Category Archives: News

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Refurb Weekend: Canon Cat

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Cats are such an interesting machine, especially because you can actually read the coherent philosophy behind them in Raskin's The Humane Interface. As much as it'd be fun to have one, they're rare and eyewateringly expensive, and the MAME core is pretty good, it's an interesting experience just to play with the software. They are very much an artifact from an alternate timeline, and it's good for your brain to experience one of those every now and then.
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After Learning Her TA Would Be Paid More Than She Was, This Lecturer Quit

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Hey, it's me for the last 5 years, designing and running classes while getting paid (effectively once tuition waiver and benefits are factored) less than the TAs. With me the excuse has been "Finishing PhD in another department" we'll see if it actually changes. No one has been stabbed, yet.
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ICQ will stop working from June 26

Source: Hacker News

Article note: I had no idea there were original-network ICQ servers still running.
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“Unacceptable”: Spotify bricking Car Thing devices in Dec. without refunds

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Gross. They were still in production in 2022. Sounds like someone has managed to hack the bootloader so at least a few of them will be hacker toys instead of ewaste.
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Cortile: auto-tiling manager that runs on top of your current window manager for X11

Source: OSNews

Article note: That's neat. There have been a few tiling assistants (mostly for X, occasionally for other major OSes) over the years, they never seem to quite persist. This one is charmingly generic because it relies on things that work in X that have intentionally been abdicated in Wayland, even though Wayland is largely by the people responsible for things like EWMH and ICCM and basic support for programmatic window control that make this kind of portable software possible.

Linux auto tiling manager with hot corner support for Openbox, Fluxbox, IceWM, Xfwm, KWin, Marco, Muffin, Mutter and other EWMH compliant window managers using the X11 window system. Therefore, this project provides dynamic tiling for XFCE, LXDE, LXQt, KDE and GNOME (Mate, Deepin, Cinnamon, Budgie) based desktop environments.

Simply keep your current window manager and install cortile on top of it. Once enabled, the tiling manager will handle resizing and positioning of existing and new windows.

↫ Cortile GitHub page

I’ve always been mildly interested in trying out a proper tiling window manager – of which are millions – but installing and setting up an entirely new environment always felt a bit like overkill for something I’m just curious about instead of actually intending to use it permanently. This seems like a great solution to this issue.

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Microsoft Recall takes constant screenshots of everything you do

Source: OSNews

Article note: Holy shit, this is the worst idea.

About a month ago we talked about the rumours, but now the feature’s officially announced: Microsoft is going to keep track of everything you do on your Windows machine by taking a constant stream of screenshots, and then making said screenshots searchable by using things like text and image recognition. As you might expect, this is a privacy nightmare, and the details and fine print accompanying this new feature do not exactly instill confidence.

First, the feature is a lot dumber than you might expect, as it doesn’t perform any “content moderation”, as Microsoft calls it.

Note that Recall does not perform content moderation. It will not hide information such as passwords or financial account numbers. That data may be in snapshots that are stored on your device, especially when sites do not follow standard internet protocols like cloaking password entry.

↫ Privacy and control over your Recall experience

Well, Microsoft says Recall doesn’t do any content moderation, but that’s actually a flat-out lie. Recall will not show any content with DRM that happens to be on your screen, and private browsing sessions in Chromium-based browsers won’t be shown either. You can also exclude specific applications and websites – filtering websites, however, is only available in Edge. In other words, managing this privacy nightmare is entirely left up to the user… Except for DRM content, of course. The mouse must be pleased, after all.

It also seems Microsoft is enabling this feature by default for at least some business users, as machines managed with Microsoft Intune will have Recall enabled by default, and administrators will need to use Group Policy to disable it. There is no way in hell any company serious about data security will want Recall enabled, so I guess this can be added to the pile of headaches administrators already have to deal with.

My biggest worry is the usual slippery slope this feature represents. How long before governments will legally require a feature like this on all our computers? The more Microsoft and other companies brag about how easy and low-power stuff like this is, the more governments – already on the warpath when it comes to things like encrypted messaging – will want their hands on this.

This is such a bad idea.

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CADmium: A Local-First CAD Program Built for the Browser

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Ooh, the CAD package _might_ turn out, the fact that it is built on Truck - a project which approaching a usable open source general-purpose boundary representation kernel which is not OpenCASCADE - makes it more of an interesting thing than most such projects. I had to do a design 3 times last week in FreeCAD because I made bad ordering/reference decisions, but I can never tell if it's because I'm dumb or because it's dumb.
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Xeon Phi support removed in GCC 15 compiler

Source: OSNews

Article note: Culling of Intel's relatively modern expensive failures. Larrabee/MIC/Phi was always kind of amusing, but still crazy bullshit with a narrow niche and weird compromises (we're gonna bring x86 baggage without ABI compatibility...) , and only lasted for about a decade on the market.

