Bonum Certa Men Certa

Gemini Links 17/08/2023: Old Phone Morning Project



  • Gemini* and Gopher

    • Personal/Opinions

      • Re: I Want to Wear a Dress

        I have been thinking hard about getting one for a year already, but until now my black corduroy flare pants will have to do instead.

      • Re: Guys in dresses, skirts

        To be honest, I agree! I'd wear a skirt (but not a dress) in the summer for sure. There are ways for a man to ditch the shorts and wear a skirt, but if you don't want to make too strong a statement the garment's cut will have to be different. I have a sulu from Fiji that I like to wear some times, but not often in public. The sulu evolved from the traditional grass skirts that Fijian men wore pre-British colonization, and it doesn't really look too """feminine""". It's very straight, and it's more like wrapping a towel around your lower body and securing it with a belt than a 'normal' skirt.

      • Dresses, Kilts and more

        Kilts have been mentioned as well, and while I'm totally all for kilts and have considered getting a few, I think that's missing the point. The original topic was dresses. As in the totally feminine, not at all masculine all in one piece ensembles associated with Disney princesses. Kilts are not that. I associate the Kilt (with a capital K) with Scotsman carrying two handed swords into battle, or at the very least tossing small telephone poles across a field to prove their masculinity.

        I'm not trans. I'm a pretty masculine guy in appearance. That said, I've never been conventional. I have no problem with defying gender stereotypes and totally support anyone else doing the same.

      • Red Lentils

        Greetings, comrades, to another episode of food science: the boring stuff. Herein we explore water, red lentils, and salt. The base is 100g of red lentils, which is about half a cup, good for a portion of a meal, and pretty easy to weigh the salt against: 1% salt is 1 gram of salt, 2% is 2 grams, etc.

      • Some corrections

        A good friend has informed me that my gopher post "re:...the maxim of Arkham (luxferre)"[1] didn't quite make sense in several ways. I've thought on what he said for a few days, and I'd like to revisit a few points. I'm doing this here rather than in our personal correspondence, because my initial comments were public and I don't wish for them to be misconstrued by anyone who may have read them; and, because the subject is interesting to me and I'd like to keep it open.

      • Strange phone call

        Got a strange phone call this morning. It was a man claiming to be the father of a friend. I haven't seen this friend for a couple weeks. The man said that he had been talking to my friend this morning, and that my friend was suicidal. I told him I would check into it, and hung up.

        I texted and left a voicemail for my friend, texted a few of his family members that I know, and even talked to the folks at 988.

    • Recreation

      • running marston flashes

        i am again consistently completing short runs in the 3 to 5 km range.

        there are two flashes close to where i stay when in marston. quite flat and in nature with link paths to marbury country park and the trent and mersey canal.

      • Garage Decluttering, Take 2

        Something is living in my garage.

        I think it's a rabbit. That's small comfort: the poop is round, and small. I'm very familiar with what rabbit poop looks like, because the critters are often in my backyard, in my vegetable garden, or hanging around the bushes out front.

        And I say "I think" because they're smaller and harder than normal, not the bigger pellets I usually see outside. So maybe it's not? But it's not the shape you get with a mouse or a vole, either.

    • Photography

      • Resin Birch? (publ. 2023-08-16)

        I have been wondering about a tree/shrub which I had previously classified as a "mystery tree" (see my August 2 2023 post).

        [...]

        Reading in "Alaska Trees and Shrubs" (2nd ed., Viereck et al), it appears to be a "Resin Birch" (betula glandulosa Michx.). I thought paper birch was the only birch found in interior Alaska, but apparently resin birch is quite common throughout most of Alaska. I had little trouble finding more of this plant, once I knew what I was looking for. It tends to be found on moist ground, however, so one must look near ponds or places where water-runoff tends to collect.

      • Sad Hill Cemetery, Santo Domingo de Silos, Burgos
    • Technology and Free Software

      • Thinking about moving on

        I am now 7 years in my current job (Head of IT in a small company), a job that i really liked for the most time, but in recent months there are creeping ever more thoughts in my mind that it is turning sour. So, i am currently evaluation my options in which way to move on.

      • Old phone morning project

        We've had a family mobile plan with Verizon for a number of years now. The service wasn't bad, but the price kept creeping up no matter what we did. It always amazes me how companies these days are so willing to punish their long time customers with higher rates while offering a much better package if you should "switch" from another service. Seems like a really backwards way of doing business to me. Anyway, due to my SO being a first responder we qualified for an AT&T special plan that will prioritize her phone if the lines are crowded. The best part is that it's a pretty good savings, and not just an introductory rate. We should be able to save money for years to come, so we switched.

