that's making local-first software with peer to peer protocols, mesh networks, and the web.
Exploring what a local-first cyberspace might look like in my spare time.