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@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-27 03:00:46

Day 30: Elizabeth Moon
This last spot (somehow 32 days after my last post, but oh well) was a tough decision, but Moon brings us full circle back to fantasy/sci-fi, and also back to books I enjoyed as a teenager. Her politics don't really match up to Le Guin or Jemisin, but her military experience make for books that are much more interesting than standard fantasy fare in terms of their battles & outcomes (something "A Song of Ice and Fire" achieved by cribbing from history but couldn't extrapolate nearly as well). I liked (and still mostly like) her (unironically) strong female protagonists, even if her (especially more recent) forays into "good king" territory leave something to be desired. Still, in Paksenarion the way we get to see the world from a foot-soldier's perspective before transitioning into something more is pretty special and very rare in fantasy (I love the elven ruins scene as Paks travels over the mountains as an inflection point). Battles are won or lost on tactics, shifting politics, and logistics moreso than some epic magical gimmick, which is a wonderful departure from the fantasy norm.
Her work does come with a content warning for rape, although she addresses it with more nuance and respect than any male SF/F author of her generation. Ex-evangelicals might also find her stuff hard to read, as while she's against conservative Christianity, she's very much still a Christian and that makes its way into her writing. Even if her (not bad but not radical enough) politics lead her writing into less-satisfying places at times, part of my respect for her comes from following her on Twitter for a while, where she was a pretty decent human being...
Overall, Paksenarrion is my favorite of her works, although I've enjoyed some of her sci-fi too and read the follow-up series. While it inherits some of Tolkien's baggage, Moon's ability to deeply humanize her hero and depict a believable balance between magic being real but not the answer to all problems is great.
I've reached 30 at this point, and while I've got more authors on my shortlist, I think I'll end things out tomorrow with a dump of also-rans rather than continuing to write up one per day. I may even include a man or two in that group (probably with at least non-{white cishet} perspective). Honestly, doing this challenge I first thought that sexism might have made it difficult, but here at the end I'm realizing that ironically, the misogyny that holds non-man authors to a higher standard means that (given plenty have still made it through) it's hard to think of male authors who compare with this group.
Looking back on the mostly-male authors of SF/F in my teenage years, for example, I'm now struggling to think of a single one whose work I'd recommend to my kids (having cheated and checked one of my old lists, Pratchett, Jaques, and Asimov qualify but they're outnumbered by those I'm now actively ashamed to admit I enjoyed). If I were given a choice between reading only non-men or non-woman authors for the rest of my life (yes I'm giving myself enby authors as a freebie; they're generally great) I'd very easily choose non-men. I think the only place where (to my knowledge) not enough non-men authors have been allowed through to outshine the fields of male mediocrity yet is in videogames sadly. I have a very long list of beloved games and did include some game designers here, but I'm hard-pressed to think of many other non-man game designers I'd include in the genuinely respect column (I'll include at least two tomorrow but might cheat a bit).
TL;DR: this was fun and you should do it too.
#30AuthorsNoMen

@jake4480@c.im
2025-12-26 20:10:59

Playing the new Nas x DJ Premier, and it's pretty damn good, because of course it is- it's Nas
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLdS

Days after starting his second term, Donald Trump issued a series of executive orders that targeted DEI programs and policies for elimination, decrying them as illegal and immoral.
Museums across the country scrambled to react
— and in many cases, comply.
Within days, Washington’s National Gallery of Art announced it would close its office of belonging and inclusion
and remove the words “diversity, equity, access and inclusion” from its list of values on its website. …

@thomastraynor@social.linux.pizza
2025-10-27 10:36:17

My answer is NO to AI in a browser. All I want is for a browser to go to the URL and render the page. A search site to provide me a list of sites that meet my query, not a hallucination of a list. The page that is edited by a person presenting real information and not AI slop.
And yes, I do use AI at times at work. I use it to quickly find documents, but I will do the review to see if they are relevant.

@zachleat@zachleat.com
2025-10-24 19:57:08

Huh, this piece of the WordPress drama was new to me: wordpressenginetracker.com/
How did WordPress get a list of all of the domains hosted with WPEngine? and is this count starting with a static list or is it populating with new WPEngine customers?
HMM

@smashtie@mas.to
2025-12-25 13:32:49

This is the level of prep my wife brings to Christmas lunch. Can you tell she's a scientist? As you can see, it's going well. I've been assigned a few tasks, but she mostly wants to do this herself, it seems.
#Christmas

A list of activities towards the cooking of a Christmas dinner, jotted on paper, with times for each one. At the end is "2:00: eat!"
@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-09-27 12:26:53

Day 4: Adiba Jaigirdar
Thought I'd mix things up a bit in terms of intensity & genre. Jaigirdar has written several lovely sapphic teen romances that grapple with parental acceptance in Muslim Bengali immigrant culture, along with racism and other aspects of second generation immigrant life in Dublin.
I've discovered a few other Southeast Asian authors at my local library who will appear on this list, but I'm putting Jaigirdar first because of just how enjoyable her books are, and because I generally find queer romance to be more engaging than non-queer romance. Jaigirdar's characters are sympathetic and convincing, and their problems are both dramatic and a little funny. "Hani & Ishu's Guide to Fake Dating" is probably my favorite by Jaigirdar, but I also enjoyed "The Henna Wars" and "Rani Choudhury Must Die." "A Million to One" is a bit of a departure from her other books, as historical fiction with a heist plot, but it still engages with Irish culture, immigrants, and queer romance.
#20WomenAuthors

@migueldeicaza@mastodon.social
2025-11-24 00:28:09

Update: it is no longer clear.
My current work around is to extract the list of linked files and relink my hand after egrep -v list-of-swift-syntax-symbols. What a horrible hack
mastodon.social/@Migueldeicaza

@grifferz@social.bitfolk.com
2025-11-23 15:30:31

Two extreme views of the same event (the recent Cloudflare outage):
"I didn't notice a thing and if it wasn't for chatter on IRC I would never have learned about it"
lists.nanog.org/archives/list/

@NFL@darktundra.xyz
2025-11-25 14:34:24

Brees, Rivers lead list of 2026 HOF semifinalists espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/470954

Trump insisted Comey be prosecuted for supposedly lying to Congress
—but his own administration is full of officials who lied to Congress.
Not just Trump
There's RFKjr
Hegseth
Noem
Bondi...
I can't list them, as it seems that lies are a job requirement in this administration

@ErikJonker@mastodon.social
2025-11-23 02:37:53

At least Rubio says what it is...
"US senators say Rubio told them Trump’s Ukraine peace plan is Russia’s ‘wish list’"
apnews.com/article/ukraine-pea

@paulbusch@mstdn.ca
2025-10-23 11:19:33

Good Morning #Canada
The list of abandoned towns in PEI is apparently so short that no one has produced any really scary histories. It makes sense being a small island that there isn't enough distance to truly "abandon" a settlement. Maybe a house here or there, perhaps a short street. But that means you are more likely to be living next door to a haunted location. So today, we have a list of ghostly tales from around the island that may, or may not, be myth. Remember, don't go into the old shed with all the sharp farm tools....
#CanadaIsAwesome #CanadianGhostTowns
pointseastcoastaldrive.com/sca

@thomasfuchs@hachyderm.io
2025-11-16 19:10:58

PSA about food labeling in the US
We have a gluten detection service dog because many things that should be gluten free/say they’re gluten free are not actually gluten free.
Stuff gets contaminated when growing (e.g. next to wheat field), by shared equipment, in factories, from packaging, during transport and in-store.
Every US consumer should know:
1. The list of ingredients on food isn't exhaustive
2. Allergen labeling:
a) limited to just some allergens
b) manufacturers don't actually have to test
c) "certified" foods are tested—but not continuously
d) testing only works with enough contamination
Some certifications may require batch-testing, but usually they don't.
A "certified gluten free" product may e.g. contain oats which sometimes are contaminated with gluten—but as not every batch is tested it's impossible to know unless you test yourself (hence the service dog).
Even if the product is properly batch-tested, you might get a part of the product that has the allergen in it, whereas the tested part didn't.
Or the threshold was too low (our dog can detect gluten better than any available lab testing equipment; yes, dogs are amazing).
Food products also contain ingredients that do not have to be included on the label when they're "incidental" (included in an another ingredient) or if they're considered part of the manufacturing process but not of the final product (e.g. various coatings on factory equipment).
Don't need to list flavors or specific spices either. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
As for allergens, only those responsible for ~90% of food allergies* have to be specifically declared, and they're not tested for as it's simply based on the ingredients list.
Good luck if you have other allergies.
*milk, egg, egg, fish, Crustacean shellfish, tree nuts, wheat, peanuts, soybeans

@midtsveen@social.linux.pizza
2025-11-22 20:32:13

I actually maintain a list of #Linux distributions that I bet you've never heard of, but still receive regular updates:
- paldo.org
paldo is a Upkg driven GNU/Linux distribution. It's kind of a mix o…

@mgorny@social.treehouse.systems
2025-11-24 09:26:29

Do you also find it wrong that train announcements list 3 cars in "front section of the train", 3 in "the middle", and only 2 in "the rear"? My aesthetics demands symmetric 3-2-3!