        One of the annoying things about the switch is that we were unable to carry our current phones over due to being carrier locked. I've always hated this practice. It's a totally non-subtle way of locking you into your current carrier. Well, FU Verizon, because even after putting four new phones on a payment plan we're still saving $50 a month. But I hate to see the old hardware, which still has plenty of life left in it, just sitting in a drawer. Her phone, and my daughter's, were new enough to trade in. That leaves mine and my son's. I'll be trying to think of something cool to do with his, but this morning I put mine to use with a nice simple project.

      • Internet/Gemini

        • Failed attempt at free multilingual TTS by abusing IPA

          My recent job have been developing a very fast TTS system for our internal use. I can't share too many details about it because NDA. But I do want to share some findings while messing with our system. - My boss is ok with me sharing these findings. We are looking to open source it soon anyway. It's not a breakthrough or anything. Just well engineered and fast - To make our model perform better, our system first converts the input text into the International Phonetic Alphabet. That is then fed into the speech synthesis model. Me with some basic phonetics training thought to myself, IPA is supposed to be universal. Can I, in principle, train a model in English. Then force it to speak Esperanto by feeding it the corresponding IPA? More far fetch, can I make it speak Japanese or Chinese?

          Kinda. But not really.

          The International Phonetic Alphabet is a writing system that allows us to write down the sounds of human languages. It's not a language itself. It records the sound of the spoken language itself. For example, the sentence "I would just like to interject for a moment" first get converts into `aɪ wʊd dʒˈʌst lˈaɪk tʊ ˌɪntɚdʒˈɛkt fɚɹə mˈoʊmənt`. The IPA letters look weird. But if you squint hard enough, you can almost see how it spells out the pronunciation.


* Gemini (Primer) links can be opened using Gemini software. It's like the World Wide Web but a lot lighter.



Recent Techrights' Posts

Microsoft Lunduke is 'Pulling a Garrett' by Turning Technical and Legal Debate Over Rust Into a 'Trans Debate'
Don't fall for the demagogue
Microsoft "Buyout" Offer is Less Than One Year's Salary
So our assumption about this was correct
In New Letter Sent to Chair and Heads of Delegation of the Administrative Council of the European Patent Organisation the Staff Union Explains How to End European Patent Office Strikes
If Campinos continues to behave as he does right now, the Council can show him the door
Microsoft Debt Rose Almost $50 Billion Since We Moved to Debian
GAFAM has a new name for debt
European Patent Office Management Mocked for Trying to 'Bribe' Staff With a Little Food
The Office is having a crisis; a little breakfast treat won't solve it
The Corporate Media Intentionally Overlooks How Google's Debt Trebles in Just Over a Year
We'll soon see how much more money Microsoft has borrowed
(Trigger Warning) Jeremy Bicha & Debian-Edu, TecKids, Ubuntu incest scandal at DebConf25
Reprinted with permission from Daniel Pocock
 
