Flutterby™!

Saturday December 13th, 2025

How come patiently explain things to a

Dan Lyke comments (0)

How come patiently explain things to a device with no ability to learn in order to get the desired outcome for a particular question, that may not work again tomorrow, is a "prompt engineer", but the same thing with humans is a "special ed teacher" or "memory care assistant"?

browser on the ancient Kindle Fire is

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The browser on the ancient Kindle Fire is no longer running GrumpyPlayer. What's the current state of "play digital music" devices? Preferred is attach to my WiFi, let it get files via HTTP or something, second is copy media to the device or an SD card. Last is a Plex or similar server.

Putin ally calls for Russia taking back Alaska

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Just so I can find it again, especially the next time someone tells me that Putin's invasion of Ukraine is payback for NATO expansion or somesuch: Putin Ally Russian TV host Vladimir Solovyov Calls for Alaska’s Return to Russia

"Do you think I'm joking when I mention Finland, Warsaw, the Baltics, Moldova? Everything returned to the Russian Empire. And Alaska too, while you're at it," Solovyov said in a translated video.

Friday December 12th, 2025

Implies the existence of BSDM?

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normal about bugs @crimson_clouds23@normal.style

the original BDSM was obsoleted in the 1990s; these days there are multiple continuations of it, including NetBDSM, FreeBDSM, OpenBDSM, and several others,,

Congestion pricing reduces pm2.5 pollution

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Congestion pricing improved air quality in NYC and suburbs

In the first six months of the program, air pollution – in the form of particulate matter 2.5 micrometers and smaller – dropped by 22% in the Congestion Relief Zone (CRZ), which encompasses all local streets and avenues at or below 60th Street in Manhattan. The team also reported declines across the city’s five boroughs and surrounding suburbs.

A first look into congestion pricing in the United States: PM2.5 impacts after six months of New York City cordon pricing

Via Doug Gordon ‪@brooklynspoke.bsky.social‬

Kessler event probabilities

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An Orbital House of Cards: Frequent Megaconstellation Close Conjunctions Sarah Thiele, Skye R. Heiland, Aaron C. Boley, Samantha M. Lawler

Our calculations show the CRASH Clock is currently 2.8 days, which suggests there is now little time to recover from a wide-spread disruptive event, such as a solar storm. This is in stark contrast to the pre-megaconstellation era: in 2018, the CRASH Clock was 121 days.

Via Prof. Sam Lawler @sundogplanets@mastodon.social (that entire thread is worth a perusal).

AI flags Hegseth war crimes

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Maybe AI isn't so bad after all? Pentagon Unveils New GenAI Platform, It Immediately Starts Flagging Pete Hegseth’s War Crimes

The Defense Department's new ChatJAG turned out to be better than the human chain of command.

Oilwell mindfullness app

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Oilwell.app: Relax… it's only the climate crisis

Oilwell is a wellness app to help you embrace climate chaos, created by Edelman, Oil and Gas PR

including:

Lo-Fi Beats to Frack To — Lo-fi sounds for a hi-carbon future.

Gricha macro-photo

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Gricha / macro-photo — An experiment where I ran Claude Code to "improve codebase quality" over 200 times. .

Via ‪Elf M. Sternberg‬ ‪@elfsternberg.bsky.social‬ who notes:

The code went from 3,000 lines to 18,000 lines. Claude just loves adding code. It added thousands of lines of "utility functions," and since this was iterative, it ended up adding utility functions to support utility functions.

We do this is in real life, but... with taste and discretion.

Although, anyone who's worked on a code base that has lots of ideas exploration in it knows about dead code and confusion...

it's not social engineering

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Taggart ‪@taggart- tech.com‬

You may be tempted to think of prompt injection attacks against language models as "social engineering." Resist this temptation.

Prompt injection is a mathematical attack against a non-deterministic system. Language may be the substrate, but the substance is numerical vectors.

