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@mgorny@social.treehouse.systems
2025-06-09 16:48:12

"""
"[…] Wanting a man got me into awful troubles more than once. But wanting to get married, never! No, no. None of that for me."
"Why not?" Tenar demanded.
Taken aback, Moss said simply, "Why, what man'd marry a witch?" And then, with a sidelong chewing motion of her jaw, like a sheep shifting its cud, “And what witch’d marry a man?"
They split rushes.
"What's wrong with men?" Tenar inquired cautiously.
As cautiously, lowering her voice, Moss replied, "I don't know, my dearie. I’ve thought on it. Often I’ve thought on it. The best I can say it is like this. A man’s in his skin, see, like a nut in its shell." She held up her long, bent, wet fingers as if holding a walnut. “It’s hard and strong, that shell, and it’s all full of him. Full of grand man-meat, man-self. And that’s all. That’s all there is. It’s all him and nothing else, inside."
Tenar pondered awhile and finally asked, "But if he's a wizard—"
"Then it's all his power, inside. His power’s himself, see. That’s how it is with him. And that’s all. When his power goes, he’s gone. Empty." She cracked the unseen walnut and tossed the shells away. “Nothing."
"And a woman, then?"
"Oh, well, dearie, a woman's a different thing entirely. Who knows where a woman begins and ends? Listen, mistress, I have roots, I have roots deeper than this island. Deeper than the sea, older than the raising of the lands. I go back into the dark." Moss’s eyes shone with a weird brightness in their red rims and her voice sang like an instrument. “I go back into the dark! Before the moon I was. No one knows, no one knows, no one can say what I am, what a woman is, a woman of power, a woman’s power, deeper than the roots of trees, deeper than the roots of islands, older than the Making, older than the moon. Who dares ask questions of the dark? Who’ll ask the dark its name?"
"""
(Ursula K. Le Guin, Tehanu)

During the election campaign, Trump and his cronies declared they would deport the allegedly massive numbers of “criminal aliens.”
When Trump came into office, however, he faced a problem:
The vast majority of undocumented immigrants are law abiding.
But Trumpists came up with an answer:
Create fake crimes and thereby turn the law abiding into criminals.
Trump announced the US is
“under invasion” by a foreign power
in order to invoke the rarely us…

@arXiv_mathAP_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-10 09:51:11

Classification of bifurcation structure for semilinear elliptic equations in a ball
Kenta Kumagai
arxiv.org/abs/2507.06760 arxiv.org/pdf/2507.06760 arxiv.org/html/2507.06760
arXiv:2507.06760v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: We consider the Gelfand problem with Sobolev supercritical nonlinearities $f$ in the unit ball. In the case where $f$ is a power type nonlinearity or the exponential nonlinearity, it is well-known that the bifurcation curve has infinitely many turning points when the growth rate of $f$ is smaller than that of the specific nonlinearity (called the Joseph-Lundgren critical nonlinearity), while the bifurcation curve has no turning point when the growth rate of $f$ is greater than or equal to that of the Joseph-Lundgren critical nonlinearity.
In this paper, we give a new type of nonlinearity $f$ such that the growth rate is greater than or equal to that of the Joseph-Lundgren critical nonlinearity, while the bifurcation curve has infinitely many turning points. This result shows that the bifurcation structure is not determined solely by the comparison between the growth rate of $f$ and that of the Joseph-Lundgren critical nonlinearity. In fact, we find a general criterion which determines the bifurcation structure; and give a classification of the bifurcation structure.
toXiv_bot_toot

@UP8@mastodon.social
2025-07-09 18:20:05

😶‍🌫️ When politicians gain power, their language becomes garbled
#politics

@yaxu@post.lurk.org
2025-06-10 12:18:10

Academic conferences often pick talk submissions on the basis of 2 or 3 review scores, which I guess has no real statistical power, especially without any of the balancing usually done with things like likert scales when they're treated properly.. different people treat the scores very differently and that should be accounted for or it's really just down to chance. Researchers can be very unscientific sometimes!
Better to just ask
- does this properly address the topic of …

@thijs_lucas@norden.social
2025-06-09 17:41:53

#Dobrindt, #Merz und #Klingbeil testen, wie weit das heute schon in Deutschland geht.

@arXiv_condmatstatmech_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-09 09:25:52

Statistical properties of stochastic functionals under general resetting
V. M\'endez, R. Flaquer-Galm\'es
arxiv.org/abs/2507.05955

@arXiv_mathNT_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-06-10 17:35:19

This arxiv.org/abs/2504.11666 has been replaced.
initial toot: mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_mat…

@arXiv_quantph_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-06-10 18:40:40

This arxiv.org/abs/2408.15323 has been replaced.
initial toot: mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_qu…

@arXiv_statME_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-08 11:56:50

The connection of the stability of the binary choice model with its discriminatory power
M. Pomazanov
arxiv.org/abs/2507.04866

@arXiv_csCG_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-06-10 16:15:59

This arxiv.org/abs/2403.12334 has been replaced.
initial toot: mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csCG_…

@arXiv_csLO_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-09 08:24:12

A Formalization of Divided Powers in Lean
Antoine Chambert-Loir, Mar\'ia In\'es de Frutos-Fern\'andez
arxiv.org/abs/2507.05327

@arXiv_csNI_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-06-09 07:51:42

Nonlinear symbols combining for Power Amplifier-distorted OFDM signal reception
Pawel Kryszkiewicz, Hanna Bogucka
arxiv.org/abs/2506.05943

@nelson@tech.lgbt
2025-06-08 01:09:31

Calamus 26 We two boys together clinging
This is one of the gayest of the Calamus poems, a fantasy of two men against the world, full of life and ardor. I should be all over this in my gay reading!
Instead I see a darker form of Americanism here. "Power enjoying ... Armed and fearless ... No law less than ourselves". It's classic American individualism fantasy, a repudiation of community and law. Armed, at that.
On top of that I trip over the "North and South" part every time I read this. In 1860 when this was published we were just steps away from a Civil War after 10 years of enormous tension. I don't blame Whitman for wanting unity, his whole program in Leaves of Grass is American unity. All I can think is how there's no moral equivalence between the North and South. But Whitman wasn't an abolitionist and this poem reflects that.
Sorry for not reveling in the gay, maybe it's the ICE and California National Guard news affecting my reading today.

