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i will say, the most alarming thing i’ve come across in the AI space is this:

i’ve spoken with various, quite large, financial institutions about their plans to integrate AI into member account management self service workflows. check my balance, make a transfer, that kinda stuff.

the area i always drill in on is “how is the AI tooling able to authenticate the customer?”

the answer is usually something along the lines of “well it has access to information in the member database that it can use to ask questions that verify identity.”

so then i ask, “so lets say it verifies the identity of the customer and connects to your core banking systems - is it connecting as that customer would - or with some sort of super user access, like an employee for example?”

the answer is nearly always: “oh its got a service account that can connect to everything”

so then i say, “well, what stops the customer from using the AI’s privileged access to access information belonging to other customers?”

and then the answer is usually: “well…the AI just knows.”

and then you let them sit with that answer and often times it dawns on them.

I'm yet again reminded that accessibility technologies are priced unfairly. Did you know that a pair of hearing aids starts at roughly £500 but an average model can easily cost over £1500? And it's not like it's rocket science.
Similarly, Braille displays start at £1500, but can easily cost over £5000.
Similarly, the most popular and one of the most affordable Braille printers costs almost £3000.

Something can be said about special design requirements for such devices, or about the fact that there is no demand to make them at the scale that would allow to cut the costs ten times. And I can't even say that a high price is an excuse; if you'd try to build a Braille embosser that can operate at practical speeds with decent reliability using off the shelf components, you are likely to spend more money on it than you'd spend getting a commercial solution, even without R&D costs.

So, uh, folks, we can do better. I can't be the only one who keeps thinking about making such technologies cheaper, right?

Maybe I should make my own linux accessibility service. 🤓☝️

Kinda wish I could set the Orca Modifier button to something more convenient for my strange keyboard setups. Middle mouse button would be ideal tbh.

And of course on a SiliconGraphics workstation there's also a 3D gopher client: GopherVR

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Really not a fan of how many web pages have all their navigation BS at the start of their accessibility tree. The main content should be front and centre rather than sidebars.

Found it from this blog post on using orca headless on a raspberry pi. I want to get rid of screens eventually so it's quite relevant for me.

techesoterica.com/future-ready

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Stumbled across this neat tool for folks to use webcams as a sort of sonar using stereo audio. (warning can be loud)

seeingwithsound.com/webvoice/w

1990: i bet they will have flying cars in the future

2026: the world is ending but i can use a game console to charge my toothbrush

Working on a new morning routine: 50 jumping jacks while listening to yackity sax

people becoming interested in decentralized autonomous governance but somehow missing 200 years of anarchist theory and arriving instead at fake computer money is galaxy level political illiteracy

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20. These "power gloves" are cool for doing gestures and game controller input. Kinda too pricy for my taste, though

udexreal.com/products/udcap-vr

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If the thing you depend on costs a lot of money to operate, and got a lot of "investment" (loans) to get it in everyone's face, it will inevitably screw you over once the true owners want to bleed it dry for cash. The alternatives might not be as "popular", but they're the only option to escape the cycle.

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It's exhausting watching people constantly shoot themselves in the foot by putting all their energy into platforms that are doomed to screw them over with the exact same patterns of being cheap and easy at first and inevitably shit once you're stuck there.

Daily affirmations:

I am not sleepy.
I got adequate sleep last night.
I will not fall asleep standing up like a horse.

1/ Congestion pricing in New York City, one year later: youtube.com/watch?v=ZgRTyKbkDUo

• Car traffic: −11%

Positive effects (many nonlinear):

• Broadway revenues: +11%
• Storefront vacancies: decreased
• Crime on transit: −5.5% (safety in numbers)
• Serious injury crashes: −9%
• Illegal parking complaints: −14%
• Network delay from traffic jams: −28.4%
• Excessive honking reports: −70%
• Fine particulate matter (PM2.5) pollution: −22%

Even people who drive cars are now predominantly in favor.

Eyyy, my bsky follow count is the max value for one unsigned byte. Lets get it up to the max value for two bytes next 😸

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