Good reminder to not limit our thinking as we look for ways to attack, and protect, these stochastic bullshit machines.

From that thread: LLM Visualizer

Democrats working for an AI takeover

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The American Prospect: Democratic Voters Are Clamoring for AI Regulation. Their Leaders Aren’t Interested. About Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) recruitment of Ted Lieu (D-CA), Valerie Foushee (D-NC), Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ), Frank Pallone Jr. (D- NJ), and Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) to carve out exemptions from civil rights and consumer protections laws for "AI" "innovation".

Via rm [-r] lininger‬ ‪@0xdaeda1a.bsky.social‬</> who notes that

NIST literally changed the definition of risk that they have been using for the past twenty years just for the AI risk management framework.

Look up OMB 130A 2000, the original 800-30, the CSF, the regular RMF, the PF, the INITIAL PUBLIC DRAFT OF THE NEW PF. And then look at NIST AI RMF.

Deconstruct anything you were indoctrinated into

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Danielle Foré @danirabbit@mastodon.online

“Transgender for everybody”, but unironically. As in, spend some time deconstructing your gender and then actively choose what gender roles and expressions you actually do and don’t want to perform. Deconstruct your sexuality too. Deconstruct your religion. Deconstruct anything you were indoctrinated into so you can be authentically you

They droned back

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This is fascinating: Digital Digging: They Droned Back

Seven German journalism students tracked Russian-crewed freighters lurking off the Dutch and German coast—and connected them to drone swarms over military bases.

Ah yes Apple which conveniently

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Ah, yes, Apple, which conveniently provides "NSNotFound" as a constant returned when a function that returns an index into an array of data has no valid results.

Except when that function returns -1. Or something else out of range.

Thursday December 11th, 2025

Kilmar Abrego Garcia to be released

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CNN: Judge orders Kilmar Abrego Garcia be released from ICE custody ‘immediately’ (and this feels like "again").

AP: Judge orders Kilmar Abrego Garcia to be immediately released from immigration detention

Nonilex has a thread looking at the court opinion, including several ways that the Trump administration has been lying through their teeth over this.

Carter Lavin joined Petaluma Urban

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Carter Lavin joined Petaluma Urban Chat's Know Before You Grow on Zoom last night to talk about his book If You Want To Win You've Got To Fight: A Guide To Effective Transportation Advocacy, and gave us an inspiring discussion. I now wanna change all the things! https://youtu.be/cSSsqm7_AKg

It isn't written for humans

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ZD Net: Scammers are poisoning AI search results to steer you straight into their traps - here's how AI tools like Google AI Overview and Perplexity Comet are being tricked into suggesting scam support numbers.

According to new research, published by Aurascape's Aura Labs on Dec. 8, threat actors are "systematically manipulating public web content" in what the team has dubbed large language model (LLM) phone number poisoning.

Via ResearchBuzz, who draws the connection to all of the hacked Wordpress sites that she's found.

Wednesday December 10th, 2025

A report of abuse

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So this morning I woke up to an abuse report from Hetzner. Someone saw my back-link checker in their logs, and because the 2 query a day request that was respecting the 304 was the default Perl package log it triggered iocane (exchange here), and...

When we're at the point that people filing abuse reports are saying:

It wasn't hitting more than that, but "Python/3.9 aiohttp/3.10.6" only hit my site once and is still a bot request from Microsoft. I can't tell from the volume of the requests whether they are malicious or not.

Which... huh, but also yeah, AI scrapers have made everyone paranoid in non-specific ways.

And maybe the web as an experimental platform is kinda over?

I don't know, just all felt weird, and is making me do my usual "why am I even bothering?" whining.

the real monsters

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geekysteven @geekysteven@beige.party

A monsterfucker, but they're just into normal humans cause we're the real monsters

AI is intellectual Viagra

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Anthony @abucci@buc.ci

The other day I had the intrusive thought

AI is intellectual Viagra

and it hasn't left me so I am exorcising it here. I'm sorry in advance for any pain this might cause.

