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Dr. WiFi. Linux kernel hacker at Red Hat. Networking, XDP, etc. He/Him.
@jpkolsen @simonjust FreeCad har en fin BIM workbench! Har tegnet en model af en hel staldbygning vi er ved at renovere, og det fungerede fint! Også bedre end SketchUp...

https://wiki.freecad.org/BIM_Workbench
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Bank of England warns AI stock bubble rivals 2000 dotcom peak

Central bank says market concentration hasn't been this extreme in 50 years.

https://arstechnica.com/ai/2025/10/bank-of-england-warns-ai-stock-bubble-rivals-2000-dotcom-peak/

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My friend David Adler (@davidrkadler), a Jewish-American who was on the flotilla and was kidnapped by the Zionist regime, is detained illegally in an Israeli prison and no one has had contact with him for four days.

Shamefully, the US government has done nothing to help him.

Don't let anyone ever tell you that Zionism is about the protection of Jewish people. Zionists reserve special hatred for Jews who reject their genocidal project and who insist on the equal humanity of Palestinians.

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@ekis I have not heard anyone talk about "military grade" drones specifically. At least in Denmark, AFAIU it has been "normal" (commercial) drones hovering over our infrastructure (airports etc).

So it's more like, "someone is looking closely at our infrastructure and we don't know who, so it's probably Putin", than it's "we followed these drones' trajectory as they flew in from Russia".
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anna_lillith 🇺🇦🌱🐖

Edited 20 days ago
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X is where you find the people who think they run the Internet.

Bluesky is where you find the people who think they ought to run the Internet.

Mastodon is where you find the people who actually do run the Internet, and kind of wish they didn't.

(WIth apologies to Yes, Minister)

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Tell me you've never seen Blade Runner or Star Trek without telling me you've never seen Blade Runner or Star Trek

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"Amid the rise of artificial intelligence, technophobes and Luddites have continued to insist that machines “can’t really write”—at least not the way humans can. Those naysayers will be hard-pressed to wave away The Great Gatsby, the debut novel from the super-advanced Xerox 914 photocopier—an exciting new voice that wrote Gatsby after being trained on a data set comprising a paperback copy of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby." https://www.mcsweeneys.net/articles/book-review-the-great-gatsby-by-the-xerox-914-photocopier

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I use Tailscale for home purposes, mostly so I can access movies from other locations without having to deal with reverse proxies and security. It's great software. I'm just saying this as preface: I would recommend it to anyone looking for a remote networking solution.

Yesterday they sent out an email about various events they would have a presence at, general marketing stuff, mostly in tech hubs and cons. Nothing remarkable. One of the events was that they were sponsoring a family movie night with another company. The movie picked was Harry Potter, but most people don't care, and it's a fine family movie. I shrugged and moved on with my day. Life's too short to get pissed off about stuff like that.

Well, today they sent out an email apologizing for the choice of movie and promising to do better in future.

I'm not stanning a corp. I wish there were a decent open-source option (well, they're built atop the open-source option, but goddamn do they make it easier). But it was nice to see. In a world which has gone full-on transphobia and doesn't seem to think that Jowling Kowling Rowling is worthy of comment, I guess enough technical people who use Tailscale aren't assholes and complained, or who knows, maybe someone at the company pointed it out, but whatever the reason, they rethought the movie choice. And they didn't just do it, they apologized for it to everyone on their mailing list.

It's a small thing, but I thought I'd share it both to say that I will continue to use Tailscale because it really is good software, but also if you need a nice thing, I guess this is a nice thing.

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JWcph, Radicalized By Decency

"These rent-seeking chokepoint obsessives have one move: corner a market and squeeze. They've been ratfucking renewables for decades because it competed with their existing racket.

But they aren't emotionally committed to setting fire to old dead things – they're just nature's most compulsive toll-booth operators, and they're sure as shit going to be looking for ways to stick toll-booths in our renewables future." - @pluralistic

https://mamot.fr/@pluralistic/115254037095248107

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Are you working on Free & Open Source technologies that benefit other people too? Consider to apply for funding in our open calls.

  • You can ask for between 5k - 50k euro
  • Anyone can apply: individuals, SMEs, institutions, collectives, etc.
  • There is little administrative overhead: no reporting-the project is the proof of work. And the application form is simple & straightforward.
    The next deadline for the rolling open call is October 1
    https://nlnet.nl/news/2025/20250801-call.html
    #FOSS #NGI #NGI0 #fossfunding
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John Oliver hat 10 Minuten über das gemacht und erstaunliche charakterliche Übereinstimmungen festgestellt. 😂

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Thorsten Leemhuis (acct. 1/4)

Edited 17 days ago

The based Binder driver has hit linux-next and thus is slated for inclusion in 6.18. Congrats to Alice and everyone who helped making this possible!

From the patch description (https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/next/linux-next.git/commit/?id=eafedbc7c050c44744fbdf80bdf3315e860b7513):

""We're generally not proponents of rewrites (nasty uncomfortable things that make you late for dinner!). So why rewrite Binder?

Binder has been evolving over the past 15+ years to meet the evolving needs of Android. Its responsibilities, expectations, and complexity have grown considerably during that time. While we expect Binder to continue to evolve along with Android, there are a number of factors that currently constrain our ability to develop/maintain it. Briefly those are:

1. Complexity: […]
2. Things to improve: Thousand-line functions, error-prone error handling, and confusing structure […]
3. Security critical […]

The biggest change is obviously the choice of programming language. We decided to use Rust because it directly addresses a number of the challenges within Binder that we have faced during the last years. […]""

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@erthalion hmm, interesting. Given the RCU issues mentioned in that thread, though, I'm not sure how big of a difference the msleep variant would make in practice compared to the spinning version (other than lowering the CPU usage, of course)?
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I enjoyed this devious snippet for overriding malloc/free at runtime on the assumption that a program's authors can't be trusted to use them properly.
https://donotsta.re/objects/2436471c-b046-44cf-b347-01763940b3e1

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How do you build a mental model of a system where "Wrong PIN" means "Your computer's hard drive is full because you bought a phone?" How?

How can anyone be expected to navigate a world like this?

My friend @grimalkina wrote this a few weeks ago: https://www.fightforthehuman.com/why-i-cannot-be-technical/

... and you should read it, but I have to believe that she is, as she always is, being far too kind.

Maybe "being technical" just means, "I'm willing to act like this bullshit is normal and acceptable."

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@joe-lawrence ugh, yeah, sounds like something that involved a lot of hair tearing 😅
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@mike
The Antifa organization has a long history of aggression, Antifa seen here in action, june 6 1944 👇🏼

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Toke Høiland-Jørgensen

New blog post: "Using eBPF to add arbitrary delay to kernel functions"

Decided to try out writing a utility to add arbitrary delay to kernel functions, as a debugging aid.

And yes, I did manage to stall my laptop while implementing this; thank you for asking! :)

https://blog.tohojo.dk/2025/09/using-ebpf-to-add-arbitrary-delay-to-kernel-functions.html
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