@midtsveen@social.linux.pizza
2025-07-09 20:12:32

I actually love getting things done, but not when some fat cat fattens their pockets off my sweat. Long live syndicalism and the power of the workers!
#Syndicalism #Capitalism

I've been reading the paper on small induction-recursion (which is really well-written btw!) and I think there might be a similar kind of terminological thingy about induction-recursion as with the "type-theoretic axiom of choice".
For context, "type-theoretic axiom of choice" is an old name for the distributivity of Π over Σ, which has nothing to do with choice. The reason it's named that is that, if you interpret ∀ as Π and ⊃ as Σ, the formulation of the axiom of choice in terms of relations
(∀ (x : X). ⊃ (y : Y). R(x, y)) − (⊃ (f : X − Y). ∀ (x : X). R(x, f(x)))
is just the distributivity of Π over Σ, which is trivial. The real mathematical content of the axiom of choice in type theory comes from the distributivity of Π over the propositional truncation, since the correct interpretation of ⊃ x. P x is ⊥ Σ x. P x ⊥.
Similarly, "induction-recursion" is made up of two parts: small induction-recursion, which is equivalent to indexed inductive definitions and thus rather anodyne, and the resizing of those definitions so that they live in U when they should live in U⁺, which is where the expressive power of IR comes from.
So, while "type-theoretic axiom of choice" is a very strong name for something innocuous, "induction-recursion" is an innocuous name for something very strong, essentially for dual reasons.
I hope this is not too obvious; I sure wish someone had explained this to me the first time I learned about induction-recursion.

@karlauerbach@sfba.social
2025-06-09 06:37:01

This is worth reading (and it is short):
"For Trump, This Is a Dress Rehearsal"
theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/

@thomasfuchs@hachyderm.io
2025-07-07 01:38:13

Even if “AI” worked (it doesn’t), there’s many reasons why you shouldn’t use it:
1. It’s destroying Internet sites that you love as you use chat bots instead of actually going to sources of information—this will cause them to be less active and eventually shut down.
2. Pollution and water use from server farms cause immediate harm; often—just like other heavy industry—these are built in underprivileged communities and harming poor people. Without any benefits as the big tech companies get tax breaks and don’t pay for power, while workers aren’t from the community but commute in.
3. The basic underlying models of any LLM rely on stolen data, even when specific extra data is obtained legally. Chatbots can’t learn to speak English just by reading open source code.
4. You’re fueling a speculation bubble that is costing many people their jobs—because the illusion of “efficiency” is kept up by firing people and counting that as profit.
5. Whenever you use the great cheat machine in the cloud you’re robbing yourself from doing real research, writing or coding—literally atrophying your brain and making you stupider.
It’s a grift, through and through.

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-06-21 02:34:13

Why AI can't possibly make you more productive; long
#AI and "productivity", some thoughts:
Edit: fixed some typos.
Productivity is a concept that isn't entirely meaningless outside the context of capitalism, but it's a concept that is heavily inflected in a capitalist context. In many uses today it effectively means "how much you can satisfy and/or exceed your boss' expectations." This is not really what it should mean: even in an anarchist utopia, people would care about things like how many shirts they can produce in a week, although in an "I'd like to voluntarily help more people" way rather than an "I need to meet this quota to earn my survival" way. But let's roll with this definition for a second, because it's almost certainly what your boss means when they say "productivity", and understanding that word in a different (even if truer) sense is therefore inherently dangerous.
Accepting "productivity" to mean "satisfying your boss' expectations," I will now claim: the use of generative AI cannot increase your productivity.
Before I dive in, it's imperative to note that the big generative models which most people think of as constituting "AI" today are evil. They are 1: pouring fuel on our burning planet, 2: psychologically strip-mining a class of data laborers who are exploited for their precarity, 3: enclosing, exploiting, and polluting the digital commons, and 4: stealing labor from broad classes of people many of whom are otherwise glad to give that labor away for free provided they get a simple acknowledgement in return. Any of these four "ethical issues" should be enough *alone* to cause everyone to simply not use the technology. These ethical issues are the reason that I do not use generative AI right now, except for in extremely extenuating circumstances. These issues are also convincing for a wide range of people I talk to, from experts to those with no computer science background. So before I launch into a critique of the effectiveness of generative AI, I want to emphasize that such a critique should be entirely unnecessary.
But back to my thesis: generative AI cannot increase your productivity, where "productivity" has been defined as "how much you can satisfy and/or exceed your boss' expectations."
Why? In fact, what the fuck? Every AI booster I've met has claimed the opposite. They've given me personal examples of time saved by using generative AI. Some of them even truly believe this. Sometimes I even believe they saved time without horribly compromising on quality (and often, your boss doesn't care about quality anyways if the lack of quality is hard to measure of doesn't seem likely to impact short-term sales/feedback/revenue). So if generative AI genuinely lets you write more emails in a shorter period of time, or close more tickets, or something else along these lines, how can I say it isn't increasing your ability to meet your boss' expectations?
The problem is simple: your boss' expectations are not a fixed target. Never have been. In virtue of being someone who oversees and pays wages to others under capitalism, your boss' game has always been: pay you less than the worth of your labor, so that they can accumulate profit and thus more capital to remain in charge instead of being forced into working for a wage themselves. Sure, there are layers of management caught in between who aren't fully in this mode, but they are irrelevant to this analysis. It matters not how much you please your manager if your CEO thinks your work is not worth the wages you are being paid. And using AI actively lowers the value of your work relative to your wages.
Why do I say that? It's actually true in several ways. The most obvious: using generative AI lowers the quality of your work, because the work it produces is shot through with errors, and when your job is reduced to proofreading slop, you are bound to tire a bit, relax your diligence, and let some mistakes through. More than you would have if you are actually doing and taking pride in the work. Examples are innumerable and frequent, from journalists to lawyers to programmers, and we laugh at them "haha how stupid to not check whether the books the AI reviewed for you actually existed!" but on a deeper level if we're honest we know we'd eventually make the same mistake ourselves (bonus game: spot the swipe-typing typos I missed in this post; I'm sure there will be some).
But using generative AI also lowers the value of your work in another much more frightening way: in this era of hype, it demonstrates to your boss that you could be replaced by AI. The more you use it, and no matter how much you can see that your human skills are really necessary to correct its mistakes, the more it appears to your boss that they should hire the AI instead of you. Or perhaps retain 10% of the people in roles like yours to manage the AI doing the other 90% of the work. Paradoxically, the *more* you get done in terms of raw output using generative AI, the more it looks to your boss as if there's an opportunity to get enough work done with even fewer expensive humans. Of course, the decision to fire you and lean more heavily into AI isn't really a good one for long-term profits and success, but the modern boss did not get where they are by considering long-term profits. By using AI, you are merely demonstrating your redundancy, and the more you get done with it, the more redundant you seem.
In fact, there's even a third dimension to this: by using generative AI, you're also providing its purveyors with invaluable training data that allows them to make it better at replacing you. It's generally quite shitty right now, but the more use it gets by competent & clever people, the better it can become at the tasks those specific people use it for. Using the currently-popular algorithm family, there are limits to this; I'm not saying it will eventually transcend the mediocrity it's entwined with. But it can absolutely go from underwhelmingly mediocre to almost-reasonably mediocre with the right training data, and data from prompting sessions is both rarer and more useful than the base datasets it's built on.
For all of these reasons, using generative AI in your job is a mistake that will likely lead to your future unemployment. To reiterate, you should already not be using it because it is evil and causes specific and inexcusable harms, but in case like so many you just don't care about those harms, I've just explained to you why for entirely selfish reasons you should not use it.
If you're in a position where your boss is forcing you to use it, my condolences. I suggest leaning into its failures instead of trying to get the most out of it, and as much as possible, showing your boss very clearly how it wastes your time and makes things slower. Also, point out the dangers of legal liability for its mistakes, and make sure your boss is aware of the degree to which any of your AI-eager coworkers are producing low-quality work that harms organizational goals.
Also, if you've read this far and aren't yet of an anarchist mindset, I encourage you to think about the implications of firing 75% of (at least the white-collar) workforce in order to make more profit while fueling the climate crisis and in most cases also propping up dictatorial figureheads in government. When *either* the AI bubble bursts *or* if the techbros get to live out the beginnings of their worker-replacement fantasies, there are going to be an unimaginable number of economically desperate people living in increasingly expensive times. I'm the kind of optimist who thinks that the resulting social crucible, though perhaps through terrible violence, will lead to deep social changes that effectively unseat from power the ultra-rich that continue to drag us all down this destructive path, and I think its worth some thinking now about what you might want the succeeding stable social configuration to look like so you can advocate towards that during points of malleability.
As others have said more eloquently, generative AI *should* be a technology that makes human lives on average easier, and it would be were it developed & controlled by humanists. The only reason that it's not, is that it's developed and controlled by terrible greedy people who use their unfairly hoarded wealth to immiserate the rest of us in order to maintain their dominance. In the long run, for our very survival, we need to depose them, and I look forward to what the term "generative AI" will mean after that finally happens.