@scott@carfree.city
2025-10-23 22:43:51

The Lurie/Mandelman RV ban is still set to go into effect and tow people's homes on Nov. 1, the same day SNAP expires and at the same time federal agents are in the Bay to terrorize immigrants.
Send a letter to the mayor and BOS asking them to extend the towing deadline:

@hllizi@hespere.de
2025-11-19 15:02:18

Dear people of Brazil, I'd like to apologise for our chancellor, a man of wealth and no taste with a virtually endless list of shortcomings.
I know it's frustrating having to deal with his BS, we have to do it every day over here. And consider also how good you have it: at least you can call him what he clearly, indulgently and unapologetically is without any fear of punishment.

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-24 13:52:52

Day 28: Samira Ahmed
As foreshadowed, we're back to YA land, which represents a lot of what I've been enjoying from the library lately.
I've read "Hollow Fires", "This Book Won't Burn", and "Love, Hate, and other Filters" by Ahmed, along with "Mad, Bad, and Dangerous to Know" which is quite different. All four are teen ~romances with interesting things to say about racism & growing up as a South Asian Muslim, but whereas the first three are set in small-town Indiana, the third is set in France and includes a historical fiction angle involving Dumas and a hypothetical Muslim woman who was (in this telling) the inspiration for several Lord Byron poems.
Ahmed's novels all include a strong and overt theme of social justice, and it's refreshing to see an author not try to wade around the topic or ignore it. Her romances are complex, with imperfect protagonists and endings that aren't always "happily ever after" although they're satisfying and believable.
My library has a plethora of similar authors I've been enjoying, including Adiba Jaigirdar (who appeared earlier in this list), Sabaa Tahir ("All my Rage" is fantastic but I'm less of a fan of her fantasy stuff), Sabina Khan ("The Love and Lies of Rukhsana Ali"), and Randa Abdel-Fattah ("Does My Head Look Big In This?"; from an earlier era). Ahmed gets the spot here because I really like her politics and the way she works them into her writing. Her characters are unapologetic advocates against things like book bans, and Ahmed doesn't second-guess them or try to make things more palatable for those who want to ban books (or whatever). Her historical fiction in "Mad..." is also really cool in terms of "huh that could actually totally be true" and grappling with literary sexism from ages past.
#30AuthorsNoMen

@cjust@infosec.exchange
2025-10-16 14:09:47

#ShamelesslyStolenFromSomewhereElseOnTheInternetHonestlyICantKeepTrackOfThisStuffAnymore

The image is a humorous meme constructed from a combination of text and a photo. It features a screenshot of a Twitter post with superimposed text.

At the top of the image, there is a circular profile picture of a man with a yellow outline. Underneath is his Twitter handle and username "Mike Toole @MichaelToole". Below the profile picture, there is a list of three lines of text that read, "it's time to burn the incense," "it's time to slay the sheep," and "it's time to wake the muppets from a …
@cosmos4u@scicomm.xyz
2025-10-20 19:44:40

My first capture of comet #Lemmon 45 minutes ago! Under the most crappy conditions - as outlined in facebook.com/dan.fischer.393/p where also more pictures are shown and technical data given - but at ~4.3 mag. according to cobs.si/obs_list?id=2606 and with a highly condensed coma the comet made it through in seconds, even with a bit of tail.

@davej@dice.camp
2025-12-22 03:21:50

10 tracks randomly chosen from a list of 2112:
1. Judas Priest, “Crossfire”
2. Royal Blood, “Figure It Out”
3. Disturbed, “Down with the Sickness”
4. The Smiths, “Ask (Remix)”
5. Stone Temple Pilots, “Plush”
6. Smashing Pumpkins, “Tonight, Tonight”
7. Queen, “Princes of the Universe”
8. Hoodoo Gurus, “Like Wow—Wipeout!”
9. Dave Graney & the Coral Snakes, “You”re Just Too Hip, Baby”
10. Stone Temple Pilots, “Dead & Bloated”
…and…

@aral@mastodon.ar.al
2025-11-12 15:13:39

Turns out Kagi are assholes too. What a surprise. Is there A Very Small List of Companies That Aren’t Run By Absolute Scum somewhere? hachyderm.io/@castarco/1141172

@jake4480@c.im
2025-12-22 16:33:28

Wanted to make a list of my favorite EPs from 2025- narrowed it down to a top 10, from over 200 I'd liked and documented this year. The list contains multiple genres & I've written a brief blurb about each. Most of these I've talked about here this year. Might be something here for everyone!
Mood Bored - Too Much? (shoegaze/alt rock from the Netherlands with great female vocals - Breeders, Pixies, that dog, Throwing Muses vibes)

@datascience@genomic.social
2025-10-16 10:00:01

Is it hard to keep up with all the awesome extensions and tools for quarto? Check here for an extensive list of resources: #quarto

@kctipton@mas.to
2025-12-15 20:26:43

Texas is making a list of transgender Texans using DMV data | KUT Radio, Austin's NPR Station kut.org/politics/2025-12-15/te

@yaya@jorts.horse
2025-10-16 17:44:50

hello my #fuckaas friends in my phone
you know about mastodon. you may have heard of lemmy, the fedi equivalent of reddit, or pixelfed, the fedi equivalent of Instagram, or bookwyrm, the Goodreads equivalent.
but did you know there's like 8 bajillion other things in the fediverse that you can check out and start using in place of corporate-captured platforms? it's true!

@aredridel@kolektiva.social
2025-11-28 16:19:02
Content warning: open source whinging

Ugh why is this always the way. I evaluated like 25 authentication servers for a small scale web project — I do want to support things like OIDC and Passkeys, so this is not something I really want to make myself like the old days of “use crypt() on the passwords and just make a simple database”.
5 of them are just dev mode garbage that will never see the light of day as a thing people use.
2 of them are home network nonsense for people who want enterprise login for their family, but where One Nerd controls the whole user-list.
15 of them are freemium "open source" where they withhold features for their enterprise tier and make them so unfortunately difficult to deploy, all requiring postgresql databases and a complex containerization setup and helm charts and oh so much.
and then there's kanidm, which is great except its opinions make it completely unusable for a community project, it's really more trying to fit the ‘enterprise unix authentication' space. Kudos to them for communicating it but it's the wrong tool, even if it is really good.
And then there's rauthy. Which is exactly what I want, well built and delightful, uses a lightweight embedded database, and even has a peer-to-peer sync for scalability. But customizing it is going to be a lesson in building it from source repeatedly, and its configuration is just a bit strange, and its frontend is extremely Backend Developer Wrote A Web UI. I guess I got a second project. And maybe a third to make debian packages of it.
Yet it really is the best of the options _by far_.
NLNet supported projects continue to punch above their weight class.