If anyone knows the proprietor of https://jak2k.eu, I just got an abuse report from Hetzner regarding what should be a once a day request to two URLs on their site, and I'd love to figure out what's going wrong with that...

push for LLM adoption

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💯: Glen Malley @glen_malley@mstdn.ca

"we're seeing an insane push for LLM adoption in all lines of work, however inappropriate, because they directly exploit a cognitive bias to which senior management is vulnerable."

Edit: This is a quote from the last line of Charlie Stross: Barnum's law of CEOs

Tuesday December 9th, 2025

Apple's slow AI pace becomes strength

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Was just reading Ed Zitron asking "NVidia isn't Enron, so what is it?", which dives into the fact that they're claiming to be selling chips that don't seem to be getting deployed (which is also interesting in light of that claim not too long ago that OpenAI was locking up silicon otherwise destined for RAM that they weren't necessarily even planning on turning into chips in order to choke out competitors), when this comes across my feed:

Bloomberg (on Yahoo): Apple’s Slow AI Pace Becomes a Strength as Market Grows Weary of Spending

Via Jared White.

Monday December 8th, 2025

AI users like sycophancy

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Sycophantic AI Decreases Prosocial Intentions and Promotes Dependence Myra Cheng, Cinoo Lee, Pranav Khadpe, Sunny Yu, Dyllan Han, Dan Jurafsky

However, participants rated sycophantic responses as higher quality, trusted the sycophantic AI model more, and were more willing to use it again. This suggests that people are drawn to AI that unquestioningly validate, even as that validation risks eroding their judgment and reducing their inclination toward prosocial behavior. These preferences create perverse incentives both for people to increasingly rely on sycophantic AI models and for AI model training to favor sycophancy.

Via

Tesla Optimus robot falling over

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This video clip of a Tesla Optimus humanoid robot knocking over a bunch of water bottles and falling over, apparently as its operator removes their headset before shutting the robot down in a stable state, is giving me the giggles.

Stopping Russia now half as expensive as doing so later

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Norway did the math: Arm Ukraine to win, or pay double when Russia does.

The report arrives as a direct challenge to the Trump administration’s 28-point peace plan, which the authors argue misreads what is required for a stable Ukraine and Europe. A Russian partial victory would force Europe into a massive rearmament program to deter further aggression, amounting to €1.2-1.6 trillion over a four-year period. Equipping Ukraine to win would cost €522-838 billion over the same period—roughly half of that amount.

Europe's choice Military and economic scenarios for the War in Ukraine Corisk Report Series No 12, 2025 November 2025

DOI:10.13140/RG.2.2.29662.70725

Police state shenanigans

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Whoah: Houston Chronicle: A mysterious Texas surveillance network told police to search his truck. Watch how it went wrong. Texas cops making up bullshit excuses for traffic stops in order to try to frame people is hardly news. Doing so on the basis of WhatsApp chats using information from sooper s3kr1t information centers allegedly doing behavior analysis is next level creepy.

Formed after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, fusion centers are federally recognized, state-run intelligence-gathering hubs where police from local, state and federal organizations team up to gather and distribute intelligence. Texas boasts eight of the secretive facilities, more than any other state. In court filings, Bexar County said the Schott intelligence came from “the Laredo Fusion Center” — a location not on any official list.

"falling behind" like a fox

Dan Lyke comments (2)

CNN: What the heck is going on at Apple?. Talking about the recent exodus and possible departure of Tim Cook:

The changes come as critics say Apple, once a tech leader, is behind in the next big wave: artificial intelligence. For one of the world’s most valuable tech companies, a change in leadership could mean a change in how it conceives, designs and creates products used around the world every single day.

Ondřej Surý @ondrej@sury.org observes:

@briankrebs Yeah, we need more "falling behind" from Apple, not less :). I am happy that Apple did not jump on the FOMO bandwagon.

