macOS Tahoe Battery Life Worse? Tips to Help Reduction in Battery Performance with macOS 26
A fair number of Mac users have found that macOS Tahoe has notably reduced the battery life and battery performance of their MacBook hardware. Looking around online, youâll find a variety of complaints from MacBook Pro and MacBook Air users about quickly draining battery and significant reductions in battery life on their Mac in general, ⊠[Read More](https://osxdaily.com/2025/10/14/macos-tahoe-battery-l ⊠â Read more
Poorer health linked to more votes for Reform UK, 2024 voting patterns suggest
Poorer health is linked to a higher proportion of votes for the populist right wing political party, Reform UK, indicates an analysis of the 2024 general election voting patterns in England, published online in the open access journal BMJ Open Respiratory Research. â Read more
Modern iOS Security Features â A Deep Dive into SPTM, TXM, and Exclaves
The XNU kernel is the basis of Appleâs operating systems. Although labeled as a hybrid kernel, it is found to generally operate in a monolithic manner by defining a single privileged trust zone in which all system functionality resides. This has security implications, as a kernel compromise has immediate and significant effects on the entire system. Over the past few years, Apple has taken steps towards a more compartmentalized kernel architecture and a more micr ⊠â Read more
I noticed Google put out this article: https://android-developers.googleblog.com/2025/09/lets-talk-security-answering-your-top.html itâs very current day Google, but the comments under the YouTube video are pretty on point and I saw a few familiar faces there. There is also, unexpectedly, ways to contact Google.
First a form for âteachers, students, and hobbyistsâ, that I filled politely, as someone who falls under their hobbyist category. It can be filled both anonymously, or with an e-mail attached, to be contacted by them (I chose the second option).
Also a general feedback and questions form, that I was not as polite in and used to send them the following message:
I have already provided some feedback, in the teacher, student and hobbyists form/questionaire, as well as an open letter Iâve recently sent to the European Commission digital markets act team, as I do believe your proposal might not even be legal, given the fact it puts privacy-focused alternative app stores at risk (https://f-droid.org/cs/2025/09/29/google-developer-registration-decree.html) and it was proposed this early, after Google lost in court to Epic Games, over similar monopoly concerns. Why should we trust Google to be the only authority for all developer signatures, right after the European courts labeled it a gatekeeper?
Assuming this gets passed, despite justified developer backlash and at best questionable legality, can you give us any guarantees, this will not be used to target legal malware-free mods, or user privacy enhancing patchers, like the ones used for applying the ReVanced patches? I have made a few mods myself, but I am in no way associated with the ReVanced team. I just share many peoples concerns, Google Chrome has been conveniently stripped of its manifest v2 support, that made many privacy protecting extensions possible and now youâre conveniently asking for the government IDs, of all the developers, who maintain these kinds of privacy protections (be it patches, or alternative open-source apps) on Android.
10 Unique Ancient Peoples Whose Cultural Footprints Still Shape the World
History has a funny way of remembering the loudest voicesâthe emperors, conquerors, and generals whose names echo through textbooks and tourist guides. But for every Caesar or Alexander, countless quieter civilizations shaped the world we live in today. Their contributions hide in plain sight, etched into our laws, our languages, our festivals, and even the [âŠ]
The post [10 Unique Anci ⊠â Read more
@bender@twtxt.net I guess most clocks donât support that. đ My wrist watch can do it, you can select it in the menu:

In general, different transmitter means different frequency and different encoding, for example these two:
AI advance helps astronomers spot cosmic events with just a handful of examples
A new study co-led by the University of Oxford and Google Cloud has shown how general-purpose AI can accurately classify real changes in the night skyâsuch as an exploding star, a black hole tearing apart a passing star, a fast-moving asteroid, or a brief stellar flare from a compact star systemâand explain its reasoning, without the need for complex training. â Read more
10 Shocking Crimes Where the Perpetrator Walked Free
The legal system operates on a fundamental principle: a person is presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. For the general public, this can sometimes lead to jarring and controversial outcomes. In certain high-profile cases, the facts of a crime seem clear. Yet, the legal defenses and trial procedures result in a stunning [âŠ]
The post [10 Shocking Crimes Where the Perpetrator Walked Free](https://listve ⊠â Read more
The case against generative AI: the numbers just donât add up (i.e., itâs a scam)
Every single âvibe coding is the future,â âthe power of AI,â and âAI job lossâ story written perpetuates a myth that will only lead to more regular people getting hurt when the bubble bursts. Every article written about OpenAI or NVIDIA or Oracle that doesnât explicitly state that the money doesnât exist, that the revenues are impossible, that one of the companies involved bur ⊠â Read more
General relativity might save some planets from death
Some habitable worlds orbiting dead stars could be kept alive for aeons thanks to a quirk of Einsteinâs theory of gravity â Read more
@prologic@twtxt.net I wouldnât know where to look for little cockroaches, or roaches, in general! LOL. We buy seeds to feed them. But not around the neighborhood, otherwise we would have a problem. đ
Chemists create red fluorescent dyes that may enable clearer biomedical imaging
MIT chemists have designed a new type of fluorescent molecule that they hope could be used for applications such as generating clearer images of tumors. â Read more
Ultra-thin sodium films offer low-cost alternative to gold and silver in optical technologies
From solar panels to next-generation medical devices, many emerging technologies rely on materials that can manipulate light with extreme precision. These materialsâcalled plasmonic materialsâare typically made from expensive metals like gold or silver. But what if a cheaper, more abundant metal could do the job just as well or better? â Read more
@movq@www.uninformativ.de canât you use generic drivers? I did that for an enterprise copier/printer/scanner we used to have at work, and it worked just fine!