@arXiv_mathNT_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-10 09:09:11

The $3$-sparsity of $X^n-1$ over finite fields
Kaimin Cheng
arxiv.org/abs/2507.06655 arxiv.org/pdf/2507.06655

@theodric@social.linux.pizza
2025-08-08 11:49:06

You know it's dire when even Euronews isn't towing the EU pro-surveillance party line. What's sold to you as the only way to stop something vile will be used to stop something you like when the opposite party to your preference gets into power (which they will, eventually!)

@blakes7bot@mas.torpidity.net
2025-07-07 06:04:35

#Blakes7 Series D, Episode 02 - Power
VILA: A sort of academy, when I was a boy. They chose me as technical advisor for the escape.
PELLA: Escape? From an academy?
VILA: Perhaps academy was the wrong word.

Claude 3.7 describes the image as: "This image appears to be from a science fiction television series, showing two people in a futuristic setting. On the left is a person with short blonde hair wearing an elegant cream-colored draped gown with a distinctive metallic collar. They're facing another person on the right who is partially visible from behind, wearing a gray uniform with yellow shoulder detailing.

The scene takes place in what looks like a spacecraft or space station interior, with m…
@thomastraynor@social.linux.pizza
2025-06-09 12:49:19

Any bets that this will mess up those of us who are working remotely and leave the machine for something like lunch and it ends up killing our VPN connection?
ghacks.net/2025/06/06/windows-

@arXiv_eessSY_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-08-08 08:43:42

Preparing for the worst: Long-term and short-term weather extremes in resource adequacy assessment
Aleksander Grochowicz, Hannah C. Bloomfield, Marta Victoria
arxiv.org/abs/2508.05163

@arXiv_condmatsoft_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-08-08 09:11:12

Heat and super-diffusive melting fronts in unsaturated porous media
Eirik G. Flekk{\o}y, Erika Eiser, Alex Hansen
arxiv.org/abs/2508.05451

@arXiv_physicsplasmph_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-08-07 08:45:14

Controlling the electric force on a dust particle during the afterglow of a plasma at a higher gas pressure
Neeraj Chaubey, J. Goree
arxiv.org/abs/2508.04621

@arXiv_mathAP_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-08 13:10:51

Global strong solution of the 3D compressible liquid crystal flows with density-dependent viscosity and large velocity
Jiaxu Li, Yu Mei, Rong Zhang
arxiv.org/abs/2507.04760

@mcdanlj@social.makerforums.info
2025-07-07 02:34:06

Working on a #HamRadio linked dipole for QRP. I designed and printed the winder because I couldn't find anything I was quite satisfied with. It has holes to hold FT82, FT140, or FT240 toroids (depending on power requirements) with zip ties. I haven't yet tuned up the 10m dipole sections wound on so far; I'll do that when it's not a tropical storm outside and I can raise it up on a mast …

Green vaguely turtle-shaped winder with RG316 coax attached, a toroid common-mode choke made with that coax, and two antenna wires found on it. An SMA connector is at the opposite end of the coax, with an SMA-BNC adapter installed.
@arXiv_csLO_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-06-09 07:51:02

Nominal Equational Rewriting and Narrowing
Mauricio Ayala-Rinc\'on (University of Bras\'ilia, Brazil), Maribel Fern\'andez (King's College London, UK), Daniele Nantes-Sobrinho (University of Bras\'ilia, Brazil,Imperial College London, UK), Daniella Santaguida (University of Bras\'ilia, Brazil)
arx…

@servelan@newsie.social
2025-07-04 19:00:33

We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all people are created equal, endowed with inherent dignity and unalienable rights—among these are life, liberty, equality, and the pursuit of justice.
 
That to secure these rights, governments derive their power from the consent of the governed. When a leader becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right and duty of the people to refuse allegiance and to stand united in the defense of their freedoms.

