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In a remarkable turn from prominent American conservatives,
-- who until Trump’s return to power in January had long complained of a censorious leftwing “cancel culture”
-- now seem happy to reframe that, too, as “consequence culture”.
Nancy Mace, a House representative, sounded a lot like the progressives she has often decried for their political correctness when she declaredlast week, during an effort to censure one of her opponents in Congress, that “free speech isn’t f…

Outside the rain begins
And it may never end, so cry no more--
On the shore a dream will take us out to sea
Forever more,
Forever more.
Close your eyes, ami,
And you can be with me.
'Neath the waves, through the caves of ours,
Long forgotten now.
We're all alone,
We're all alone.
Close the window, calm the light,
And it will be all right.
No need to bother now.
Let it out, …

@primonatura@mstdn.social
2025-07-20 17:00:52

"Inside Elon Musk’s plan to rain SpaceX’s rocket debris over Hawaii’s pristine waters"
#Hawaii #Rockets #Pollution

@mariyadelano@hachyderm.io
2025-07-21 21:13:31

Update - I think I managed to come to a compromise on timeline and firmly established that no AI will be used for this project.
They agreed, although they did make say that “it’s as if you decided to dig up a garden using a shovel instead of a tractor. As long as it’s done, it’s done”
I don’t wanna pick a fight so I left the comment alone but now that I think of it I have two responses:
- who digs a garden with a tractor?
- last I checked tractor didn’t have a ~30% chance of lying about the dirt they did or up to 70% odds of just giving up on working if the ground was too hard to dig

@blakes7bot@mas.torpidity.net
2025-09-20 12:23:27

D12 - Warlord
ZUKAN: [Shakes head] As long as the installation is right.
AVON: Well, the only problem now is: where do we find enough raw material to keep this lot running? [He is moving about, looking at various circuit boards and so forth.]
blake.torpidity.net/m/412/103 B7B3

Claude 3.7 describes the image as: "This image shows a scene from a science fiction television production from the late 1970s or early 1980s, based on the distinctive costume design and set aesthetics. The scene takes place in what appears to be a futuristic control room or spacecraft interior.

Two figures are prominently featured wearing elaborate costumes - one on the left in a metallic, gold-toned outfit with a distinctive headpiece, and one on the right in a black uniform with shiny detail…
@wraithe@mastodon.social
2025-09-20 18:59:57
Content warning: I’m thinking the person who did my blood draw at my physical needs to go back and do some practice (CW: bruising)

And this was 3 days ago.
I haven’t had bruises like this from a date in a long time.
Wait, now I’m sad. 😂

Picture of my light skinned arm with a significant amount of light bruising in the crook of my elbow.
@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.

@matthiasott@mastodon.social
2025-09-19 06:19:09

Five years ago, I put my iPhone 11 in a case and have been using it since then without any issues. None of my previous phones ever lasted that long. It’s really a shame that Apple is now giving gold bars to wannabe sun kings … 😞

In a post on social media this weekend addressed to AG Pam Bondi,
Trump said “nothing is being done” on investigations into some of his foes.
“We can’t delay any longer, it’s killing our reputation and credibility,” he said.
Noting that he was impeached and criminally charged, “JUSTICE MUST BE SERVED, NOW!!!”
Criticizing investigations into Trump’s dealings under Democratic President Joe Biden’s Justice Department,
Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., said Sunday that “it is n…

@stephane_klein@social.coop
2025-09-19 10:22:05

« The @… project is excited to share that long-time maintainer @… is now working part-time on improving the Servo contributor experience. » 🙂

@burningbecks@social.tchncs.de
2025-07-19 14:42:46

« To the extent that we are stuck for now with untrustworthy LLMs that nobody can quite control, rapidly enshittifying the internet with botshit and replacing humans with systems that can’t be relied on, it is in part because we have spent too much energy pursuing the pure neural net black box approach, and not enough into looking at alternatives. We are drowning in a sea of mediocre prose precisely because LLMs, the backbone of virtually all current sytems, lack the underlying representatio…

@arXiv_csCL_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-08-19 11:47:50

Reinforced Context Order Recovery for Adaptive Reasoning and Planning
Long Ma, Fangwei Zhong, Yizhou Wang
arxiv.org/abs/2508.13070 arxiv.or…

@markhburton@mstdn.social
2025-09-18 08:18:11

"Labour could easily counter some of the wild extremism. Ministers might point out that “English patriot” Robinson is an Irish passport-holder (up until last summer, anyway) who hunkers down in Spain and has a list of criminal convictions long enough for a tattoo sleeve. Starmer might observe how much of the UK would simply fall apart without migrants and their children.... He might even point out – imagine! – that migrants are human too...."
Aditya Chakrabortty

@hex@kolektiva.social
2025-07-21 01:50:28

Epstein shit and adjacent, Rural America, Poverty, Abuse
Everyone who's not a pedophile thinks pedophiles are bad, but there's this special obsessed hatred you'll find among poor rural Americans. The whole QAnon/Epstein obsession may not really make sense to folks raised in cities. Like, why do these people think *so much* about pedophiles? Why do they think that everyone in power is a pedophile? Why would the Pizzagate thing make sense to anyone? What is this unhinged shit? A lot of folks (who aren't anarchists) might be inclined to ask "why can't these people just let the cops take care of it?"
I was watching Legal Eagle's run down on the Trump Epstein thing earlier today and I woke up thinking about something I don't know if I've ever talked about. Now that I'm not in the US, I'm not at any risk of talking about it. I don't know how much I would have been before, but that's not something I'm gonna dig into right now. So let me tell you a story that might explain a few things.
I'm like 16, maybe 17. I have my license, so this girl I was dating/not dating/just friends with/whatever would regularly convince me to drive her and her friends around. I think she's like 15 at the time. Her friends are younger than her.
She tells me that there's a party we can go to where they have beer. She was told to invite her friends, so I can come too. We're going to pick her friends up (we regularly fill the VW Golf well beyond the legal limit and drive places) and head to the party.
So I take these girls, at least is 13 years old, down to this party. I'm already a bit sketched out bringing a 13 year old to a party. We drive out for a while. It's in the country. We drive down a long dark road. Three are some barrel fires and a shack. This is all a bit strange, but not too abnormal for this area. We're a little ways outside of a place called Mill City (in Oregon).
We park and walk towards the shack. This dude who looks like a rat comes up and offers us beer. He laughs and talks to the girl who invited me, "What's he doing here? You're supposed to bring your girl friends." She's like, "He's our ride." I don't remember if he offered me a beer or not.
We go over to this shed and everyone starts smoking, except me because I didn't smoke until I turned 18. The other girls start talking about the rat face dude, who's wandered over by the fire with some other guys. They're mainly teasing one of the 13 year old girls about having sex with him a bunch of times. They say he's like, 32 or something. The other girls joke about him only having sex with 13 year olds because he's too ugly to have sex with anyone closer to his own age.
Somewhere along the line it comes out that he's a cop. I never forgot that, it's absolutely seared in to my memory. I can picture his face perfectly still, decades later, and them talking about how he's a deputy, he was in his 30's, and he was having sex with a 13 year old girl. I was the only boy there, but there were a few older men. This was a chunk of the good ol' boys club of the town. I think there were a couple of cops besides the one deputy, and a judge or the mayor or some kind of big local VIP.
I kept trying to get my friend to leave, but she wanted to stay. Turns out under age drinking with cops seems like a great deal if you're a kid because you know you won't get busted. I left alone, creeped the fuck out.
I was told later that I wasn't invited and that I couldn't talk about it, I've always been good at compartmentalization, so I never did.
Decades later it occurred to me what was actually happening. I'm pretty sure that cop was giving meth he'd seized as evidence to these kids. This wasn't some one-off thing. It was regular. Who knows how many decades it went on after I left, or how many decades it had been going on before I found out. I knew this type of thing had happened at least a few times before because that's how that 13 year old girl and that 32 year old cop had hooked up in the first place.
Hearing about Epstein's MO, targeting these teenage girls from fucked up backgrounds, it's right there for me. I wouldn't be surprised if they were involved in sex trafficking of minors or some shit like that... but who would you call if you found out? Half the sheriff's department was there and the other half would cover for them.
You live in the city and shit like that doesn't happen, or at least you don't think it happens. But rural poor folks have this intuition about power and abuse. It's right there and you know it.
Trump is such a familiar character for me, because he's exactly that small town mayor or sheriff. He'll will talk about being tough on crime and hunting down pedophiles, while hanging out at a party that exists so people can fuck 8th graders.
The problem with the whole thing is that rural folks will never break the cognitive dissonance between "kill the peods" and "back the blue." They'll never go kill those cops. No, the pedos must be somewhere else. It must be the elites. It must be outsiders. It can't be the cops and good ol' boys everyone respects. It can't be the mayor who rigs the election to win every time. It can't be the "good upstanding" sheriff. Nah, it's the Clintons.
To be fair, it's probably also the Clitnons, a bunch of other politicians, billionaires, etc. Epstein was exactly who everyone thought he was, and he didn't get away with it for so long without a whole lot of really powerful help.
There are still powerful people who got away with involvement with #Epstein. #Trump is one of them, but I don't really believe that he's the only one.
#USPol #ACAB

