Bonum Certa Men Certa

Gemini Links 22/07/2023: Duelin’ Boots and Oddmuse Issues



  • Gemini* and Gopher

    • Personal/Opinions

      • Dry Herb Vapes Are Game Changing

        Smoking is a common habit for people to develop. If you aren't a smoker you probably know someone who does or did. I have been a smoker for about a decade. The only real difference is that I am not a tobacco smoker, I smoke cannabis/hemp/dope flower. Though admittedly I did pick up cigarette smoking for a year as a teenager I fortunately got out of that before it became an addiction.

        For about 10 years now I have smoked cannabis in various formats, hand bowls, bongs, gravity bongs, one hitters/dugouts, joints, blunts. Lots of experience with all sorts of pieces, pipes, and papers. However one thing that has illuded me until a month ago has been 'dry herb vaporizers'. And this is what I would like to write about today. What dry herb vaporizers are and how it has made my smoking like far better for my health and wallet.

    • Politics and World Events

      • But Who Will Maintain The Roads?

        When I tell people I am an anarchist, the response is often something along the lines of "that is just naive. Without the government we are screwed! Who will maintain the roads?"

        I find that incredibly amusing, considering the current state of the US infrastructure (your country may differ).

        The roads are total shit; bridges are collapsing, and trains are derailing daily, all while costs are rising exponentially.

    • Science

      • Gibson's theory of ecological perception

        In a reductionistic scheme perception would be studied in the laboratory with artificial tasks, quite dissimilar to our everyday experience. Studies of pitch perception might involve pure sine tones, but absolutely no real musical excerpts. James J. Gibson's ecological theory, which I do not know too much about, points out the necessity of considering the senses as they operate in context in complex environments. Gibson's often cited books were long out of print, now some of them have reappeared, but unfortunately not affordably priced. However, a few papers can be found on the internet.

        Gibson's ecological theory of perception has had some influence on certain musicologists and researchers in auditory perception (Eric Clarke, Stephen Handel, among others). This is perhaps not what one would expect, given that Gibson developed his theory mainly in the visual domain. I'm not aware that Gibson would have had nearly as big an impact on more recent research on visual perception, but I could have missed something.

    • Technology and Free Software

      • Duelin' Boots

        I tried dual-booting back in the very late 1990s, Mac OS and I think it was Yellow Dog Linux. Since then, not so much. Problems include the installers or updators elbowing one another, which may result in one or more systems that cannot boot, and do you have the time and skill to debug and fix that? Or how many on IRC or a forum will be dragged along when the waters turn out to be a bit too swift and deep? There is also generally a lack of security updates until the other operating system(s) can be booted, which means frequent reboots, or a virtual mandate that urgent security updates be installed before the long-since-rebooted OS can more safely be used. Also dual-booting may not mix well with configuration management, in particular the kind that is push based. Or maybe the different OS do different things to set the clock on the motherboard, and now you have unexpected time sync problems? Dual booting is more complicated and time consuming than any benefit provided, in my view: you have not only multiple operating systems to maintain, but also the potential for bootloader and hardware level interactions between them, and various security and configuration management drawbacks. Do you have the time for that?

        "Mac OS" probably needs to be tagged with "Classic" these days; this was before Mac OS X 10.0.0 came out. Also I guess postings are supposed to have stock photos in them? I haven't used any modern AI, so here's something cropped with ImageMagick.

      • Advice about computers

        A few days ago, one of our patrons asked for advice about computers. And a good patron gave some recommendations. I checked them out.

        I won't go into the details now, but suffice it to say, that I'm not a tech guy. The limited knowledge I have about technology is purely out of interest.

        A brief background on why I'm making this post is that many years ago, I went to buy a computer, and I got ripped off. I didn't even realize that until I talked to my brother, and he got visibly upset.

      • Internet/Gemini

        • How wonderful to be able to count on two-fold Geminaut quality

          winter was one of the first I started reading courtesy of Antenna. And not once have I been let down by the quality of their writing and character. Grant it, that means I feel above average embarrassed, because by comparison I feel more a hack of a former, and impolite cretin in the latter. Oh, to able to write like that *and* not get involved in variations on the theme of participatory selfishness.

        • Reduced Site Functionality

          I somehow managed to introduce a bug into this site's configuration. It manifests as one of processes serving the site eating all the CPU resources. Every day there seems to be about zero to three of these.

          As I can't debug such rare events, I need to rely on logging but my efforts so far haven't been successful. So now what I'm doing is that I'm disabling part of this site's functionality, piece by piece. Let's see whether I can pare it down to a set that no longer runs into the problem.

        • Thinking about switching away from Oddmuse

          Oddmuse started out as a CGI script written in Perl. This is great for very small and dynamic sites: Most of the time, nobody is visiting and the process isn't running. As activity increases (and search engines and bots activity increases!) a CGI script is an increasingly bad idea. Every time, you load the Perl binary, it loads the script, parses the script, runs the script, loads the libraries, parses the libraries, and so on.

