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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)HA
handskneesplease @yall.theatl.social
Posts 13
Comments 8
Technology @yall.theatl.social handskneesplease @yall.theatl.social

Is it time for Revenge of the Normies?

open.substack.com Is it time for the Revenge of the Normies?

An optimistic take on technology and inequality.

Is it time for the Revenge of the Normies?
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Programming @yall.theatl.social handskneesplease @yall.theatl.social
go.dev Go 1.21 is released! - The Go Programming Language

Go 1.21 brings language improvements, new standard library packages, PGO GA, backward and forward compatibility in the toolchain and faster builds.

Go 1.21 is released! - The Go Programming Language

Along with some nifty new features!

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Programming @yall.theatl.social handskneesplease @yall.theatl.social
arstechnica.com Rest in peace Bram Moolenaar, author of Vim and hero of many developers

The open source software legend left us on August 3 at age 62.

Rest in peace Bram Moolenaar, author of Vim and hero of many developers

The passing of a giant. VIM is one of the first tools I install (if not already installed) on *nix systems.

export EDITOR="/usr/bin/vim"

VIM > Emacs forever. 🍻🍻

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Let's Discuss: Moderation and Block Lists
  • I believe the admin has sufficient skills to determine if any instances listed in tier-0 are consumed by users of theatl.social. I trust they're making sounds calls what to include from the list and what to not include. That said, an auto-update could be deployed with some automated list scrubbing (i.e.: scan the list for changes, check if newly added instances are consumed, post a message to theatl.social clearly calling out changes or calls for review). But until then, a manual periodic review is appreciated.

    I feel the general Mastodon community well established has a consistent baseline of acceptable use/content with guardrails requiring content warnings (CW) and proper flagging of material not suitable for general audiences. That said, there's a time, place, and instance that can provide people with outlets to consume and share non-"G-Rated" (NSFW) content and other content not generally accepted in polite company. TheATL.social is managed in such a way to avoid publishing NSFW content- and that's fine. My litmus test before posting on theatl.social: "would I feel okay if my mom saw this post?" If not, rethink the content or post to a more appropriate instance.

    However...I want to call out one sentence that made me bristle a bit:

    I’d support blocking brighton.social purely to protect theATL users from wandering into a conversation prompted by their nonsense...

    Assuming the content/instance in question doesn't violate established community standards or violate terms of use, I would not appreciate the admin (or anyone) doing something to "protect" me from accidental conversation wandering. I'm fully functional adult who can choose what to read, what to "believe", and what to reject. Same goes for the concept of blocking mainstream news orgs and other entities with knee jerk reactions, such as preemptively blocking threads.net. Why actively close yourself off from the world around you? Echo chambers can be quite toxic and lead to uninformed world views. Why block something without a clear observation of impact? If I don't want to see it, I can simply block from my account.

    To round out the public park analogy- I've wandered through many public parks while people hand out flyers, yell from megaphones, and try to recruit for their cults. I just walk by and ignore them. Just as I do when I see something in social media I don't want to engage with. I don't need a nanny to "protect" me. As a gay man, I've heard plenty of mainstream news orgs propagate ideas I find personally offensive; I take the content for what it is and move on or engage in healthy public debates. By blocking the org, I'd loose context around the discussion, the people engaging in the discussion, and in impact of the topics. I'd rather be informed of the unsavory things than to be blindsided because someone put my head in the sand.

  • Let's Discuss: Moderation and Block Lists
  • Likewise, I am not a free speech absolutist- limits should be in place to censor the most repugnant content. Using the Tier-0 list for instance-level blocking is a good approach: light touch, using globally accepted standards.

    For the rest, if a user doesn't want to see content from a user or domain, they can block either/both at their level. As a user, I should be permitted to follow who I choose, consume text/media I wish to see, and block content that which offends me. I don't need an admin making those decisions for me. An overzealous admin (or instance leadership) blocking domains at the instance level that /they/ find distasteful is far too arbitrary.

