Bonum Certa Men Certa

Gemini Links 19/08/2023: Missing Physical Buttons on Electronics



  • Gemini* and Gopher

    • Personal/Opinions

      • The ridiculousness of 80's crime dramas

        It's 11pm on a Friday, the kids are in bed and the wife is playing video games. All caught up on TV shows and MST3k on Pluto is playing an episode I don't really care for. So I start digging around their on-demand selection. Score, classic MacGyver. I was always a fan of 80's shows like that. MacGyver, Magnum PI, Murder She Wrote. But boy were their setups crazy.

        One thing I never quite got about Murder, She Wrote was that the protagonist, Jessica Fletcher, was constantly getting involved in murders. Everywhere she went some cousin or nephew was doing some interesting thing she had to go see and boom, someone was killed. Not just once or twice. Over 264 murders (assuming at least one murder per episode). And yet in over a decade with a death toll of a small town no one ever called the FBI. Every once in a while a detective objected to her helping due to her just being an author, and even fewer thought twice about the fact death followed her around. No one really stopped and said it was ridiculous to assume she just happened to stumble upon so many murders. Cases for serial killers started with less of a trail.

      • The ridiculousness of 80's crime dramas
      • Dungeon Fantasy: Monster Seeds

        I was glad to get my physical copy a while ago. Having now looked over it, I think it did exactly what it set out to do, gather the various Monster Seeds for the original Dungeon Fantasy Monsters developed and published in various places during the Kickstarter for Dungeon Fantasy 2 in one place, something that hadn't been done before. So far, so good.

      • Filleting and the circle that doesn't hide anything

        Oftentimes, if you watch a lot of anime or manga, you may see references or outright cameos of objects (including living things) from another story or a media franchise.

        Consider, for example, this series of tweets about the strangest school in the world in terms of the proclivities for the teachers (and the head teacher!) seemingly bursting into cosplay at a moment's notice.

      • Numberstation!

        I was once sitting in a nice, comfy position and thought: Heck yeah, let's do an internet radio station that only plays numbers that are spoken with espeak! Yeah, that's a great idea! Anyway, this was also an experiment on how many radio directory sites I could get into.

      • learnding

        do you ever want to learn something but your brain is just NOT playing ball?

        i sat down to learn the ropes of Dwarf Fortress earlier. i did the tiny little interactive tutorial but there's so much more i gotta learn about in the help section. i could just dive in and try to learn it from scratch but i know i'm not gonna enjoy that lmao

        it's dumb coz it is ABSOLUTELY a game i know i'm gonna enjoy when i eventually do learn how to play. i might just take it baby steps, just go through a new help section every day or so?

    • Technology and Free Software

      • Improving mental health with software 🧠💻

        I started thinking I was depressed when I had "suicidal ideation" at railway stations. Among my responses was to want to know how bad things were, and so I started to gather stats. Every day, at about bed time, a thing pops up on my laptop to ask me to rate my day on a scale from -10 to +10. I don't have a clear idea what the numbers mean, but it feels like I use them fairly consistently. And I'm not doing science, so I can be as arbitrary as I like.

        It feels like a positive, sensible thing to consider how I am. Emotional state can seem overwhelming, but assigning a number requires a moment of contemplative calmness. I noticed that there was a lot of fluctuation. Some of the time life was grim, but some of the time I was ok. Good - I found out something from doing this. The badness always ends. Seems trite, but it's backed up with stats!

      • I Miss Physical Buttons on Electronics

        I just snagged a Sony PRS-650 ereader off Kijiji for $20 and I'm over the damn moon. It's in incredible condition, works like a dream, and the battery is still rock solid. It's an older device (released around 2011 I believe), yet it has all the functionality I need from an ereader in 2023. There is one feature of this incredible device that I would like to focus on. Along the bottom of the screen there are physical buttons for page turning, home, zoom, and options.

      • Bought a new 3DS LL (JPN)

        I bought a new Japanese 3DS LL off ebay so I could resume playing my various Japanese 3DS games. In large part, this is so I can play Fantasy Life to tide me over until the Nintendo Switch release of Fantasy Life i. But it’s also so that I’ll have a working console as they become less and less easily obtained over the coming years.

        I have had two USA 3DS XL. An original 3DS XL with a bad motherboard and a New 3DS XL with glitchy shoulder buttons. I didn’t want to do surgery on the USA one until I better understood the situation with the eShop and whether all of my downloaded titles were going to disappear. I can put up with being able to play most of them in a diminished capacity, but if I could play none of them with a fully working unit I would have been sad.

      • Hardware Showcase: Tello



        I’ve had drones for a long time—maybe ten years.

        Along with VR and 3D printing, drones fall for me into the “living in the future” category—they’re tech that was fun to imagine, and now you can actually buy it.

        So I did: I had a few Nano QX drones from Horizon. They were cheap even back then, around 120CHF if I remember correctly, and they now seem to sell for about 80CHF. They were fun: reasonably easy to control, very nimble, a lot of fun to fly. I used to take them into the office and we’d take turns to fly them in a basement corridor adjacent to the underground parking lot.

      • v everywhere almost

        ### gnu/linux of the debian 12 variety

      • Inkscape Countersheets Extension 3.1

        I just tagged the current version of my Inkscape Countersheets Extension on GitHub as release 3.1, since I recently got some help to make it not crash in recent versions of Inkscape and I thought it was good to make an official release at this point even if there has not been many major other changes. It is sad that the state of software "engineering" is such that backwards compatibility is a dying concept and that we keep inflicting "software rot" on each other like this, but in the ~15 years history of my Inkscape extensions most of the time I spent on it has basically been this kind of wasted work just to keep up with Inkscape API changes. There are a few neat new features though, mostly also contributed by others, so it is not all wasted.

      • Internet/Gemini

        • Re: Why you no BBS?

          And same can be said for Station, Geddit etc.

          And I’m not into it.

          I just don’t like making silo accounts all over the place.

          I’ve had a few Reddit accounts, and accounts on Discourse or Vanilla sites like Story-Games, and the big bad evil elephant in the room called BoardGameGeek, but I’m not happy about it.

        • Giving Up a Static IP

          Ever since it was first launched, I've hosted Rob's Gemini Capsule on a local machine from my home Internet connection. Yesterday, almost two and a half years later, I decided to move the capsule to AWS.

          It was a tough decision, primarily because of my stance on digital autonomy. I believe in the right to establish one's own presence in cyberspace however one wishes, including entirely on one's own terms. I've exercised that right for years by insisting on a static IP address for my home Internet connection and hosting my own services from there. However, at our new house, we have to subscribe to a business Internet plan to get a static IP and CPE bridging in our ISP's infrastructure for opening ports. That increased our monthly Internet by $50, and since I only host a Gemini capsule right now, I was essentially paying $50 a month just for Gemini hosting. I was willing to pay the extra cost for future flexibility, but in recent weeks we've entered a period of tight finances, and it became necessary to migrate the capsule in order to save money.


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



Recent Techrights' Posts

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
 
Microsoft "Buyout" Offer is Less Than One Year's Salary
So our assumption about this was correct
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