          These days, I run a Mojolicious server which keeps the script in memory and reruns it for every request. The webserver acts as a proxy server for all of this. And it's somewhat tricky: Every now and then there are processes that won't die, accumulating, see 2023-06-28 Reduced Site Functionality.

        • Bots crawling my sites

          I'm thinking about blocking all bots from my website. But where to start? How about this: Check the access.log file (I use Apache as my web server). If the User Agent Field contains the word "bot" that sounds like a candidate? Let's see!


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



Recent Techrights' Posts

All-Time Lows for Windows in Spain and Portugal
data which became publicly available less than 24 hours ago in statCounter
SLAPP Censorship - Part 64 Out of 200: Not Amused by Repeated Threats (to "Shut Down" My "Existence" While Mentioning My Wife Too)
it's about censorship
The NHS is Under Attack by Anthropic and Microsoft (or Their Lemmings That Infect the NHS)
They are kidding themselves if they seriously believe Web-facing source code repositories are the real threat to patients
cPanel is Not Linux, cPanel is Proprietary Software
It's fair to say I've used cPanel for 23 years
 
Links 03/05/2026: Water Shortages Crises and Slop Fakes "Are Coming for Your Bank Account" (Slop-Enabled Fraud)
Links for the day
The Corrupt Lecture the Non-Corrupt - Part XI - EPO 'Products' to Cement Asian and American Monopolies
Only a fool would believe Lame Duck Campinos
Microsoft Windows Falls Below 9% in South Africa
As one can expect, GNU/Linux is measured as going up in France
Gemini Links 03/05/2026: The Black Side of the Web, LiveJournal, Chimarrão
Links for the day
A Month Since Mass Layoffs at Red Hat (400+ Engineers Laid Off), The Media Didn't Cover It
We are very concerned about the state of the media
Over at Tux Machines...
GNU/Linux news for the past day
IRC Proceedings: Saturday, May 02, 2026
IRC logs for Saturday, May 02, 2026
Gemini Links 02/05/2026: Strange Psychosis and TUIs
Links for the day
Links 02/05/2026: Microsoft Has Begun Rebranding Vista 11 as 'XBox' (Because the Console is Dying), Slop Rejected by Oscars
Links for the day
IBM's CEO 10 Years Ago in IBM-Sponsored Forbes: "For those willing to embrace [blockchains], the future will indeed be bright."
How well did this prediction materialise?
RightsCon Cancellation as a Data Point in a World Gone Astray
RightsCon should not even be controversial
Links 02/05/2026: Gen Z is Turning Against Slop and OpenAI/Microsoft Rift Explained
Links for the day
Storage and Memory Prices Are Rising Not Because of High Demand (Production Can Match Demand), It's Partly Because of Price-Fixing (Same as Food Price Increases)
Sophisticated robberies are still robberies
Thousands of Layoffs at IBM, So IBM Pays Mainstream Media to Claim That IBM is Hiring (Paid Lies)
This is a story about the media failing us, not just IBM failing as a company
A Look at DataStax Bluewashing (IBM and Layoffs)
IBM is a place that many people leave or get pushed out of
Gemini Links 02/05/2026: Leaving Session, Alhena 5.5.7, and Slop Failing Customers
Links for the day
Over at Tux Machines...
GNU/Linux news for the past day
IRC Proceedings: Friday, May 01, 2026
IRC logs for Friday, May 01, 2026
Links 01/05/2026: Microsoft 'Headcount' Decreasing, Apple Quietly Killing Vision Pro
Links for the day
Oracle's Debt Grew by Over 50 Billion Dollars in 6 Months
Larry Ellison spent a lot of money buying a lot of the corporate media
In Praise of Debian
30 hours ago we began an upgrade
What Linus (Torvalds, the Linux Dude) Meant by "Show Me the Code"
"Show Me the Code" is a common cultural reference
Yes, GNU/Linux Can Run on Playstation 5, But Don't Buy It, Learn From Sony's Past of Rootkit and PS3 Betrayal
Millions of Playstation 3 owners will never forget what Sony did to them
XBox Will Not Last Much Longer, XBox Chief Admits Problems
Microsoft's latest "results"
Dealing With Demagogue in Free Software
Don't spread their ideology and never participate in any of their projects
What May 1 Means to Us (and to Many Others)
To me, May 1 means something
Microsoft Lunduke is 'Pulling a Garrett' by Turning Technical and Legal Debate Over Rust Into a 'Trans Debate'
Don't fall for the demagogue
Links 01/05/2026: Regulatory Trouble for Apple, Now Even Mozilla Pushes Back Against Google
Links for the day
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
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
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
Microsoft Debt Rose Almost $50 Billion Since We Moved to Debian
GAFAM has a new name for debt