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@bourgwick@heads.social
2025-11-28 02:45:01

60 years ago tonight, the merry pranksters' first informal acid test, held at ken babbs's place outside santa cruz, where the grateful dead did not play (& all purported flyers are almost certainly fake). below text from dennis mcnally's bio & i wrote about it for the 50th.

the larger world. The first of those special parties was at Ken
Babbs’s place in Soquel, near Santa Cruz, on the coast south
of Palo Alto, on November 27, 1965. Such public notice as
there was of the event came through a posting at Lee Quarn-
strom and Peter Dema’s Hip Pocket Bookstore in Soquel. The
Pranksters were joined by Allen Ginsberg and his lover, Peter
Orlovsky, and Garcia, Lesh, Weir, Sue Swanson, and Connie
Bonner among others, and the night basically involved hang-
ing out and tripp…
Kesey didn’t want to give it up, but Phil was not dissuaded,
and learned one of his early lessons in the subtleties of trip-
ping. He proceeded to gluehiseyesonKesey, and in a while
Ken got up and shoved the guitar at him. “Here.” Weir, on
the other hand, had another sort of adventure. Although he
had read “Howl,” he did not recognize Allen Ginsberg, and
saw only that he “was pretty damned amazing, the stuff he
would say and do. So I figure, okay, I'm gonna sit next to this
guy. Which was okay …

Exasperation with the United States has been building in Vietnam.
Blow by blow, it has risen with the elimination of American aid for clean energy and H.I.V. prevention,
up-and-down tariffs,
indifference to requests for a leader-to-leader meeting,
a Trump family golf development near Hanoi that has enraged local residents,
and surprises like the new tax on U.S. imports of furniture
— one of Vietnam’s priority industries for growth.
It has been 50 ye…

@pre@boing.world
2025-11-23 11:34:36
Content warning: re: bitcoin conference report

Geyser is a crowdfunding system.
Lots of history of patrons raising funds from the public for art works or public infrastructure.
Kickstarter and the like on the internet made this much easier. But it's all bank money which is conservative and restrictive. Not global. High fees and middle men.
So doing it freely with bitcoin makes some sense. Censorship resistance and global scope.
Geyser has been running and funding projects for a while. Non custodial and money goes to creators only if target reached in time, otherwise returned.
All open source in smart contracts on chain.
#bitfest #bitcoin #crowdfunding

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-11 11:44:24

Day 18: Mark Oshiro
Having just learned that Oshiro is nonbinary, they're an instant include on this list. In veering extremely heavily towards YA, and losing a spot that would have gone to an absolutely legendary mangaka, anime writer, or feminist philosopher, but "Anger is A Gift" and "Each of us a Desert" are just that good, and I'm trying to steer a bit towards towards lesser-known authors I respect.
I already mentioned "Anger is a Gift" above, but to recap, it's a painful, vivid, and beautifully honest story of queer love, loss, and protest against an oppressive system. CW for racist police murder, intergenerational trauma, and police brutality against highschool students. It's a book a lot of Americans could benefit from reading right now, and while it's fiction, it's not fantasy or sci-fi. Besides the themes and politics, the writing is just really solid, with delicate characterization and tight-plotted developments that are beautifully paced.
To me "Each of us a Desert" is maybe even more beautiful, and Oshiro leaps into a magnificent fantasy world that's richly original in its desolation, dark history, lonely characters, and mythical magic. Particularly the clearly-not-just-superscription but ambiguously-important/powerful magical elements of Oshiro's worldbuilding are a rare contrast to the usual magic-is-real-here's-how-it-works fare, and pulling that off a all as they do is a testament to their craft. The prose is wonderful, probably especially so if you speak Spanish, but I enjoyed it immensely despite only knowing a few words here and there. The rich interiority of the characters, their conflicts both with each other and within themselves, and the juxtaposition of all that against origins in cult-like ignorance allows for the delivery of a lot of wisdom and complex truths.
Between these two books, so different and yet each so powerful, Oshiro has demonstrated incredible craft and also a wide range of styles, so I'm definitely excited to read more of their work and to recommend them to others.
I'm also glad to have finally put a nonbinary author on this list; the others I had in mind won't make it at this point because there's too much genre overlap, although I'll include them in my didn't-make-it list at the end. I've now got just 2 slots left and have counted up 14 more authors that absolutely need to be mentioned, so we'll see what happens.
#20AuthorsNoMen

@thomasfuchs@hachyderm.io
2025-12-03 14:20:29

I think the root of the “AI” evil is when AI researchers in the 1960s recognized that they outrageously underestimated the complexity of the human mind.
They became humiliated by their promises that AGI was just a few years away—and then went full goblin mode that’s lasting to this day.
Some of the OG researchers took it quite badly that they stalled and weren’t in the limelight anymore.
‣ Marvin Minsky (co-founder of MIT AI lab and arguably the most important early AI bro) went on to visit Epstein’s island multiple times.
‣ Karl Steinbuch, who came up with the German term for computer science ("Informatik")—who also was a literal Nazi (and likely war criminal) in World War II—later wrote articles in ultra-right magazines about things like “equal rights rob women of their children”.
‣ John McCarthy (inventor of Lisp, co-authored document that coined the term “Artificial Intelligence”) was a staunch Republican who years later claimed (in a serious article) that “thermostats have beliefs”.
[one moment, I am receiving more information]
‣ There’s a second Epstein Island AI pioneer? Who also was Chief Learning Officer at… Trump University? That would be Roger Schank (founded one of the first AI companies in the 1980s AI boom, it even had an IPO. Of course the 1980s AI bubble burst).
Obviously all of the above received all the awards in computer science and are very revered people.

@hikingdude@mastodon.social
2025-11-16 19:56:05

We just attended another travel show. This time: #mountainbiking in #ligurien from Harald Philipp.
The visuals were pretty cool. And riding such trails UPHILL was pretty impressive, too. Definitely only doable with an ebike.

This image captures a moment from a live presentation by **Harald Philipp**, titled **"Ligurien Erfahren"** (Experiencing Liguria), held on **16.11.2025**. Harald Philipp is seen speaking on stage, with a large screen behind him displaying the event title and a stunning background image of a cyclist on a rugged coastal trail overlooking the sea.

The screen also features logos for **"Wunderfälke Events"** and **"world insight"**, indicating the event's friendly support and focus on inspiring tr…
This image captures a lively stage presentation, likely at a mountain biking or outdoor adventure event. The large screen behind the speakers showcases a dynamic scene featuring a mountain biker and a dog running through a scenic trail, symbolizing adventure and companionship in the great outdoors.

The screen is divided into three sections, each listing notable individuals in the fields of **Foto (Photography)**, **Film**, and **Rider**:
- **Foto**: Ardita Ferrari, Jens Staudt, Markus Greber, …