@tezoatlipoca@mas.to
2025-07-16 19:22:09

I had a bitbuy account long time ago (back when there might have been legit reasons for #crypto) and I guess I never closed it.
But wtf. We're going after the youth market now are we? Yes, I choose my currency and investments based on how cute/fun the mascot is. :(

Promotional email: 

Pudgy Penguins (PENGU) & Pump.fun (PUMP) are now available for trading on Bitbuy!

PENGU (picture of a cute cartoon penguin) is a Solana-based token created by the team behind Pudgy Penguins, a popular NFT collection known for its playful, penguin-themed characters and strong community. 

PUMP (icon looks like a Dr. Mario pill) is the native token of Pump.fun, a Solana-based platform for creating and launching memecoins.
@NFL@darktundra.xyz
2025-07-09 17:41:44

10 NFL futures bets to make right now: Dak Prescott redemption, Bijan Robinson explosion, long shot CPOY, more

cbssports.com/nfl/news/10-nfl-

@threeofus@mstdn.social
2025-08-18 09:08:57

Survived a week long ‘holiday’ with the blended family. The chaos completely drained me. Got back late Saturday night and was wiped out yesterday so didn’t get around to unpacking. Now I’m wiped out on Monday morning with the house turned upside down with holiday stuff, sat at my desk trying to work. Except I can’t work because the house is a shit tip. I need to get everything back in order to enable my brain to function. So I’ll creep away from my desk and get it sorted.

@Sustainable2050@mastodon.energy
2025-08-15 05:17:34

We already managed to screw up the climate of Spain, in many ways.
And as long as we're emitting more greenhouse gases than ever before, it will get worse faster than ever before.
We have to get to net zero emissions asap. It's not 'realistic' but absurd to slow down climate action now.

@karlauerbach@sfba.social
2025-09-18 04:59:16

This is the kind of tune we need now in our nation.
(I first saw this performed by the Weavers - that's a long time ago. But Peter, Paul, and Mary did it better.)
"Wasn't That A Time"
youtube.com/watch?v=CbBRC3bc1qM

@Techmeme@techhub.social
2025-07-17 02:55:39

Delta plans for 20% of its fares to be individually determined using AI by the end of 2025, up from 3% now, with the goal of eliminating static pricing entirely (Irina Ivanova/Fortune)
fortune.com/2025/07/16/delt…

@jake4480@c.im
2025-07-15 17:02:19

I rarely pre-order ANYTHING, much less a game, but sometimes I make exceptions. I've been wanting to grab Dezatopia on Switch for so long, it's literally the first thing I ever put on my Switch wishlist many years ago (which now has like, a couple hundred games on it). I was waiting for it to go on sale but it never really did. I'm glad I waited, really. I dig physical games, and now there's this combo that includes Mecha Ritz. GREAT bang for the buck. I'll of course post…

The case and box with art for the Dezatopia/Mecha Ritz combo presale at the link.
@gwire@mastodon.social
2025-08-18 16:36:05

MSNBC to drop it's long obsolete Microsoft-connected name, to be rebranded "MS NOW".
I think that if a news channel rebranded in the UK it would be to something like "Sebastian" or "Mr Hughes".

@tml@urbanists.social
2025-07-11 06:24:25

The feeling when you find the root cause for a problem that has been bothering you for months. And it turns out to be fixable by adding a single letter. (To turn an "unsigned long" literal into an "unsigned long long" one.) (Actually I made it use the UINT64_C() macro from <cstdint>.)
Writing portable code is hard. And thanks, Windows, for keeping "long" as 32 bits even in 64-bit code.
Now, if only Clang or gcc on Linux would warn about such po…

@iragersh@mstdn.social
2025-09-18 02:22:17

What's the story with the indefinitely and likely permanently closed Exit 12 northbound off the HHP to St. Clair Place? 1.5 miles long and 2 lanes wide and currently usually totally empty.
Closed over two months due to its harming the Amtrak tunnel it crosses. Previously owned by NYC DOT, but now? NYC Parks? #bikenyc

@jerome@jasette.facil.services
2025-07-17 17:22:02

Eglinton Crosstown LRT may be facing yet another delay
Let me die now
thestar.com/news/gta/eglinton-

@paulwermer@sfba.social
2025-07-17 14:48:49

Sigh - but, you know, abundance. ...
theguardian.com/technology/202

@PaulWermer@sfba.social
2025-07-17 14:48:49

Sigh - but, you know, abundance. ...
theguardian.com/technology/202

@fanf@mendeddrum.org
2025-08-16 17:42:03

from my link log —
You know more Finnish than you think.
dannybate.com/2025/08/03/you-k
saved 2025-08-07

@metacurity@infosec.exchange
2025-09-06 12:03:47

It's been about three weeks, but Metacurity's digest of the best long-form (and longish) infosec-related pieces we couldn't properly fit into our daily news crush is back!
This issue's selection covers
--Russian cybersecurity companies are tools for global expansion,
--Merrick Garland's fears of a judicial system cyberattack came true,
--Flock has plans for ubiquitous surveillance to stop crime,
--Misinformation from adversaries now runs ram…

@mgorny@social.treehouse.systems
2025-09-16 19:19:16

Time to continue my #rail travel stories. It's a few years since I was at the seaside last, since the travel's too long for me now. Before, I used to visit Świnoujście and Kołobrzeg a few times. The route to Kołobrzeg is quite straight, whereas Świnoujście gets interesting because of Szczecin on the way there.
So over all these years, using regional Poznań – Świnoujście trains, I've made all these variations:
• a direct train that reversed on Szczecin Główny station (i.e. the main station in Szczecin)
• a direct train, except that I got off at Szczecin Dąbie to stretch my legs, and then entered the same train 40 minutes later as it stopped at the same station again
• a direct train that passed through Główny and used a roundabout track to reverse
• a direct train, except that I got off at the first stop at Szczecin Dąbie, and changed trains to "Błękitny" that went faster from Szczecin to Świnoujście
• the "Orkan" train that used the rail bypass to go straight from Szczecin Zdunowo to Szczecin Załom, and skip all the other Szczecins (except I only went as far as Goleniów back then)

@Dragofix@veganism.social
2025-08-11 01:30:56

Scientists thought this Argentine glacier was stable. Now they say it's melting fast #Argentina

@thomasfuchs@hachyderm.io
2025-08-09 13:28:08

That some people find “text box that spits out a broken version of what they want and then you yell at it until it’s sufficing” more convenient than using existing tools says a lot more about existing tools than about the text box.
E.g. programming has long been extremely overwrought and complex for no reason other than enterprise wankery and gatekeeping, see the various frameworks from Big Tech.
The same companies now rent you expensive tools that “make programming easy”, while their overly complex frameworks and environments are free of course.
Instead of fixing the problem we’re now having two problems.
(The same is true in other industries.)