My uneducated guess is that they have a lot of telemetry from their devices and they probably see how many people did disable the use of LLMs on their devices.

AI slop and DDG

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AskMeFi question about Duck Duck Go results shows the summary for the Wikipedia result, that I've replicated, as:

Williot Swedberg is a Swedish footballer who plays for Celta Vigo and the Sweden national team. He started his career at Hammarby IF and was named one of the best young talents in 2004 by The Guardian.

What Wikipedia actually says is:

In October 2021, Swedberg was named as one of the 60 best young talents in world football born in 2004, by the English newspaper The Guardian.

[Emphasis mine]

https://noai.duckduckgo.com/ gives the same bogosity, so this is probably something that's crept in from Bing. https://www.startpage.com/ gives a shorter summary.

AI & Insurance coverage

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I ran across links to this article, Financial Times: Insurers retreat from AI cover as risk of multibillion-dollar claims mounts, about AIG, Great American, and WR Berkley backing away from AI coverage, but it's paywalled, so I went searching for the headline, and it's interesting how this current media push is being spun, with a week before that stories about startup insurers stepping in to cover risks that the major companies don't want to touch: Insurance companies are trying to avoid big payouts by making AI safer

“We’re in an era now where the losses are really here and happening; that’s one thing. The second thing is that insurers are now actually starting to exclude AI from their existing policies,” Dattani said. “So it feels pretty certain that we’re going to need some solution here, and we need people with skin in the game who can provide third- party oversight. That’s where we see the role of insurance.”

Ernst & Young: How can responsible AI bridge the gap between investment and impact?

Almost every company in our survey (99%) reported financial losses from AI- related risks, and 64% experienced losses exceeding US$1 million. On average, the financial loss to companies that have experienced risks is conservatively estimated at US$4.4 million.1 That’s an estimated total loss of US$4.3 billion across the 975 respondents in our sample.

And now traditional insurers stepping back: Major Insurers Want Out of AI Coverage as 'Black Box' Risk Grows:

The industry has good reason to be spooked. Google's AI Overview falsely accused a solar company of legal troubles earlier this year, triggering a $110 million lawsuit. Air Canada got stuck honoring a discount its chatbot completely invented after a customer took the airline to small claims court. Most dramatically, fraudsters used a digitally cloned executive to steal $25 million from London engineering firm Arup during what appeared to be a legitimate video conference.

Live and let Dye

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Wow, the Alan Dye hatred is big on the inkernets: Spyglass: Live and Let Dye (Via)

Saturday December 6th, 2025

That this is the sole suggested

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That this is the sole suggested reaction pic, that shows up when I think I'm trying to send a photo, says something about Android messages.

(And if I could totally turn off reaction pics, I would, because I do not want to send this message by accident.)

Your regular reminder that businesses

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Your regular reminder that businesses run loyalty programs because they make more money with them, consumers use loyalty programs because they're willing to trade privacy for being made more money from.

So privacy has negative market value.

Friday December 5th, 2025

I can quit any time I want

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Shann on Prickett @Binder@petrous.vislae.town

Using ethics but only recreationally.

Red Wine causes headaches

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Roundabout notes

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Ben Werdmuller's Friday links included notes about the New Public Local Lab announcement of their community engagement platform Roundabout. In the sign-up form they ask you to write a bit about how and why you'd like to bring their platform into your community, and I wrote the following:

I have been chronically online since the '80s, started an ISP in the '90s to expand my online community and cross that with my in-person community, and sociology grad students call me up to chat about being one of the early bloggers (still am). Over the years I've participated in various community email lists.

I accidentally helped found Petaluma Urban Chat (urbanchat.org), a 501c3 which works to educate and advocate on housing to meet community needs, alternatives to car mobility, sustainable municipal finance, all in the face of needing to adapt to climate change.

I'm even a Nextdoor lead, though I mostly ignore those duties, because...

I *hate* that I'm enriching Nextdoor through trying to bring some sanity to their horrific engagement bait. My reasonable neighbors have fled their platform.

