I surprised someone again yesterday by saying that I legitimately don’t think technical issues are the hard part of shipping projects.
I find the constraints are almost always about how to navigate conflicting points of view, deadlines, organization, planning, and budgets. People, planning, and money are the hardest topics. The technical parts seem far less difficult -sometimes even trivial- in comparison.
Instead of #selfhosted servers it'd be nice if software was #CloudFree and #P2P
Not only should we not ve reliant kn centralized corporate hosting, we should be able to just use whatever devices we have on hand without extra server maintenance.
for those ready for next year's class, the language setting for your toots actually matters for accessibility!
it's not just helpful for those of us an instances with a translation feature
see, my screenreader has a voice for both french and english because i read a lot of content in those two languages
so my screen reader attempts to read anything tagged as english with the english voice and anything tagged as french with the french voice
if things are tagged not as either, it informs me and doesn't attempt to butcher it!
but the synthesizers for French and English are ridiculous when swapped, worse than a bad stereotype movie accent - to the point that sometimes i can't understand the text at all
so yeah! try to make sure your language is tagged correctly. this is true in your web design as well and a huge thing i often see missed! if you have any level of multi-language text in an HTML file make sure that's tagged.
this is all!
Hello, Toronto! Have you been in want of a hackerspace that caters to software tinkerers, game jammers, demosceners, and tech art makers? Do you wish there was a community hub for weird nerds right near Spadina and Bloor?
Then the Queer Computer Club is your space! Come by this Sunday for our first open house. Meet people, chat about tech, and maybe become a member?
More details in the link below. We hope to see you there!
http://queercomputerclub.ca/events/
Hey #WebXR people, as we are still stuck on Android rather than a proper Linux XR headset, could we at least put a Linux instance on a Web page, an immersive one? 🐧😎
It's "flat" but what if it didn't have to? Started as https://github.com/leaningtech/webvm/issues/90 and working now, partly.
Kudos to the whole AFrameVR, threejs and WebVM communities for that, amazingly enough I only put it all together and voila, working GNU environment in WebXR.
Once entering XR the terminal based on xterm.js and https://github.com/AdaRoseCannon/aframe-htmlmesh by @ada works... but freezes, no input (despite term.focus() ) nor refresh (despite term.refresh() or reset()) so suggestions welcomed!
Running nginx in termux as on device HTTPS server works on a standalone HMD too.
I think I might have to switch to visual studio code or something similar soon just to make my speech to text typing easier. I can imagine that having the fancy code completion would actually make a huge difference from my typing speed.
when I use a keyboard and typically way too fast for suggesting thing to actually keep up, but my voice isn't quite as good at handling weird API names
Adding tech to household appliances makes them less reliable and more expensive.
[Refrigerators with net-connected computers and screens. Wifi-connected dishwashers, clothes washers, etc.]
Improving the technology of a household appliance usually makes it more efficient or cheaper.
[Heat pumps are more efficient air conditioners. High-capacity inverters make refrigerators, air conditioners, microwaves and induction cookers more efficient... to the point where induction cookers wouldn't be residential devices without them.]
Over the weekend, I learned that in modern JS, you can just make up your own events and create listeners to respond to them, and *nobody can stop you*. Like, you can add a listener for an event you call `control-reset` or `text-edit` or `steve` or *whatever*, and then when something on the page dispatches that event at the listener, the listener will act! It’s event anarchy!
Pet snake
One of my new kittens has decided it's a good idea to start climbing on top of my corn snake's terrarium and just staring at her as she tries to inch in closer. Gotta relocate the snake now cause she tried to strike at the cat (stopped bybthe terrarium cover) which didn't dissuade it from sitting longer
@jonny "if our wildest dreams for "open science" are to pay amazon to rent our own data... we need better dreams" 💯 there is this weird push for expensive (and carbon-unfriendly) cloud hosting of raw data in neuroscience. everything else on the poster is also awesome.
Open source maintainers are often good at writing code but not good at asking for money
Companies aren't very good at giving money away, but they absolutely know how to hire consultants - and they often have a training budget set aside already
Spend that money on maintainers!
Fission Tech Talk now: Willow talk with @gwil and Aljoscha https://lu.ma/fission-tech-talk-willow-overview @fission #FissionTechTalk
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.