Trump directs nuclear weapons testing to resume for first time in over 30 years
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@movq@www.uninformativ.de Uh, that actually looks not that terrible. Somehow, I remember Swing GUIs being way uglier.
As for Visual Basic, I only had to use VBA once in my life. That was in the beginning of my career when I inherited a project from a leaving coworker. Fuck me, was that awful. Just alone the damn compiler error dialog box popping up in my face all the time while editing and the compiler already trying to parse the unfinished and hence of course uncompilable code. Boy, that left a lasting impression on me. I ported everything to Java very quickly. Luckily, the code base wasnât all that large at that point in time. I had to add a bunch of new features after that, so I was very glad that I convinced my workmate/project manager to do that first. We didnât even need a GUI, the button in Excel was transformed to a command line program that just generated the large file.
But I cannot comment on the VB GUI designer, I never used that. Your screenshot looks very similar to the Delphi one, though. Only towards the end of my Delphi days I found out about the possibility to make the widgets snap to window edges and corners (I donât remember how that was called), so that resizing the windows was actually possible without messing up their entire contents.
Switching to Linux, Delphi wasnât an option anymore. For some reason I couldnât use Kylix. Maybe it was already dead by the time I changed OSes. Or I couldnât get it to run. I just donât remember. I just recall that the unavailability of Delphi was the reason it took me a while to actually settle on Linux. I then fully switched to Java. The GridBagLayout was my absolutely favorite Swing layout manager. I reckon I used it 98% of the time, because it was so powerful and made the windows resize properly, just as I had learned to do in Delphi shortly before.
Up until discovering Swing, I used Javaâs AWT for a short amount of time. That was very limited I think and I hit the limits fairly quickly. Later at uni, we had one project making use of SWT. Didnât convince me either. I could be wrong, but I think there was also a SWT GUI designer plugin for Eclipse. If there really was, that one wasnât in the same street as Delphiâs (there must be a reason I forgot about it ;-)).
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Donât you worry, this was meant as a joke. :-D
There was a time when I thought that Swing was actually really good. But having done some Qt/KDE later, I realized how much better that was. That were the late KDE 3 and early KDE 4 days, though. Not sure how it is today. But back then it felt Trolltech and the KDE folks put a hell lot more thought into their stuff. I was pleasantly surprised how natural it appeared and all the bits played together. Sure, there were the odd ends, but the overall design was a lot better in my opinion.
To be fair, I never used it from C++, always the Python bindings, which were considerably more comfortable (just alone the possibility to specify most attributes right away as kwargs in the constructor instead of calling tons of setters). And QtJambi, the Java binding, was also relatively nice. I never did a real project though, just played around with the latter.
How did the Windows 95 user interface code get brought to the Windows NT code base?
After the release of Windows 95, with its brand new and incredibly influential graphical user interface, it was only a matter of time before this new taskbar, Start menu, and everything else would make its way to Microsoftâs other operating system line, Windows NT. The development of Windows 95 more or less lined up with that of Windows NT 3.5, but it wouldnât be unt ⌠â Read more
And maybe I should go back to using GUI designers. Havenât used those since the Visual Basic days. đ¤ It wasnât pretty, but you got results very quickly and efficiently.
(When I switched to Linux, I quickly got stuck with GTK and that only had Glade, which wasnât super great at the time, so I didnât start using it ⌠and then I never questioned that decision âŚ)

So we tried interactive cat TV for the first time⌠â Read more
EU in race against time to agree climate emissions target
European diplomats are scrambling to agree on a 10-year target to cut EU carbon emissions this week, with time running out ahead of the United Nations COP30 climate summit. â Read more
Analogue computers could train AI 1000 times faster and cut energy use
Computers built with analogue circuits promise huge speed and efficiency gains over ordinary computers, but normally at the cost of accuracy. Now, an analogue computer designed to carry out calculations that are key to AI training could fix that â Read more
Just typing twts directly into my twtxt file.
Details:
- Opening my twtxt file remotely using
vim scp://user@remote:port//path/to/twtxt.txt
- Inserting the date, time and tab part of the twt with
:.!echo "$(date -Is)\t"
- In case I need to add a new line I just
Ctrl+Shift+u, type in the2028and hitEnter
- In order to replay, you just steal a twt hash from your favorite Yarn instance.
It looks tedious, but itâs fun to know I can twt no matter where I am, as long as can ssh in.
@bender@twtxt.net Hm, are we talking about different dates or are there different timezone offsets for this timezone abbreviation? With EDT being UTC-4, 2025-11-02T12:00:00Z is Sunday at 8:00 in the morning local time for you. Or were did I mess up here? :-?
@prologic@twtxt.net You want me to submit a reply with âI probably wonât show upâ?
Introducing Agent HQ: Any agent, any way you work
At Universe 2025, GitHubâs next evolution introduces a single, unified workflow for developers to be able to orchestrate any agent, any time, anywhere.