@arXiv_astrophCO_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-08 10:11:51

Shot noise in clustering power spectra
Nicolas Tessore, Alex Hall
arxiv.org/abs/2507.03749 arxiv.org/pdf/2507.03749…

@rberger@hachyderm.io
2025-06-03 20:37:57

"The administration’s claims to monarchical power are a real threat to America’s constitutional order. But its executive orders and policy feints are so haphazard and poorly articulated that they amount to a kind of autocratic takeover written in smudge-able crayon: terrifying, cartoonish, and vulnerable to erasure, all at once.
This is not to say that Americans should ignore Trump’s efforts to make confetti of the Constitution. Rather, when evaluating any one Trump policy, one has to keep front of mind the possibility that it simply won’t exist by the end of the week. Despite an energetic effort by some right-wing intellectuals to make Trump out to be some kind of 14-dimensional-chess player, his approach doesn’t resemble chess so much as a denial-of-service attack on a functioning government."
#USPolitcs
theatlantic.com/politics/archi

@inthehands@hachyderm.io
2025-07-04 21:04:18

I am triply cautious of this article from @…:
- OpenAI et al use the supposed danger (and thus implied power) of their own product as a marketing ploy (as the article points out)
- When a product vendor funds their own research about the potential dangers of their product, it’s more likely to be good PR than good research
- Society always engages in moral panics about new things causing addiction and psychological damage (including bicycles and novels!)
With those caveats in mind, I do think this is an issue worth watching closely. And that quote in the post? Chef’s kiss.
mstdn.ca/@dyckron/114796898620

@lil5@social.linux.pizza
2025-06-06 19:53:20

Remember when we compared the energy consumption of bitcoin to a country? And that was a bad thing remember, so we didn’t buy any nor program with it.
> According to his research, worldwide AI energy demand is now set to surpass demand from bitcoin mining by the end of this year.

@arXiv_mathAC_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-08-05 09:02:00

Involutory Cayley graphs of polynomial and power series rings over the ring of integers modulo $n$
Hamide Keshavarzi, Afshin Amini, Babak Amini
arxiv.org/abs/2508.01202

@Techmeme@techhub.social
2025-08-01 18:25:51

Source: GPT-5 improvements won't be comparable to the leaps in performance of earlier models, such as between GPT-3 in 2020 and GPT-4 in 2023 (The Information)
theinformation.com/articles/in

@arXiv_statME_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-08-07 08:43:43

Bayesian Design of Experiments in the Presence of Nuisance Parameters
Shirin Golchi, Luke Hagar
arxiv.org/abs/2508.03948 arxiv.org/pdf/2508…

@aredridel@kolektiva.social
2025-07-29 13:39:34

I want to push back on the idea in the world of tech work that a PIP (performance improvement plan) is about getting rid of someone, that they're not intended to be survivable.
This is completely false. (I'm sure there's instances of it, of course, but the mode and vast majority are, in fact about performance improvement. Sometimes they're shadow layoffs, but that is cruel callous behavior that not everyone will exhibit.)
Now _most people do not survive the PIP process_. This is to be expected: if someone is in fact not performing, and more gentle remedies haven't worked, it's not looking good.
But here's where I get a bit spicy: most performance problems are constitutional problems with management and management style, not individual performance problems. However, since managers are as a class 'in power' somewhat, the individual contributor takes the fall for this structurally.
The intent of a PIP is not to get rid of people. It's to right performance.
However, as a system, PIPs do largely get rid of people who are constitutionally misaligned with management. Even when it's a management problem (and it usually is)

@arXiv_mathFA_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-08 10:10:21

$k$-Quasi $n$-Power Posinormal Operators: Theory and Weighted Conditional Type Applications
Sophiya S Dharan, T. Prasad, M. H. M. Rashid
arxiv.org/abs/2507.03672

@arXiv_csAI_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-06-03 08:08:25

The Ultimate Test of Superintelligent AI Agents: Can an AI Balance Care and Control in Asymmetric Relationships?
Djallel Bouneffouf, Matthew Riemer, Kush Varshney
arxiv.org/abs/2506.01813

@arXiv_quantph_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-06-06 10:06:38

This arxiv.org/abs/2406.13785 has been replaced.
initial toot: mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_qu…

@hex@kolektiva.social
2025-06-14 10:21:24

I have my share of issues with Parkrose Permaculture, but she has a lot of things I do strongly agree with. I can't stress enough that you never dehumanize your enemies. You can respond appropriately to violence. You can defend yourself from them by any means necessary. But you do not dehumanize them. You always limit your response to the minimum necessary to defend yourself.
There are a number of former Nazi skins who became antifascists after realizing they were wrong. Those folks tend to be some of the most dedicated because they feel a debt, and some of the most knowledgeable because they were there. Coming out of these types of cults, police included, is hard and takes time. A lot of us don't have the ability to work with them. But some do.
By repeatedly humanizing your opponent, you can break some of them. The #Seattle Police Department was not defunded but saw a massive reduction in numbers because their morale was destroyed. Some people will never change. Some people are broken and feel like they need the power. But if you change one person's mind, even give them something to think about, it's a crack. If even one cop quits, that's one less trained gun pointed at you in the future.
The 18 year old marines and federalized national guard troops out there are literally kids. A lot of them came from poor communities. They are being used in a way they haven't been trained to do, doing things they (should) have been told are not legal. They joined to get out of poverty, to go to college, or to "defend the American people" (regardless of how misguided that is). Few, if any, of them joined to abuse people. They will be especially open to persuasion.
Remind those troops that they are carrying out illegal orders, that they are being called on to violate their oath to protect the constitution, that they are suppressing the free speech of the fellow Americans they swore to defend. Remind them that the people they could be illegally arresting now are just like their parents, their neighbors, their families, the friends who didn't join. Remind them that this is the first step. They will be called on to kill Americans if they let this keep going.
Remind them ICE sleeps in hotels while they sleep on the ground. Remind them that their drunk and incompetent leadership thinks of them as disposable tools. Remind them that some of these people are out protesting *for them* against cuts to the VA and other services. Remind them that the people they're defending refuse to make college free so they can recruit from poor schools. Remind them that they will always be welcome when they're ready to join the side of freedom and justice.
When you dehumanize your enemies, you unify them. When you humanize your enemies, you can divide them. There is no weapon available to us right now so powerful as compassion.
youtu.be/YtWOYUDMsBw

Netanyahu Pushes for Full Israeli Occupation of Gaza
Doing so would appease the prime minister’s far-right coalition partners at a time when his grip on power remains fragile.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convened with senior security officials on Tuesday to set a new strategy for the Israel-Hamas war, which has been ongoing for 22 months.
The meeting included Defense Minister Israel Katz, Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer, military chief of staff Eyal Zam…

@midtsveen@social.linux.pizza
2025-07-03 21:21:49

My day just took a nosedive because some fascist jerk is celebrating a bill landing on his desk!
Honestly, it’s wild how people still put their faith in the same old power games when real change comes from people coming together, running things themselves, and kicking the fascists out of the picture.
Being autistic, I usually struggle to get what people mean, but Rudolf Rocker said some real shit that even my autistic brain understands.