@relcfp@mastodon.social
2025-10-22 16:06:06

CFP> Intrinsic Perfection (UHM, 12–13 March 2026) Update of the links
ift.tt/OI7mxfF
H-Diplo Roundtable XXV-12 on Fall, _Dien Bien Phu: Un coin d’Enfer_ H-Diplo Roundtable…
via Input 4 RELCFP

@thek3nger@mastodon.social
2025-12-06 13:18:56

In Part 2 I did a REAL MESS. But surprisingly, it works in 10 milliseconds. Time to make this more presentable, I guess.
(I don't particularly like parse-based challenges)
I just completed "Trash Compactor" - Day 6 - Advent of Code 2025 #AdventOfCode

  let numbers =
    lines
    |> list.map(string.to_graphemes)
    |> list.transpose
    |> list.chunk(last_is_operator)
    |> list.sized_chunk(2)
    |> list.map(list.flatten)
    |> list.map(fn(c) { list.map(c, fn(d) { list.take(d, lines_number) }) })
    |> list.map(fn(c) { list.map(c, string.concat) })
    |> list.map(fn(c) { list.map(c, fn(d) { string.trim(d) }) })
    |> list.map(fn(c) { list.map(c, fn(d) { int.parse(d) }) })
    &#…
@metacurity@infosec.exchange
2025-11-04 19:58:57

therecord.media/north-korea-us
Treasury sanctions 8 for laundering North Korea earnings from cybercrime, IT worker scheme

@robpike@hachyderm.io
2025-10-13 23:32:17

Does anyone know how to make iOS (26 is what I run, but 18 has it too) accept a new default search engine? It appears that in some parts of the world you can add a search engine, but at least in Australia the phone comes without that ability. One can only choose from a short list, with no option to add to the list.
Is there a workaround? The dammits are getting in my way.

@Xavier@infosec.exchange
2025-11-16 01:20:20

Wow, what a wonderful day at @… ! They put on a great conference and I was honored to have been part of it. I held a privacy workshop and gave a #fedvierse talk. I just posted the worksheets from the workshop and the presentation from the talk over on the …

he image shows a conference room with a person standing at a podium giving a presentation. Two large screens display identical slides titled “Getting Started on the Fediverse”. In the foreground, a table is set with microphones and water bottles, and several people are seated facing the presenter. An American flag is partially visible in the left corner of the frame. 

The slides list the following points:

    “Pick a username”
    “Fill out your profile”
    “Set privacy preferences and enabl…
The image shows a person standing at a podium giving a presentation in a lecture hall. Three large screens behind the podium display presentation slides with bullet-point lists. Several people are seated in rows of chairs facing the podium, appearing to be listening to the presentation.
The image shows a person standing at a podium giving a presentation in a lecture hall. Three large screens behind the podium display presentation slides with bullet-point lists. Several people are seated in rows of chairs facing the podium, appearing to be listening to the presentation. 

The left screen reads "4. Hosting" with sub-points "Self Hosting", "Cloud Hosting", "Dedicated Hosting" and "Bare Metal Hosting". The center screen reads "Running Your Own Server" with sub-points "1. Think abo…
@adulau@infosec.exchange
2025-11-03 05:46:21

I think the best summary until now about Post-quantum cryptography is from Peter Gutmann in the cryptography mailing-list.

Given that after 20 years and hundreds of millions of dollars spent researchers have yet to demonstrate a single legitimate cryptanalysis result using a quantum physics experiment, it's a bit like arguing over which brand of unicorn repellent is the most cromulent.

The current state of things in terms of pure vs. hybrid systems seems to be:

- …
iang via cryptography <cryptography at metzdowd.com> quotes:

>The problem in a nutshell. Surveillance agency NSA and its partner GCHQ are
>trying to have standards—development organizations endorse weakening ECC+PQ
>down to just PQ.

Given that after 20 years and hundreds of millions of dollars spent
researchers have yet to demonstrate a single legitimate cryptanalysis result
using a quantum physics experiment, it's a bit like arguing over which brand
of unicorn repellent is the most cromulent…
@jake4480@c.im
2025-11-20 13:08:15

Ugh the new Funeral Vomit got pushed to December 19 from the 10th. Which makes more sense, probably, since it's a Friday and not the Wednesday of the 10th, but it'll bump my favorite 20 of the year list to the next week in December probably. At least til after I've heard it.
The crazy thing is, I already have five things I'm looking forward to in January of the new year 🤯

Screenshot of spreadsheet rows with Voidhammer, Architectural Genocide, Casket, Sacri Suoni, and Invictus releases on it that come out January 2026
@blakes7bot@mas.torpidity.net
2025-10-16 12:19:48

Series A, Episode 03 - Cygnus Alpha
AVON: I have to get rid of Blake first. You're next on my list.
JENNA: That would have been very disarming, if I didn't know that you meant it.
[Jenna begins to leave. She turns at the bottom of the stairs]
blake.torpidity.net/m/103/358

Claude Sonnet 4.0 describes the image as: "I can see this appears to be from a science fiction television production, likely from the late 1970s or early 1980s based on the styling and production values. The scene shows two characters in what appears to be an intimate or tense moment - a dark-haired man in black clothing facing a blonde woman with an elaborate curled hairstyle typical of that era. The setting appears to be some kind of futuristic interior space, possibly a spacecraft or station…
@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-20 11:16:23

Day 26: Emily Short
If you know who Short is, you know exactly why she's on this list. If you don't, you're probably in the majority. She's an absolutely legendary author within the interactive fiction (IF) community, which gets somewhat pigeonholed by stuff like Zork when there's actually a huge range of stuff in the medium some of which isn't even puzzle-focused, and Short has been writing & coding on the bleeding edge of things for decades.
I was lucky enough to be introduced to Short's work in graduate school, where we played "Galatea" as part of an interactive fiction class. Short uses a lot of clever parser tricks to make your conversation with a statue feel very fluid and conversational, giving to contemporary audiences a great example of how vibrant interaction with a well-designed agent can be in contrast to an LLM, if you're willing to put in some work on bespoke parsing & responses (although the user does need to know basic IF conventions). While I didn't explore the full range of Galatea's many possible outcomes, it left a strong impression on me as a vision for what IF could be besides dorky puzzles, and I think that "visionary" is a great term to describe Short.
If you'd like you get a feel for her (very early) work, you can play Galatea here: #30AuthorsNoMen

@gray17@mastodon.social
2025-10-18 15:46:47

Inconsensual
Considering generative-AI disregard
of continuity in images and video,
I wonder if I am now
Old Man Yells At Cloud.
Does continuity matter?
In IMDB's list of goofs for a movie,
continuity is dull trivia:
The half-empty glass at 4:33 is
half full in the next scene.
Maybe this detail is a clue
that the perp has already
killed his lawyer
without the lawyer realizing it.
But subtlety is for lovers,

@Mediagazer@mstdn.social
2025-12-01 16:01:05

The White House's "media bias" page has "Media Offender of the Week" and "Hall of Shame" sections, with CBS News making the inaugural Media Offenders list (Dominic Patten/Deadline)
deadline.com/2025/11/trump-med

