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pls
There is too much free space and too many colors and UI elements
I cannot unleash my autism with such a UI
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Orange Site:
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Found this comical, I hope you do as well!
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tl:dr shitty programming
A couple of weeks ago EasyList maintainers saw a huge spike in traffic. The overall traffic quickly snowballed from a couple of terabytes per day to 10-20 times that amount. The source of that dramatic surge, it turned out, were Android devices from India.
What happened to us bears a striking resemblance to what is now crippling EasyList:
- There’s an open source Android browser (now seemingly abandoned) that implements ad-blocking functionality.
- This browser is forked by a couple of other browsers that are very popular in India.
- The problem is that this browser has a very serious flaw. It tries to download filters updates on every startup, and on Android it may happen lots of times per day. It can even happen when the browser is running in the background.
When we encountered a similar problem last year, we found a simple solution: block the undesired traffic from these apps. Even so, we continue to serve about 100TB of “Access Denied” pages monthly!
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Fricking naming conventions: USB 4 2.0
DIE IN MINETEST USB FOUNDATION!
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I use both
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Losing my fricking shit over this
Post got deleted, here's the federated post
Context: A new instance started up on the Frediverse. The owner of fosstodon.org, some fossstrag instance decided to shut down.
Now, everyone's moving to floss.social, GIMP being one of those on the Fediverse.
It's like brand accounts on Twitter but for nerds
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Unironically a based move from the bongs.
Orange Site:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33246016
Facebook parent Meta ordered to sell Giphy by UK competition regulator
Meta, the owner of Facebook, admitted defeat Tuesday after U. competition regulators issued a final verdict ordering the company to sell its animated image making unit Giphy. Citing the risk of a substantial lessening of competition in the social media and display advertising market, the Competition and Markets Authority said Tuesday that Meta must «sell GIPHY, in its entirety, to a suitable buyer.» It is not yet clear which company will step in to buy Giphy. «We will work closely with the CMA on divesting GIPHY,» the Meta spokesperson told CNBC.
«We are grateful to the GIPHY team during this uncertain time for their business, and wish them every success. We will continue to evaluate opportunities - including through acquisition - to bring innovation and choice to more people in the UK and around the world». In November, the CMA ordered Meta to divest Giphy after finding the combination of the two companies raised competition concerns. Meta tried to appeal the decision.
After a three-month review, a CMA panel ruled the deal would enable Meta to further increase its market power. Giphy has seen a decline in the number of GIF uploads in the past two years, it added. display advertising market. Meta controls nearly half of the U. «Before the merger, Giphy was offering innovative advertising services in the US and was considering expanding to other countries, including the UK,» the regulator said.
The CMA also cited the prospect of Giphy relinquishing its own ambitions in digital advertising in its decision to block the deal. Giphy had plans to launch its own ads but these were quashed by Meta after the takeover was completed in 2020, according to the regulator. The watchdog said this effectively «removed Giphy as a potential challenger in the UK display advertising market». users to secure continued access to its GIFs.
Landmark move
It is the first time a global regulator has unwound a completed deal by a Big Tech company. The CMA is seeking to become a greater force in the battle among global regulators to rein in Big Tech companies.
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Based. Not dramatic, but based. May also fit in /h/vidya.
http://discmaster.textfiles.com/
Orange Site:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33254791
Lost something? Search through 91.7 million files from the 80s, 90s, and 2000s | Ars Technica
The quest to save today’s gaming history from being lost forever
Discmaster opens a window into digital media culture around the turn of the millennium, turning anyone into a would-be digital archeologist. The files on Discmaster come from the Internet Archive, uploaded by thousands of people over the years. «The value proposition is the value proposition of any freely accessible research database,» Scott told Ars Technica. Scott says that Discmaster is «99.999 percent» the work of that anonymous group, right down to the vintage gray theme that is compatible with web browsers for older machines.
Scott says he slapped a name on it and volunteered to host it on his site. And while Scott is an employee of the Internet Archive, he says that Discmaster is «100 percent unaffiliated» with that organization. One of the highlights of Discmaster is that it has already done a lot of file format conversion on the back end, making the vintage files more accessible. In the Discmaster Twitter announcement thread, people are already using the service to rediscover programs they lost during the 1990s, rare BBS files, ZZT worlds, bitmap fonts, shareware they wrote 20-plus years ago, and vintage music software.
Enlarge / Using Discmaster, you can search through vintage stock photo CD-ROMs on many subjects. «It is probably, to me, one of the most important computer history research project opportunities that we've had in 10 years,» says Scott. «The they are choosing are very specifically compilation and presentation CD-ROMs, like the best shareware discs,» says Scott.
Thousands of DOS games have been added to the Internet Archive
Scott is no stranger to radical acts of digital archivism, having participated in backing up GeoCities, preserving Flash files, making thousands of MS-DOS games playable though a web browser, and more. Com, he's hosted archives of BBS files and CD-ROMs for almost two decades. But until now, those resources had never been searchable with the degree of precision that Discmaster allows. In 2005, he created Vintage Computing and Gaming.
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Hello. This is Matthew Butterick. I'm a writer, designer, programmer, and lawyer. I've written two books on typography---Practical Typography and Typography for Lawyers---and designed the fonts in the MB Type library, including Equity, Concourse, and Triplicate.
As a programmer, I've been professionally involved with open-source software since 1998, including two years at Red Hat. More recently I've been a contributor to Racket. I wrote the Lisp-advocacy essay Why Racket? Why Lisp? and Beautiful Racket, a book about making programming languages. I've released plenty of open-source software, including Pollen, which I use to publish my online books, and even AI software that I use in my work.
In June 2022, I wrote about the legal problems with GitHub Copilot, in particular its mishandling of open-source licenses. Recently, I took the next step: I reactivated my California bar membership to team up with the amazingly excellent class-action litigators Joseph Saveri, Cadio Zirpoli, and Travis Manfredi at the Joseph Saveri Law Firm on a new project---
We're investigating a potential lawsuit against GitHub Copilot for violating its legal duties to open-source authors and end users.\
We want to hear from you. Click here to help with the investigation.\
Or read on.
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Edit: Nothing changes
Currently we have this guideline:
Help keep this hole healthy by keeping drama and non-drama balanced. If you see too much drama, post something that isn't dramatic. If there isn't enough drama and this hole has become too boring, POST DRAMA!
While I have posted non-drama, this is a drama site and posts that aren't dramatic in this hole have been allowed. However, your average pinkoid and at least one poweruser who gets very mad at every hole's content that has a pink username (still like him btw) gets mad when something non-dramatic is posted. I have retained a drama-lite approach to the hole.
However, I've been thinking about revising the guideline above to require at least one dramatic or funny link in the post if you will post boring tech content. Meta posts asking for advice or whatever would still be allowed. If the news article is funny, then it's optional but recommended to post dramatic content. At least a reaction from Hacker News, /r/technology or any other tech sub, twittertards, /g/, etc. Meta posts asking for advice would still be allowed. While the content won't change much, you would no longer be able to post boring shit like this.
Should we make a change to the guideline and require posts to be dramatic or funny?