@prologic@twtxt.net Heyho, welcome back. š Did you guys have a nice trip? š
Iām back! š
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org Probably. :-) I just saw that the account on Yarn is also gone. Maybe it didnāt survive the crash earlier this year.
Just realized: One of the reasons why I donāt like āflat UIsā is that they look broken to me. Like the program has a bug, missing pixmaps or whatever.
Take this for example:
https://movq.de/v/8822afccf0/a.png
Iām talking about this area specifically:
https://movq.de/v/8822afccf0/a%2Dhigh.png
One UI element ends and the other one begins ā no ātransitionā between them.
The style of old UIs like these two is deeply ingrained into my brain:
https://movq.de/v/8822afccf0/b.png
https://movq.de/v/8822afccf0/c.png
When all these little elements (borders, handles, even just simple lines, ā¦) are no longer present, then the program looks buggy and broken to me. And Iām not sure if Iāll ever be able to un-learn that.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Yeah, itās been a while. Didnāt feel this long, though. Not at all, Iām quite surprised. :-O
But like with every quality content, there is no publishing schedule. Eventually, @mckinley@mckinley.cc will write another article for all of us. :-)
I was wondering: What the heck is the light on my boot!? Turns out between sock and shoe tongue was a firefly, unbelievable! ;-D Iāve no idea how that happened. After untying, it took me five attempts to finally get it off. How crazy!
Watching several hundred glowworms tonight did not get boring. Itās just so damn cool. :-)
Alright, now for something fun! Taxes! Yay!
I went to the firefly party again and checked them out on a different path. Boys and girls, there were so many of them! Apparently, I took the wrong turn and the numbers dropped. Still several hundreds if not over a thousand, but Iām spoiled now.
On the way there I noticed an absolutely spectacular sunset. However, I didnāt bring my camera. Should have peaked through the closed shutters before I left.
It turns out the disco music from the next town over wasnāt only audible in the forest but is also free-to-air in my bed. :-( Itās earplugs time.
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org Wow. Just like Skyrim! š
@mckinley@mckinley.ccās blog appears to have gone stale, hm.
Thanks @bender@twtxt.net! Yeah, so super cute. I couldnāt pet them, though. Despite very curious, they were also very restless.
I persuaded my dad to check out the fireflies with me tonight. He only wanted to go for a short trip, so we came just across a couple hundred of them. Otherwise, the thousands mark would have been exceeded in no time. He was super glad I talked him into that. :-)
It was also my first time to see them over the meadows. Those numbers donāt compare to the ones inside the forest, no question, but we probably saw 60 or so. Havenāt come across them there before, I only heard and read about that.
Note to future-Lyse next year: Leaving at 21:45 seems like a good time. We left earlier and had to wait just a few more minutes for them to come out in masses.
Too bad itās impossible to share photos or videos. My camera isnāt made for that at all, not even close.
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org such a beautiful goooooooat! Those eye, and the ear I would love to pet⦠Nice click, mate!
Anyone that the Pigs donāt like sure is the perfect candidate. Without fail.
Happy for you! Mamdani looks like he will be good for NYC.
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org itās so bad!!!
Hahaha, Iām sure there were well over one thousand fireflies today! Basically at all times I could watch at least 15 of them around me. At better spots where one could see a few meters into the forest, there were easily 30 individuals, probably more. One even landed on my small finger. I didnāt feel anything at all, but my finger glowed. :-) Awwww! After a 20 meters ride it took off.
But it looks like I have to go already at 21:30 at sunset the next days. Today, I left the house at 22:00 and all the above happend in the first half. The second half of the walk was rather boring, maybe just around 70 glowworms in total. The extremely busy route yesterday was virtually dead this time I came around. They all have already gone to sleep, or something like that.