@inthehands@hachyderm.io
2025-07-13 17:28:01

❝I have noticed that we people privileged by supremacy have a tendency to take this same stance toward newly aware people, a stance which is not ours to assume. We seem to feel that it is our business to meet people who are in the same place that we were just a few short years or decades ago, and meet their shock and surprise and anger and dismay with a skepticism and an impatience we haven't earned.
We say things like "are you surprised?"
We say things like "why does this shock you?"
We say "oh so you're only angry now?"
We say things like "where have you been?"

Instead of asking “are you surprised?” say “I was surprised once, too; here's what I know.” Instead of “what took you so long?” say “I just got here recently; here's what I've learned.”❞ mastodon.social/@JuliusGoat/11

@UP8@mastodon.social
2025-08-02 02:08:50

🐮 Now on Wall Street, JBS eyes growth amid scrutiny on deforestation & graft
news.mongabay.com/2025/07/now-

@georgiamuseum@glammr.us
2025-08-14 12:19:22

The #UniversityOfGeorgia fall semester started yesterday (yes, we know, it's VERY early), and that means it's time to swap out the works on view in our study gallery. This fall, we're working with professors in art history, history (museum studies) and women's studies to pull works from the collection that their classes can use all semester long: Goya, Ronnie Goodman, a 19t…

Detail of a 19th-century quilt made in Georgia, likely by an enslaved person. Instead of being brightly colored, it features black designs (stars, things that look like hashtags) on what is now an off-white backing. The patterns are intricate and beautiful.
@raiders@darktundra.xyz
2025-09-17 15:28:15

Chargers get positive Khalil Mack update after Week 2 injury sportingnews.com/us/nfl/los-an

@BBC3MusicBot@mastodonapp.uk
2025-08-15 21:15:25

🔊 #NowPlaying on #BBCRadio3:
#LateJunction
- Vanished presences and long-lost sounds
Jennifer Lucy Allan explores the sounds of vanished presences, actual and potential instrumentation, and some old favourites from New Zealand’s 1980s underground post-punk scene.
Relisten now 👇
bbc.co.uk/programmes/m002grg2

@cheryanne@aus.social
2025-08-13 11:45:57

Have a last minute day trip to Goulburn tomorrow. So a very long day today to get enough work done to cover while I'm away.
Now have been booked in for a tech support call on Friday afternoon for a very non-tech friend in FNQ. Could be interesting. Life is never dull.
Oh and I have virtually no voice again - I'm not sick, just a bit drained of energy, and very very squeaky. So much so that, at times, my voice must only be audible to bats. Hopefully my prodigal voice wil…

@Techmeme@techhub.social
2025-08-04 18:20:41

OpenAI says ChatGPT now offers "gentle reminders" to take breaks during long sessions, and it is building tools to better detect signs of emotional distress (Ian Carlos Campbell/Engadget)
engadget.com/ai/chatgpt-will-n

@blakes7bot@mas.torpidity.net
2025-07-17 21:14:21

Series A, Episode 08 - Duel
TRAVIS: Just so long as you remember that.
MUTOID: Do you now believe we mutoids are vampires?
TRAVIS: I believe you're useful. Get on with it.
MUTOID: My function will be impaired if I don't get further serum soon.
blake.torpidity.net/m/108/422

@toxi@mastodon.thi.ng
2025-09-07 10:47:58

Langtauferer
Today, a year ago, I ventured on a dream trip I'd been researching for a long time, and which ended up being a semi-religious experience, being immersed in (and somewhat overwhelmed by) an actively changing environment, the upheaval and plethora of geological features, structures, unreal colors, layers, textures and the "wounds" exposed by the melting and disappearing glaciers... Countless waterfalls, stunning erosion features, later traversing the glacier ga…

Photo of the upper part of a glacial valley with large mountain peaks (some 3700+ meters) and remaining glaciers and icefields. The vivid colors are purely the result of the polarization filter used, but also nicely show the variety of rock types and minerals (rock colors vary from pale gray to orange, deep rust, black). The main arm of the glacier is curving down in the left side of the image, it's gate visible (a close up in the next image). In the front a fragment of the semi-eroded old side…
Close up view (from a few hundred meters above) of the Langtauferer glacier gate and a beautiful river delta of the milky blueish-gray creek of another glacier (next image) which terminates higher up by now. The ice is characteristically blue, heavily crevassed and crumbling at the front. A word about scale: One of the larger detached ice fragments is ~2.5 meters tall.
Abstract looking photo of a section of the south-western edge the Gepatschferner (Austria's second largest glacier), which used to be connected here (as a major ice fall) to the Langtauferer glacier. Now only several large waterfalls are remaining, dropping over the exposed rock faces 300 meters down into the valley. The ice is pale blue with large seracs (approx. 50-100 meters thick at the edge). Some snow patches are a pale pink/orange, traces of Sahara sand...
Top down view of the Langtauferer outflow section of the valley, showing a patch work of different textures/rocks and colors from grassy slopes, talus fields in shades of gray, orange, beige, rust. The milky grey glacier creek meandering through it all from left to right. A small pool of crystal clear intensely green-blue water nearby. The entire scene feels like an abstract painting
@muz4now@mastodon.world
2025-08-31 23:08:05

We've Long Known That Music Eases Pain. Now, Science Is Proving It. reasonstobecheerful.world/how-

@AimeeMaroux@mastodon.social
2025-07-10 20:49:46
Content warning:

It's the #DayOfZeus / Jupiter's Day / Thorsday! ⚡
"Then #Zeus no longer held back his might; but straight his heart was filled with fury and he showed forth all his strength. From Heaven and from Olympos he came forthwith, hurling his lightning: the bold flew thick and fast from hi…

A bronze statue of Zeus striding forward, his arm raised to hurl a thunderbolt now missing. He has long, braided hair and a crown.
@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-08-12 09:01:39