Political rights do not exist because they have been legally set down on a piece of paper, but only when they have become the ingrown habit of a people, and when any attempt to impair them will meet with the violent resistance of the populace... One compels respect from others when he knows how to defend his dignity as a human being... The people owe all the political rights and privileges which we enjoy today in greater or lesser measure, not to the good will of their governments, but to their…
@arXiv_mathAG_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-08-04 08:44:31

The Canonical Exact Sequence of Differential Modules for 0-Dimensional Schemes
Tran N. K. Linh, Le Ngoc Long
arxiv.org/abs/2508.00196 arxiv…

@pre@boing.world
2025-06-23 22:44:30

Interesting thing about tomorrow's tarot show, rendering now, is that I upgraded from Blender 4.0 to blender 4.4 and it's quite a bit nicer to look at the timeline editor.
Was sad to find that the render time was up though. From about 3 seconds per frame usually to more like 12!?
Trying it with an old version I see that the lights and textures look way better with 4.4 than 4.0 though. A substantial step up in the way the show looks without me even doing anything other than waiting four times longer per frame.
Seems to be heavily dependent upon lighting now. The slow frames are like 12 seconds but the fast frames with minimal lighting and close up on the video are more like 2.
Looks too beautiful now to go back though. Upgraded my cloud-remote render machines too. We will render on four machines tonight. FOUR! The power of it all.
g3.4xlarge is no faster than g3.large but g6.xlarge seems to be twice the speed.
But hard to be sure really coz of the massive variance in time depending on the lighting.
Anyway, great show coming tomorrow. Sometimes I wonder what the hell I'm trying to do with it but tomorrow's show is the answer. Hide the angry bitter political rant behind a strange CGI tarot show. When the rant comes together well I like it.
wordcloudtarot.com/@wordcloudt

@arXiv_physicsaccph_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-08-06 09:05:30

A Simulation of the Fermilab Main Injector Dual Power Amplifier Cavities
Susanna Stevenson (Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory)
arxiv.org/abs/2508.03312

@arXiv_condmatmeshall_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-06-04 07:47:55

Phonon-Induced Current Noise in Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes across the Ballistic-Diffusive Crossover
Aina Sumiyoshi, Takahiro Yamamoto
arxiv.org/abs/2506.02569

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-07-22 00:03:45

Overly academic/distanced ethical discussions
Had a weird interaction with @/brainwane@social.coop just now. I misinterpreted one of their posts quoting someone else and I think the combination of that plus an interaction pattern where I'd assume their stance on something and respond critically to that ended up with me getting blocked. I don't have hard feelings exactly, and this post is only partly about this particular person, but I noticed something interesting by the end of the conversation that had been bothering me. They repeatedly criticized me for assuming what their position was, but never actually stated their position. They didn't say: "I'm bothered you assumed my position was X, it's actually Y." They just said "I'm bothered you assumed my position was X, please don't assume my position!" I get that it's annoying to have people respond to a straw man version of your argument, but when I in response asked some direct questions about what their position was, they gave some non-answers and then blocked me. It's entirely possible it's a coincidence, and they just happened to run out of patience on that iteration, but it makes me take their critique of my interactions a bit less seriously. I suspect that they just didn't want to hear what I was saying, while at the same time they wanted to feel as if they were someone who values public critique and open discussion of tricky issues (if anyone reading this post also followed our interaction and has a different opinion of my behavior, I'd be glad to hear it; it's possible In effectively being an asshole here and it would be useful to hear that if so).
In any case, the fact that at the end of the entire discussion, I'm realizing I still don't actually know their position on whether they think the AI use case in question is worthwhile feels odd. They praised the system on several occasions, albeit noting some drawbacks while doing so. They said that the system was possibly changing their anti-AI stance, but then got mad at me for assuming this meant that they thought this use-case was justified. Maybe they just haven't made up their mind yet but didn't want to say that?
Interestingly, in one of their own blog posts that got linked in the discussion, they discuss a different AI system, and despite listing a bunch of concrete harms, conclude that it's okay to use it. That's fine; I don't think *every* use of AI is wrong on balance, but what bothered me was that their post dismissed a number of real ethical issues by saying essentially "I haven't seen calls for a boycott over this issue, so it's not a reason to stop use." That's an extremely socially conformist version of ethics that doesn't sit well with me. The discussion also ended up linking this post: chelseatroy.com/2024/08/28/doe which bothered me in a related way. In it, Troy describes classroom teaching techniques for introducing and helping students explore the ethics of AI, and they seem mostly great. They avoid prescribing any particular correct stance, which is important when teaching given the power relationship, and they help students understand the limitations of their perspectives regarding global impacts, which is great. But the overall conclusion of the post is that "nobody is qualified to really judge global impacts, so we should focus on ways to improve outcomes instead of trying to judge them." This bothers me because we actually do have a responsibility to make decisive ethical judgments despite limitations of our perspectives. If we never commit to any ethical judgment against a technology because we think our perspective is too limited to know the true impacts (which I'll concede it invariably is) then we'll have to accept every technology without objection, limiting ourselves to trying to improve their impacts without opposing them. Given who currently controls most of the resources that go into exploration for new technologies, this stance is too permissive. Perhaps if our objection to a technology was absolute and instantly effective, I'd buy the argument that objecting without a deep global view of the long-term risks is dangerous. As things stand, I think that objecting to the development/use of certain technologies in certain contexts is necessary, and although there's a lot of uncertainly, I expect strongly enough that the overall outcomes of objection will be positive that I think it's a good thing to do.
The deeper point here I guess is that this kind of "things are too complicated, let's have a nuanced discussion where we don't come to any conclusions because we see a lot of unknowns along with definite harms" really bothers me.

