I do not want Slack to provide a probabilistic summary of what I said. I don't want notion to guess what I'm going to say. I want to choose my words with clarity and precision in mind, and if people want me to take the time to read what they've written I would hope that they've taken the time to choose their words too
And I really want to take my words out of training data sets
gender (mostly positive)
My mom is apparently my biggest ally in trying to gender me properly. Double hard since it/its isn't really used for people in Russian.
Then some anglophones struggle to even use they/them despite it literally being a single word change and doesn't even require using weird suffixes
I'm making an ActivityPub server for distributing transit alerts 🎉 The tool is completely open-source and fetches alerts from GTFS-realtime Service Alerts feeds
Official instance: https://transit.alerts.social
Currently works with:
@kingcountymetro
@commtrans
@soundtransit
I expect to add a lot more agencies to the instance in the near-ish future—want to validate more before going wider
BTW for anyone wanting to migrate away from centralized chat to a more #federated alternative via #matrix I'd strongly suggest using https://etke.cc/ to set up your own instance and bridges to your existing chat apps.
You can bring your own VM and pay them to set it up along with a small monthly fee for upkeep. Generally good if you've got a community that wants to migrate together.
Imagine a hypothetical conference about AP, a virtual CVQCon if you will, but now imagine the infrastructure. What do we need to spend money on? If we keep our commitment to open systems (and I don't see why we shouldn't), we certainly won't find ourselves paying eight dollars a head for video conferencing. The only real costs are hosting costs, a bit of sysadmin time, plus a few hundred on creative commons furry art (obviously, branding is clearly important)
I can't even begin to describe what the state of gaming on the Linux desktop is even like any more. When I started using Ubuntu back in 2005, Wine barely worked. Native commercial games were an absolute chore to get running.
Now, we're at a point where I can easily play loads of indie, retro, and AAA titles with great graphics and smooth be gameplay. My desktop plays Returnal like a PS5. My handheld can do something like 40 years worth of games, plus many current titles.
My roles right now are interesting.
- Coordinating small team of folks doing mostly technical writing and small scale web apps
- Making an open source HTTP server for proxying to p2p backends
- Coordinating a dev and myself for an HTTP API for p2p publishing with user management
- P2P database / indexing architecture consulting (managing a researcher, working with international groups)
And on top of that random fixes for Agregore when I have time.
Also got ny back touched up and boy howdy that hurts so much worse than my arm 😭 Hopefully my body doesn't reabsorb as much of the ink this time
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.