Long post, game design
Crungle is a game designed to be a simple test of general reasoning skills that's difficult to play by rote memory, since there are many possible rule sets, but it should be easy to play if one can understand and extrapolate from rules. The game is not necessarily fair, with the first player often having an advantage or a forced win. The game is entirely deterministic, although a variant determines the rule set randomly.
This is version 0.1, and has not yet been tested at all.
Crungle is a competitive game for two players, each of whom controls a single piece on a 3x3 grid. The cells of the grid are numbered from 1 to 9, starting at the top left and proceeding across each row and then down to the next row, so the top three cells are 1, 2, and 3 from left to right, then the next three are 4, 5, and 6 and the final row is cells 7, 8, and 9.
The two players decide who shall play as purple and who shall play as orange. Purple goes first, starting the rules phase by picking one goal rule from the table of goal rules. Next, orange picks a goal rule. These two goal rules determine the two winning conditions. Then each player, starting with orange, alternate picking a movement rule until four movement rules have been selected. During this process, at most one indirect movement rule may be selected. Finally, purple picks a starting location for orange (1-9), with 5 (the center) not allowed. Then orange picks the starting location for purple, which may not be adjacent to orange's starting position.
Alternatively, the goal rules, movement rules, and starting positions may be determined randomly, or a pre-determined ruleset may be selected.
If the ruleset makes it impossible to win, the players should agree to a draw. Either player could instead "bet" their opponent. If the opponent agrees to the bet, the opponent must demonstrate a series of moves by both players that would result in a win for either player. If they can do this, they win, but if they submit an invalid demonstration or cannot submit a demonstration, the player who "bet" wins.
Now that starting positions, movement rules, and goals have been decided, the play phase proceeds with each player taking a turn, starting with purple, until one player wins by satisfying one of the two goals, or until the players agree to a draw. Note that it's possible for both players to occupy the same space.
During each player's turn, that player identifies one of the four movement rules to use and names the square they move to using that rule, then they move their piece into that square and their turn ends. Neither player may use the same movement rule twice in a row (but it's okay to use the same rule your opponent just did unless another rule disallows that). If the movement rule a player picks moves their opponent's piece, they need to state where their opponent's piece ends up. Pieces that would move off the board instead stay in place; it's okay to select a rule that causes your piece to stay in place because of this rule. However, if a rule says "pick a square" or "move to a square" with some additional criteria, but there are no squares that meet those criteria, then that rule may not be used, and a player who picks that rule must pick a different one instead.
Any player who incorrectly states a destination for either their piece or their opponent's piece, picks an invalid square, or chooses an invalid rule has made a violation, as long as their opponent objects before selecting their next move. A player who makes at least three violations immediately forfeits and their opponent wins by default. However, if a player violates a rule but their opponent does not object before picking their next move, the stated destination(s) of the invalid move still stand, and the violation does not count. If a player objects to a valid move, their objection is ignored, and if they do this at least three times, they forfeit and their opponent wins by default.
Goal rules (each player picks one; either player can win using either chosen rule):
End your turn in the same space as your opponent three turns in a row.
End at least one turn in each of the 9 cells.
End five consecutive turns in the three cells in any single row, ending at least one turn on each of the three.
End five consecutive turns in the three cells in any single column, ending at least one turn on each of the three.
Within the span of 8 consecutive turns, end at least one turn in each of cells 1, 3, 7, and 9 (the four corners of the grid).
Within the span of 8 consecutive turns at least one turn in each of cells 2, 4, 6, and 8 (the central cells on each side).
Within the span of 8 consecutive turns, end at least one turn in the cell directly above your opponent, and end at least one turn in the cell directly below your opponent (in either order).
Within the span of 8 consecutive turns at least one turn in the cell directly to the left of your opponent, and end at least one turn in the cell directly to the right of your opponent (in either order).
End 12 turns in a row without ending any of them in cell 5.
End 8 turns in a row in 8 different cells.
Movement rules (each player picks two; either player may move using any of the four):
Move to any cell on the board that's diagonally adjacent to your current position.
Move to any cell on the board that's orthogonally adjacent to your current position.
Move up one cell. Also move your opponent up one cell.
Move down one cell. Also move your opponent down one cell.
Move left one cell. Also move your opponent left one cell.
Move right one cell. Also move your opponent right one cell.
Move up one cell. Move your opponent down one cell.
Move down one cell. Move your opponent up one cell.
Move left one cell. Move your opponent right one cell.
Move right one cell. Move your opponent left one cell.
Move any pieces that aren't in square 5 clockwise around the edge of the board 1 step (for example, from 1 to 2 or 3 to 6 or 9 to 8).
Move any pieces that aren't in square 5 counter-clockwise around the edge of the board 1 step (for example, from 1 to 4 or 6 to 3 or 7 to 8).
Move to any square reachable from your current position by a knight's move in chess (in other words, a square that's in an adjacent column and two rows up or down, or that's in an adjacent row and two columns left or right).
Stay in the same place.
Swap places with your opponent's piece.
Move back to the position that you started at on your previous turn.
If you are on an odd-numbered square, move to any other odd-numbered square. Otherwise, move to any even-numbered square.
Move to any square in the same column as your current position.
Move to any square in the same row as your current position.
Move to any square in the same column as your opponent's position.
Move to any square in the same row as your opponent's position.
Pick a square that's neither in the same row as your piece nor in the same row as your opponent's piece. Move to that square.
Pick a square that's neither in the same column as your piece nor in the same column as your opponent's piece. Move to that square.
Move to one of the squares orthogonally adjacent to your opponent's piece.
Move to one of the squares diagonally adjacent to your opponent's piece.
Move to the square opposite your current position across the middle square, or stay in place if you're in the middle square.
Pick any square that's closer to your opponent's piece than the square you're in now, measured using straight-line distance between square centers (this includes the square your opponent is in). Move to that square.
Pick any square that's further from your opponent's piece than the square you're in now, measured using straight-line distance between square centers. Move to that square.
If you are on a corner square (1, 3, 7, or 9) move to any other corner square. Otherwise, move to square 5.
If you are on an edge square (2, 4, 6, or 8) move to any other edge square. Otherwise, move to square 5.
Indirect movement rules (may be chosen instead of a direct movement rule; at most one per game):
Move using one of the other three movement rules selected in your game, and in addition, your opponent may not use that rule on their next turn (nor may they select it via an indirect rule like this one).
Select two of the other three movement rules, declare them, and then move as if you had used one and then the other, applying any additional effects of both rules in order.
Move using one of the other three movement rules selected in your game, but if the move would cause your piece to move off the board, instead of staying in place move to square 5 (in the middle).
Pick one of the other three movement rules selected in your game and apply it, but move your opponent's piece instead of your own piece. If that movement rule says to move "your opponent's piece," instead apply that movement to your own piece. References to "your position" and "your opponent's position" are swapped when applying the chosen rule, as are references to "your turn" and "your opponent's turn" and do on.
#Game #GameDesign

@arXiv_csHC_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-09-08 08:56:40

Long-Term Experiences From Working with Extended Reality in the Wild
Verena Biener, Florian Jack Winston, Dieter Schmalstieg, Alexander Plopski
arxiv.org/abs/2509.05067

@gray17@mastodon.social
2025-07-11 06:58:40

Wicked Part 1 was ok, but that was a pretty long digression into Elphaba's storyline. Well, now that she's fallen to her death (again), Part 2 can focus on the wolf doctor protagonist.

@cowboys@darktundra.xyz
2025-09-01 19:54:45

DaRon Bland talks new extension, reflects on long road to the NFL dallascowboys.com/news/daron-b

@hex@kolektiva.social
2025-08-07 00:24:12

There was once a machine that told you "you want this" and "this is good." It said, "there can be no better system and it's foolish to try to build one." That machine has long since failed to function. Now you choke on fumes as it is consumed by the wild flames of an abandoned cause.
That machine could not possibly work anymore because the evidence of it's falsehood has become too overwhelming.
No, only abject terror now can keep you from plotting your escape, from creating an alternative. No, the illusion has long since broken. All that's left now is triggering fight, flight, freeze as hard as possible. Most will be paralyzed, and those who fight can be used as an excuse to escalate the terror.
These are the final stages of a dying sun, expanding and consuming it's children before the final supernova.
There is no longer a stable system, no longer a system with a future. All that remains is the spectacle that hopes to distract you long enough that you too can be consumed, that it may sustain itself a few moments longer.

@kubikpixel@chaos.social
2025-09-10 05:05:23

»How Do I Block an IP Address on My Linux server?
How do I block an IP address or subnet (CIDR) under Linux operating system?«
– by @…
I do not want to allow certain data swallowers that market the data for themselves again and these lists are now very long.
🐧

@arXiv_quantph_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-08-14 09:36:52

Procedural Generation and Games at the Dawn of Fault Tolerant Quantum Computing
Daniel Bultrini, James Wootton
arxiv.org/abs/2508.09683 arx…

@padraig@mastodon.ie
2025-08-06 15:14:17

@… "Right now, new subscription sign-ups have slowed to around 1–2 per day – a long way off our target of 2,000"
...
"Add in current subs revenue of around €20k/year"
...
"579 people have stepped up and subscribed. Our target is 2,000"
Anyone who has had any interest in Boards would have signed up right now,…

@arXiv_csAR_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-09-12 07:32:59

Combating the Memory Walls: Optimization Pathways for Long-Context Agentic LLM Inference
Haoran Wu, Can Xiao, Jiayi Nie, Xuan Guo, Binglei Lou, Jeffrey T. H. Wong, Zhiwen Mo, Cheng Zhang, Przemyslaw Forys, Wayne Luk, Hongxiang Fan, Jianyi Cheng, Timothy M. Jones, Rika Antonova, Robert Mullins, Aaron Zhao
arxiv.org/abs/2509.09505

@bogo@hapyyr.com
2025-08-11 05:32:11

#Thunderbird Mobile is now 96% translated into Bulgarian. The next steps are to make it 100-ish and then do a quality check.
The most common problem so far are the long strings which are not easy to be localized as short as their English friends :)

@nitpicking@mstdn.party
2025-09-15 01:06:27

I posted elsewhere, but sharing here, too.
I got email from someone whose surname I recognize.
I asked if she was related to the President of the first company I ever worked for. She's his granddaughter.
I shared with her how kind he was when I was a young, entry-level "Specialist" in my first corporate job. She was gratified. Her aunt remembers me from those days.
35 years ago, and I remember it now.
Be nice to someone. It might matter for a long …

@jerome@jasette.facil.services
2025-07-16 18:37:14

I frequently talk against the rush of transitioning to electric battery-powered buses. The technology is just not there yet, and we risk making public transit worse and reduce actual bus service if we don't slow down.
This article based on a TTC report makes a good case as to why.
The TTC had announced they would no longer buy hybrid bus, now they are considering buying 200 because electric isn't ready.

