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Monday March 9th, 2026

The Right Wing Values Of Bicycling Dan Lyke / comment 0

From Tara Calishain, Make Biking Great Again: Conservatives Should Embrace The Right Wing Values Of Cycling.

The article brings up all of the usual reasons, government fiscal responsibility, benefits for business, removal of external costs...

Not that that actually holds any sway with the current "Right Wing" whiners who are all about centralized economic control, debt spending, and externalizing the costs of their lifestyle on to other people, but...

I appreciate the attempts at crossing the political divide.

Can someone familiar with solar systems Dan Lyke / comment 2

Can someone familiar with solar systems give me any evidence that a slightly north-facing (4°) panel would give better performance (perhaps evenings or mornings) at 38.23N?

I think I'm being fed bullshit, but citable evidence would be really nice to have to smack this down.

Programming now isn't so much like that Dan Lyke / comment 0

wingolog: international lisp conference -- day two has this very interesting snippet:

The "debate" had an interlude, in which Costanza asked Sussman why MIT had switched away from Scheme for their introductory programming course, 6.001. This was a gem. He said that the reason that happened was because engineering in 1980 was not what it was in the mid-90s or in 2000. In 1980, good programmers spent a lot of time thinking, and then produced spare code that they thought should work. Code ran close to the metal, even Scheme -- it was understandable all the way down. Like a resistor, where you could read the bands and know the power rating and the tolerance and the resistance and V=IR and that's all there was to know. 6.001 had been conceived to teach engineers how to take small parts that they understood entirely and use simple techniques to compose them into larger things that do what you want.

But programming now isn't so much like that, said Sussman. Nowadays you muck around with incomprehensible or nonexistent man pages for software you don't know who wrote. You have to do basic science on your libraries to see how they work, trying out different inputs and seeing how the code reacts. This is a fundamentally different job, and it needed a different course.

Via Andy Wingo @wingo@mastodon.social

Noids Dan Lyke / comment 0

Cam Pedersen: Noids, an update on Craig Reynold's "Boids" idea based on what's been learned about starling behavior in the intervening 4 decades, and by doing it with a neural net.

Via MeFi.

WigglyPaint Dan Lyke / comment 0

Some Words on WigglyPaint.

On how the author of WigglyPaint is processing an older version of that code base being republished on a gazillion linkbait sites.

Via.

Deleted Post Dan Lyke / comment 0

Yeah, I'm pulling this one back.

Sunday March 8th, 2026

Charlene had run across some African Dan Lyke / comment 0

Charlene had run across some African singing she really liked, so last night we tried to find a bit of it before we went to sleep. Looks like everything "Ubuntu Choir" on YouTube is AI generated. Along with all of the videos on Facebook. The slop really is taking over.

Eventually we figured out that "gwijo" was a useful search term, but I'm sure it's only a matter of time for that to get slipped.

adults in the room Dan Lyke / comment 0

‪Gerry Doyle‬ ‪@mgerrydoyle.bsky.social‬

are the "adults in the room" in the room with us right now?

Against the Uncritical Adoption of 'AI' Dan Lyke / comment 0

Olivia Guest · Ολίβια Γκεστ @olivia@scholar.social linked to Zenodo: Against the Uncritical Adoption of 'AI' Technologies in Academia

Related to the rejection of expertise is the rejection of imagining a better future and the rejection of self-determination free from industry forces …. Not only AI enthusiasts, but even some scholars whose expertise concentrates on identifying and critically interrogating ideologies and sociotechnical relationships — such as historians and gender scholars — unfortunately fall prey to the teleological belief that AI is an unstoppable force. They embrace it because alternative responses seem too difficult, incompatible with industry developments, or non-existent. Instead of falling for this, we should “refuse [AI] adoption in schools and colleges, and reject the narrative of its inevitability.” …. Such rejection is possible and has historical precedent, to name just a few successful examples: Amsterdammers kicked out cars, rejecting that cycling through the Dutch capital should be deadly. Organised workers died for the eight-hour workday, the weekend and other workers’ rights, and governments banned chlorofluorocarbons from fridges to mitigate ozone depletion in the atmosphere. And we know that even the tide itself famously turns back. People can undo things; and we will …. Besides, there will be no future to embrace if we deskill our students and selves, and allow the technology industry’s immense contributions to climate crisis and environmental destruction to continue unimpeded ….

Citations ellipsized out for readability.

Went down to Marv's Big Sing https Dan Lyke / comment 0

Went down to Marv's Big Sing https://www.singwithmarv.com with Riomas (formerly Shireen Amini, https://shireenamini.com ), and Rio's transformation has been accompanied by a shift from "good song leader" to "that was powerful and I feel compelled to learn those songs in order to share them".


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Dan Lyke
for the web publications at www.flutterby.com and www.flutterby.net. Last modified: Thu Mar 15 12:48:17 PST 2001