I used to believe that online created fantastic communities, which is why I worked to bring the physical world online, but discovered that mostly I just was one of many people whose work destroyed those online communities.

So these days in my spare time (yes, I'm employed) working on building real-world physical communities, but I see a need for better communication, for better neighborhood level organizing, and, despite all of the evidence and experience to the contrary still believe that it may be possible to use online tools to do such things.

And the few Signal groups that are forming up don't seem up to the task.

I am getting more and more pissed off

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I am getting more and more pissed off at Apple: Wi-Fi settings "Copy Password" does not appear to be working, and I can't find another way to see it.

CSS gone wild

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Masonry: Things You Won’t Need A Library For Anymore is an article on the excesses of CSS, or a good rundown of all of the things you don't need JavaScript or other hacks (wacky-ass background images) for, or that can now be laid out more cleanly in CSS and HTML.

Grieving for the future

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Valerie Roney @vlrny@disabled.social

A friend, while having an existential meltdown, just said:

"I think I'm grieving for the future."

And dayum! That pretty much sums up all the feels rather poetically, eh?

AI slop is ruining Reddit

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Wired: AI slop is ruining Reddit for everyone draws extensively from a friend who was okay with using their Reddit name, but was quoted anonymously.

Chuck Wendig's Google AI cat

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Chuck Wendig — Vital Cat Update

It’s time to talk about my cat. To which you might be saying, “Chuck, I didn’t know you had a cat!” and I’d respond with, “I didn’t know I had a cat either.” But Google — the preeminent search engine! — knows otherwise, courtesy of its wonderful, never-ever- inaccurate “AI Overview,” which is totally not a piece of shit that just makes up information willy-fucking-nilly.

Interesting: SkoBots — A Wearable Language Revitalization Robot for Indigenous Languages

Which I found via dylan @dylan@dair-community.social's note:

Speaking of data collection, a detail I always look for in projects like this is the data: where does it come from? Who benefits from it? Who decides how it's used? I can't find specific info on their methods, but I think their stated principles are spot-on:

"We will never own recordings, we will never publish them, we will never profit off of them. It will always be up to the discretion of the communities we work with and we always defer to them."

Reverse engineering Linux malware

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LinkPro: eBPF rootkit analysis

LinkPro targets GNU/Linux systems and is developed in Golang. The Synacktiv CSIRT names it LinkPro in reference to the symbol defining its main module: github.com/link-pro/link-client. The GitHub account link-pro has no public repositories or contributions. LinkPro uses eBPF technology to only activate upon receiving a "magic packet", and to conceal itself on the compromised system.

(eBPF is the "extended Berkeley Packet Filter")

Teaching Calculus through Nonstandard Analysis

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This is fascinating to me because the calculus (and, indeed, the linear algebra) I was taught was so much drudgery and remembering rules, and it took other means to build a better intuitive feel for what was actually happening.

Daniel Lakeland @dlakelan@mastodon.sdf.org

Found this article thanks to a Reddit comment. Every day or so there's someone asking in math reddits what "dy/dx" means or why there's a "dx" in the integral notation, and then an army of people come out of the woodwork to push the orthodoxy of limits like some stockholm syndrome prisoners... And a small number of people point out that nonstandard analysis is actually a real thing and works... Anyway, back before I was born Sullivan did an actual experiment on teaching

The paper is The Teaching of Elementary Calculus Using the Nonstandard Analysis Approach Kathleen Sullivan (Wayback Machine link) from The American Mathematical Monthly, Vol. 83, No. 5 (May, 1976), pp. 370-375

http://www.jstor.org/stable/2318657

OpenAI shapes what you see

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Æ. @aesthr@wandering.shop

Last week in a seminar we discussed a text that was largely about sexual violence, including mass rape during war. Heavy stuff.

One student admitted they had not read the text but worked off a ChatGPT summary.

