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@foone the frustrating thing is that everything should be able to work together but as I understand it everything has an API and needs a library to interact with it.
Watching lgr videos and hearing about how smart devices used to be whether or not they had a computer inside them you just sent them a certain number and they would do a thing.
now you need a library and authentication and then the library isn't maintained, so a change in one of the 8 million libraries it depends on breaks it...
Not a fan of how sites with search features (youtube, duckduckgo, ali express, etc) have taken to showing results that they think are a "best match" even if they don't contain all the search terms I'm looking for. What the hell is the point of giving me options if it doesn't plan to respect them? Every year data becomes more frustrating to access as stuff gets "machine learned".
body horror, fleshy lookin art
Wish all my computers worked like this. 🥰 #BodyHorror #FleshTech
https://www.tiktok.com/@orchid.flesh/video/7254756248589962542
The reason for difference between two is in the WHATWG spec: https://url.spec.whatwg.org/#url-representation
There are "special schemes" (http(s), ftp, ws(s)) for which hostname gets actually parsed, but for the rest - everything after the "protocol" part will go into the pathname (including two “//" slashes). This is wild!
You likely don't have to worry about it, but in Electron apps this can easily result in a bug. Here's my fix for proxy-agent npm module https://github.com/TooTallNate/proxy-agents/pull/242
Thinking of names for a new app that loads data from *anywhere*.
So far thinking #SemHog as in "Semantic hog which eats all your data and rolls around in the mud and you give it belly pats to search through stuff".
Also sounds a bit like "send hog".
free software? aye comrade, and food should be free as well! and housing, and the hospital, and the library and post office too. ah, but why are these things not gratis? that is a dangerous question, isn’t it? why when there is more food than even all of us could eat, is there poverty all around us? do not limit your query to the business of software, comrade, for the villains of this play have a far greater span than your meager discipline.
Many people seem still unaware of just how bad Chrome Sync is for your privacy. By default, Chrome will sync all your data – including e.g. your passwords, bookmarks, browsing history and open tabs. And by default, Chrome will not encrypt any of this data. All of it will be accessible by Google, by anyone who subpoenas Google to turn up your data and whoever else managed to get access to these servers.
If you want this data encrypted before it is first uploaded, you need to click “Settings” instead of confirming sync, then expand “Encryption options” and set up a sync passphrase. The default option “Encrypt synced passwords with your Google Account” is essentially a disguised “We can access all your data but we promise not to look. Don’t you trust us?”
Except that they will look of course. Apparently, they now started censoring your synced bookmarks: https://strangeobject.space/@silvermoon82/110969122337810598
The only positive aspect here: Chrome Sync used to be a lot worse. It used to enable automatically when you signed into Chrome. It used to encrypt only passwords and none of the other data even if you set up a passphrase. It used to warn you when setting a passphrase because Google’s web services would no longer be able to access your passwords. It used to upload data without encryption first, only allowing to enable encryption after the fact. And its encryption used to be horribly broken. I wrote about that five years ago: https://palant.info/2018/03/13/can-chrome-sync-or-firefox-sync-be-trusted-with-sensitive-data/#chrome-sync
But even now, Chrome Sync requires you to take action in order to get privacy. Because Google knows that you won’t. Compare that to Firefox Sync which has always been encrypting all data by default. I criticized the implementation here as well, but that was really a minor issue compared to the mess which is Chrome Sync.
Quick reminder that we are not actually in a "Cost of Living Crisis".
It's a Extreme Inequality and Record Untaxed Profits Crisis.
While we struggle for the basics, banks, energy companies, supermarkets and the oligarchs are posting record breaking profits.
It would be pretty straight forward to even it out. If they wanted to.
Don't buy the framing that makes it seem like nothing can be done, other than suffering through it.
@futurebird The science fiction species I'm writing are plant-people. Their "technology" is largely biohacking of their (and other plant) physiology.
A backpack? It's a living plant grafted to the host. A space ship? One of the People sacrificed themselves to be mutated into that vessel. Communication and transportation? "World trees" link colonies whose space-born seeds offer zero-risk expansion. #peirspapre #spapre
The complexity of life and its interactions will never cease to amaze.
there was a post that went by recently like “the weird thing about Open Source is that PhD research relies on the work of college dropouts”, but I’m really looking forward to the first respectable conference or journal paper with a citation like:
[35]: Bisimulation for concurrent reasoning. Retrieved April 13, 2024 from https://pissdumpster.horse/sapiosimulation.
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.