Author Archives: pappp

Facebook is banning leftwing users like me – and it’s going largely unnoticed

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Good, maybe some of the ladder-pullers are noticing how bad a decision they're making. One of the scariest things I've seen in the last couple months is an assortment of people associated with movements who benefited enormously from organizing online while their cause was outside socially acceptable norms arguing that speech currently outside acceptable norms should be policed online. ...also, several of the bans in the article looks like perfectly reasonable incitement bans, so maybe this is still just "Censorship is good when applied to the enemy other, bad when applied to me and mine."
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How to improve your mask game amid the new COVID-19 strains

Source: The Week: Most Recent Home Page Posts

Article note: They're _finally_ fixing what has, IMO, been one of the biggest holes in pandemic messaging: talking about mask effectiveness. Do the best you can! Filter quality! Seal quality! Actually covering your disease holes!

"The discovery of highly transmissible coronavirus variants in the United States has public health experts urging Americans to upgrade the simple cloth masks that have become a staple shield during the pandemic," The Washington Post reports. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation's top infectious disease expert, suggested on Monday's NBC Today that people consider wearing two masks at the same time, explaining, "If you have a physical covering with one layer, you put another layer on, it just makes common sense that it likely would be more effective."

Experts suggest wearing a surgical mask underneath a cloth mask, assuming you don't have access to N95 or KN95 masks, which afford the most protection. Linsey Marr, an engineering professor at Virginia Tech and mask effectiveness researcher, told the Post that if you don't have access to surgical masks, you can create a protective three-layer mask by sandwiching a high-efficiency filter — like one cut from a vacuum bag — between two tightly woven fabric masks.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) advises Americans to wear a tight-fitting masks with "two or more layers of washable, breathable fabric," and to leave surgical masks and N95 respirators for health care workers. Fauci appeared alongside new CDC Director Rochelle Walensky at a CNN town hall on Wednesday and advised people to follow the CDC guidelines. Walensky said N95s are uncomfortable and might turn people off of wearing masks entirely.

Many other countries have responded to the contagious new variants by mandating that people wear medical-grade masks in public — Europe's solution — or by mass-producing high-quality masks and shipping them directly to residents, as South Korea, Singapore, and other Asian nations have done, the Post reports. Some medical experts — and The Week's Ryan Cooper — say the Biden administration should consider following Asia's lead.

All available evidence "suggests two masks are likely more effective than a single mask," and "in situations where you are not able to social distance, you may want to double up by wearing a cloth mask over a surgical mask or two cloth masks," Jamie Ueda writes at Reviewed. But "if you already have trouble breathing while wearing one mask, adding another may not be the best option. The CDC notes wearing one mask is better than not wearing any face covering."

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Losing faith in UX

Source: Hacker News

Article note: The illustration of an angler-fish labeled "Business model" with it's head light-dangle labeled "UX" is a delightful summary of the situation.
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Rocky Linux gets a new sponsor, with $4m Series A funding

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: Good for Greg!
Ctrl IQ provided us with this diagram of its proposed technology stack. (Thankfully, spelling correction is not one of the core services Ctrl IQ offers.)

Enlarge / Ctrl IQ provided us with this diagram of its proposed technology stack. (Thankfully, spelling correction is not one of the core services Ctrl IQ offers.) (credit: Ctrl IQ)

Gregory Kurtzer, co-founder of the now-defunct CentOS Linux distribution, has founded a new startup company called Ctrl IQ, which will serve in part as a sponsoring company for the upcoming Rocky Linux distribution.

Rocky Linux is to be a beneficiary of Ctrl IQ's revenue, not its source—the company describes itself in its announcement as the suppliers of a "full technology stack integrating key capabilities of enterprise, hyper-scale, cloud and high-performance computing."

About Rocky Linux

If you've been hiding under a Linux rock for the last few months, CentOS Linux was the most widely known and used clone of Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Kurtzer co-founded CentOS Linux in 2004 with mentor Rocky McGaugh, and it operated independently for 10 years until being acquired by Red Hat in 2014. When Red Hat killed off CentOS Linux in a highly controversial December 2020 announcement, Kurtzer immediately announced his intention to recreate CentOS with a new distribution named after his deceased mentor.