@tschfflr@fediscience.org
2025-09-07 13:57:01

Bad news: Our game of Spirit Island took too long, now I ran out of time to go swimming (and still manage all the other family plans this evening)
Good news: At least we won! (It looked pretty dire for a while there…) #boardGames

@NFL@darktundra.xyz
2025-08-09 22:56:30

Jakorian Bennett took an improbable road to the Eagles; now he gets another opportunity to overcome adversity

cbssports.com/nfl/news/jakoria…

@spamless@mastodon.social
2025-08-03 20:36:50

Uppin' the Ante @ 69 (sped up middle)
Now at 35 cm offset, since I made my long-term goal last Sunday of 100 in each of two sets at 29½ cm. That's 19% more offset. Much harder. I got to 60 reps. I'll do a second set now.
#calisthenics #seniorfitness

@cosmos4u@scicomm.xyz
2025-07-25 04:22:51

The last step in a long process on “arsenic life”: #arsenic Instead of phosphorus” from 2010 has now been killed (over the objections of the authors) by the journal that had published it: science.org/doi/10.1126/scienc (and see skyweek.wordpress.com/2010/12/ and skyweek.wordpress.com/2010/12/ for my reporting back then about the announcement and the swift and hard criticism).

@arXiv_csCV_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-09-11 10:01:43

AdsQA: Towards Advertisement Video Understanding
Xinwei Long, Kai Tian, Peng Xu, Guoli Jia, Jingxuan Li, Sa Yang, Yihua Shao, Kaiyan Zhang, Che Jiang, Hao Xu, Yang Liu, Jiaheng Ma, Bowen Zhou
arxiv.org/abs/2509.08621

@steadystatemcr@mstdn.social
2025-08-04 08:02:21

#Manchester's filthy air.
A long way to go.
"All in all, the measures will get Greater Manchester’s air to 40.3 micrograms of nitrogen dioxide in one cubic metre of air.
"The UK legal limit is officially 40, but results under 40.4 are rounded down, making TfGM’s plan compliant.
"But the World Health Organisation’s recommended limit is just 10."

After his summit with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia,
Trump adopted Putin’s preference for pursuing a sweeping peace agreement
-- instead of the urgent cease-fire Trump said he wanted before the meeting.
Doing so would give Russia an advantage in the talks,
which are due to continue on Monday when President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine visits Trump at the White House.
It breaks from a strategy Trump and European allies,
as well as Zelensky, had ag…

@DominikDammer@mastodon.gamedev.place
2025-07-07 16:41:08

Now that my game released on steam, I am looking for a new long term opportunity to work as a game designer.
If you need a (freelance) Game designer, hit me up!
here you can see my cool stuff
dominik-dammer.de/

@cyrevolt@mastodon.social
2025-07-02 16:04:49

And so it begins.
blog.google/around-the-globe/g

@cellfourteen@social.petertoushkov.eu
2025-07-09 09:27:29

I love it that years ago, Linux boasted things like, 'It has an office suite like in Windows!', and now it's, like, 'Plug in. Game on!' 🥰 ->
I FINALLY listened to you and tried Linux... Why did I wait so long? - JayzTwoCents
youtube.com/watch?v=Sa8nMiEoti0

@Dragofix@veganism.social
2025-08-01 22:33:35

Illegal pet trade in Nepal now shifting online, research suggests news.mongabay.com/2025/07/ille

@midtsveen@social.linux.pizza
2025-07-01 23:04:47

If you liked me with short hair, that’s cool, but honestly, I hated it, and I even felt really depressed about it sometimes, but now my hair’s naturally pretty long, so yay for that!
#LGBTQIA #GendedFluid

Person with long light brown hair wearing a black and gray patterned cardigan.
@arXiv_astrophGA_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-09-15 09:16:01

Impact of stochastic star-formation histories and dust on selecting quiescent galaxies with JWST photometry
K. Lisiecki, D. Donevski, A. W. S. Man, I. Damjanov, M. Romano, S. Belli, A. Long, G. Lorenzon, K. Ma{\l}ek, Junais, C. C. Lovell, A. Nanni, C. Bertemes, W. Pearson, O. Ryzhov, M. Koprowski, A. Pollo, S. Dey, H. Thuruthipilly

@gedankenstuecke@scholar.social
2025-08-27 22:16:29

I've been at my little "link blog" for my website long enough now it was time to figure out how to make it paginate: #Jekyll, there didn't seem to be a default way to create paginated lists that are based on `_data` files. So I did the minimum viable edits to the jekyll-paginate gem to make it work – which it does reasonably okay.
Now I wonder if it's worth to actually still make a gem out of it?
codeberg.org/gedankenstuecke/p

@grumpybozo@toad.social
2025-08-01 20:18:21

True.
OTOH: The same is true for TB, flu, measles, and a slate of other potentially severe diseases floating around.
#Covid is not a qualitatively new threat, it's the latest in a long line of pathogens that we have become accustomed to just living with. For a long time measles left the list, but it is now back and it is at least as harmful as Covid.
I don’t have a magic bullet.…

@whitequark@mastodon.social
2025-08-30 13:10:49

i had bought caves of qud a *very* long time ago but only now finally playing it!

@tinoeberl@mastodon.online
2025-08-28 04:06:59

Die #Klimakrise trifft die #Antarktis:
Diese verändert sich schneller als gedacht.
Das #Meereis schrumpft rasant, die

@arXiv_condmatstatmech_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-07-03 09:17:30

Stabilization of long-range order in low-dimensional nonequilibrium $O(N)$ models
Oriana K. Diessel, Jaewon Kim, Ehud Altman
arxiv.org/abs/2507.01959

@fanf@mendeddrum.org
2025-07-13 08:42:03

from my link log —
Reading NFC passport chips in Linux.
shkspr.mobi/blog/2025/06/readi
saved 2025-06-25

@philip@mastodon.mallegolhansen.com
2025-07-06 17:35:03

@… I grew up with my grandfather taking me for long walks around my mother’s home town (Świnoujście, Germany pre-war, Poland post-war, where he and his family were resettled from former Poland now Belarus).
He could point to every building the army had occupied, the city hospital, which locals were not permitted to use. The beach, which was raked with…

@ruari@velocipederider.com
2025-09-01 13:01:22

A long time ago I ordered a product on a "kickstarter-like" setup. As is the case with many such things, there were numerous delays. Now more than a year later it is ready to be delivered. I got a link from DHL, which was shortly followed up with an offer to deliver to service point or automatic pickup location, instead.

@lightweight@mastodon.nzoss.nz
2025-07-22 06:59:21

Holy crap. I still haven't deployed my upgraded personal blog. I have a bunch of posts that I've withheld for months now because I was going to push it to production 'any day now'... but Drupal 11's got a remarkably convoluted tool chain, especially with regard to theming. So I've still got one or two pesky things to sort... then I will make it live. This has gone on long enough. I need to put a fork in it. It's (so close to) done. Stop procrastinating Dave!