@arXiv_astrophSR_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-01 09:22:53

Is convective turbulence the only exciting mechanism of global p modes in the Sun?
E. Panetier, R. A. Garc\'ia, S. N. Breton, A. Jim\'enez, T. Foglizzo
arxiv.org/abs/2506.23686

@fgraver@hcommons.social
2025-08-02 16:15:36

We Need a Strategy to Win Zohran’s Agenda. Call It Plan Z. jacobin.com/2025/08/zohran-ber

@arXiv_csIT_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-30 08:51:41

Pilot-to-Data Power Ratio in RIS-Assisted Multiantenna Communication
Masoud Sadeghian, Angel Lozano, Gabor Fodor
arxiv.org/abs/2507.21785 a…

@jamesthebard@social.linux.pizza
2025-06-12 14:59:35

Some thoughts:
- While the "mini" part of minirack might be debatable for this build, the footprint of my Proxmox cluster has become miniscule when compared to the size of three full-sized ATX builds.
- The Minisforum MS-A2s are very warm bois. Keeping the cables clear from behind the server nodes will pay off tons later as the hot air is unobstructed.
- Putting those massive power bricks into the bottom of the minirack is not going to work. I'm not sure exactl…

The back of the T2 minirack build showing all of the servers power on, networked, and cable managed.
The front of the T2 minirack build showing all of the servers, the Pi shelf, and everything looking _clean_...unlike the room they're sitting in.
@arXiv_condmatstatmech_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-08-05 09:56:40

Momentum distribution and correlation of free particles in the Tsallis statistics using conventional expectation value and equilibrium temperature
Masamichi Ishihara
arxiv.org/abs/2508.01609

@mariyadelano@hachyderm.io
2025-07-25 16:16:24

As a marketer by profession I feel this very deeply and struggle to find a way to communicate to fellow people on the left that the methods and tools for communicating messages and persuading masses of people SHOULD be used, as effectively as possible, to promote facts and values we align with.
I get that power is uncomfortable when so many parties visibly abuse it for malicious purposes.
But power in and of itself is a tools that needs to be wielded, and we should be cognizant about targeting it at changes that will improve our societies and help us and the planet.
Yes, don’t use power blindly. Don’t manipulate people. But using persuasive, effective tactics for mass communication to educate people on the truth and get them aboard initiatives that will help them??? Why is that evil?
It feels like the left sees power, influence, and thus marketing / PR / propaganda as too black-and-white. We need to be comfortable in navigating the grey. sauropods.win/@futurebird/1149

@arXiv_mathCA_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-02 08:30:10

An Algebraic Proof of Weierstrass's Approximation Theorem
Jos\'e M. Gonz\'alez Barrios, Alberto Contreras-Crist\'an, Patricia I. Romero-Mares
arxiv.org/abs/2507.00834

@pgcd@mastodon.online
2025-07-02 10:37:25

Long shot but I can't find an answer with "short searches": I got a KVM. Everything finally works, except Mint shuts down (closing all apps) when I switch to the other computer and I need to open the lid to make it come back.
This is with "lid action=nothing" in the power settings, of course.
Any ideas? Even ideas on how to express this concept in a way that lets me find the relevant reddit thread would be awesome.

@YaleDivinitySchool@mstdn.social
2025-06-25 19:06:16

From the article: "Gregory E. Sterling, dean of Yale Divinity School, recently said that Christians do not have to agree on all aspects of what the teachings of Jesus Christ mean, but we can apply the test given in the Fourth Gospel..."
churchleadership.c…

A man shouting with a megaphone, his fist raised in the air in front of a crowd.
@arXiv_eessSP_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-08-04 08:50:40

Subband Architecture Aided Selective Fixed-Filter Active Noise Control
Hong-Cheng Liang, Man-Wai Mak, Kong Aik Lee
arxiv.org/abs/2508.00603

@chris@mstdn.chrisalemany.ca
2025-08-06 13:50:35

EV Charging Cost by the Numbers.
I charge my car at home almost nightly wirh a Level 2 Flo 30A/240V charger.
I noticed today that they have added an "estimated rate" for my address based on my utility (BC Hydro) charge so that it can estimate the cost of the charging.
Their estimate is $0.11400/kWh. I drive alot. 160km a day when I am commuting to work and then 50-100km in the evening 4-5 days a week Dashing. Thanks to dashing I have a solid record of odometer readings.
We have both tiered and time of day pricing so it's complicated to do this manually. I do most of my charging during the lowest rate overnight. I have the Flo charger set to only charge at full 30A power between 11PM and 7AM to match the overnight rate, then 15A in "off peak" (standard rate) and to turn off completely during on-peak 4PM to 9PM times.
I think their estimate is quite accurate considering the overnight rate is usually $0.14 - $0.05/kWh. Ill include my latest electrical bill. (we are billed monthly)
Here are the numbers.
A "full tank" of battery is 65kWh
Monthly: eg. March (full time commuting plus dashing) 4668km
30 charging sessions
853.4kWh
$97 ($2.07/100km)
Last 12 months: 56,107km
8793kWh
$1,002 ($1.78/100km)
There are a few free charges at work in there (15 in the year?) but any saving is eaten up by $6/day parking cost.
As a comparison if I drove our 2014 Prius C hybrid 56,000km at its general fuel mileage of 5L/100km and an average price of $1.60/L that would be $2,800. So I am saving by more than half, and probably more than that, compared to one of the best mileage hybrids out there.
It makes less and less sense to buy a gas car.
(We have 222,607km on the 2019 Hyundai Kona and about 250,000 on the Prius)
#EV #ElectricCar #cost #electricity #bchydro #bcpoli #endfossilfuels

@arXiv_csET_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-08-05 10:15:00

Thermal Implications of Non-Uniform Power in BSPDN-Enabled 2.5D/3D Chiplet-based Systems-in-Package using Nanosheet Technology
Yukai Chen, Massimiliano Di Todaro, Bjorn Vermeersch, Herman Oprins, Daniele Jahier Pagliari, Julien Ryckaert, Dwaipayan Biswas, James Myers
arxiv.org/abs/2508.02284

@aral@mastodon.ar.al
2025-07-26 14:33:15

This is the last straw! Working with Israel to commit genocide we can forgive but asking us to pay more for their services… now that’s unconscionable. mastodon.online/@parismarx/114

@arXiv_mathNT_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-03 08:23:20

The length of the repeating decimal
Siqiong Yao, Akira Toyohara
arxiv.org/abs/2507.01295 arxiv.org/pdf/2507.01295

@brichapman@mastodon.social
2025-08-06 17:51:03

EVs with bidirectional charging can save lives during disasters like hurricanes. #climatechange #climatesolutions #climate

@arXiv_mathNA_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-02 08:58:30

Isogeometric contact analysis in subsea umbilical and power cables
Tianjiao Dai (School of Naval Architecture and Ocean Engineering, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Hubei Key Laboratory of Naval Architecture and Ocean Engineering Hydrodynamics, HUST, Wuhan, China), Shuo Yang (Zoomlion Heavy Industry Science and Technology Co., Ltd., China), Xing Jin (China Offshore Engineering and Technology Co., Ltd., China), Svein S{\ae}vik (Department of Marine Technology, Norwegian U…