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Parents’ income, not smarts, key to entrepreneurship

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Almost everything about the (self)mythologization of entrepreneurship, and especially tech entrepreneurship, is utter bullshit. This is the most egregious and probably the best known. Like ...almost everything else in society... making sure people have healthcare and financial security is the better move than listening to entrenched survivor-ship-baised bullshit.
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What happens when the internet realizes the stock market is basically a casino? They go shopping at the Mall

Source: The Register

Article note: This whole situation, where upstart speculators are disrupting the interests of established professional speculators using only memes and petty cash, is hilariously absurd.

GameStop shares soaring to $350 from $5 last year?! WTF is going on?

Analysis  So it seems 2021 is going to be the year that internet culture finally reaches the deepest and most protected pockets of society.…

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I tried to report scientific misconduct. How did it go?

Source: Hacker News

Article note: A regular reminder that you get what you incentivize, and the entire incentive structure of academia has aligned to encourage bullshit.
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Split keyboards and how to build them

Source: Hacker News

Article note: I can't encourage people who spend a lot of time at a computer (...which is everyone these days) to be mindful, try things, and customize their computing environment enough. I have a rather large (...and kind of expensive) collection of input devices I've bought or built over the years, and while I don't regularly use many of them, I've learned things about how to interact with computers and use my hands from every single one, and do use a couple essentially every day. I _personally_ don't generally like modal (layered) keyboards for the same reasons I don't like modality in software (hidden state = cognitive load), and I don't love alternative layouts on standard keyboards for the same reasons I don't do super-botique software environments (you'll have to deal with qwerty and WIMP enough to keep it in your fingers anyway)... but I know people who are so settled in that I don't think another human being could operate their computers without extended instructions because they've built something that is so much an extension of themselves. ...but I do really like my split keyboards (lately an UltraErgo Wireless and trackball (usually an Logitech M570) for not constantly re-contorting my wrists. Likewise, I have a VESA-arm mounted to the hutch of my desk to get a monitor positioned exactly where I want it without giving up any desk space.
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The Teeniest Tiniest Laptop in the West

Source: Hacker News

Article note: I love the idea of the "pocket workstation," and I've never been as happy with a mobile device as I was with my n810 which was sort of the missing link between the UMPC and Smartphone (ran Linux with some mobile affordances, slider keyboard that was comfortable for thumb typing), and I want to have that again... but every time I look I don't think these mini laptops quite make it in to the niche. I have my little 12" carryin' around laptop that has a decent keyboard for touch-typing and an OS that does what I ask of it, but I need to have a bag to carry and a surface or seat to use, and my smartphone that fits in a pocket and I can use on the go, but whose human I/O and coercive environment make me rage most of the time I try to do anything nontrivial on it. These mini-laptops are a little to big to pocket comfortably, and a little too small to operate comfortably. ... The Gibsonian cyberdeck of the Sprawl books had HMDs and gloves or straight up neural interfaces because it was obvious by the mid 90s that the problem was the human interface. I want to see some innovation on that front. HMDs that are comfortable for text. Software that works with e-ink displays (even just wide-spread support for pgup/pgdn events to paginate and scroll without a bunch of unnecessary refreshes, lookin' at you Android). Key-gloves or Chorders you can use clipped to a pants pocket or wrapped around the back/edges of a handheld device. These aren't new ideas, just once that need to be refined into something serviceable. Get away from the fondleslab appliance that uses half of its expensive, power-hungry touchscreen to present an awkward gimped keyboard that only works as well as its prediction estimates and re-flows your content as it pops in and out paradigm.
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Should You Write a Wayland Compositor?

Source: Hacker News

Article note: This (and every article like it) reads to me as basically "Wayland presents a really bad abstraction for the problem(s) it is supposed to solve." I wish it weren't, because X is a fucking mess, but replacing an accreted mess with a wrong-by-design mess is not improving the situation.
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