@arXiv_csLG_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-12-22 13:54:35

Replaced article(s) found for cs.LG. arxiv.org/list/cs.LG/new
[2/5]:
- The Diffusion Duality
Sahoo, Deschenaux, Gokaslan, Wang, Chiu, Kuleshov
arxiv.org/abs/2506.10892 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- Multimodal Representation Learning and Fusion
Jin, Ge, Xie, Luo, Song, Bi, Liang, Guan, Yeong, Song, Hao
arxiv.org/abs/2506.20494 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- The kernel of graph indices for vector search
Mariano Tepper, Ted Willke
arxiv.org/abs/2506.20584 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- OptScale: Probabilistic Optimality for Inference-time Scaling
Youkang Wang, Jian Wang, Rubing Chen, Xiao-Yong Wei
arxiv.org/abs/2506.22376 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- Boosting Revisited: Benchmarking and Advancing LP-Based Ensemble Methods
Fabian Akkerman, Julien Ferry, Christian Artigues, Emmanuel Hebrard, Thibaut Vidal
arxiv.org/abs/2507.18242 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- MolMark: Safeguarding Molecular Structures through Learnable Atom-Level Watermarking
Runwen Hu, Peilin Chen, Keyan Ding, Shiqi Wang
arxiv.org/abs/2508.17702 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- Dual-Distilled Heterogeneous Federated Learning with Adaptive Margins for Trainable Global Protot...
Fatema Siddika, Md Anwar Hossen, Wensheng Zhang, Anuj Sharma, Juan Pablo Mu\~noz, Ali Jannesari
arxiv.org/abs/2508.19009 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- STDiff: A State Transition Diffusion Framework for Time Series Imputation in Industrial Systems
Gary Simethy, Daniel Ortiz-Arroyo, Petar Durdevic
arxiv.org/abs/2508.19011 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- EEGDM: Learning EEG Representation with Latent Diffusion Model
Shaocong Wang, Tong Liu, Yihan Li, Ming Li, Kairui Wen, Pei Yang, Wenqi Ji, Minjing Yu, Yong-Jin Liu
arxiv.org/abs/2508.20705 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- Data-Free Continual Learning of Server Models in Model-Heterogeneous Cloud-Device Collaboration
Xiao Zhang, Zengzhe Chen, Yuan Yuan, Yifei Zou, Fuzhen Zhuang, Wenyu Jiao, Yuke Wang, Dongxiao Yu
arxiv.org/abs/2509.25977 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- Fine-Tuning Masked Diffusion for Provable Self-Correction
Jaeyeon Kim, Seunggeun Kim, Taekyun Lee, David Z. Pan, Hyeji Kim, Sham Kakade, Sitan Chen
arxiv.org/abs/2510.01384 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- A Generic Machine Learning Framework for Radio Frequency Fingerprinting
Alex Hiles, Bashar I. Ahmad
arxiv.org/abs/2510.09775 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- ASecond-Order SpikingSSM for Wearables
Kartikay Agrawal, Abhijeet Vikram, Vedant Sharma, Vaishnavi Nagabhushana, Ayon Borthakur
arxiv.org/abs/2510.14386 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- Utility-Diversity Aware Online Batch Selection for LLM Supervised Fine-tuning
Heming Zou, Yixiu Mao, Yun Qu, Qi Wang, Xiangyang Ji
arxiv.org/abs/2510.16882 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- Seeing Structural Failure Before it Happens: An Image-Based Physics-Informed Neural Network (PINN...
Omer Jauhar Khan, Sudais Khan, Hafeez Anwar, Shahzeb Khan, Shams Ul Arifeen
arxiv.org/abs/2510.23117 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- Training Deep Physics-Informed Kolmogorov-Arnold Networks
Spyros Rigas, Fotios Anagnostopoulos, Michalis Papachristou, Georgios Alexandridis
arxiv.org/abs/2510.23501 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- Semi-Supervised Preference Optimization with Limited Feedback
Seonggyun Lee, Sungjun Lim, Seojin Park, Soeun Cheon, Kyungwoo Song
arxiv.org/abs/2511.00040 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- Towards Causal Market Simulators
Dennis Thumm, Luis Ontaneda Mijares
arxiv.org/abs/2511.04469 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- Incremental Generation is Necessary and Sufficient for Universality in Flow-Based Modelling
Hossein Rouhvarzi, Anastasis Kratsios
arxiv.org/abs/2511.09902 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- Optimizing Mixture of Block Attention
Guangxuan Xiao, Junxian Guo, Kasra Mazaheri, Song Han
arxiv.org/abs/2511.11571 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
- Assessing Automated Fact-Checking for Medical LLM Responses with Knowledge Graphs
Shasha Zhou, Mingyu Huang, Jack Cole, Charles Britton, Ming Yin, Jan Wolber, Ke Li
arxiv.org/abs/2511.12817 mastoxiv.page/@arXiv_csLG_bot/
toXiv_bot_toot

@pre@boing.world
2025-11-23 00:08:23
Content warning: re: bitcoin conference report

Of course it's not only the money which is broken.
The music industry is also very crappy. Major pop stars rake in billions while most artists starve. There's only three record companies left, acting as gate keepers determining which sings get the payola to get radio play and Spotify basically gave up paying small artists in order to give Joe Rogan hundreds of millions of dollars.
Terrible situation.
So can bitcoin and lightning fix this?
Thus the after party here in Manchester.
Musicians and rappers at the event embrace V4V, value for value. Busking on the internet. Payment links on screen and on the live stream as they play.
Ainsley Costello tells us that her first song on fountain.fm made her a million sats, way more than any Spotify stream could make even if they still paid small artists.
She played us that song and then a whole range of artists took to the stage, live streamed over nostr, with donations coming in from all over the world.
All of them were talented and entertaining, but in particular Green Sands were tight and energetic and rocking, Edwin Williamson was deep and baritone and country, Roger 9000 really pumped the crowd with his bitcoin based songs and great tiny digital guitar and The Crypto raptor gets a special mention.
It was a really fun party, with musicians who all believe there is a better way than the terrible music industry.
Fast change overs and short sets means there were like ten acts in four hours among a friendly crowd in a dirty dive bar who all shared this common cause.
Full act list, all of whom are with checking out.
Ainsley Costello
The crypto raptor
Andy prince
Green sands
Edwin Williamson
Nathan abbot
G o l d
Longy
Roger 9000
Fable
#bitfest #music #v4v #bitcoin

@jtk@infosec.exchange
2025-12-20 03:16:06

When you're trying to get #Google to help them fix a problem they have in relaying an email to a list (they are forwarding as if it they are originating your non-GMail email, thus incurring an SPF failure) their helpful support team to the rescue (see image attached).
FYI... the second thing they want is a screen cap of the client SMTP config.
Very temped to send a screenshot wit…

Thank you for reaching out to Google Workspace Support. This is Jolina, and | hope this message finds you well

Thank you for your patience as we look into the issues you've been experiencing with your email integration.

To help our technical team pinpoint exactly why the connection is failing, we need a bit more visibility into how your third-party application is communicating with our servers. Could you please provide the following two items?

A Screen Recording: Please record your scre…
@andres4ny@social.ridetrans.it
2025-11-05 05:41:10

I was looking for my dishwasher manual. I noticed next to the manual, a link that said "Free Open Source Software". Curious, I clicked on it, and it's a long list of licenses and copyright information that is used in the dishwasher. Ctrl-F, and sure enough - my name's on the list.
I feel like I should have gotten a discount on the dishwasher, or at the very least access to its firmware source code! 🤠

Copyright (c) 2010-2011  Andres Salomon dilinger@queued.net
Copyright (c) 2007  Andres Salomon dilinger@debian.org
Copyright (c) 2010  Andres Salomon dilinger@queued.net
Copyright 2007-2008  Andres Salomon dilinger@debian.org
@njamster@mastodon.gamedev.place
2025-10-13 16:16:26

In case you missed it (like me, up until this point): The "Made with Godot" Steam curator reached its limit (of 2000 games), so there's a second one now: store.steampowered.com/curator

@publicvoit@graz.social
2025-10-12 11:21:45

Interesting: I was unsure if I should buy a 2nd hand OLED computer monitor for a specific price and if I really should because it's some kind of luxury for a few hundred Euros.
So I asked ChatGPT for (1) estimating a fair price given all the relevant information about that and then (2) describing my situation and letting it generate a /- list (to check if I have overseen an aspect) and a recommendation for buy/not buy.
The result was fascinating to me. One of the better use-…

@jswright61@ruby.social
2025-12-14 19:25:37

It was approaching time to renew my Global Entry Membership. One of the questions required for renewal was to list the countries I’ve been to since 2020.
Each country visited had to be selected from a list. The UI was excellent. I could type a substring and the options would be limited to countries containing that substring ✅. I couldn’t find Turkey. Searched Tu, scrolled the unfiltered list no Turkey.
WHY?