đ» Issue 489 - Scala learning, tutorials, references and general related info. ScalaTut resource. â Read more
Vim Config Generator Idea â Read more
Spec-driven development: Using Markdown as a programming language when building with AI
I coded my latest app entirely in Markdown and let GitHub Copilot compile it into Go. This resulted in cleaner specs, faster iteration, and no more context loss. âš
The post [Spec-driven development: Using Markdown as a programming language when building with AI](https://github.blog/ai-and-ml/generative-ai/spec-driven-development-using-markdown-as-a-p ⊠â Read more
Comprehension debt: A ticking time bomb of LLM-generated code
Article URL: https://codemanship.wordpress.com/2025/09/30/comprehension-debt-the-ticking-time-bomb-of-llm-generated-code/
Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45423917
Points: 530
# Comments: 334 â Read more
@prologic@twtxt.net That zs looks pretty cool! I love simple static site generators, and look forward to trying it on my next web site project. Kudos!
MacOS Tahoe 26 Feels Slow? Try These 6 Performance Tips
Some Mac users who have updated to macOS Tahoe 26 feel like the new operating system runs slower than their prior MacOS installation did. Reports online suggest there can be general sluggishness and lagging performance, sometimes with frame rate drops and stuttering animations on the screen, or even when typing. Other users in various forums ⊠Read More â Read more
@prologic@twtxt.net I know we wonât ever convince each other of the otherâs favorite addressing scheme. :-D But I wanna address (haha) your concerns:
I donât see any difference between the two schemes regarding link rot and migration. If the URL changes, both approaches are equally terrible as the feed URL is part of the hashed value and reference of some sort in the location-based scheme. It doesnât matter.
The same is true for duplication and forks. Even today, the âcannonical URLâ has to be chosen to build the hash. Thatâs exactly the same with location-based addressing. Why would a mirror only duplicate stuff with location- but not content-based addressing? I really fail to see that. Also, who is using mirrors or relays anyway? I donât know of any such software to be honest.
If there is a spam feed, I just unfollow it. Done. Not a concern for me at all. Not the slightest bit. And the byte verification is THE source of all broken threads when the conversation start is edited. Yes, this can be viewed as a feature, but how many times was it actually a feature and not more behaving as an anti-feature in terms of user experience?
I donât get your argument. If the feed in question is offline, one can simply look in local caches and see if there is a message at that particular time, just like looking up a hash. Whereâs the difference? Except that the lookup key is longer or compound or whatever depending on the cache format.
Even a new hashing algorithm requires work on clients etc. Itâs not that you get some backwards-compatibility for free. It just cannot be backwards-compatible in my opinion, no matter which approach we take. Thatâs why I believe some magic time for the switch causes the least amount of trouble. You leave the old world untouched and working.
If these are general concerns, Iâm completely with you. But I donât think that they only apply to location-based addressing. Thatâs how I interpreted your message. I could be wrong. Happy to read your explanations. :-)
Outback gardeners share the joys of turning dust to daisies
Flower farmer Suzanne Stanton says generations of outback women have taken comfort in their gardens, proof that life can survive in the harshest of climates. â Read more
** Strata **
A Counterfeit - a Plated Person -
I would not be -
Whatever strata of Iniquity
My Nature underlie -
Truth is good Health - and Safety, and the Sky.