I also encountered two toads. I nearly stepped on the first one, but it luckily jumped to the side in time. No animals harmed.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de @kat@yarn.girlonthemoon.xyz Itās awful, ājustā 32°C here. When I rode my bike into town I came across some spots where the heat was stationary built up and really intense. The airflow felt like the sauna attendant poured water over the heated rocks and severely fanned the hot air with his towel.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de That short segment is fairly close to reality, even though it obviously looks heaps better in person: https://youtu.be/u8YVorNRcDM?t=66
@kat@yarn.girlonthemoon.xyz Oh dear. š©
i love pinkpantheress so much sheās so cute and fun and tapped into every aesthetic and dance music sound i love. if you like house and garage and D&B music, check her out!!!! she absolutely knows her shit too btw sheās sampled basement jaxx and adam F
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xo_lPnBlfto
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TFWXqLSr4ZM
@thecanine@twtxt.net awww so cute and silly!!!
@movq@www.uninformativ.de OMG SLEEPY LITTLE GUY!!!
@movq@www.uninformativ.de itās sooo bad here on the east coast of the US omg 102F/38C heat here!!
@movq@www.uninformativ.de I also donāt think that Iām a particularly good speaker. :-) The workshop model is a good idea, I like that.
Yeah, itās really good fun. I can highly recommend it. This is also a good way to train (new) developers to think like attackers, how to break in, destroy something or raise awareness of some classes of bugs. Then you can avoid them next time. Itās surprising to me what vulnerabilities come up during this event every time. So, absolutely worth it, win, win.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Oh, really!? You should come visit. :-)
As far as I know females are sitting in the shrubs and males fly around, but theyāre not all that quick. They are slowly moving glowing dots that you can easily follow with your eyes. The bigger problem might be that they turn off and then on again. So, one could count duplicates. However, thereās typically a bit of distance between them (at least 30-50 cm Iād say, often more). Counting the same individual multiple times is not all that common (assuming that they donāt speed up when turned off). My counting was also conservative I believe.
Ah, Die Maus also covered them a few days ago: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OVGD5QEvtoc At the end, thereās a video were you can see the speeds a bit.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Tada, cool! :-)
@arne@uplegger.eu Stattdessen rutscht er seitlich vom Tisch? š¤Ŗ
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org I can confidently say that I donāt remember ever having seen fireflys. (Nor Firefly.) š³ Iām most surprised that you could count them. Naively, I would assume that these guys move around a lot and youād lose track of them?
Weāre entering the ātoo hot to thinkā-season in 3, 2, 1 ⦠and weāre live!
Welcome to the family, Puffy. š„³š”
Heute im Support-Kanal: Schrƶdingers Laptop
⦠der Laptop fƤhrt weder runter noch hoch ā¦
After drawing the bigger canine stickers, I also want to change my profile picture for summer, to something more fluffy, shaded and a bit smug looking.
@kat@yarn.girlonthemoon.xyz NEVER MIND WE ARE SO BACK MAMDANI WON
went to vote. got told i canāt vote because iām not registered. handed a form to fill out that i later learn is not in english.
go home and find out the problem is widespread among young voters like me.
fuck this country.
OH, FUCK ME DEAD! On the way home from todayās walk I saw easily 800 fireflies! Yes, over eight hundred! That was absolutely amazing. First time this year and already this many. Crazy! They were just fricking everywhere in the entire forest. I counted to one hundred and then stopped. The darker it got, the more fireflies came out and glowed around. :-) There were spots where in under ten seconds I counted 20 glowworms. Super sick. Soooo beautiful. <3
Before I left I tried to call a mate to join me, who apparently wasnāt home yet, though, didnāt pick up. But in the very end I surprisingly met her in the forest and we were super happy to encounter all the fireflies. She also said that today was her first time this year to spot them. Iāll definitely check them out in the next days, too.
Apart from all the glowworms, I also came across some goats, two deer (one of which only the ears showing out of the grass), according to the sounds I sadly must have scared up four more, bucketloads of tadpoles, four big and very active anthills next to each other and three bats to finish the stroll off. I call that extremely successful.
There ya go: https://lyse.isobeef.org/waldspaziergang-2025-06-24/
Theyāre all talks, not real hands-on trainings like you did.
I love listening to good, well-structured talks. Problem is, not everybody is a good speaker and many screw it up. š„“ Iām certainly not a great speaker, which is why I gravitate more towards āworkshopsā, in the hopes that people ask questions and discussions arise. Doesnāt always work out. 𤣠At the very least, I almost always have some other person connect to the projector/beamer/screenshare and then they do the stuff ā this avoids me being wwwwaaaaaaaaayyyy too fast.