@arXiv_csIT_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-10-13 13:04:09

Replaced article(s) found for cs.IT. arxiv.org/list/cs.IT/new
[1/1]:
- On the Capacity of Vector Linear Computation over a Noiseless Quantum Multiple Access Channel wit...
Yuhang Yao, Syed A. Jafar

@bourgwick@heads.social
2025-11-17 23:31:21

50 years ago tonight, the jerry garcia band at keystone #berkeley, seemingly a late addition to the show, replacing delta wires.
4 songs from middle of 2nd set included on “let it rock”:

@hex@kolektiva.social
2025-10-30 19:36:00

As a security engineer, whenever anyone talks about a control it's always important to ask "by what mechanism?"
> "Oh, that can't happen because we have a system to stop it."
By what mechanism?
> "We have documentation that says...."
Yeah, that's not a mechanism.
People keep saying, "Trump can't do that!" But like... by what mechanism?
> "The constitution says..."
Yeah... a documented list of rules is not self-enforcing. What is the mechanism?
What makes this impossible? Oh, it's possible under certain conditions? Oh, it's always possible and you're completely relying on the idea that there will never be a malicious actor? Yeah, that's gonna get exploited. Oh shit, now you're owned.
What do you do with a system that's completely owned? Once it's compromised it can never be trusted again. What would you tell a client who told you, "Patching is really hard, so we're just gonna ban the attacker's IP."
What, you're not even gonna reinstall?
I assume we've all had the "burn everything down and start again" client. I wonder how many of us thought we would see the US government ask for them to hold it's beer.
#USPol

@compfu@mograph.social
2025-12-17 12:38:50

Haven‘t heard of Trillium but it looks cool. A self-hosted alternative to my Trello board that I‘m just using as a todo list and more and more like a note-taking app anyways. 90% of the UI widgets in Trello are just noise for me. mastodon.art/@NiwlCraft/115734

@grumpybozo@toad.social
2025-10-09 01:04:19

This is amazing. As a kid when we would do the summer pilgrimage from Chicago and later St. Louis to Onekama and Empire, the piece of the trip around the southeast side of Lake Muskegon was always a disturbing one. Smelly, swampy, and chronically brown.
I still would not swim in it, but the fact that it has come off the list of polluted waters is fabulous.
#Michigan

@laimis@mstdn.social
2025-10-06 21:27:24

Solid list:
scotthyoung.com/blog/2025/10/0
Don't run through LLM, it's already a very concise list. Take time and look through it.

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-16 07:22:11

Day 23: Thi Bui
Indirect CW: parental neglect, war, intergenerational trauma
Bui is the author of "The Best We Could Do", a graphic memoir which explores her relationship with her parents and unpacks some of the intergenerational trauma coming out of the Vietnam War. It has a lot of wisdom to offer about both dealing with troubled parents as a 1.5th-generation immigrant, and it delves deeply into her parents' histories in Vietnam and the complexities of the situation there both in the north and in the south. It's beautifully illustrated and very nicely plotted together given all the disparate threads it is working with.
I haven't read any of Bui's other work, but it looks like she's published a picture book for kids as well as a series of short comics during the pandemic. Besides Oseman who also writes non-illustrated fiction and the two manga artists Ice mentioned, Bui is the first graphic novel author I've included here, but I've actually got quite a few of them in my longer list, one of whom may make it into the 30 I'll include in this thread. These days I'm reading a bunch of graphic novels since they're easy to get through, and the variety of stories and perspectives in that space is wonderful these days, with a huge array of indie stuff that probably never would have gotten off the ground in traditional publishing/comics spaces.
#30AuthorsNoMen

@arXiv_statML_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-10-09 09:41:01

Root Cause Analysis of Outliers in Unknown Cyclic Graphs
Daniela Schkoda, Dominik Janzing
arxiv.org/abs/2510.06995 arxiv.org/pdf/2510.06995…

@hikingdude@mastodon.social
2025-11-27 20:34:56

Updated my list what I moved away from BigTech. To be honest: when I started it, I didn't expect the amount of time & energy it takes to get out.
Therefore I regard it as crucial to just do it step by step. Otherwise you might get overwhelmed. And some nasty dependencies will just show up along the way ... but it's a nice hobby!

@hanno@mastodon.social
2025-11-06 09:56:00

Is Enerkem's Waste Gasification technology a Failure or a promising Climate Solution?🗑️💨♨️🏭
Gasification of waste and biomass🪵 could be an enormously helpful tool to make valuable circular or renewable chemicals. Yet, the list of failed gasification projects is long.
Enerkem looked like it had finally unlocked successful waste gasification, with the world's only waste-to-Methanol/Ethanol plant operating in Edmonton, Canada🇨🇦, since 2014. But in early 2024, it was shut down.…

@adulau@infosec.exchange
2025-11-18 11:29:36

While testing some new misp-modules, such as the OpenAPI interface, I discovered a strange behavior in Firefox when trying to reach TCP port 6666, which is the default port used by misp-modules.
It seems Firefox blocks access to a predefined list of TCP ports, and this has been in place for quite some time, as you can see in the commit log.
If you want to override the blocked port list, there is an obscure setting called network.security.ports.banned.override.

@cheryanne@aus.social
2025-12-14 00:17:36

It's another Sunday in suburbia.
We've been for our coffee walk and on the way popped into one of the local IGA stores to pick up something on special.
I've done the washing and cleaned the bathroom.
That's my entire list done for the day.
Husband will be making hamburgers on the bbq for lunch.
I really like Sundays.
#Sunday

@arXiv_mathCO_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-10-06 08:21:59

Two Proofs of the Hamiltonian Cycle Identity
Hamilton Sawczuk, Edinah Gnang
arxiv.org/abs/2510.02473 arxiv.org/pdf/2510.02473

@newsie@darktundra.xyz
2025-11-04 18:28:33

Treasury sanctions 8 for laundering North Korea earnings from cybercrime, IT worker scheme therecord.media/north-korea-us

@relcfp@mastodon.social
2025-10-21 06:05:27

CFP> Intrinsic Perfection (UHM, 12–13 March 2026) Update of the links
ift.tt/WwDx1u8
Prof. Ruth Halperin-Kaddari, LLM, JSD: "Recognition and Justice for Victims of Sexual Violence in…
via Input 4 RELCFP

@mela@zusammenkunft.net
2025-10-10 21:45:20

Scenes from the wannabe-VA-HQ:
Me: "Hey, I only now realized you've added a custom emoji to our server."
Husband: "I did?"
Me: "Yeah, look here "
*A moment later*
Husband: *mumbles* "But I can't find it."
Me: "Show me."
*Is shown a list of emojis sans the custom emoji*
Me: "You are on Mastodon, I'm on Discord."

@scott@carfree.city
2025-11-14 03:27:31

Lurie admin "blamed the plan to stall housing at 101 Hyde on the state’s designation of the Tenderloin as a low-resourced area, which puts it down on the priority list for state funding."
SF has the third most billionaires of any city in the world. One of them is our mayor. Not having funds for affordable housing is a choice.

@ripienaar@devco.social
2025-12-01 12:58:50

Every time I try to use Obsidian I just dont understand how anyone can use this fucking editor?
Who thinks opening a quote with ``` should then visually start a quote block and put the ``` inside the text of the quote block? And then when you remove the ``` it removes the quote block?
Or when you make a "*" bullet list it visually makes a bullet list but then also put your bullet in the bullet list which you then have to remove?
And that's in "source"…

@memeorandum@universeodon.com
2025-11-06 08:10:55

FAA says it's cutting thousands of flights a day starting this week due to shutdown. Here's the list of airports where flights are set to be reduced (ABC News)
abcnews.go.com/US/flight-capac
memeorandum.com/251106/p2#a251

@stefanlaser@social.tchncs.de
2025-10-29 19:49:02

not on my list of expected developments: Ex-Intel boss Gelsinger now leads a #Christian #AI company
"We’re not trying to take a theological position: we’re building a technology platform. 🧐"

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-14 20:21:12

Day 21: Aya Yoshinaga
I'm actually generally much less aware of the creators involved in the anime I watch, for a number of reasons, and the few anime directors I could name without looking them up were all men before I started this list. I've now got a short list of anime directors/writers who are women, and the first I'll include here is Yoshinaga, in part because she was pivotal to one of my favorite lesser-known anime, "Kurau Phantom Memory". It was actually one of the first anime I watched ever, but I didn't like it just because of that, since I've rewatched it at least twice and still regard it highly. It's got a pretty cool science fiction setting, an extremely cool barely-comprehensible alien race, a female protagonist who is not sexualized and not subjected to romance, and it centers a platonic relationship torn apart by technological hubris. Very "cool seinen stuff that wouldn't make it past the focus groups today" stuff.
Besides Kurau, Yoshinaga has worked on other great stuff like Golden Kamuy, Azumanga Daioh, Durarara, and Fullmetal Alchemist, and when you see a correlation like that between well-written shows and the same writer showing up again and again, it's clear there's talent there, even if most of these are manga-based.
Probably going to circle back to at least one more anime writer, but for tomorrow I'll move on to manga probably, since I want to space out all my YA enthusiasm a bit.
#30AuthorsNoMen

