@krypt3ia @recursive That's the first thing I did. Everything I found said something like "generally lifelong protection".
@krypt3ia @recursive Is there data on this? How old is old?
Microsoft is putting privacy-endangering Recall back into Windows 11
Snapshotting and AI processing a screen every 3 seconds. What could possibly go wrong?
https://arstechnica.com/security/2025/04/microsoft-is-putting-privacy-endangering-recall-back-into-windows-11/?utm_brand=arstechnica&utm_social-type=owned&utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social
linux(-)
A kernel update broke my wifi driver today (and the bug also caused stutters, I think). Which is my first major issue from an update since starting to use Arch 4 months ago. Which is not long at all so I guess I should expect a lot of this.
I've used Manjaro for longer, and I don't think I've encountered anything similar yet there, so that seems like a stability difference.
Arch was also harder to set up and has shown no clear advantage so I will continue to recommend it to no one.
question to (presumably?) neurotypicals, please Boost <3
@oddtail Unfortunately, I have no idea how to teach this. Apparently I learned it somehow as a child because I remember once being overwhelmed by noise and unable to do anything about it. I suspect it's a form of dissociation and that neurotypicals dissociate way more than they admit.
For me, it was tied to plurality (one specific headmate held the unfiltered mode), but I've since learned to decouple the mode switch from headmates.
question to (presumably?) neurotypicals, please Boost <3
@oddtail At this point the "filtered" mode is the default for me, and unfiltered takes conscious effort. Also, my filters will automatically switch on if I am overwhelmed.
My conscious input on what should be filtered out is limited. However, in some cases depending on what I'd like to "ignore", focusing my attention elsewhere might cause my unconscious filter to drop the unwanted stimulus.
question to (presumably?) neurotypicals, please Boost <3
@oddtail I've experienced multiple levels of filtering, apparently one that was my default and one I somehow learned.
Default: Basically everything I perceive reaches my consciousness. I cannot filter out noise even if I am overwhelmed.
Learned: The vast majority of stimuli (visual, audio, proprioception) does not reach my conscious awareness. There is an unconscious filter that decides what is worth noticing.
For the record:
- The *cryptography* in Signal is probably fine; a practical attack would be a big surprise.
- Signal lacks specific features required for classified systems, such as security labels, certified identities, revocation, etc.
- Signal runs on uncontrolled, insecure platforms connected to the Internet, rendering it unsuitable for classified even if it had the above features.
- Adding classified features to Signal would make it unusable for most purposes for which it's intended.
the moment I realized how absolutely bonkers hyperrogue sounds to people who haven't played it
"a dragon followed me into the dungeon. but I had orb of domination so the dragon was an ally. so I tried to get it to dive the dungeon with me because it could fly out, but it wouldn't stop attacking the unkillable skeletons so I had to just leave"
@mavica_again I like that simply by being here I'm making it harder for them. Friends joining fedi will notice if they can't follow me. If I see a friend talking about thebadspace I get to say "the instance I'm on is blocked by them" (this happened maybe once I think?)
Here’s a few ideas I had to make electric cars better.
Firstly, we should give electric cars dedicated lanes. As these vehicles need to be promoted over fossil fuelled counterparts, giving them their own lanes makes them seem more exclusive.
Secondly, we could then outsource the electrical power to an overhead cable system, and each car could have a pickup.
This would mean each car would then become lighter as they wouldn’t need batteries. Plus we could drive even more power to each vehicle, therefore increasing the efficiency.
Thirdly, we should replace the low-resistance rubber tyres on electric vehicles with steel, and lay “tracks” in their dedicated lanes.
Now, with all these out of the way, we have made these vehicles much more efficient. Therefore we have capacity to actually make these vehicles bigger so they can carry more people. This would make them EVEN MORE efficient because now each vehicle is carrying more people per kW of electricity used, now that we have outsourced the power supply.
In fact, this leads to another efficiency: we could link these larger electric vehicles together, and only the lead vehicle needs to have a driver, freeing up the other drivers. This reduces the overall drag on the vehicles in a “chain” thereby making it EVEN more efficient to drive.
Any takers on my idea? We can call it an “steelroader” due to the steel tracks involved.
It's been eight years to the day since Lance Ulanoff, the storied Tech and Social Media Expert and an award-winning tech journalist, decided that Mastodon won't survive because William Shatner couldn't find him on here.
Eight years on, Mastodon stubbornly survives:
https://rys.io/en/177.html
Please join me in celebrating the annual Mastodon Won't Survive Day, right here on fedi.
@lewurm I didn't know anyone was using LLVM at all. I had the impression that it was an incomplete experiment.
@lewurm That's the one. I ran the tests with the optimization disabled, and it's still broken. I'm like 90% sure it's spilling doubles into 4-byte stack slots.
Covid - Masking - free Atlantic article
@hollie Maybe it's my neurospice or where I am physically and socially, but I don't seem to feel pressure against it the way others apparently do.
Everything you need to know about bird flu
H5N1 influenza’s origins stretch back to the 1990s.
https://arstechnica.com/health/2025/04/everything-you-need-to-know-about-bird-flu/?utm_brand=arstechnica&utm_social-type=owned&utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social