They had no idea the text was about sexual violence. ChatGPT withheld that information.

This wasn’t just a minor error nor a typical LLM hallucination.

About a third of the text, arguably its most important part, went completely ignored because it didn’t match OpenAI’s content policies

28m person COVID vaccine study

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SVG exploiting iframes

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lyra's epic blog: SVG Filters - Clickjacking 2.0. In which someone sets out to recreate Apple's "Liquid Glass" interface for the web, and ends up discovering a whole new class of iframe exploits.

Via

buy a good laptop

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We are taking care of the neighbor's cat

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We are taking care of the neighbor's cat, which means he gets lots and lots of scritches.

Buffoons on keyboards with chatbots

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Ars Technica: In comedy of errors, men accused of wiping gov databases turned to an AI tool

US DOJ: Two Virginia Men Arrested for Conspiring to Destroy Government Databases.

The indictment:

  1. On February 18, 2025, at approximately 4:58 p.m., MUNEEB AKHTER issued commands that deleted a DHS production database containing U.S. government information. The database was hosted on a Company-1 server in the Eastern District of Virginia.
  2. On February 18, 2025, at approximately 4:59 p.m., MUNEEB AKHTER asked an artificial intelligence tool, “how do i clear system logs from SQL servers after deleting databases.”
  3. On February 18, 2025, at approximately 5:14 p.m., SOHAIB AKHTER stated aloud, “They’re gonna probably raid this place,” to which MUNEEB AKHTER replied, “I'll clean this shit up.” SOHAIB AKHTER responded, “We also gotta clean stuff up from the other house, man.”

Thursday December 4th, 2025

Stop Writing Dead Programs

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Interesting both for work, and for thinking about environments and platforms like Emacs: Jack Rusher at Strange Loop 2022: Stop Writing Dead Programs.

I found a taker for the TI99-4a that came into my life, but in pondering the joy of the BASIC environment I was reminded of a lot of the Seymour Papert and Alan Kay ideas that made their way into this talk, about how a great environment isn't just about being able to inspect the state at a given place, but to play with it and let it continue.

My primary environment these days has been XCode, and the problems with Apple's direction on software process are well documented, but as conditional breakpoints are apparently broken and it's harder to change values than it was with CodeView or SoftICE back in the day, I've been pondering this even at my level.

Darkness fell

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Darkness fell, like a cliche in a room full of poetry majors.

RAM prices spiking

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I've been seeing the posts about RAM, and not quite understanding what was up (especially given that "DDR" will always mean "Dance, Dance, Revolution" to me), but allison @aparrish@friend.camp noted

you know i'd never stopped to consider how annoying tulip mania must have been for folks who just wanted to grow a few pretty flowers in their front garden

about Ars Technica: After nearly 30 years, Crucial will stop selling RAM to consumers

The surprise announcement from Micron follows a period of rapidly escalating memory prices, as we reported in November. A typical 32GB DDR5 RAM kit that cost around $82 in August now sells for about $310, and higher-capacity kits have seen even steeper increases.

Yikes, especially since 32G seems to be the absolute minimum for a computer these days...

Edit: Pivot to AI weighs in.

My VLC wrapped for 2026 Top artist was

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My VLC wrapped for 2026: Top artist was "Unknown Artist", top album was "Unknown Album".

Single top track was "Vocal Warmup 2.mp3".

From the creators of Oglaf, though this one is mostly SFW, some notes on owning a pony. For the horse-y people in my feed.... https://www.patreon.com/posts/pony-club-144777978

Wednesday December 3rd, 2025

Microsoft having trouble selling AI

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Microsoft drops AI sales targets in half after salespeople miss their quotas. The source I got this from, @jenniferplusplus@hachyder m.io said "what's that popping sound", but it also sounds a lot like the layered capabilities aren't much of a draw:

The sales figures suggest enterprises aren’t yet willing to pay premium prices for these AI agent tools. And Microsoft’s Copilot itself has faced a brand preference challenge: Earlier this year, Bloomberg reported that Microsoft salespeople were having trouble selling Copilot to enterprises because many employees prefer ChatGPT instead. The drugmaker Amgen reportedly bought Copilot software for 20,000 staffers only for them to ignore it in favor of OpenAI’s chatbot.