    However, the admin must balance risk- they own the underlying infrastructure and could be accountable for the content transacted and stored- from both a legal standpoint and with respect to the broader community. Consider a situation where a user is acting against de facto global content standards and the admin does nothing- all users of the instance are at risk of global defederation.

    I feel the guidelines established to moderate theatl.social are broad enough to foster open dialog, but also protect the instance from broad defederation. Adding a Tier-0 block is a sensible addition.

  • Technology @yall.theatl.social handskneesplease @yall.theatl.social
    arstechnica.com Twitter commandeers @X username from man who had it since 2007

    Twitter took Gene X Hwang's username and only offered him "some merch."

    Twitter commandeers @X username from man who had it since 2007

    Reasons why you always name things (servers, network gear, disks, screen names, ducks, etc) with nonsensical, whimsical, or otherwise garbage text.

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    Technology @yall.theatl.social handskneesplease @yall.theatl.social
    arstechnica.com The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

    In this deep-dive explainer, we look at a big-business mainstay.

    The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives
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    Technology @yall.theatl.social handskneesplease @yall.theatl.social
    www.shuttle.rs More than you've ever wanted to know about errors in Rust

    A (mostly) complete guide to error handling in Rust

    More than you've ever wanted to know about errors in Rust

    Great write up on errors and error handing in Rust.

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    Meta releases Llama 2

    ai.meta.com Llama 2 - Meta AI

    Llama 2 — The next generation of our open source large language model, available for free for research and commercial use.

    Llama 2 - Meta AI

    in Carrie Ann voice it's heeeeeeaarrrrrrr

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    Technology @yall.theatl.social handskneesplease @yall.theatl.social
    arstechnica.com Norway has had it with Meta, threatens $100K fines for data violations

    "It is so clear that this is illegal," Norwegian regulator said.

    Norway has had it with Meta, threatens $100K fines for data violations

    At least someone is paying attention.

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    Technology @yall.theatl.social handskneesplease @yall.theatl.social

    Intel macs are going down as technology marches forward

    arstechnica.com How long will the last Intel Macs be supported? macOS Sonoma gives us some hints

    Nearly 20 years of data show how Intel Macs are faring as Apple switches chips.

    How long will the last Intel Macs be supported? macOS Sonoma gives us some hints
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    arstechnica.com AT&T and Verizon’s ancient lead cables have US lawmakers demanding action

    "Corporate irresponsibility": Telcos accused of failing to act on health risks.

    AT&T and Verizon’s ancient lead cables have US lawmakers demanding action

    ... They "found that where lead contamination was present, the amount measured in the soil was highest directly under or next to the cables, and dropped within a few feet—a sign the lead was coming from the cable," ... 😱

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    High-temperature superconducting tape is behind one hope for a tinier tokamak.

    spectrum.ieee.org This Fusion Reactor Is Held Together With Tape

    High-temperature superconducting tape is behind one hope for a tinier tokamak

    This Fusion Reactor Is Held Together With Tape
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    Standalone Chick-fil-A floated for heart of Buckhead
  • More meat-based foods 🙄 Don't we have enough Chick-Fil-A's? Also, their track record supporting anti-LGBT orgs and support of religious orgs is a big "no, thank you" for me. One more Chick-fil-a is two too many.

  • We can leave the Solar System, but arriving anywhere is not happening soon.

    arstechnica.com We can leave the Solar System, but arriving anywhere is not happening soon

    What if we dropped interstellar ambitions and focused on understanding our home system?

    We can leave the Solar System, but arriving anywhere is not happening soon

    The article is a great read, but this paragraph is worth highlighting (referring to Voyager 1):

    > Whatever fate befalls us now, whatever future civilizations rise and fall, whether we heal the Earth or continue our self-destructive path, we will still, and always, have this. A monument, a marker, a testament to the existence of our species and the ingenuity of our minds. It’s unlikely that any alien civilization will encounter our spacecraft, yet it will still exist, circling the center of the Milky Way for eons to come.

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    general @yall.theatl.social handskneesplease @yall.theatl.social

    How it's going.

    !

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