What May 1 Means to Us (and to Many Others)
To me, May 1 means something
Links 01/05/2026: Regulatory Trouble for Apple, Now Even Mozilla Pushes Back Against Google
Links for the day
The Corrupt Lecture the Non-Corrupt - Part X - European Patent Office Managers Have Crossed Red Lines, According to Themselves
The girlfriend of the President of the European Patent Office (EPO) is trying to muzzle EPO critics
Techrights is Still Growing, Attacking Techrights Does Not Weaken the Community
Bullying us for 2+ years does not result in fear, it results in us feeling more emboldened and motivated
SLAPP Censorship - Part 63 Out of 200: Graveley as a Stripped-Down Version of Garrett in the Particulars of Claim (5RB Barrister Could Do This in One Minute)
Lazily and sloppily, it looks like the barrister took Garrett's claims and tweaked them a little (shortened) for Graveley
Lots of People Leave IBM, Today IBM Has About 1,000 Workers Fewer Than Yesterday
Confluent "last day" for 800+ people
Been a Very Busy Week
Next week, as we have no upgrades to prepare for, we should be able to publish at the usual pace of 20+ pages per day
Links 01/05/2026: Poems and Continuous Privacy Policy
Links for the day
Over at Tux Machines...
GNU/Linux news for the past day
IRC Proceedings: Thursday, April 30, 2026
IRC logs for Thursday, April 30, 2026
Google News Sloppy Again
Today was disappointing
SLAPP Censorship - Part 62 Out of 200: Garrett and Graveley Issue Astounding Copy-Paste Masterpiece Asserting Publicly-Accessible Embarrassing Facts Must Remain Hidden
Are Garrett and Graveley twins separated at birth but joined by GNOME and Microsoft?
Links 30/04/2026: Barrage of Lawsuits Against Slop, Microsoft's Stock Crashes
Links for the day
Microsoft Says Mass Layoffs Are Coming and Puts a Price on Them
Microsoft will shrink
Upgrade Successful
we had a downtime of only 1-2 minutes overall (for two reboots)
Links 30/04/2026: Slop Industry Cannot Keep Up With Bills, "The World Is Getting Too Hot to Feed Itself"
Links for the day
Then Come the DDoS Attacks
Is someone trying to 'kill' Techrights?
The Corrupt Lecture the Non-Corrupt - Part X - Deliberately Violate European Patent Convention (EPC), Tolerate Cocaine Use in Management, Hide That From Staff and Stakeholders
The "Alicante Mafia" (as staff calls it) is a disgrace to Europe
The Register MS Running Spam Pieces for Huawei, a Banned Company
Money does not excuse bad behaviour
Apparently Last Day for Nearly 1,000 Confluent Workers IBM Laid Off Last Month
IBM is a dying company pretending to be strong because of its age
Over at Tux Machines...
GNU/Linux news for the past day
IRC Proceedings: Wednesday, April 29, 2026
IRC logs for Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Gemini Links 30/04/2026: Outdoor Time, Old Computers, and Joining Geminispace
Links for the day
In Past 6 Months IBM Lost About 100 Billion Dollars in 'Value' While Debt Ballooned to 70 Billion Dollars
Welcome to a universe of fake finances and phony accounting based on fictional assets with made-up 'worth'
Dr. Andy Farnell on Weaponising Morality Against Technofascism and Slop
It's longer than a "tweet", so social control media addicts are likely mentally unfit to read it
Six Months
Techrights will be around (and active) for a very long time to come
If We Move Everything to Devuan...
IRC, Git, Apache and so on
Why We Publish "The Corrupt Lecture the Non-Corrupt"
We intend to report the facts, fearlessly, until real and lasting solutions are reached
SLAPP Censorship - Part 61 Out of 200: Garrett and Graveley Must Understand That Reporting Women's Issues in the United States of America (“the US”) is Not Impermissible
when you cover Microsoft corruption and have real effect
Weeks After Mass Layoffs of Red Hat Engineers We Learn of European "Buyouts" and Layoffs at IBM
At Microsoft, they tell us there are merely "buyouts", but they don't tell us what happens if you say "no!"
OS Upgrade Tentatively Scheduled for Tomorrow
We have some contingencies in case the upgrade goes wrong
Campinos is a Lame Duck President This Year at the European Patent Office (EPO)
The strikes are not ending. If anything, they intensify further.
Links 29/04/2026: LLM Chatbot Usage Goes Down Sharply (as Do Stocks Associated With Them), Microsoft's Circular Financing Accounting Fraud at Risk
Links for the day
Gemini Links 29/04/2026: Returning to an Exodus and Farewell APU
Links for the day
Slop Has a Long Way to Go Before It Gets Basic Facts Right
Please do not rely on slop for anything
The Corrupt Lecture the Non-Corrupt - Part IX - European Patents That Are Illegal (But Serve Non-European Monopolists in Exchange for 'Quick Cash')
People who shamelessly violate the European Patent Convention (EPC) have the audacity to lecture workers on "ethics"
Canonical is Selling You, Ubuntu is a Data-Collecting Platform
Canonical is looking for money in the wrong places
Links 29/04/2026: "Snowden Affair 13 Years Later" and "Landmark Data Center Pause"
Links for the day
Seems Like Only Techrights Covered IBM Laying Off About 33% of Confluent Staff
How can such a large round of layoffs evade today's media?
Over at Tux Machines...
GNU/Linux news for the past day
IRC Proceedings: Tuesday, April 28, 2026
IRC logs for Tuesday, April 28, 2026
Gemini Links 29/04/2026: Bad Diet, New Middle Ages, and Temperature Model
Links for the day