The post Introducing Agent HQ: Any agent, any way you work appeared first on The GitHub Blog. â Read more
Hurricane Melissa is being fuelled by exceptional ocean heat
The monster hurricane pummelling Jamaica is powered by abnormal sea surface temperatures in the Caribbean, which were made at least 500 times more likely by global warming â Read more
Largest study of its kind shows AI assistants misrepresent news content 45% of the time â regardless of language or territory
Comments â Read more
Geoscientistâs innovative approach aims to safeguard irrigation canals
Irrigation canal maintenance in western Nebraska is taking a giant step forward thanks to an innovative, non-invasive method by Husker geoscientist Mohamed Khalil to check canal integrity. His sophisticated time-lapse analysis pinpoints canal seepage and structural settlement far more accurately and efficiently than traditional approachesâusing a technology that can have wide-ranging uses statewide for agriculture, ⌠â Read more
Ignite Realtime Blog: Helping Dutch Healthcare Speak the Same Language with XMPP
Helping Dutch Healthcare Speak the Same Language with XMPPThe XMPP Standards Foundation (XSF) has put out a call to action: itâs time for the community to help make secure, interoperable chat a reality - especially in healthcare. Here at Ignite Realtime, weâre excited to support this effort. Our projects, ⌠â Read more
The XMPP Standards Foundation: Towards Secure and Interoperable Healthcare Chat
Supporting the development of the Dutch NTA 7532 standard with lessons from international practice
The XMPP Standards Foundation (XSF) is an independent, non-profit organization that promotes and advances open standards for real-time communication and collaboration. The XSF oversees the development of extensions to the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol (XMPP) and fost ⌠â Read more
Iâd like to speak to the Bellcore ManaGeR
I love it when I discover â usually through people smarter than I â an operating system or graphical user interface Iâve never heard of. This time, weâve got Bellcore MGR, as meticulously detailed by Nina Kalinina a few weeks ago. I love old computers, and I enjoy looking at old user interfaces immensely. I could spend a whole evening on installing an old version of MS Word and playing with it: âAh, look, how cute, they didnât invent scrollbars just ⌠â Read more
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org then I blame @prologic@twtxt.net, and no one else. LOL. But yeah, it is Saturday around 08:00 my time (EDT).
No space, no time, no particles: A radical vision of quantum reality
If we admit that quantum numbers are the true essence of reality â not particles, space or time â then a surprising and beautiful new vision of reality opens up to us â Read more
Why zero is the most important number in all of mathematics
It took a long time for zero to be recognised as a number at all, let alone one of the most powerful ones â but now itâs clear that every number is made up of zeroes, says Jacob Aron â Read more
@bender@twtxt.net Thereâs a reason itâs in UTC time đ¤Ł
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Itâs way more expensive and time-consuming in the end. If only somebody had warned us!!1
The triangle reminds me of zalgo text: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zalgo_text
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org Theyâre seriously telling us at work: âCan it be AIâd? Do it, donât waste time!â Shit like that is the result. (Whatâs this weird gray triangle in the bottom right corner?)
man and it calls home to see if I'm allowed to do that.
Because OP twtxt seems to be a cross-post from the Fediverse, I am bringing some context here. It refers to this GitHub issue. This comment explains why the issue described is happening:
This is usually due to notarization checks. E.g. the binaries are checked by the notarization service (âXProtectâ) which phones home to Apple. Depending on your network environment, this can take a long time. Once the executable has been run the results are usually cached, so any subsequent startup should be fast.
OP network must be running on 1,200 Baud modem, or less. đ¤ I have never, ever, experienced any distinguishable delays.
Turned out I didnât make it, sorry. Maybe next time. I hope you had a great yarn, @prologic@twtxt.net and @bender@twtxt.net, and didnât waste any time waiting for me.
We had some gray soup with the occasional fine rain with strong wind gusts. Despite the bad forecast we took the train to Geislingen/Steige and strolled up to the Helfenstein castle ruin. All the colorful leaves were so beautiful, it didnât matter that the sun was behind thick layers of clouds.
We then continued to the Ădenturm (lit. boring tower). By then the wind had picked up by quite a bit, just as the weatherman predicted. We were very positively surprised that the Swabian Jura Association had opened up the tower. Between May and October, the tower is typically only manned on Sundays and holidays between 10 and 17 oâclock. But yesterday was Saturday and no holiday. The lovely lady up there told us that theyâre currently experimenting with opening up on Saturday, too, because there are some highly motivated members responsible for the tower.
We were the very first visitors on that day. Last Sunday, when the weather lived up to the weekdayâs name, they counted 128 people up in the tower. Very impressive.
The wind gusts were howling around the tower. Luckily, there are glass windows. So, it was quite pleasant up in the tower room. Chatting with the tower guard for a while, we got even luckier: the sun came out! That was really awesome. The photos donât do justice. As always, it looked way more stunning in person.