Last week I wrote about Intel aiming to remove Xeon Phi support in GCC 15 with the products being end-of-life and deprecated in GCC 14. While some openly wondered whether the open-source community would allow it given the Xeon Phi accelerators were available to buy just a few years ago and at some very low prices going back years so some potentially finding use still out of them especially during this AI boom (and still readily available to buy used for around ~$50 USD), today the Intel Xeon Phi support was indeed removed.

↫ Michael Larabel

Xeon Phi PCIe cards are incredibly cheap on eBay, and every now and then my mouse hovers over the buy button – but I always realise just in time that the cards have become quite difficult to use, since support for them, already sparse to begin with, is only getting worse by the day. Support for them was already removed in Linux 5.10, and now GCC is pulling he plug too, so the only option is to keep using old kernels, or pass the card on to a VM running an older Linux kernel version, which is a lot of headache for what is essentially a weird toy for nerds at this point.

GCC 15 will also, sadly, remove support for Itanium, which, as I’ve said before, is a huge disgrace and a grave mistake. Itanium is the future, and will stomp all over crappy architectures like x86 and ARM. With this deprecation, GCC relegates itself to the dustbin of history.

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Company behind Amiga OS 4 seems to be either going or is in fact bankrupt

Source: OSNews

Article note: Trying to follow the ownership of the Amiga IP is crazy. Looks like another episode.

So, I won’t be wasting too many words on this – partially because I’m not into cheap soap operas, and partially because there’s no way to know what’s going on with this nonsense without dedicating a year’s worth of detailed study into the subject. So it seems that the company Hyperion, which develops and owns the rights to Amiga OS 4 and Amiga OS 3.2 has gone into bankruptcy proceedings. The main shareholder of Hyperion, someone named Ben Hermans, has apparently set up several shell companies (or something?), and they might now own the rights to the two variants of Amiga OS, or they might not? And those shell companies have also gone into bankruptcy proceedings?

Hyperion has been managed by a receiver since last week (Update)
“Ben Hermans BV” (hereinafter: BHBV) is a private company with limited liability owned by Ben Hermans, which has held 97% of the shares in Hyperion since 2019 and acts as a ‘director’ of Hyperion on paper. In March, bankruptcy proceedings were initiated against BHBV for the second time. In the same month, Ben Hermans had already initiated the founding of a new company with the same name.

As BHBV has not published any statutory annual reports since 2021, it is currently unclear whether the company still holds the majority of shares in Hyperion. Ben Hermans has not responded to an inquiry from amiga-news.de; the appointed liquidator Charlotte Piers tells us she’ll get back to us in the next few days with “a more detailed response”.

↫ Amiga-news.de

I stopped trying to keep track of this stuff years and years ago, but bits and bobs I’ve picked up since is that there’s been countless lawsuits flying back and forth, questions of rights ownership, and all sorts of other drama you can only keep track of by following the various different Amiga websites and forums in great detail on a daily basis.

As is Amiga tradition.

Amiga OS 4 is an interesting operating system that I spent some fun time with for an OSNews review way back in 2009, but at this point, if you’re truly hooked on the Amiga OS way of doing things, just stick to AROS. There’s technically also MorphOS, which is pretty great actually, but unless they sort out their own mess of being stuck to dying PowerPC Macs and move to x86 or ARM, they’re basically on borrowed time, too.

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It could soon be illegal to publicly wear a mask for health reasons in NC

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: Such a microcosm of modern dysfunction. Dumb motherfuckers in positions of power. People loosing sight of reasonable policy in favor of ideological point scoring. The usual "party of small government" butting into other people's business on medical matters issue. Ugh.
It could soon be illegal to publicly wear a mask for health reasons in NC

Enlarge (credit: Getty | Spencer Platt)

The North Carolina State Senate on Wednesday voted 30-15, along party lines, in favor of a Republican bill that would make it illegal for people in the state to wear a mask in public for health reasons. The bill is now moving to the House, where it could potentially see changes.

The proposed ban on health-based masking is part of a larger bill otherwise aimed at increasing penalties for people wearing masks to conceal their identity while committing a crime or impeding traffic. The bill was largely spurred by recent protests on university and college campuses across the country, including North Carolina-based schools, against the war in Gaza. In recent months, there have been demonstrations in Raleigh and Durham that have blocked roadways, as well as clashes on the nearby campus of University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Some demonstrators were seen wearing masks in those events.

But the bill, House Bill 237, goes a step further by making it illegal to wear a mask in public for health and safety reasons, either to protect the wearer, those around them, or both. Specifically, the bill repeals a 2020 legal exemption, enacted amid the COVID-19 pandemic, which allowed for public health-based masking for the first time in decades.

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