Flutterby™! (short)
Tuesday June 30th, 2026
week or two ago we picked up a puzzle
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
A week or two ago we picked up a puzzle at a garage sale. Charlene really liked it, got it, dived in (forbidding me from helping), and last night after I went to bed completed it.
Except that it was missing a piece.
This morning the seller left the missing piece with a "sorry" note on our mailbox.
github & ipv6
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
ellie
@ellie@social.lol
github doesn't support ipv6, but judging by their uptime they're at least
doing their best to also not support ipv4
Scammer unable to perform, jailed
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
smoltcp
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
smoltcp
smoltcp is a standalone, event-driven TCP/IP stack that is designed
for bare-metal, real-time systems. Its design goals are simplicity and robustness. Its
design anti-goals include complicated compile-time computations, such as macro or type
tricks, even at cost of performance degradation.
Via ✧✦Catherine✦✧
@whitequark@treehouse.systems's note that it now follows NLnet Labs' LLM policy.
AI/LLM policy in Godot
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
decentralize identity
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
Felicitas Pojtinger 🌅
@pojntfx@mastodon.social
The fight against root-based remote attestation and mandatory code signing with
vendor-provided keys are the defining software freedom issues of our time. Nothing else
even comes close
Get fucked, cyclists
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
NPR: World Cup bike lane sparks fury from Mexico City sex
workers
Before, the sex workers stood right on the street, and their clients could slow
down, they could loop, they could negotiate. Now, in parts of Tlalpan, the sex workers are
separated from the street by the bike lane and in some cases even huge concrete planters.
Via Momentum Mag.
RTO is narcissism
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
Because so so many people have been linking to it, and I've got a gift code: New York Times:
The Secret Reason Bosses Want Everyone Back in the Office, Every Day of the
Week, Adam GrantMarissa Shandell and Courtney Elliott. The money paragraph:
Over the past six years, weve studied why some leaders continue to support remote work, while others resist it. We
surveyed thousands of executives, middle managers and frontline supervisors on a host of
personality traits. When we later asked them about their stances on hybrid and remote work,
their answers didnt correlate with how much they trusted their employees or how much they
loved being around people. The only trait that consistently predicted objections to remote
work was narcissism the tendency to be self-centered and entitled. The higher the
opinions of themselves leaders expressed, the more they coveted power and status and the
more they favored return-to-office mandates.
Sometimes it's hard to tell until I get
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
Sometimes it's hard to tell until I get deeply into a community, but I'm gonna get really obnoxious about judging communities by how core people in those spaces advertise their events and wares.
Meanwhile, I've actually become a pretty good Modern Western Square Dance caller, and I'm wondering why.
JavaScript was a mistake JavaScript
Dan Lyke /
comment 2
JavaScript was a mistake.
JavaScript was a generation-scale mistake.
Fighting the good fight
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
Monday June 29th, 2026
agent orchestration
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
highly praised and little
read
@hannah@posts.rat.pictures
Each broom agent can spawn additional, autonomous broom agents, each with their
own pails. This allows apprentices to accelerate monotonous water-fetching tasks and save
their time and energy for more interesting and useful work
Progress OTD
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
Futurism: AI Companies Are Learning an Ironic Lesson as the People They Pay to
Improve Their Chatbots Are Just Feeding AI Slop Into Them
"If these companies want quality data, then they should offer quality contracts."
Via, and Via.
Ford hired AI and sacked humans. It backfired badly
We didnt pay as much attention as we should have to the experience of our
most knowledgeable engineers, says automaker
Via.
Codex SQLite feedback logs can
write ~640 TB/year and rapidly consume SSD endurance
#28224
. Via.
Thomas Fuchs
@thomasfuchs@hachyderm.io
So to summarize, AI will cause personal computers to cost ten thousand
dollars, all applications will be forever be frozen to about 2025 design and
implementation (because thats what vibe coding outputs), power to run the computer will
be twice the price and also you need to sign in with your passport to start your computer
in the first place.
Explain to me again how this is progress?
Take the shot
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
Garrett
Gilchrist
@garrettgilchrist.bsky.social
NANCY PELOSI: We must find the next generation of Democratic leadership. Young,
charismatic and exciting candidates who can energize the party. People that voters love
because they're not 80 years old and sold out to big capital.
CHUCK SCHUMER (behind sniper rifle): Found one
PELOSI: Take the shot
Quantifying AI in stories
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
StoryScope: Investigating idiosyncrasies
in AI fiction (Preprint)
Jenna Russell, Rishanth Rajendhran, Chau Minh Pham, Mohit Iyyer, John Wieting
A compact set of 30
core narrative features captures much of this signal: AI stories over-explain
themes and favor tidy, single-track plots while human stories frame protagonist choices
as more morally ambiguous and have increased temporal
complexity (e.g., flashbacks, nonlinear structure). Per-model fingerprint
features enable six-way attribution: for example, Claude produces notably
flat event escalation, GPT over-indexes on dream sequences, and Gemini
defaults to external character description. We find that AI-generated stories cluster in a
shared region of narrative space, while human-authored
stories exhibit greater diversity. More broadly, these results suggest that
differences in underlying narrative construction, not just writing style, can
be used to separate human-written original works from AI-generated fiction.
Via LinkedIn: The Shape of Enshittification: Books That No
Longer Get Read, An Internet That No Longer Gets Surfed, & The End of Social Media As We
Know It..., which is a pitch piece for Return to Real: The Last Human
Advantage in an Age of Artificial Everything by Ryan Levesque, but which
suffers from LinkedIn-ness so deeply that I can't tell if it's AI generated...
Left Antisemitism
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
I saw the video in which Weiner was badgered out of the Trans Pride March (an event he's
attended for 22 years, since its inception), didn't think it needed amplifying, and I'm a
fan of Scott Weiner's legislative accomplishments, but I think this is a useful perspective:
Assigned Media: Scott Wieners Viral Harassment is What Left Antisemitism
Looks Like
warm gemini sound
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
Andy Wingo
@wingo@mastodon.social
an't help getting astrology × audiophile vibes from llm enthusiasts: "oh no
honey you can't use opus 4.8, it's so nerfed, try glm-5.2 or the codex 5.5, they have a warm
gemini sound, very well rounded on details and tone. but don't use google's gemini models,
they are really leos, they have good treble response but you can't trust their mid-range"
People around me vibe coding has taught
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
People around me vibe coding has taught me that all of those ridiculous tests that checked every stupid arithmetic operator are actually necessary and useful.
Flutterby&tm;! is a trademark claimed by Dan Lyke for the web publications at www.flutterby.com and www.flutterby.net.
Last modified: Thu Mar 15 12:48:17 PST 2001