Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-06-01:/2484373] "Microsoft is intentionally bricking all Office for Mac 2019/2021 installations"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-06-01:/2484272] "Nvidia's Grace Blackwell superchips are officially coming to the PC with RTX Spark notebooks"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-05-30:/2483921] "Adding Linux support back for the BASIC (free) version of Vivado"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-05-30:/2483835] "Proposed new US funding rules: We can cancel any grant at any time"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-05-27:/2483228] "The exemptions in age-verification laws for open source operating systems are bad, actually"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-05-31:/2484064] "Mysteries of the Griffin iMate"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-05-23:/2482255] "AMD (Xilinx) is Excluding Linux From the Free Tier For Its FPGA Dev Tool"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-05-19:/2481210] "The Virtual OS Museum"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-05-19:/2481121] "Google changes its search box"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-05-15:/2480224] "Windows 11 tests an adjustable taskbar and resizable Start menu"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-05-15:/2480167] "Send the arXiv AI-generated slop, get a yearlong vacation from submissions"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-05-13:/2479471] "KDE Receives $1.4 Million Investment From Sovereign Tech Fund"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-05-12:/2479155] "Google's Android-powered laptops are called Googlebooks, and they're coming this year"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-05-07:/2478063] "Canvas is online again after ShinyHunters threaten to leak schools’ data"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-05-07:/2477845] "Aramark, University of Kentucky to end partnership, eliminating more than 900 jobs"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-04-29:/2475951] "Apple gives up on Vision Pro, disbands Vision Pro team"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-01-29:/2451557] "Slopaganda: AI images posted by the White House and what they teach us"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-01-29:/2451518] "SpaceX in Merger Talks with xAI"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-01-27:/2450683] "Albania Created an ‘A.I. Minister’ to Curb Corruption. Then Its Developers Were Accused of Graft."
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2026-01-27:/2450729] "Xfwl4 – The Roadmap for a Xfce Wayland Compositor"
The editing/cleaning/etc. I’ve been doing to the new blog has caused lots of inconsequential minor revisions to content… which would be fine except that, by default, recent versions of WP generate a new PostID (and associated database cruft) EVERY TIME YOU MAKE A REVISION, resulting in about 350 bogus PostIDs between my last two posts – about 200 of them from leaving the editor up and autosaving for a couple hours. The interwebs are full of notes about adding define('WP_POST_REVISIONS', false); to wp-config.php to turn revision saving off, and there is a handy delete-revision plugin to purge any that got by without having to bust out SQL tools, but what a dumb behavior.
I’ve had the idea of a “Hackbiscus” emblem rattling around my head for a while, and I was contemplating it again as a possible option for theming the new blog. The idea is to have a hibiscus with it’s stamen arranged in the pattern of a glider(⠠⠵). The glider has been suggested, and weakly accepted, as a suitable emblem for hacker culture. Even better, most Hibsicus really do have five Stigma, so it is biologically correct. With my affection for Aloha shirts and both Hawaiian and Hacker culture, it seemed like a good sigil… and the pun on “Hacker Stigma” is too good to pass up.
It should be an easy trick to make; take one of the common outline images of a hibiscus (It turns out there are about 10 of them from which nearly all prints/stickers/etc. are derived), pull it into GIMP and massage the dots representing the five stigma into the correct pattern. The problem with this plan is I’ve never found an example of the separated-stamen pattern larger than an oddly aliased 400×400 gif. The solution to that problem arrived the other day when my advisor showed me how to use the Trace Bitmap tool in Inkscape, during a discussion about preparing images for the Silhouette SD cutter the group bought recently to use in some projects (more on that later, hopefully). I’ve never had good luck working Inscape in the past, but decided to try it to get a nice resizable smooth-edged Hackbiscus. I got excellent results with only a little bit of parameter fiddling, as shown above (although, that is 400×400 like the source image. It scales up indefinitely, promise).