@arXiv_qbioNC_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-08-01 08:26:21

Place-cell heterogeneity underlies power-laws in hippocampal activity
John J. Briguglio, Jaesung Lee, Albert K. Lee, Vincent Hakim, Sandro Romani
arxiv.org/abs/2507.23030

@arXiv_csOS_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-04 07:37:01

Dissecting the Impact of Mobile DVFS Governors on LLM Inference Performance and Energy Efficiency
Zongpu Zhang, Pranab Dash, Y. Charlie Hu, Qiang Xu, Jian Li, Haibing Guan
arxiv.org/abs/2507.02135

@arXiv_csHC_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-06-24 09:06:00

Full-body WPT: wireless powering with meandered e-textiles
Ryo Takahashi, Takashi Sato, Wakako Yukita, Tomoyuki Yokota, Takao Someya, Yoshihiro Kawahara
arxiv.org/abs/2506.17606

@emd@cosocial.ca
2025-06-27 15:54:19

Which is why the conservatives supported it, they were thinking ahead for when they’re in power.
#CdnPoli
fed.brid.gy/r/https://bsky.app

Loser: U.S. factories
When Democrats in 2022 created and expanded a slew of federal tax breaks for electric vehicles, solar panels, wind turbines, batteries,
they designed them to encourage companies to use components made in the United States.
That spurred a manufacturing boom, including solar-panel glass recyclers in Georgia and electric-vehicle assembly lines in Kentucky.
The new law could derail many of those factories.
The old tax credit for solar power, for…

@pbloem@sigmoid.social
2025-05-18 14:09:23

This type of reasoning is always baffling to me. When climate change is discussed these people always say that there is some magical technological solution that will pop up to save us (usually handed to us by the AI gods).
Why then, in the the several decades that it takes to scale up nuclear, can we not account for the possibility that AI could become more energy efficient?
That sounds like something you could solve for the cost of a few power plants...

@MAD_democracy@journa.host
2025-05-29 11:14:17

TONIGHT: Pulitzer-winning cartoonist Ann Telnaes discusses The Power of Editorial Cartoonists for Democracy!
Ann Telnaes resigned from WaPo when this cartoon was rejected.
She wrote, “...My job is to hold powerful people and institutions accountable. For the first time, my editor prevented me from doing that critical job.”
Sign up here: #FreePress #Democracy #Media

@inthehands@hachyderm.io
2025-07-28 00:37:07

When Nixon adopted Goldwater’s Southern Strategy and won, that was a party realignment. The new foundation of the Republican coalition was “throw anti-Black racism lots of ethnonationalist red meat so they support the concentration of wealth.”
I’d venture that ethnonationalism captured to concentrate power is (or inexorably becomes) fascism. Nixon’s realignment made the Republican Party the fascist party.
@…’s post below on this topic touched off my train of thought here:
4/
jorts.horse/@AnarchoNinaWrites

@coreyjrowe@detmi.social
2025-08-04 01:43:53

Welp, it was a fantastic 8-year run but my laptop is finally toast. Ol' fella had another battery give out along with its replacement keyboard and this weekend it finally stopped accepting power altogether even when plugged in. The Micro Center tech who tried to revive it today literally wrote "no signs of life" in the diagnostic report.
RIP Dell Inspiron, Fall 2017 – Summer 2025. You served me well 🫡

@@arXiv_physicsatomph_bot@mastoxiv.page@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-30 08:26:32

Isotope shift for total electron binding energy of atoms
V. A. Dzuba, V. V. Flambaum
arxiv.org/abs/2507.21410 arxiv.org/pdf/2507.21410 arxiv.org/html/2507.21410
arXiv:2507.21410v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: We compute the isotope shifts of the \emph{total} electron binding energy of neutral atoms and singly charged ions up to element $Z=120$, using relativistic Hartree-Fock method including the Breit interaction. Field shift coefficients are extracted by varying the nuclear charge radius; a small quadratic term is retained to cover large radius changes relevant to superheavy nuclei. We tabulate isotope shift coefficients for closed shell systems from Ne to Og and benchmark selected open shell cases, used to test the interpolation formula. A simple power law interpolation $bZ^k$ reproduces calculated field shifts to within about 1\% across the table, with the effective exponent $k$ growing from roughly 5 near $Z \sim 50$ to about 12 at $Z \sim 118$. Due to the domination of inner shells, differences between neutrals and singly charged ions does not exceed few percent, becoming noticeable mainly when an outer $s$ electron is removed. Therefore, these results may also be used for higher charge ions.
toXiv_bot_toot

@arXiv_astrophSR_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-06-03 07:58:22

Power density spectra morphologies of seismically unresolved red-giant asteroseismic binaries
Jeong Yun Choi, Francisca Espinoza-Rojas, Quentin Copp\'ee, Saskia Hekker
arxiv.org/abs/2506.01745

@arXiv_quantph_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-08-04 09:42:40

Entangling Power and Its Deviation: A Quantitative Analysis on Input-State Dependence and Variability in Entanglement Generation
Kyoungho Cho, Jeongho Bang
arxiv.org/abs/2508.00301

Justices need to own the consequences of their injunction ruling
The Supreme Court has curbed the power of lower court judges to block illegal presidential actions,
even as the sitting president tries to do things that are plainly unconstitutional.
Now they need to own the consequences of their ruling.
More than ever, they must be willing to act with speed and force when the president attempts to violate Americans’ rights.

The ruling inhibits federal distric…

@arXiv_eessSY_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-06-02 07:23:48

Input-Power-to-State Stability of Time-Varying Systems
Hernan Haimovich, Shenyu Liu, Antonio Russo, Jose L. Mancilla-Aguilar
arxiv.org/abs/2505.24805

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-07-22 21:37:18

Been playing Transiruby and the exploration poetics are top-notch, like rivalling Super Metroid good, which is a distinct rarity among metroidvanias.
Something the original Super Metroid had was required secrets and the expectation that you'd actually read the map as a gameplay skill. Many many metroidvanias don't have that, including favorites like Ori, but it's one of the things that makes Hollow Knight stand out. Transiruby sadly doesn't have maps-as-rewards, but it does have moments where consulting the map is expected (water cog is a big one since it's in the middle of an already-explored area by the time you can access it). The game also requires revisits with the coin door mechanic, but marks the things you need on the map and structures revisits really nicely with a variety of shortcuts that open up as you gain abilities.
I was kinda sad when the first movement power was double jump (le sigh) but the second movement power is really neat and original, so I'm happy again.
Besides the big things, there are a lot of little moments where there's ludonarrative harmony between the choice structures and the area themes/plot points.
Haven't finished it yet, but so far it's headed into my top tier of metroidvanias, or very close, even despite fairly simple combat and easy (if fun) bosses.
#Transiruby #AmPlaying #Metroidvania

