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Reeeeally need to set up that alt. I'm thinking I'll focus on poetry and art and emotions on it and leave tech to this one.

Fun fact! You can now follow @mauve@staticpub.mauve.moe which is one of the first accounts using the project.

We're finalizing our release so expect more info on how it works shortly!

For folks that don't want to mess with the technical details, keep wacth for @sutty which is integrating this functionality into their static site using Jekyll!

this is fine meme with disturbing imagery 

Honestly KC Green is my favorite webcomic artist. I think he portrays the dread and despair really well in addition to his goofy jokes.

I wish he got more respect and recognition for his work.

FTR Ive been running a HP Pro Slimline (cost 30 euros second hand from marktplaats) with 8 gb ram and 500 gb disk for 2 years out of my house. The machine is probably 5 - 10 years old at a guess. I upgraded from 4gb ram to 8gb after one year for a blistering 20 euros.

The server hosts a software called foodsoft and powers the ordering system of a local food co-operative (https://biobulkbende.org) which currently has around 80 members (including myself) ordering between 800 - 2000 euros worth of dry goods and local veggies (within 15 km of Rotterdam) every month since around 2 years.

I do 1 to 2 hours of routine server and app maintenance every odd month. We have a working group for taking care of stuff at the food co-op. Ive not noticed any issues with my home connection (e.g. slowness). I don't notice any extraordinary costs on my energy bill.

Members like that their data is literally around the corner and they can just call us up if something weird happens. I even invited people over to see the server.

I think this machine could probably support a couple of hundred more folks from the neighbourhood.

We don't need data centers or IT companies or technical "experts"!

EOF

@mauve will download it for sure when it is out. Love to hear how you think about the power dynamics. I’ve been somewhat keeping track: chadkohalyk.com/2023/08/10/lof

I've got a recommendation! Hierarchy in the Forest by Christopher Boehm.

hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?is

It shows some examples of top-down and bottom-up hierarchy in human and primate societies and how they get maintained. I found it interesting from the perspective of how to maintain egalitarian organizations by avoiding certain failure modes.

If you can't afford it and don't have it in your local library definitely don't download it through annas-archive dot org!

Just got off a podcast recording for futureproof.so/

Really excited for this series to come out so I can hear what some of the other folks had to say!

Got into how my view of politics relates to local-first software and power dynamics.

I'm pretty excited to get once there's a sale for the PS5 version. Been seeing lots of hype and I've been wanting to get lost in another rpg.

even more pumped for Broken Reality 2000 whenever that comes out. I absolutely loved the first one and I bet the sequel will give me some of the same feels. store.steampowered.com/app/213

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IMO the most perfect game I've played in the past few years was Donut County. It's short and sweet and made me feel warm and fuzzy (like a raccoon!)

I really love cute indie games that I can play on my playstation (this is an invitation for recommendations!)

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Outer Worlds is a neat game but I remember feeling kinda dissapointed in how short it was. I managed to 100% it in much less time than I expected and there wasn't that much in terms of replay value. I think especially compared to Borderlands 3 which I played around the same time.

@TheGibson I was one of the sysadmins at a university in a previous life. We had a very diverse set of systems, and a lot of computers spread across the entire campus. They were all centrally managed, and we had a whole lot of scripts to make common tasks easier.

One day, one of the printers in one of the offices two buildings away was replaced, the new one slightly different than the old. We went there to check that it's working, and it prints and all that, standard procedure, even though all printers were connected to the uni's Samba network. It was simply easier to go there and do a test print, in case anything goes wrong. Calling them on the phone was a hassle for everyone involved.

We had Procedures in place, and one of them was to do a test print from a remote machine to make sure everything's properly connected. We didn't have laptops, so the only way to do a remote print was to log into a unix system back in our department, and do a test print from there. We had a script for that, too! You gave it an office name, a printer name, and a set of files, and it sent the print jobs to the targeted printer, one file at a time, waiting for each to finish before starting the next.

I logged into a unix system, and used one of our scripts to do a test print: tools/test-print foo.txt -o office -p printer

A few seconds later, the printer started to print. So did the other printer in the office. And all other printers on campus. All other printers connected to the network. There were about a thousand printers involved in this. Some of them in another city.

You see, I was - and still am - a Linux guy. I'm used to being able to mix named and positional parameters. Whoever wrote this script wasn't. It looked for options first, then started to print the files given as positional parameters, one by one, waiting until the print job finished on all affected printers.

If no printer was specified, it defaulted to sending to all printers in the office (there was usually only one printer in an office, so this made it easier to do a test print). If no office was given, it defaulted to all of them (this script was originally written when there were only two offices on the network).

Oops.

“This app coulda been a website” is my “this meeting coulda been an email”

It turns out my code was fine. I was running my program wrong

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Been wandering around the city with a satelite view on my HMD at night. Looking for new places and navigating like I was in a videogame with my chats and media up in the corner

a library in the dependency tree is worth 2 landing pages on the web.

the source code is mightier than the whitepaper.

don't count your user base before you deploy!

other such parables

I'm decentralizing myself! Last week was the end of ~4.5yrs at Protocol Labs.

Wild and fascinating times with a rad group of people committed to a vision of a resilient internet with people at the center.

Thanks to Juan Benet for making Protocol Labs a place where uncertain and very-long-term work could happen. I'm very grateful to have been given the opportunity to do it.

Private jets are responsible for more greenhouse gas emissions in the past three years than Uganda, a country with a population of 46 million. But tell us again how it's "humanity" as a whole who has caused global heating...

@KaiHeron
#degrowth for the Global north NOW

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