@blakes7bot@mas.torpidity.net
2025-10-13 09:08:50

Series C, Episode 08 - Rumours of Death
TARRANT: You took your time.
AVON: It was necessary.
TARRANT: Is it done?
AVON: Yes, but it isn't finished.
VILA: Wonderful. Who's next on your list? Servalan?
AVON: [Inserts key] Orac.
blake.torpidity.net/m/308/306

Claude Sonnet 4.0 describes the image as: "This scene appears to be set in a futuristic interior, likely aboard a spacecraft, with characteristic metallic wall panels and angular architecture typical of science fiction productions from this era. Two men are engaged in what appears to be a tense confrontation. One figure is dressed in period-style clothing with ornate brown leather studded with metal details over a white shirt, while the other wears dark, fitted clothing with a high collar. The …
@davej@dice.camp
2025-12-20 01:55:34

I should steal junk food. Copy that.
Love the scare acronym, BTW. Y’know, I might consider taking this article seriously if they hadn't plastered it with inline clickbait ads encouraging me to wrap my doorknobs in tinfoil. #meeja #jermalisms

The Telegraph

The 10 ultra-processed foods you should never buy again

A new analysis has linked UPFs to harm in every major organ. Our experts tell us which ones to strike off the shopping list for good
A (presumably AI-generated) image of a hand reaching for a doorknob wrapped in tinfoil, from “LifeSorted 101”.

The caption reads: “Wrap Aluminum Foil Around Your Doorknob When Alone (Here's Why)”.
@bourgwick@heads.social
2025-11-17 23:31:21

50 years ago tonight, the jerry garcia band at keystone #berkeley, seemingly a late addition to the show, replacing delta wires.
4 songs from middle of 2nd set included on “let it rock”:

J-card for Jerry Garcia Band at Keystone
@zachleat@zachleat.com
2025-11-03 16:21:34

@… I am still maintaining it (last round of work happened in August of this year) even if it isn’t top of the list right at this moment
fediverse.zachleat.com/@zachle

A leaked memo by U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi
directs the Justice Department and FBI to ❌compile a list of groups that may be labeled
“domestic terrorism” organizations
- based on political views related to immigration, gender and U.S. policy.
The memo was obtained by independent investigative journalist Ken Klippenstein,
who joins us to discuss how it expands on Donald Trump’s "NSPM-7 directive" following the assassination of Charlie Kirk,
--…

@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

@arXiv_csIT_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-10-10 13:03:33

Crosslisted article(s) found for cs.IT. arxiv.org/list/cs.IT/new
[1/1]:
- Simulation of Quantum Repeater Networks under Decoherence and Purification Constraints
Wenhan Li, Shiyu Zhang

@cjust@infosec.exchange
2025-11-18 02:02:20

I guess we should probably add #Clankerslop and #FurryPorn to Cypher's list
#ShamelesslyStolenFromSomewhereElseOnTheInternetHonestlyICantKeepTrackOfThisStuffAnymore

The image is a meme referencing a scene from the movie "The Matrix". It features a screenshot with text overlaid.

The scene appears to be set in a dimly lit, high-tech environment. Two figures are present. On the right, a man with a shaved head and a small mustache is visible. He is angled slightly towards the left of the frame, looking at the other person with a slight smile. The other person is mostly obscured, only their silhouette is visible on the left side, facing the man.

Behind the ma…
@grifferz@social.bitfolk.com
2025-11-05 19:31:36
Content warning: uspol

"A US Army website for its bases in Bavaria, Germany published a list of food banks in the area that could help soldiers and staff as part of its “Shutdown Guidance,” the subtext being that soldiers and base employees might need to obtain free food from German government services during the government shutdown."

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-09 13:27:14

Day 16: Mayra Cuevas & Marie Marquardt
Okay so this is cheating, but they're co-authors of multiple books together, and there's no way for me to separate their contributions... I've already got too many authors I'd like to list, so why not?
I read their book "Does My Body Offend You?" and absolutely loved it; it's a celebration of teen activism while also being a deep exploration of feminist issues through practical situations that bring out the complicated side of things, which the authors refuse to reduce back to a simple formulaic answer. It has a supporting cast of appropriately-complex male characters that help in exploring the nuances of issues like the line between female empowerment & male gratification, and it brings race and macho culture into the conversion as well.
CW for sexual harassment & deep discussion of the resultant trauma.
I'll cheat again here to sneak in mention of two male authors whose work resonates with theirs: Mark Oshiro's "Anger is a Gift" has a more pessimistic/complex take on teen activism along with a gay romance (CW for racist cop murder), while Jeremy Whitley's graphic novel "Navigating With You" deals with queer romance & disability, while having a main character pairing that echoes those from "Does My Body Offend You?" in a lot of ways. Another connection (to non-men authors this time) is with "Go With the Flow" by Lily Williams and Karen Schneemann. Their graphic novel about teen activism and periods is a bit more didactic and has a much lighter tone, but it does necessarily have some overlapping themes.
To bring it back to Cuevas & Marquhardt, their writing is great and their ability to discuss such complex topics with such nuance, all wrapped up in a story that feels completely natural, is amazing to me, and makes their book feel like one of the most valuable to recommend to others.
In writing this I've realized a grave oversight in the list so far that I'll have to correct tomorrow, but I'm quickly running out of days. The didn't-quite-make-it list is going to be full of more excellent authors, and I'm honestly starting to wonder whether it might actually be harder to name 20 male authors I respect now that I've found the sense to be mostly somewhere between disgusted and disappointed with so many of the male authors I enjoyed as a teen.
#20AuthorsNoMen (cheating a bit)

@migueldeicaza@mastodon.social
2025-09-28 16:02:19

In Xogot parts of the UI just host the native Godot elements, you can still see them every once in a while. Most of the time they are ok, but the interaction is obnoxious on touch and small displays.
There are two large ones that I was hoping nobody would use, so I wouldn’t have to rewrite them.
But it looks like the VisualShader editor and the Theme Editor are next on the list of UI rewrites.

@relcfp@mastodon.social
2025-10-21 13:09:12

CFP> Intrinsic Perfection (UHM, 12–13 March 2026) Update of the links #acrel networks.h-net.org/group/annou

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-15 12:08:42

Day 22: Yuki Urushibara
I've got a few more mangaka left on my short list, and might very well get to at least one more, but Urushibara is the author of Mushishi and anyone who knows either the manga or anime understands immediately why she appears here.
Mushishi is a "seinen" anime, which means it's written for adults, not children or teenagers (although it's very accessible for all ages). It deals with a vast array of life's circumstances through the lens of a traveling mushi expert and the various whimsical supernatural creatures he is called on to deal with. He's not an exorcist though, instead understanding that humans must live in harmony with the mushi, and working like an ecologist to sort things out. As is probably obvious, Urushibara is an incredible world-builder; she's also a top-notch artist and above all, her stories are overflowing with kindness, humanity, and respect for the natural world.
Besides Mushishi, I've read "Suiiki", and it's one of the few manga I stumbled through in the original Japanese, which says a lot given my limited reading vocabulary (and the fact that it doesn't include rubi). It weaves the supernatural into a story of childhood innocence and curiosity in a lovely way.
Much like Shirahama who I mentioned earlier, Urushibara's stories are full of gentle wisdom for all ages, but Urushibara's work is quieter and less dramatic, with an adult main character confident in his expertise instead of a young-and-learning protagonist.
#30AuthorsNoMen

@arXiv_mathCO_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-09-30 10:54:51

An Ohba-like Result for Flexible List Coloring
Michael C. Bowdoin, Yanghong Chi, Christian B. Ellington, Bella Ives, Seoju Lee, Fennec Morrissette, Jeffrey A. Mudrock
arxiv.org/abs/2509.24013

@metacurity@infosec.exchange
2025-10-29 12:35:07

We need to stop the endless reporting of whatever claims cybercriminal threat actors make on their leak sites because, in many (most?) cases, they are untrue, and yet so many outlets report them anyway.
In this case, HSBC denies the breach, and yet that doesn't stop folks from writing "news" reports about it. These outlets are taking the frequently false word of cybercriminals at face value and clogging up my news feeds.