@bici@mastodon.social
2025-07-06 23:27:35

Niki notes a front yard vegetable garden can be expensive to kick off at first. “It’s a bit of a status symbol now to have a tidy vegetable garden in your front yard producing some of your own food,” she says.
Nature's bountiful crops

The image depicts a woman standing in a lush garden. She is positioned centrally, holding a white bowl filled with leafy greens. The woman has long brown hair, wears a short-sleeved gray shirt and beige shorts, and is smiling. The garden is vibrant with various plants, including tall sunflowers and climbing plants supported by a blue trellis. The background features a clear blue sky and trees, indicating a sunny day. The garden is well-maintained, with a variety of flowers and plants, including…
@karlauerbach@sfba.social
2025-08-08 18:59:10

By-the-way, it is clear that we are experiencing the end of Democracy and rise of Dictatorship in the US.
We have long observed the rise of large corporations as a class of privileged nobility.
And now we are watching the onset of governance by artificial "intelligence".
Perhaps we will resume democracy, but unless we change our ground rules - such as our Constitution - the power of corporations and, now, AI's will remain a serious problem.
So I will men…

The announcement this week that Elon Musk’s SpaceX is purchasing
$17 billion in wireless spectrum
has sent jitters through an industry now eyeing the prospect of
Elon-style disruptions to a market
long dominated by Verizon, AT&T and T-Mobile.
The new bandwidth is destined for use by SpaceX’s satellite service, Starlink.

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-09-14 12:01:38

TL;DR: what if instead of denying the harms of fascism, we denied its suppressive threats of punishment
Many of us have really sharpened our denial skills since the advent of the ongoing pandemic (perhaps you even hesitated at the word "ongoing" there and thought "maybe I won't read this one, it seems like it'll be tiresome"). I don't say this as a preface to a fiery condemnation or a plea to "sanity" or a bunch of evidence of how bad things are, because I too have honed my denial skills in these recent years, and I feel like talking about that development.
Denial comes in many forms, including strategic information avoidance ("I don't have time to look that up right now", "I keep forgetting to look into that", "well this author made a tiny mistake, so I'll click away and read something else", "I'm so tired of hearing about this, let me scroll farther", etc.) strategic dismissal ("look, there's a bit of uncertainty here, I should ignore this", "this doesn't line up perfectly with my anecdotal experience, it must be completely wrong", etc.) and strategic forgetting ("I don't remember what that one study said exactly; it was painful to think about", "I forgot exactly what my friend was saying when we got into that argument", etc.). It's in fact a kind of skill that you can get better at, along with the complementary skill of compartmentalization. It can of course be incredibly harmful, and a huge genre of fables exists precisely to highlight its harms, but it also has some short-term psychological benefits, chiefly in the form of muting anxiety. This is not an endorsement of denial (the harms can be catastrophic), but I want to acknowledge that there *are* short-term benefits. Via compartmentalization, it's even possible to be honest with ourselves about some of our own denials without giving them up immediately.
But as I said earlier, I'm not here to talk you out of your denials. Instead, given that we are so good at denial now, I'm here to ask you to be strategic about it. In particular, we live in a world awash with propaganda/advertising that serves both political and commercial ends. Why not use some of our denial skills to counteract that?
For example, I know quite a few people in complete denial of our current political situation, but those who aren't (including myself) often express consternation about just how many people in the country are supporting literal fascism. Of course, logically that appearance of widespread support is going to be partly a lie, given how much our public media is beholden to the fascists or outright in their side. Finding better facts on the true level of support is hard, but in the meantime, why not be in denial about the "fact" that Trump has widespread popular support?
To give another example: advertisers constantly barrage us with messages about our bodies and weight, trying to keep us insecure (and thus in the mood to spend money to "fix" the problem). For sure cutting through that bullshit by reading about body positivity etc. is a better solution, but in the meantime, why not be in denial about there being anything wrong with your body?
This kind of intentional denial certainly has its own risks (our bodies do actually need regular maintenance, for example, so complete denial on that front is risky) but there's definitely a whole lot of misinformation out there that it would be better to ignore. To the extent such denial expands to a more general denial of underlying problems, this idea of intentional denial is probably just bad. But I sure wish that in a world where people (including myself) routinely deny significant widespread dangers like COVID-19's long-term risks or the ongoing harms of escalating fascism, they'd at least also deny some of the propaganda keeping them unhappy and passive. Instead of being in denial about US-run concentration camps, why not be in denial that the state will be able to punish you for resisting them?

@hex@kolektiva.social
2025-09-15 10:32:50

People keep trying to point to an event where the "right/left" political violence thing got out of hand. You cannot point to anywhere in US history where the right hasn't been murdering leftists. It has never happened.
They've been talking about civil war since they lost the last one, and most of US politics before that was just trying to prevent the first one.
There isn't a wave of right/left violence. Right wing violence has just gone unchecked for so long, and been so accepted, that now they're killing each other regularly. The Trump assassination attempts were all from the right. #CharlieKirk was killed by another fascist for not being fascist enough.
Fascists have so completely taken over that they see each other as legitimate targets because they've run out of "leftists" worth murdering. That's the story. That's what people can't wrap their heads around.
Everyone is worried about the right wing response, worries about right wing escalation, but they called for civil war over the cracker barrel logo. They're already maxing out their base. All the proud boys and other Nazis are already hired by ICE. They're also already going as hard as they can. They don't need any excuses. They have total control of everything. This bumbling mess is *the best they can do.* They call for civil war every few days.
We're not seeing a war between the left and the right. We're seeing a war between the right and the far right, where both side opportunistically punch left when they can and liberals help them justify their actions.
#USPol

@thomasfuchs@hachyderm.io
2025-09-06 18:38:53

Send your good thoughts to Watson, who is now an older cat and has pancreatitis and possibly cancer. Here’s a photo of when we got him long ago.

@raiders@darktundra.xyz
2025-09-11 17:40:27

The Athletic has now lost both Raiders beat writers within months raiderswire.usatoday.com/story

@wraithe@mastodon.social
2025-09-10 17:51:32

So yes, BlueSky finally has bookmarks.
Before this feature came out, people had simply been replying to posts with a 📌 emoji and there was a dedicated feed where you could view your 📌’ed posts.
In an example of how to roll stuff out, someone made an importing tool that either moved OR copied your 📌 posts to bookmarks (saved posts)
VERY well done.

@jerome@jasette.facil.services
2025-08-11 03:51:40

So sad. The first #glacier I saw in 2018, during our honeymoon.
Indeed at a time they were telling us the glacier wasn’t really impacted by climate change, I had not truly understood why.
Such a majestic and unique place to visit.

@mgorny@social.treehouse.systems
2025-07-26 13:30:55

New on blog: "EPYTEST_PLUGINS and other goodies now in #Gentoo"
"""
If you are following the gentoo-dev mailing list, you may have noticed that there’s been a fair number of patches sent for the #Python eclasses recently. Most of them have been centered on #pytest support. Long story short, I’ve came up with what I believed to be a reasonably good design, and decided it’s time to stop manually repeating all the good practices in every ebuild separately.
In this post, I am going to shortly summarize all the recently added options. As always, they are all also documented in the Gentoo Python Guide.
"""
blogs.gentoo.org/mgorny/2025/0

@Sustainable2050@mastodon.energy
2025-07-02 05:05:09

After long presenting heatwaves as fun episodes, with pictures of young people in fountains and swimming pools, European media are now realizing it's not funny anymore.
French TV talked about the worst day instead of the warmest day, and Le Parisien had "Torture" as headline. nos.nl/l/2573263

@arXiv_csCL_bot@mastoxiv.page
2025-09-11 10:02:13

A Survey of Reinforcement Learning for Large Reasoning Models
Kaiyan Zhang, Yuxin Zuo, Bingxiang He, Youbang Sun, Runze Liu, Che Jiang, Yuchen Fan, Kai Tian, Guoli Jia, Pengfei Li, Yu Fu, Xingtai Lv, Yuchen Zhang, Sihang Zeng, Shang Qu, Haozhan Li, Shijie Wang, Yuru Wang, Xinwei Long, Fangfu Liu, Xiang Xu, Jiaze Ma, Xuekai Zhu, Ermo Hua, Yihao Liu, Zonglin Li, Huayu Chen, Xiaoye Qu, Yafu Li, Weize Chen, Zhenzhao Yuan, Junqi Gao, Dong Li, Zhiyuan Ma, Ganqu Cui, Zhiyuan Liu, Biqing Qi, N…