This is also interesting, because I have this general vibe that OpenAI is getting its ass kicked by Google.

Just using HTTPS is shit

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Kohler Can Access Data and Pictures from Toilet Camera It Describes as “End-to-End Encrypted”

Claimed end-to-end privacy doesn’t fully conceal your rear-end data

Via.

Among the things that surprised me in

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Among the things that surprised me in today's Timdle, the Suez Canal opening, and the US crossing 300M residents.

https://www.timdle.com/daily

AI exploiting smart contracts

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Oh, hey, a business model for AI: Anthropic: AI agents find $4.6M in blockchain smart contract exploits

Going beyond retrospective analysis, we evaluated both Sonnet 4.5 and GPT-5 in simulation against 2,849 recently deployed contracts without any known vulnerabilities. Both agents uncovered two novel zero-day vulnerabilities and produced exploits worth $3,694, with GPT-5 doing so at an API cost of $3,476.

Via Metafilter.

So assuming the API cost isn't a loss leader (hahahaha), the benchmark is over the period of 2020 to 2025, we have a model for AI ROI...

Long Covid is expensive

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Long COVID takes $1 trillion global economic toll each year, analysis suggests

A brief communication published last week in NPJ Primary Care Respiratory Medicine outlines the substantial economic burden of long COVID worldwide, estimating that persistent symptoms after COVID infection cost the global economy roughly $1 trillion each year, or roughly 1% of global gross domestic product.

Via.

IBM CEO points out the obvious

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Business Insider: IBM CEO says there is 'no way' spending trillions on AI data centers will pay off at today's infrastructure costs.

"It's my view that there's no way you're going to get a return on that, because $8 trillion of capex means you need roughly $800 billion of profit just to pay for the interest," he said.

That article is pulling from the podcast portion of The Verge: IBM CEO Arvind Krishna says there is no AI bubble after all, which from the text sounds like he's happily pushing the quantum computing bubble.

Cycling once again good for you

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A Decade Long Study Shows Cycling Helps Older Adults Live Longer Healthier Lives

If you’re looking for yet another reason to hop on your bicycle today— especially if you’re in your 60s or beyond—new research out of Japan has delivered a big one. A 10-year study from the University of Tsukuba has found that older adults who cycle regularly aren’t just feeling better day-to-day—they’re actually living longer and avoiding long-term care at significantly higher rates.

what's the goal?

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annaf @annaf@climatejustice.social

What I want to say to these AI guys is, ok you could create an existential threat, so what? We've already got nuclear weapons, war, climate change, ecosystem destruction, and you're adding another one. It proves that the super rich (mostly white, mostly men) are so stupid they will create things that can destroy themselves and everyone else just to look big. If that's the pinnacle of technological genius in your view, then we're done. So do what you want, I will slow hand clap you on our way to extinction. #AI #Extinction

AI generated headlines

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Google Discover is testing AI-generated headlines and they aren't good. Whoever could have guessed?

For instance, one rewritten headline claimed "Steam Machine price revealed," but the Ars Technica article's actual headline was "Valve's Steam Machine looks like a console, but don’t expect it to be priced like one." No costs have been shared yet for the hardware, either in that post or elsewhere from Valve. In our own explorations, Engadget staff also found that Discover was providing original headlines accompanied by AI-generated summaries. In both cases, the content is tagged as "Generated with AI, which can make mistakes." But it sure would be nice if the company just didn't use AI at all in this situation and thus avoided the mistakes entirely.

Via @researchbuzz.

Retro computer folks

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Retro computer folks: where an I most likely to pass on a TI 99-4a to someone who will appreciate it?