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First reward of December: futuristic / cyberpunk bounty hunter racoon!

#FurryArt #MastoArt

How to release my dopamine in one easy step.

Show me a picture of Renamon and say "It u"

on retro gatekeeping 

i did all that shit - fucking around with tapes and floppies and microdrives (god help me), screens of varying clarity and quality and ability to display the full width of the PAL display field, completely incompatible peripheral sets and BASIC implementations, processors so slow that you could measure the number of 16 bit multiplies they could do a second in (low) 4 digits - back when i didn't have a choice.

you fucking bet i'm going to reach for an emulator and disk images these days! i would even if the prices of the actual hardware hadn't been vastly overinflated by the rich arseholes who insist that it only counts if it hurts, and the damn fools who listen to them

retro is a spirit, it's not a qualification

Unless you have a DRM-free file in an open format on your own hard drive, these assholes can do whatever the heck they want.

What're you going to do, sue them? Their terms probably require arbitration and forbid class actions suits. And even if you sued and won, you'd probably end up with a check for four dollars and thirteen cents. You're definitely not getting those movies back.

It drives me up the wall how hard it is to
actually buy digital creations so that you actually own them. A few places make this possible — Libro.fm for audiobooks, AK Press & No Starch for text. There's not a lot for movies and television, in part because of intense consolidation.

The truth is that the only way to really own a movie is to buy it on a disk and rip it. And much streaming TV doesn't even offer that option. You've seen how many incredible streaming shows have been memory-holed in the last year. Right now, the
only way for people to watch those shows involves a tricorn hat and a cutlass.

Truly, the only way to preserve access to culture is archiving lots of copies. Centralization has done so much work to push reasonable archival activities into the margins, by making archival both technically challenging and legally uncertain. And we live in an era of the most impressive information preservation & duplication technology ever made! You can carry all of Wikipedia, thousands of books, hundreds of audiobooks, and movies and TV shows on a tiny SD card.

There's no reason that all the most important works of our culture shouldn't be massively replicated and available everywhere. You shouldn't need Internet access to read a book or watch a show. All of that should be available offline on all your devices. Just like the books on your shelf, but better and lighter-weight and easier to use.
mastodon.social/@gamingonlinux/111507402238224111

furry delights 

@gardevoir ahhh!!! I'm really glad because wow those pics make me want to hang out with them all, and maybe get cuddles from them!

furry delights 

@gardevoir if this is the art you got recently with your three sonas then I am just gonna say again that I LOVE how they're drawn!!

Here’s my thread on stopping some of the hacks you see in the news by… just deploying uBlock Origin to every employee and browser. Like we do. I’m not talking theory. I’m the practitioner who does it as my day job today in production at a very large firm.

@philpem it's something I keep thinking about; making music with something like protracker and recording my own samples.

dream 

the version I got ahold of was condensed and added fanfiction-style extra chapters to the end, where the user was a little more bitter and asked much more broad practical questions like “how do I just set up email and browse the web”

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Computer Fairies is a Mastodon instance that aims to be as queer, friendly and furry as possible. We welcome all kinds of computer fairies!