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-08-11 13:26:07

How the US democracy is designed to avoid representation
Right now in the US, a system which proclaims to give each citizen representation, my interests are not represented very well by most of my so-called representatives at any level of government. This is true for a majority of Americans across the political spectrum, and it happens by design. The "founding fathers" were explicit about wanting a system of government that would appear Democratic but which would keep power in the hands of rich white landowners, and they successfully designed exactly that. But how does disenfranchisement work in this system?
First, a two-party system locked in by first-post-the-post winner-takes-all elections immediately destroys representation for everyone who didn't vote for the winner, including those who didn't vote or weren't eligible to vote. Single-day non-holiday elections and prisoner disenfranchisement go a long way towards ensuring working-class people get no say, but much larger is the winner-takes all system. In fact, even people who vote for the winning candidate don't get effective representation if they're really just voting against the opponent as the greater of two evils. In a 51/49 election with 50% turnout, you've immediately ensured that ~75% of eligible voters don't get represented, and with lesser-of-two-evils voting, you create an even wider gap to wedge corporate interests into. Politicians need money to saturate their lesser-of-two-evils message far more than they need to convince any individual voter to support their policies. It's even okay if they get caught lying, cheating, or worse (cough Epstein cough) as long as the other side is also doing those things and you can freeze out new parties.
Second, by design the Senate ensures uneven representation, allowing control of the least-populous half of states to control or at least shut down the legislative process. A rough count suggests 284.6 million live in the 25 most-populous states, while only 54.8 million live in the rest. Currently, counting states with divided representation as two half-states with half as much population, 157.8 million people are represented by 53 Republican sensors, while 180.5 million people get only 45 seats of Democratic representation. This isn't an anti-Democrat bias, it's a bias towards less-populous states, whose residents get more than their share it political power.
I haven't even talked about gerrymandering yet, or family/faith-based "party loyalty," etc. Overall, the effect is that the number of people whose elected representatives meaningfully represent their interests on any given issue is vanishingly small (like, 10% of people tops), unless you happen to be rich enough to purchase lobbying power or direct access.
If we look at polls, we can see how lack of representation lets congress & the president enact many policies that go against what a majority of the population wants. Things like abortion restrictions, the current ICE raids, and Medicare cuts are deeply unpopular, but they benefit the political class and those who can buy access. These are possible because the system ensures at every step of the way that ordinary people do NOT get the one thing the system promises them: representation in the halls of power.
Okay, but is this a feature of all democracies, inherent in the nature of a majority-decides system? Not exactly...
1/2
#uspol #democracy

@midtsveen@social.linux.pizza
2025-09-04 17:44:52

Yay! The #Pixelfed app now supports Stories! 🎉
You can follow me here: @… ! ❤

A person with glasses and long hair takes a selfie in a cozy room with bookshelves and a blue wall. They wear a white top and floral choker.
@blakes7bot@mas.torpidity.net
2025-07-09 09:14:38

Series A, Episode 04 - Time Squad
VILA: What's eating you now?
AVON: I'm just wondering how long we're going to live to enjoy our new found skills.
blake.torpidity.net/m/104/8 B7B2

The women whom Jeffrey Epstein abused demand to be heard.
And their voices — long suppressed, but now emerging powerfully and with courage — could further fuel the maelstrom around Donald Trump and aides — who dig the scandal deeper each time they try to end it.
These are women who’ve been let down for years, at multiple levels,
by a government that was supposed to keep them safe.
Their families are victims, too,
since abuse sows trauma through generations.
A…

@NFL@darktundra.xyz
2025-09-10 10:11:44

The Eagles spend money unlike any other team. Are they the new NFL model, or an anomaly? nytimes.com/athletic/6575493/2

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-07-28 13:06:20

How popular media gets love wrong
Now a bit of background about why I have this "engineered" model of love:
First, I'm a white straight cis man. I've got a few traits that might work against my relationship chances (e.g., neurodivergence; I generally fit pretty well into the "weird geek" stereotype), but as I was recently reminded, it's possible my experience derives more from luck than other factors, and since things are tilted more in my favor than most people on the planet, my advice could be worse than useless if it leads people towards strategies that would only have worked for someone like me. I don't *think* that's the case, but it's worth mentioning explicitly.
When I first started dating my now-wife, we were both in graduate school. I was 26, and had exactly zero dating/romantic experience though that point in my life. In other words, a pretty stereotypical "incel" although I definitely didn't subscribe to incel ideology at all. I felt lonely, and vaguely wanted a romantic relationship (I'm neither aromantic nor asexual), but had never felt socially comfortable enough to pursue one before. I don't drink and dislike most social gatherings like parties or bars; I mostly hung around the fringes of the few college parties I attended, and although I had a reasonable college social life in terms of friends, I didn't really do anything to pursue romance, feeling too awkward to know where to start. I had the beginnings of crushes in both high school and college, but never developed a really strong crush, probably correlated with not putting myself in many social situations outside of close all-male friend gatherings. I never felt remotely comfortable enough to act on any of the proto-crushes I did have. I did watch porn and masturbate, so one motivation for pursuing a relationship was physical intimacy, but loneliness was as much of a motivating factor, and of course the social pressure to date was a factor too, even though I'm quite contrarian.
When I first started dating my now-wife, we were both in graduate school. I was 26, and had exactly zero dating/romantic experience though that point in my life. In other words, a pretty stereotypical "incel" although I definitely didn't subscribe to incel ideology at all. I felt lonely, and vaguely wanted a romantic relationship (I'm neither aromantic nor asexual), but had never felt socially comfortable enough to pursue one before. I don't drink and dislike most social gatherings like parties or bars; I mostly hung around the fringes of the few college parties I attended, and although I had a reasonable college social life in terms of friends, I didn't really do anything to pursue romance, feeling too awkward to know where to start. I had the beginnings of crushes in both high school and college, but never developed a really strong crush, probably correlated with not putting myself in many social situations outside of close all-male friend gatherings. I never felt remotely comfortable enough to act on any of the proto-crushes I did have. I did watch porn and masturbate, so one motivation for pursuing a relationship was physical intimacy, but loneliness was as much of a motivating factor, and of course the social pressure to date was a factor too, even though I'm quite contrarian.
I'm lucky in that I had some mixed-gender social circles already like intramural soccer and a graduate-student housing potluck. Graduate school makes a *lot* more of these social spaces accessible, so I recognize that those not in school of some sort have a harder time of things, especially if like me they don't feel like they fit in in typical adult social spaces like bars.
However, at one point I just decided that my desire for a relationship would need action on my part and so I'd try to build a relationship and see what happened. I worked up my courage and asked one of the people in my potluck if she'd like to go for a hike (pretty much clearly a date but not explicitly one; in retrospect not the best first-date modality in a lot of ways, but it made a little more sense in our setting where we could go for a hike from our front door). To emphasize this point: I was not in love with (or even infatuated with) my now-wife at that point. I made a decision to be open to building a relationship, but didn't follow the typical romance story formula beyond that. Now of course, in real life as opposed to popular media, this isn't anything special. People ask each other out all the time just because they're lonely, and some of those relationships turn out fine (although many do not).
I was lucky in that some aspects of who I am and what I do happened to be naturally comforting to my wife (natural advantage in the "appeal" model of love) but of course there are some aspects of me that annoy my wife, and we negotiate that. In the other direction, there's some things I instantly liked about my wife, and other things that still annoy me. We've figured out how to accept a little, change a little, and overall be happy with each other (though we do still have arguments; it's not like the operation/construction/maintenance of the "love mechanism" is always perfectly smooth). In particular though, I approached the relationship with the attitude of "I want to try to build a relationship with this person," at first just because of my own desires for *any* relationship, and then gradually more and more through my desire to build *this specific* relationship as I enjoyed the rewards of companionship.
So for example, while I think my wife is objectively beautiful, she's also *subjectively* very beautiful *to me* because having decided to build a relationship with her, I actively tried to see her as beautiful, rather than trying to judge whether I wanted a relationship with her based on her beauty. In other words, our relationship is more causative of her beauty-to-me than her beauty-to-me is causative of our relationship. This is the biggest way I think the "engineered" model of love differs from the "fire" and "appeal" models: you can just decide to build love independent of factors we typically think of as engendering love (NOT independent of your partner's willingness to participate, of course), and then all of those things like "thinking your partner is beautiful" can be a result of the relationship you're building. For sure those factors might affect who is willing to try building a relationship with you in the first place, but if more people were willing to jump into relationship building (not necessarily with full commitment from the start) without worrying about those other factors, they might find that those factors can come out of the relationship instead of being prerequisites for it. I think this is the biggest failure of the "appeal" model in particular: yes you *do* need to do things that appeal to your partner, but it's not just "make myself lovable" it's also: is your partner putting in the effort to see the ways that you are beautiful/lovable/etc., or are they just expecting you to become exactly some perfect person they've imagined (and/or been told to desire by society)? The former is perfectly possible, and no less satisfying than the latter.
To cut off my rambling a bit here, I'll just add that in our progress from dating through marriage through staying-married, my wife and I have both talked at times explicitly about commitment, and especially when deciding to get married, I told her that I knew I couldn't live up to the perfect model of a husband that I'd want to be, but that if she wanted to deepen our commitment, I was happy to do that, and so we did. I also rearranged my priorities at that point, deciding that I knew I wanted to prioritize this relationship above things like my career or my research interests, and while I've not always been perfect at that in my little decisions, I've been good at holding to that in my big decisions at least. In the end, *once we had built a somewhat-committed relationship*, we had something that we both recognized was worth more than most other things in life, and that let us commit even more, thus getting even more out of it in the long term. Obviously you can't start the first date with an expectation of life-long commitment, and you need to synchronize your increasing commitment to a relationship so that it doesn't become lopsided, which is hard. But if you take the commitment as an active decision and as the *precursor* to things like infatuation, attraction, etc., you can build up to something that's incredibly strong and rewarding.
I'll follow this up with one more post trying to distill some advice from my ramblings.
#relationships #love

