Looks like I'm finally starting to get out of the covid hole. Gotta figure out my current priority queue to cagch up on all the stuff I missed while I was under. Very frustrated to have lost so much time but hopefully veing agressive on letting my physical form do it's thing and redt will havr avoided some of the risk of long term side effects.
Among the schemes discussed to move the Zuckerverse - sorry, Fediverse - forward:
- Monetization of fediverse interactions: https://fediforum.org/2023-09/session/4-a/
- Crypto functionality: https://fediforum.org/2023-09/session/3-d/
- Location tracking: https://fediforum.org/2023-09/session/4-c/
- Individual reputation scoring: https://fediforum.org/2023-09/session/1-d/
- Contact book ingestion: https://fediforum.org/2023-09/session/2-d/
- For-profit revenue models: https://fediforum.org/2023-09/session/5-c/
- Facebook feature incorporation: https://fediforum.org/2023-09/session/4-h/
#FreeFediverse #FediPact #DefederateMeta #Meta #Facebook #Threads #FediForum ...and no more
2/8
Wondering if all this fiddling with ZFS and big box of hard drives is worth it, went to compare it to AWS elastic file storage and whelp...
I've downloaded 100TB (more, but 100 is round number) of data so far. To store that in EFS near me, that would cost $0.33/GB/month to store, $0.03/GB to read, and $0.07/GB to write. Downloading the data does a 100% write (obvi) and read (checksumming). So merely to get the data it would cost $10,000, and to park it for ONE MONTH would cost $33k.
That's more than the whole NAS for ONE MONTH. and the NAS has 500TB. Even with 25% storage efficiency from mirroring and backups, we could afford to buy a new NAS every month instead of using AWS. That's a hell of a scam.
The pharmacy decided they don't want to take my call for 35 mins so now I'm stuck in the pbyskcal waiting room instead of resting in bed.
Custom protocol support has landed and will be in the next release.
This means when your app is installed, links like this in your browser, on your command line, or anywhere else on your computer will load the app and parse the url.
If you ever wondered what happened to that TextBlade kickstarter project, the answer is "they succeeded in building what they set out to build, and then a patent troll cut them off from being able to ship anything, ran them out of funding runway, and now they have several shipping pallets worth of working hardware stored somewhere in California, a stack of legal bills and no way to ship the finished, working product they've built."
I'm a bit disappointed that all the discourse in the #gemini hashtag is about Google's newest large language model and not the powerful, minimalist hypertext protocol.
BTW! i'm currently at #Spintercon in #Montreal. I'm the person with the purpleish hair and mask! Feel free to chat me up if you see me 🥳
@mauve I just tried #SocialInbox with Sutty, and I'm super impressed by it how smooth its all working. Already fully set up and visible in the fediverse as well. Really cool stuff
Distributed.Press incorporates existing dweb protocols to expand the possibilities of digital publishing.
The Social Inbox is thus an expansion of this effort to decentralize web publishing, allowing people to integrate their website with the Fediverse and to engage with readers there.
Follow @hyphacoop's blog Dripline and receive new posts directly into your timeline @dripline @hypha.coop
Also! Make sure to follow @mai who's been helping coordinate all this stuff, @akhileshthite that worked hard to code the features and do editing, and the folks at @sutty who who made the jekyll plugin, integrated all this into their CMS, and made sure this stuff was all working!
📣 Announcing DP Social Inbox!
I've had the pleasure of contributing to the development of the #DistributedPress Social Inbox with an incredibly talented team at hypha.coop @dripline.
This tool brings social interactions to static websites on the decentralized web.
https://hypha.coop/dripline/announcing-dp-social-inbox/
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.