@arXiv_statME_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-06-04 07:52:07

Power Enhancement of Permutation-Augmented Partial-Correlation Tests via Fixed-Row Permutations
Tianyi Wang, Guanghui Wang, Zhaojun Wang, Changliang Zou
arxiv.org/abs/2506.02906

America’s democratic collapse has been coming for years, always just over the horizon.
But when everything that happened during Trump’s first three months in office happened and
(here’s the important part)
shockingly little was done by the few groups
(Congress, the Supreme Court, the Democratic Party, American corporations & other large institutions, media companies)
who had the power to counter it,
I knew it was over.
And over in a way that is…

@midtsveen@social.linux.pizza
2025-07-23 20:36:31

One of the many reasons I keep coming back to Rocker's work is how sharply he cuts through the illusions of power.
#Anarchism #Syndicalism #AnarchoSyndicalism

A sepi-toned image of Rudolf Rocker is displayed over a quote by him that reads "Power operates only destructively, bent always on forcing every manifestation of life into the straitjacket of its laws. Its intellectual form of expression is dead dogma, its physical form brute force. And this unintelligence of its objectives sets its stamp on its supporters also and renders them stupid and brutal, even when they were originally endowed with the best of talents. One who is constantly striving to …
@arXiv_mathNT_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-02 08:43:39

Murmurations of Modular Forms and $p$-power Coefficients
Debanjana Kundu, Katharina Mueller
arxiv.org/abs/2507.00738

@arXiv_mathAG_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-21 09:02:40

Automorphisms of prime power order of weighted hypersurfaces
Alvaro Liendo, Ana Julisa Palomino
arxiv.org/abs/2507.13538

@arXiv_condmatstatmech_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-28 08:49:01

$1/f^{3/2}$ Power Spectrum at the Phonon Bottleneck
Steven T. Bramwell
arxiv.org/abs/2507.19159 arxiv.org/pdf/2507.19159

@arXiv_eessSP_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-30 09:36:52

Impact of Phase Noise and Power Amplifier Non-Linearities on Downlink Cell-Free Massive MIMO-OFDM Systems
\"Ozlem Tu\u{g}fe Demir, Emil Bj\"ornson
arxiv.org/abs/2507.21635

If a sitting president can direct the IRS to investigate political enemies, revoke nonprofit status from dissenting institutions, or selectively enforce tax law to reward loyalty,
the agency no longer serves the public.
It serves power.
The slow hollowing of the IRS through funding cuts, staff attrition, and the erosion of norms yields the same result:
a weakened institution unable to enforce the law, uphold equity, or hold the powerful to account.
And when th…

@arXiv_physicsplasmph_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-05-28 07:35:36

Simulations of the churning mode: toroidally symmetric plasma convection and turbulence around the X-points in a snowflake divertor
D Power, M V Umansky, V A Soukhanovskii
arxiv.org/abs/2505.21223

When, will Americans realize we are descending into dictatorship?
Trump has already silenced ABC, CBS, and Facebook,
extorting millions of dollars from them for offending him.
The job was done using bogus lawsuits and the power of the presidency.
And now it's the turn of The Wall Street Journal. -- Trump is suing the newspaper owned by his sometime supporter Rupert Murdoch.
The Wall Street Journal had the effrontery to publish a piece painful to Trump

@arXiv_mathNT_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-06-26 08:22:40

Values at non-positive integers of partially twisted multiple zeta-functions II
Driss Essouabri, Kohji Matsumoto, Simon Rutard
arxiv.org/abs/2506.20150

@midtsveen@social.linux.pizza
2025-06-18 20:45:51

When the family calls me a tankie, I just drop Rudolf Rocker’s black-and-red flag and remind them: Rocker spent his life critiquing both state capitalism and authoritarian socialism, he literally wrote book's on why real liberation means smashing all forms of state power, not trading one boss for another.
Anarcho-syndicalism: Theory and Practice

A diagonally divided red and black anarchist flag with a centered circular portrait of Rudolf Rocker, symbolizing the unity of anarcho-syndicalist and anarcho-communist ideals.

The red represents the historic socialist roots and blood of struggle, while the black signifies anarchism’s negation of state power and mourning for lost liberty.
@arXiv_condmatstatmech_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-28 08:46:41

Kibble-Zurek mechanism for dissipative discrete time crystals
Roy D. Jara Jr., Jayson G. Cosme
arxiv.org/abs/2507.18950 arxiv.org/pdf/2507.…

When he left the Soviet Union for a new life in America, the novelist never imagined he would live under another authoritarian regime.
Then Trump got back into power
... Is it time to move again?

@arXiv_quantph_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-06-11 10:16:15

Observation of Power Superbroadening of Spectral Line Profiles on IBM Quantum
Ivo S. Mihov, Nikolay V. Vitanov
arxiv.org/abs/2506.08748

This is the time to speak out, to disembed our selves from a fascist system, to place principles over profit and self-advancement.
To be what Viet Thanh Nguyen calls “disagreeable”.
Yes, of course there are risks.
But at this moment, with ICE in the streets and at our door,
when each hour another liberty is being erased,
and those who speak truth to power are being removed from TV,
from universities, from cultural centers,
when the cultural platform…

Sen. Alex Padilla says he was at the Wilshire Federal Building waiting to start a briefing with top military officials when he heard that Kristi L. Noem,
the homeland security secretary,
was holding a news conference on the federal presence there.
He asked the people escorting him if he could attend it.
Noem was in the middle of criticizing local leaders as “socialists” and “burdensome” for not coordinating more closely with the federal government
when Padilla…

Donald Trump’s deployment of the National Guard and military against protesters in Los Angeles is widely being interpreted as
a display of intimidation and state power ahead of his birthday,
when Trump will oversee a military parade in Washington, D.C. in the style of a dictator.
The president has warned that protesters in D.C. will be
“met with very heavy force.”
Democrats and civil rights groups say the president is inflaming tensions to justify further repr…

The lesson of Hungary is this:
We cannot claim to care about democracy only when it costs nothing.
Trump, like Orban, no doubt believes that everyone can be bought.
America’s elites are proving him right.
There is a Hungarian phrase I heard often: “Van az a penz” — “There’s always a price.”
If we’re serious about defending democracy, it’s not enough to hold our government accountable in court.
Lawsuits against the Trump administration are fine,
b…