@Dragofix@veganism.social
2025-08-28 23:19:07

From sea ice to ocean currents, Antarctica is now undergoing abrupt changes—and we'll all feel them phys.org/news/2025-08-sea-ice-
Collapse of critical Atlantic current is no longer low-likelihood, study finds

When the Spanish colonized the region in the 17th century,
they didn't introduce horses to Indigenous people, as long thought.
Instead, horses were present in the Southwest long before Europeans,
and were traded by Indigenous people who formed close relationships with them.
Horses lived in North America for millions of years
but went extinct at the end of the last ice age, about 11,000 years ago.
When Europeans reintroduced horses to what is now the ea…

@tiotasram@kolektiva.social
2025-07-04 20:14:31

Long; central Massachusetts colonial history
Today on a whim I visited a site in Massachusetts marked as "Huguenot Fort Ruins" on OpenStreetMaps. I drove out with my 4-year-old through increasingly rural central Massachusetts forests & fields to end up on a narrow street near the top of a hill beside a small field. The neighboring houses had huge lawns, some with tractors.
Appropriately for this day and this moment in history, the history of the site turns out to be a microcosm of America. Across the field beyond a cross-shaped stone memorial stood an info board with a few diagrams and some text. The text of the main sign (including typos/misspellings) read:
"""
Town Is Formed
Early in the 1680's, interest began to generate to develop a town in the area west of Natick in the south central part of the Commonwealth that would be suitable for a settlement. A Mr. Hugh Campbell, a Scotch merchant of Boston petitioned the court for land for a colony. At about the same time, Joseph Dudley and William Stoughton also were desirous of obtaining land for a settlement. A claim was made for all lands west of the Blackstone River to the southern land of Massachusetts to a point northerly of the Springfield Road then running southwesterly until it joined the southern line of Massachusetts.
Associated with Dudley and Stoughton was Robert Thompson of London, England, Dr. Daniel Cox and John Blackwell, both of London and Thomas Freak of Hannington, Wiltshire, as proprietors. A stipulation in the acquisition of this land being that within four years thirty families and an orthodox minister settle in the area. An extension of this stipulation was granted at the end of the four years when no group large enough seemed to be willing to take up the opportunity.
In 1686, Robert Thompson met Gabriel Bernor and learned that he was seeking an area where his countrymen, who had fled their native France because of the Edict of Nantes, were desirous of a place to live. Their main concern was to settle in a place that would allow them freedom of worship. New Oxford, as it was the so-named, at that time included the larger part of Charlton, one-fourth of Auburn, one-fifth of Dudley and several square miles of the northeast portion of Southbridge as well as the easterly ares now known as Webster.
Joseph Dudley's assessment that the area was capable of a good settlement probably was based on the idea of the meadows already established along with the plains, ponds, brooks and rivers. Meadows were a necessity as they provided hay for animal feed and other uses by the settlers. The French River tributary books and streams provided a good source for fishing and hunting. There were open areas on the plains as customarily in November of each year, the Indians burnt over areas to keep them free of underwood and brush. It appeared then that this area was ready for settling.
The first seventy-five years of the settling of the Town of Oxford originally known as Manchaug, embraced three different cultures. The Indians were known to be here about 1656 when the Missionary, John Eliott and his partner Daniel Gookin visited in the praying towns. Thirty years later, in 1686, the Huguenots walked here from Boston under the guidance of their leader Isaac Bertrand DuTuffeau. The Huguenot's that arrived were not peasants, but were acknowledged to be the best Agriculturist, Wine Growers, Merchant's, and Manufacter's in France. There were 30 families consisting of 52 people. At the time of their first departure (10 years), due to Indian insurrection, there were 80 people in the group, and near their Meetinghouse/Church was a Cemetery that held 20 bodies. In 1699, 8 to 10 familie's made a second attempt to re-settle, failing after only four years, with the village being completely abandoned in 1704.
The English colonist made their way here in 1713 and established what has become a permanent settlement.
"""
All that was left of the fort was a crumbling stone wall that would have been the base of a higher wooden wall according to a picture of a model (I didn't think to get a shot of that myself). Only trees and brush remain where the multi-story main wooden building was.
This story has so many echoes in the present:
- The rich colonialists from Boston & London agree to settle the land, buying/taking land "rights" from the colonial British court that claimed jurisdiction without actually having control of the land. Whether the sponsors ever actually visited the land themselves I don't know. They surely profited somehow, whether from selling on the land rights later or collecting taxes/rent or whatever, by they needed poor laborers to actually do the work of developing the land (& driving out the original inhabitants, who had no say in the machinations of the Boston court).
- The land deal was on condition that there capital-holders who stood to profit would find settlers to actually do the work of colonizing. The British crown wanted more territory to be controlled in practice not just in theory, but they weren't going to be the ones to do the hard work.
- The capital-holders actually failed to find enough poor suckers to do their dirty work for 4 years, until the Huguenots, fleeing religious persecution in France, were desperate enough to accept their terms.
- Of course, the land was only so ripe for settlement because of careful tending over centuries by the natives who were eventually driven off, and whose land management practices are abandoned today. Given the mention of praying towns (& dates), this was after King Phillip's war, which resulted in at least some forced resettlement of native tribes around the area, but the descendants of those "Indians" mentioned in this sign are still around. For example, this is the site of one local band of Nipmuck, whose namesake lake is about 5 miles south of the fort site: #LandBack.

The Army has posted thousands of the warnings in New Mexico and western Texas, declaring a “restricted area by authority of the commander.”
It’s part of a major shift that has thrust the military into border enforcement with Mexico like never before.
The move places long stretches of the border under the supervision of nearby military bases,
-- empowering U.S. troops to detain people who enter the country illegally
-- and sidestep a law prohibiting military involvemen…