A list of cyber publications that are reporting an unverified breach at HSBC despite HSBC's denials simply because some cybercriminals said so.
@jake4480@c.im
2025-10-31 21:58:59

Today (October 31) in 1980, The Smithereens released their debut 4 song EP 'Girls About Town'. The four songs were also included on 'Attack of the Smithereens', one of their compilations. Great bunch of songs here. It didn't have them in a playlist on YouTube, so I made one.

The cover of the Smithereens' Girls About Town EP, pink, red, gal stuff
The back of the Girls About Town EP. Song listing, band logo, check the band in the letters!
Side 1 of the Girls About Town EP
Side 2 of the Girls About Town EP

The atmosphere of fear surrounding Trump’s cult of personality has kept Republicans from criticizing him
even when they think he’s wrong.
But consider the list of issues on which notable Republican officeholders and influencers are now breaking with Trump,
or at the very least fighting amongst themselves in ways that weaken his movement:
After months of resisting the release of the Epstein files, Trump faced a revolt from his own party in Congress,
where both ho…

@davej@dice.camp
2025-12-15 02:57:32

It's Monday. I have 2107 tracks on my playlist. I’m going to list 10 of them at random:
1. Afrojack & Saymyname, “Hot”
2. Propellerheads, “Crash!”
3. Bloodywood, “Punjabi Metal”
4. Cypress Hill, “Dr Greenthumb”
5. Jon English, “Hollywood Seven”
6. Basement Jaxx, “Get Me Off”
7. The Cure, “This is a Lie”
8. E-Klektik, “Maracana Madness”
9. Subcarpați, “Underground Folclor”
10. The Beatles, “I am the Walrus”
And then I’ll slap a …

@arXiv_csIT_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-10-06 11:46:42

Replaced article(s) found for cs.IT. arxiv.org/list/cs.IT/new
[1/1]:
- Algorithmic randomness and the weak merging of computable probability measures
Simon M. Huttegger, Sean Walsh, Francesca Zaffora Blando

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-13 07:16:11

Day 20: bell hooks.
Despite having decided to continue to 30, number 20 feels important, and hooks gets the spot in part because I haven't yet included a non-fiction feminist author, which feels like an obvious thing to include on such a list. The one category of author being bumped out of the first 20 here is anime writers, but I'll follow up with one of them, along with more academics and mangaka who I've been itching to include.
In any case, hooks is absolutely legendary as a feminist writer for good reason, and as a teacher I've especially appreciated her writing on pedagogy like "Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice of Freedom" and "Teaching Critical Thinking: Practical Wisdom". These have challenged me to teach at a higher level, and while I'm not sure I've completely succeeded, they're important to me. They also pair well with Paolo Friere's "Pedagogy of the Oppressed", but hooks always seems to be focused on very practical advice and it's incredibly direct in her writing, even though her advice isn't always straightforward to implement. In fact, that's one of the things I value about her writing: when the truth is complicated or the real work is messy interpersonal relationships that need to be negotiated with each student, she's not afraid to say so and give good advice for navigating those waters instead of trying to dispense simple-seeming platitudes or formulas for success that paper over the deeper issues. Her concern has always been truth, rather than simplicity or audience comfort and the popularity it might seem to entail, which I think is part of why her legacy endures so well.
#20AuthorsNoMen
#30AuthorsNoMen

FBI Is Offering a “Bounty” for Reporting “Anti-Trump Thought”
democracynow.org/2025/12/8/ken

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-04 06:54:07

Day 11: Bee Johnson
As promised, back to printed books, and since I hadn't yet done any authors of picture or board books, here's one. It looks like Johnson is primarily an illustrator and has only written a single kids' book, but it's a magnificent one: "What Can A Mess Make?"
Naturally, the illustrations are rich and evocative, but it's also got one of my favorite formats (just a few lines per page, with consistent meter and rhymes throughout) and has the incredibly charming theme of two sisters who are constantly making messes, except it highlights the fun (and other emotions) they get out of their messy play, reminding parents cleaning up messes that there's a benefit to letting your kids make the mess in the first place, which is an idea that's stuck with me as I clean up my own kids' messes. This book checks *all* of my boxes for a good picture book (which is kinda hard).
#20AuthorsNoMen
P.S. at this point, I think I've exhausted the range of "author" definitions I wanted to include in my list, and I've now got the unenviable task of balancing between genres and trying to hit some of my favorite authors before we get to 20. We'll see how that goes...

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-09 13:49:07

Day 17 (oops; a bit early): Angie Thomas
Can hardly believe it's taken me this long to get to Thomas, and I haven't even read "The Hate You Give" which is probably her most popular book. I did read "Concrete Rose" and was duly blown away by her craft: the use of vernacular, the love she has for the community she writes about, the honesty with which she grapples with the bleak details of the setting, and her stubborn and inescapable portrayal of a human being where our society has taught us to see only perpetrators and victims. CW for family member death and gun violence that I can think of; it's not light reading.
As the parent of two children, Thomas' descriptions of baby care ring true, and drew me into the book more than any other factor, and her vision of a positive masculinity among so much pain is breathtaking. "Concrete Rose" is a brilliant novel, and Thomas richly deserves a spot on this list.
#20AuthorsNoMen

It was National Voter Registration Day,
and Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows was on her way to a small liberal arts college
for a voter registration event.
That’s when she learned the US Department of Justice
was suing her over how she manages Maine’s voter registrant list.
While the DOJ appearing as the official plaintiff was new,
what the federal government sought through the lawsuit
—access to Maine’s complete, unredacted voter roll file

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-09-30 22:27:24

Day 7: Brenda Romero
I hinted yesterday I'd be moving beyond a narrow definition of "author," so of course that means I'm going to include game designers. I'll definitely get back to some more traditional authors before I hit 20, but I wanted to mix things up early.
Brenda Romero is something of a celebrity in the niche culture that is the Game Developers Coherence, I like to imagine. Of course the misogyny there likely means many just pay attention to who her husband is, but she's a terrific designer in her own right, if not prolific.
Content warning: the Holocaust
To me her most outstanding game has always been "Train," which is an exhibition tabletop game in which players collaborate to load and unload cargo and move train cars around a board, with the stated objective of efficiently delivering cargo to meet certain collective goals. However, through both physical cues and in-game reveals, it becomes clear to players that the game they are playing stimulates the Holocaust, and the cargo they're moving is people being brought to extermination camps. The actual goal of the game is for the players to stop playing and walk away, or perhaps to play against the stated objective and gridlock the trains. Romero supervised play at the expos where it was presented, and intervened to stop the game if the players continued too far (in some cases not picking up on the hints offered because they had very little knowledge of the Holocaust as a historical event). I've never played the game myself; just heard Romero give a report about it, but the sheer genius of designing a game meant not to be played to help educate about a system within which defying the rules was the only ethical action earned her instant respect from me. Romero has a whole series of games in this vein about didn't historical events (not necessarily all designed to not be played), although last I checked in most are just at prototyping stages.
I've got other non-man game designers that will appear on this list, but Romero stood out to go first because she's a good example that you don't need to be someone prolific or widely-known to do great work; I'd bet most people have an author or two they respect who is not widely known (and I'll include at least one more from that category on this list).
#20AuthorsNoMen

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-05 06:42:31

Day 12: Laura Zimmerman
We're back to a YA author here, and Zimmerman has been floating in my list of people to include since the start. I've read "My Eyes are Up Here" about dealing with misogyny and just general logistics while having very large breasts in high school. It's both engaging & educational, but also very well written in terms of the pacing, comedic moments, and turns of phrase. That led me to check out "Just Do This One Thing For Me" which is extremely dark, *incredibly hilarious*, and so thick with dramatic irony it had me constantly amused. It's also really touching at times, and a beautiful ode to the bonds of siblinghood that made me cry as well as laugh. I won't spoil the plot at all, but it's one of the best YA books I've ever read.
#20AuthorsNoMen