How meagre, what an Exile - is a Lie,
And Vocal - when we die -
â Emily Dickinson
I made another game! This one pretty much has one single verb:âmove.â The game, like most games I make, is a roguelike that relies heavily on probabilities and rng (random number generation).
Each level is ⊠â Read more
How Generative AI Video Works - Computerphile â Read more
https://bester.slackware.nl/AST/ slackbuild online generator
Ni Hao; bÄ«ng qĂlĂn!
Iâm just dropping in, to emphasize my love for ice cream and the Chinese crawler bots, allocating their time and resources, towards scraping my humble website.

To show my gratitude, Iâve even added a random little dog generator to https://thecanine.ueuo.com/sparkle.html so that everyone can pick up their own custom dogFT, on their journey through my site.
Why do I care about this?
- The load will become a problem at some point.
- These crawlers and the current âAIâ in general are breaking the rules. I am supposed to be paying for every little thing, I get sued for âpiracyâ. But apparently, these rules only apply to me. If I had more money, I could break them. Fuck that.
- I simply donât want it. Period.
Erlang Solutions: Healthcare Blog Round-Up
Healthcare is moving quickly, and technology is playing a big part in that shift. The way information is collected, the way patients are cared for, and the way hospitals run are all changing.
Over the past year, our team has written about some of the most important trends shaping the future of healthcare. In this round-up, we bring together three of those articles: remote patient monitoring, big data, and generative AI.
Maybe you have been following along, or ⊠â Read more
Tertulia de Dieter: Las explicaciones de la directora general de ProtecciĂłn Civil
Cristina Losada, Pepe GÂȘ DomĂnguez y Carmelo JordĂĄ comentan la comparecencia de Virginia Barcones sobre los incendios. â Read more
@prologic@twtxt.net Thatâs fair, this version really is a stretch. Similar to old Atari game spirites, a lot is left to interpretation,especially by those who have not seen any of the more detailed ones, before.
On the other hand, some suggested Iâm still wasting too many pixels on the tail, but removing those, makes it just a generic dog (at best), even to me.
Sam Whited: Notes
Iâve recently been using the Mixxx software for DJs. This page includes some
personal notes on my own use cases, whatâs good, whatâs bad, etc.
It is not really made for general consumption, but is thrown up here anyways.
It will be a bit rambling and/or ranty at times, most likely.
Letâs get my overall impressions of the software out of the way up front: itâs
absolutely great and I recommend it over the commercial alternatives for DJs of
all stripes (except maybe Radio DJs, itâs not really for ⊠â Read more
@movq@www.uninformativ.de having to go to a gopher proxy to see a text document better served on readily available web servers⊠đ€, but I digress. Verbatim text:
What's Missing from "Retro"
~softwarepagan
------------------------------------------------------------------
You know, often, when I say I miss older ways of computing or
connecting online, people tell me "there's nothing stopping you
from doing that now!" and they are technicay correct in most cases
(though I can't, for example, chat with friends on MSN ever
again...) However, let me explain that while this type of thing can
*sort of* fill that hole in my heart, it isn't *the same.*
Say, for example, I wanted to connect with others over a BBS. This
wouldn't offer the same types of connections it used to. While
there are BBSes around with active users, they're no longer there
to discuss movies, Star Trek, D&D, games, etc. They're there to
discuss *BBSes.* The same can be said for Gopher, old-school forums
and all sorts of revival projects (such as Escargot, Spacehey,
etc.) Retrocomputing enthusiasts, while they have a variety of
interests, are often in these spaces to discuss the medium itself
and not other topics. This exists at a stark contrast from how
things were in the past, where a non-tech-inclined person may learn
the tech to connect with likeminded others (as I did as a
Zelda-obsessed kid.)
The same can be said of old media. People will say "well, nobody is
stopping you from watching old shows/movies now!" Again, they are
technically correct. I can go home right now and watch *Star Trek:
The Next Generation* to my heart's content. It will never again,
however, be current, or new. When something is new, it serves as a
shared cultural experience. Remember how "Game of Thrones* felt in
the mid-to-late 2010s? Yeah, that.
It's sad. I sustain myself on a mixed diet of old things, new
things, and new things intended for old millenials like me who like
old things. It can be bittersweet.
Hereâs an example of X11/Xlib being old and archaic.
X11 knows the data type âcardinalâ. For example, the window property _NET_WM_ICON (which holds image data for icons) is an array of âcardinalâ. I am already not really familiar with that word and Iâm assuming that it comes from mathematics:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardinal_number
(It could also be a bird, but probably not: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardinalidae)
We would probably call this an âintegerâ today.