We are usually drowned in stress and tight deadlines, hence events like today are super rare ⦠We used to do it more often until ~10 years ago.
Once a year the security guys organize a really great hacking event, though.
Oh dear, Iād love to participate in that. 𤯠That sounds like a lot of fun. (Why donāt we do this?!)
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Interesting internal education sessions are way too infrequent here as well. There are a bunch of āknowledge transferā meetings actually, but 90% of the topics already sound totally boring to me. The other 9% talks turned out to be underwhelming, sadly. I only attended a single one where it was delivered what has been promised. Theyāre all talks, not real hands-on trainings like you did.
Once a year the security guys organize a really great hacking event, though. Teams can volunteer to hand in their software dev instances and all workmates are invited to hack them and report security vulnerabilities. Thatās a lot of fun, but also gets frustrating towards the end when you donāt make any progress. :-) Thereās also some actual hands-on training in advance for preparation of the two days. Unfortunately, I missed the last event due to my own project being very stressful at the time.
When I had a Do What You Want Day I also show my direct teammates what I learned in the hopes of this being interesting to them as well. Iām the only one in my team using this opportunity, sadly.
About ChatGPT rotting peopleās brains, similarly could be said about search engines, and reference books. Oh, also doom scrolling, and mobile devices, and the Internet⦠:-P
@prologic@twtxt.net This person isnāt particularly happy with this study:
https://mastodon.social/@grimalkina/114717549619229029
I donāt know enough about these things to form an opinion. 𫤠I sure wish it was true, though. š
I did a ālectureā/āworkshopā about this at work today. 16-bit DOS, real mode. š¾ Pretty cool and the audience (devs and sysadmins) seemed quite interested. š„³
- People used the Intel docs to figure out the instruction encodings.
- Then they wrote a little DOS program that exits with a return code and they used uhex in DOSBox to do that. Yes, we wrote a COM file manually, no Assembler involved. (Many of them had never used DOS before.)
- DEBUG from FreeDOS was used to single-step through the program, showing what it does.
- This gets tedious rather quickly, so we switched to SVED from SvarDOS for writing the rest of the program in Assembly language. nasm worked great for us.
- At the end, we switched to BIOS calls instead of DOS syscalls to demonstrate that the same binary COM file works on another OS. Also a good opportunity to talk about bootloaders a little bit.
- (I think they even understood the basics of segmentation in the end.)
The 8086 / 16-bit real-mode DOS is a great platform to explain a lot of the fundamentals without having to deal with OS semantics or executable file formats.
Now that was a lot of fun. š„³ Itās very rare that we do something like this, sadly. I love doing this kind of low-level stuff.
pledge()
and unveil()
syscalls:
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org Multi-Threading. Is. Hard. 𤯠And yes, that blog is great. š
pledge()
and unveil()
syscalls:
On todayās research journey on pledge(ā¦)
/unveil(ā¦)
/landlock/capabilities I came across the great EWONTFIX blog, in particular this article here: https://ewontfix.com/17/ Super interesting.
@aelaraji@aelaraji.com awww :(((
bought the new server thatāll replace my optiplex 780 woooo!!! new server is a lenovo thinkstation P520
I was this š¤ close to buying a couple of baby-cactus plants but, I couldnāt ⦠I still have to save up for that future screen printing project. š„²
think iām gonna use this license on my git repos going forward. it kicks ass https://anticapitalist.software/
Thanks all š
Option
and error handling. (Or the more complex Result
, but itās easier to explain with Option
.)
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org lol ā I explicitly kept them in there so that the code is easier to understand for non-Rust people š¤Ŗš
@prologic@twtxt.net Bon voyage! I hope youāll find some well-needed rest.
Option
and error handling. (Or the more complex Result
, but itās easier to explain with Option
.)
@movq@www.uninformativ.de All the return
s tell me that youāre not a real Rust programmer. :-D Personally, I would never omit them either. They make code 100 times more readable.