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-02 10:22:21

Day 8 (a bit late): Timnit Gebru
Academic authors are authors too, and there are a bunch of people I deeply respect both in my fields and adjacent.
Gebru is someone I have huge respect for because she stood up for her (mild, completely reasonable) principles to the point of losing her job on Google's AI ethics team (since disbanded entirely), and then went ahead and founded an independent research institute to continue doing AI ethics research.
Why was she fired? Because she insisted on publishing her "Stochastic Parrots" paper after it passed Google internal review only to have extra nonstandard scrutiny applied at the last minute. Why did Google want to suppress her paper (which included an academic co-author)? Because it expressed valid criticisms of the large language models fad, and Google was planning to make money off that fad. Personally, I don't think I'd hire an "AI ethics" team only to then try to suppress their publications, and Google seems to now agree, having scrapped the team (during the initial furor, Timnit's boss also effectively quit to support her).
That "Stochastic Parrots" paper? Indeed, it predicts the core underlying problems with large language models that lead to so many of their user-side harms today. You can read it here: #20AuthorsNoMen

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-02 10:55:31

Day 9: Eniko Fox
Edit: added a store link for Kitsune Tails.
We're back to videogames, and with another author who's on the fediverse: @…
Fox has developed a few games, but the one that I've played and love is Kitsune Tails. It's a sapphic romance take on Super Mario Bros. 3, and (critically for a platformer) it's got very crisp controls and runs smoothly. I think one thing a lot of indie platforms devs struggle with is getting those fundamentals right, because on the technical side they require very challenging things like optimization of your code and extremely careful input handling that go beyond the basic skills necessary to put together a game. From following her on Twitter and now the Fediverse, it's clear that Fox is a deeply competent programmer, and her games reflect that. Beyond the fundamentals, Kitsune Tails has a very sweet plot with a very cool twist in the middle, and without spoilers, that twist made both the levels and gameplay very difficult to design, but Fox rose to that challenge and put together a wonderful game. Particularly past the plot twist (but in subtle ways before it) Fox is able to build beyond SMB3 mechanics in ways that gracefully complement the original, and the movement in the game ends up being difficult but extremely satisfying, with an excellent skill/speed response allowing for both slower, easier approaches that work for a range of players and high-skill extremely-fast options for those who want to push themselves.
There have been plenty of people I follow with indie game projects that are kinda meh in the end, and I'll still boost them without much comment if they're decent. Fox' work is actually amazing, which is why if you've followed me for a while you'll know I tend to mention it periodically, and which is why she makes this list of authors I respect.
You can buy Kitsune Tails here: #20AuthorsNoMen

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-10-30 09:09:31

Okay, here's the promised follow-up with more authors I respect who didn't make it onto this list. I won't do deep dives but I'll list at least one work per author:
YA novelists:
- Randi Pink ("Girls Like Us")
- Louisa Onomé ("Twice as Perfect")
- Emery Lee ("Meet Cute Diary")
- Robin Benway ("Far from the Tree")
- Angela Velez ("Lulu and Milagro's Search for Clarity")
Children's book authors:
- Jacqueline Davies ("Bubbles Up")
- Freya Hartas ("Slow Down in the Park")
Novelists:
- Rimma Onoseta ("How You Grow Wings")
Graphic novelists:
- Linda Medley ("Castle Waiting")
- 🖋️Magsalene Visaggio 🖌️Paulina Ganucheau ("Girlmode")
- Ursula Vernon ("Digger")
- SJ Sindu ("Tall Water" w/ Dion MBD)
- Hope Larson ("Be That Way"; "Salt Magic" w/ Rebecca Mock)
- Lily Williams Karen Schneemann ("Go With the Flow")
- Maia Kobabe ("Gender Queer")
- Kay O'Neill ("Tea Dragon Society")
- Marjane Satrapi ("Persepolis")
Mangaka:
- Kaoru Mori ("Young Bride's Stories")
- Ryoko Kui ("Delicious in Dungeon")
- Natsuki Takaya ("Fruits Basket")
Anime writers/directors and/or Japanese light/fantasy/SF novelists:
- Nahoko Uehashi ("Moribito")
- Sayo Yamamoto ("Michiko & Hatchin"; "Yuri!!! On Ice")
- Mari Okada ("Ano Hana: The Flower we Saw That Day"; "Toradora!")
Game designers/programmers:
(Upon review I was pretty remiss in skipping over a few of these people, some of whom I wasn't aware of but most of whom I just didn't remember when writing my short list. Subconscious misogyny in action. Short & Thorson probably would have squeezed out some of the YA authors I included, although I have no real regrets.)
- Junko Kawano ("Suikoden")
- Elizabeth LaPensée ("When Rivers Were Trails")
- Momo Pixel ("Hair Nah")
- Zoë Quinn ("Depression Quest"; narrative designer on "Solar Ash")
- Kellee Santiago ("Cloud"; "Flower")
- Tanya X. Short ("Moon Hunters")
- Kim Swift ("Portal")
- Maddy Thorson ("Celeste")
- Andi McClure @… ("Jumpman")
Note: I haven't included composers or artists here, but there's a deep bench.
Games journalists/steamers:
- Tanya DePass @… (#/INeedDiverseGames; twitch streams)
- Anita Sarkeesian (Feminist Frequency)
Game/play scholars:
- Mary Flanagan ("Critical Play")
- Tracy Fullerton ("Game Design Workshop")
- Brenda Laurel ("Toward the Design of a Computer-Based Interactive Fantasy System")
- Janet Murray ("Hamlet on the Holodeck"l
- Susana Tosca ("A Pragmatics of Links")
- Jichen Zhu ("Agency Play: Dimensions of Agency for Interactive Narrative Design")
- Magy Seif El Nasr ("Design patterns to guide player movement in 3D games")
- Kate Compton ("Causal Creators"; also "Spore")
P.S. upon consideration I've decided not to include any authors who are men in this coda.
There are definitely others who probably deserve to be here that I'm forgetting...
#GsmeDesign #Authors

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-09-28 10:06:00

Day 5: Robin Wall Kimmerer
I'm taking these liberty of changing my hashtag and expanding the intent of this list to include all non-men, although Kimerer is a woman so I'll get to more gender diversity later... I've also started planning this out more and realized that I may continue a bit beyond 20...
In any case, Robin Wall Kimmerer is an Indigenous academic biologist and excellent non-fiction author whose work touches on Potawotomi philosophy, colonialism (including in academic spaces), and ideas for a better future. Anyone interested in ecology, conservation, or decolonization in North America will probably be impressed by her work and the rich connections she weaves between academic ecology and Indigenous knowledge offer a critical opportunity to expand your understanding of the world if like me you were raised deeply enmeshed in "Western" scientific tradition. I suppose a little background in skepticism helped prepare me to respect her writing, but I don't think that's essential.
I've only read "Braiding Sweetgrass," but "Gathering Moss" and her more recent "The Serviceberry" are high on my to-read list, despite my predilection for fiction. Kimmerer incorporates a backbone of fascinating anecdotes into "Braiding Sweetgrass" that makes it surprisingly easy reading for a work that's philosophical at its core. She also pulls off an impressive braided organization to the whole thing, weaving together disparate knowledges in a way that lets you see both their contradictions and their connections.
The one criticism I've seen of her work is that it's not sufficiently connected to other Indigenous philosophers & writers, and that it's perhaps too comfortable of a read for colonizers, and that seems valid to me, even though (perhaps because I am a colonizer) I still find her book important.
An excellent author in any case, and one doing concrete ideological work towards a better world.
#20AuthorsNoMen

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-09-29 10:10:20

Day 6: Kamome Shirahama
Before I wander much father afield, I'd be remiss not to include at least one Mangaka (I've got 8 on my planning list; if you think Manga is pushing it just wait until you see what the next few days have in store).
I'm currently following "Witch Hat Atelier," and it's absolutely amazing in several dimensions: first class world-building, deep philosophical themes, nuanced diverse cast, tightly-constructed interwoven plots, deep mysteries that keep everything churning and show up in unexpected places, absolutely stellar art both in terms of in-panel depictions and page layouts (some are Watchmen-quality), especially if you are sartorially inclined, and general kindness of its core messages. This is a series I wish every programmer would read, because it includes excellent advice about software design in multiple ways (did I mention there's an intricate and logical magic system within which the main character innovates in legible-to-the-reader-as-innovation ways?). Also, I bet I would have enjoyed this just a much as a 10-year-old as I'm enjoying it in my 30's, which is something that takes well-honed skill to pull off.
Shirahama is a master of her craft, and I'm honestly kinda surprised to see Witch Hat is only her second series. Definitely thinking how I can get my hands on her earlier work in English.
#20AuthorsNoMen