EWMH says that icons are arrays of cardinals and that theyâre 32-bit numbers:
https://specifications.freedesktop.org/wm-spec/latest-single/#id-1.6.13
So itâs something like 0x11223344 with 0x11 being the alpha channel, 0x22 is red, and so on.
You would assume that, when you retrieve such an array from the X11 server, youâd get an array of uint32_t, right?
Nope.
Xlib is so old, they use char for 8-bit stuff, short int for 16-bit, and long int for 32-bit:
That is congruent with the general C data types, so it does make sense:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_data_types
Now the funny thing is, on modern x86_64, the type long int is actually 64 bits wide.
The result is that every pixel in a Pixmap, for example, is twice as large in memory as it would need to be. Just because Xlib uses long int, because uint32_t didnât exist, yet.
And this is something that I wouldnât know how to fix without breaking clients.
gomdn: Yet another Static Site Generator
Yet another Static Site Generator (SSG), but this one is mine.
Itâs a stupidly simple Go program ( wc says 229 lines), more like a
hack, really, but I donât need something like Hugo. Most of the real
work is done by the goldmark package, of course. This is mostly just a
wrapper, deciding if something needs to be rebuilt.
Iâve been using a Perl script together with cmark (originally
Markdown.pl) since forever. And before that the old [txt2tags](htt ⊠â Read more
I have a Python script that transforms the original YouTube channel Atom feed into a more useful Atom feed by removing the spam description and replacing it with the video duration, filtering out videos by title, duration, etc. I just updated it to exclude the damn Shorts garbage more efficiently. Finally, YouTube updated their Atom feed generation, so that the video URL contains /short/ if itâs of this useless kind. Never thought that they ever actually will improve their Atom feeds. Thank you, much appreciated!
PEP 798: Unpacking in Comprehensions
This PEP proposes extending list, set, and dictionary comprehensions, as well as generator expressions, to allow unpacking notation (* and **) at the start of the expression, providing a concise way of combining an arbitrary number of iterables into one list or set or generator, or an arbitrary number of dictionaries into one dictionary, for example: â Read more
I give up.
Letâs try again next year. I donât have the stamina. Death by a thousand paper cuts.
Canât set up a meaningful taskbar: https://github.com/labwc/labwc/discussions/2924 (This is not a labwc issue, itâs a generic issue in the broader Wayland ecosystem.)
TKey: The Next Generation
Not speaking for my employer, just as an interested developer in an
interesting open source project.
As you might have noticed, the platform repo of the Tillitis TKey has
some alpha tags for the next generation, Castor:
https://github.com/tillitis/tillitis-key1/tags
An alpha tag means that all planned features for the platform are in
place, but thereâs not yet a complete audit and a lot of testing ⊠â Read more
** Om nom nom LLMs, in which I respond to Simon Willisonâs analogy **
I am hesitant to wade into the tumultuous waters that are the discourse around generative AI and LLMs, but this morning I came across a thing that so thoroughly melted my brain I feel uncontrollably compelled to respond.
This morning, at evidently 4:10 AM (no mention of timezone), Simon Willison shared the following blog post, quoted here in full:
Quitting programming as ⊠â Read more
@kat@yarn.girlonthemoon.xyz Welcome back. đ (Itâs a bit quiet here in general. đ€)
Tertulia de Dieter: Dos personas visitaron a Aldama en la cĂĄrcel en una visita no registrada para ofrecerle beneficios
Dieter analiza el procesamiento del fiscal general del Estado con Alejandro Vara, Pepe GarcĂa DomĂnguez y Mario Noya. â Read more
En este paĂs llamado España: Pedro SĂĄnchez y su âbĂșnkerâ
Dieter Brandau analiza la escasez de comparecencias del presidente del Gobierno, y comenta el procesamiento al Fiscal General del Estado. â Read more
Ukraineâs General Staff confirms strike on Russian facility producing special receivers for Shahed drones â Read more
Live tracking solution for OsmAnd
I previously shared my transition from Komoot to OsmAnd, and after some time, Iâve grown accustomed to its comprehensive capabilities. Whether for cycling, hiking, or general navigation, OsmAnd truly functions as a versatile âSwiss Army knifeâ for offline mobile navigation and tracking. â Read more
I wanted to port this to Rust as an excercise, but they still have no random number generator in the core library: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/130703
On my blog: Generative AI Wish List https://john.colagioia.net/blog/2025/06/08/ai-wish-list.html #artificialintelligence #harm #rant