Thanks to all the volunteers who make it possible to enjoy the view from the thirty odd meters up there. That certainly made our day!
After signing the guestbook we climbed down the staircase and returned to the station and headed back. The train even arrived on time. What a great little trip!
https://lyse.isobeef.org/wanderung-auf-die-burgruine-helfenstein-und-den-oedenturm-2025-10-25/
âIâm not going to be wasting my timeâ â Trump rules out Putin meeting without Ukraine peace progress â Read more
US army taps private equity groups to help fund $150bn revamp
Steff Chåvez and Antoine Gara,  Reporters -  Financial Times
_Stephan: The military-industrial corporate system in the United States, and the military itself, is being corrupted like every other agency of government, as the Trump Republican Party oligarch fascist coup continues. We are 10 months into the coup, and almost every day there are reports, like this one, about more corruption. The Republican ⌠â Read more
New forecasting tool improves accuracy of epidemic peak and hospital demand predictions
During an epidemic, some of the most critical questions for healthcare decision-makers are the hardest ones to answer: When will the epidemic peak, how many people will need treatment at once and how long will that peak level of demand for care last? Timely answers can help hospital administrators, community leaders and clinics decide how to deploy staff and other resources most effectively. Unfortunately, man ⌠â Read more
Netanyahuâs wife pressed several ministers to sign a letter urging President Herzog to pardon Netanyahu, saying: âThis is good timing - even Trump asked, itâs important for us. The cases are baseless and will lead nowhere anyway, letâs just finish with this.â â Read more
Your Org, Your Tools: Building a Custom MCP Catalog
Iâm Mike Coleman, a staff solutions architect at Docker. In this role, I spend a lot of time talking to enterprise customers about AI adoption. One thing I hear over and over again is that these companies want to ensure appropriate guardrails are in place when it comes to deploying AI tooling. For instance, many⌠â Read more
I finally took a closer look at OpenRouter today, added some credits, and used it with the Kilo Code VS Code extension to vibe code (or at least guide the LLM to code) a bit on the wedding website Iâm building for next year. I used the Grok Code Fast 1 model most of the time. Furthermore, I also switched this blogâs AI plugins to use Mistral Small 3.2 for summary generation and image caption generation. â Read more
âAIâ assistants misrepresent news content 45% of the time
An extensive study by the European Broadcasting Union and the BBC highlights just how deeply inaccurate and untrustworthy âAIâ news results really are. âAIâ sucks even at its most basic function. Itâs incredible how much money is being pumped into this scam, and how many people are wholeheartedly defending these bullshit generators as if their lives depended on it. If these tools canât even summarise a text â something ⌠â Read more
Stephen Hawkingâs Time Travel Party â Read more
When I wasnât given time to finish a feature properly â Read more
@movq@www.uninformativ.de I guess I wasnât talking about the speed of interesting text/context, but more the âslownessâ of these tools. I think I can build/ solutions and fix bugs faster most of the time? Hmmm đ¤ I think the only thing itâs able to do better than me is grasp large codebases and do pattern machines a bit better, mostly because weâre limited by the interfaces we have to use and in my ase being vision impaired doesnât help :/
Hmmm đ§ Iâm annectodaly not convinced so-called âAIâ(s) really save timeâ˘. â I have no proof though, I would need to do some concrete studies / numbers⌠â But, there is one benefit⌠It can save you from typing and from worsening RSI / Carpal Tunnel.
The most infuriating 3 seconds of using this Mac every day are the first time I run man and it calls home to see if Iâm allowed to do that.
Tuckr - Stow alternative with symlink checking
Iâve been using Stow for a few years now. At the time (2020) Stow had a bug where it would just fail with a cryptic error and the maintainer didnât have time to fix it, the bug was there for 2 years or so. So I got fed up and decided to try and fix it but I didnât know perl nor did I want to learn it, so I decided to rewrite Stow and fix the issue. To fix it I decided that I track all symlinks and give users a nice way to see what was going on. So the entire project was based on having a n ⌠â Read more
Highlights from CNCFâs first Open Observability Summit
Itâs about time open observability had its own industry-wide, vendor-neutral event. This year, the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) finally made it happen with the inaugural Open Observability Summit, bringing together contributors, practitioners, and end users for⌠â Read more
@movq@www.uninformativ.de I think if I was younger, with more energy, and wasnât blind with leberâs disease (look it up) Iâd be fine⢠But yeah I get the whole âexhaustingâ apart. Iâll join you this year, since thereâs only 12 puzzles and as you say, we can âtake our timeâ it might actually be fun! (as opposed to exhausting and pressured).
Ukrainian drones strike major Russian oil refinery near Moscow for sixth time this year. â Read more
@prologic@twtxt.net Yeah, lots of people are welcoming this change, saying they are relieved that there are fewer puzzles. And ngl, I, too, have been very exhausted at the end of the month. Itâs a lot of fun and I loved it each time, but yeah, it can be exhausting.