Monthly Archives: February 2021

The Vaccine Had to Be Used. He Used It. He Was Fired

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Didn't we _just_ see some feel-good pieces about doctors doing very similar things and being lauded? Like most anti-fraud measures that cost more than the fraud they try to prevent, our weird-assed, probably protestant derived, obsession with keeping things away from "the wrong people" is super fucked up. Especially when contrasted with our acceptance of much much more costly fraud by "the worthy" (tax evasion, crony contracts, regulatory capture, etc.) .
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Lalboard – A 3D-printed keyboard inspired by the DataHand

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Neat. I've been conceptually interested in datahands for years, but the prices have kept me from even considering. This looks like a not-too-insane project for some time when I have some extra time and the desire to build things.
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Border agents can search phones freely under new circuit court ruling

Source: The Verge - All Posts

Article note: Ah, shit. That had previously appeared to settle in a much better affirming basic civil liberties sort of way.
More than 1 million people traveled on planes in US on a single day ahead of Thanksgiving amid coronavirus pandemic
David Santiago/Miami Herald/Tribune News Service via Getty Images

A US appeals court has ruled that Customs and Border Protection agents can conduct in-depth searches of phones and laptops, overturning an earlier legal victory for civil liberties groups. First Circuit Judge Sandra Lynch declared that both basic and “advanced” searches, which include reviewing and copying data without a warrant, fall within “permissible constitutional grounds” at the American border.

Lynch ruled against a group of US citizens and residents objecting to invasive searches of their electronic devices. The group includes Sidd Bikkannavar, a NASA scientist who was detained and pressured to unlock a secure government-issued phone. Most of the incidents date to 2017, when then-President Donald Trump pushed for tighter border...

Continue reading…

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Popular open-source library SDL moving development to GitHub despite ‘calamitous design choices’ in git

Source: The Register

Article note: That looks about right. Git is obscenely over-complicated and ill-suited to the vast majority of things it is used for, and github's EEE workflow has made it even weirder -- but it's also by far the dominant species, and if you pretend the 10% of its surface area that is not a foot-cannon is the whole thing and entirely hide how it actually works, you can get network effects while still pretending to be using an appropriate tool. More generally, the tooling to do _anything_ has become so horrifically complicated and opaque that everyone is scurrying back mainframes^H^H the cloud, and that itself is a problem.

'I don't have the energy to be a server admin for something that's held together with scotch tape and prayers'

The Simple DirectMedia Library (SDL) project is moving development to GitHub today despite what a core developer calls "calamitous design choices" in git, for the sake of familiarity and wide tool support.…

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Google could have killed Facebook

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Eesh. It's such a tale of the modern tech industry. Facebook's ad-tech panel, responsible for at least a quarter of their revenue, was a disaster of legacy Javascript being maintained by one engineer until someone looking for a ladder to climb noticed it was dependent on the deprecated WebSQL API (...and said API was deprecated because the other webhipsters were like "Nooo, SQLite backing isn't exciting enough, let's standardize on NoSQL instead") and re-wrote it with a newer generation of hipster tools.
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Interview with Bill Joy (1984)

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Huh. I knew about how much of vi was agglomerated via cross-pollination among academic UNIX folk, like almost everything in UNIX in the mid-to-late 70s, but didn't know how early they were looking at very-different editors (like Bravo) for inspiration, and how early they were aware that modality was a bad idea. Lot of _very_ forward-looking Also, looking from the present,"These editors tend to last too long - almost a decade for vi now. Ideas aren't advancing very quickly, are they?" in 1984 is absolutely hilarious, both for the obvious reasons about it still being around and everything in computing being stalled, and because of how much computing folk in that era under-estimated the value of consistency I'm one of the only editor-hoppers I know (right now mostly kate and micro), most people seem to learn one of the arcane ones and get stuck forever.
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Cops are playing music while citizens are filming to trigger copyright filters

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Our legal system is hilariously broken. Where our failure at police accountability and our regulatory-captured IP law collide, we get this.
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Recreating the Mac SE Logic Board

Source: Hack a Day

Article note: That is _majestic_ work. Reversed board, found modern drop-in replacements for all but a few parts. Gonna rescue a bunch of battery-damaged SEs.

When [Kai Robinson] found himself faced with the difficult task of saving as many Mac SE’s as he possibly could, the logical but daunting answer was to recreate the Mac SE logic board for machines that would otherwise be scrapped. These machines are over 30 years old and the PRAM battery often leaks, destroying parts and traces. Given that the logic board is a simple through-hole two-layer board, how hard could it be?

The first step was to get some reference photos so [Kai] set to desoldering everything on the board. The list of components and the age of solder made this an arduous task. Then a composite image was produced by merging images together using a scanner and some Inkscape magic. Rather than simply putting the pins in the right place and re-routing all the netlists, [Kai] elected instead to do a copy, trace for trace of the original SE board. [Kai] and several others on the forum have been testing the boards and tracking down the last few bugs and kinks in the design. An unconnected pin here and an improperly impedance matched resistor there. Hopefully, soon they’ll have Gerbers and design files ready for anyone should they need a new logic board PCB.

It’s no secret that we love the Macintosh SE here at Hackaday. We’ve seen new custom cases for it and now new PCBs for it. It does cause the mind to ponder though and wonder, what’s next?

Thanks [Toru173] for sending this one in!

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VESA Arm Turned Low-Cost Overhead Camera Rig

Source: Hack a Day

Article note: That's a very good idea. Camera booms are super useful and super expensive, There are VESA arms that are similar and way cheaper, and the adaptation is straightforward.

Whether you’re live streaming builds or just want to take your project photography to the next level, you can’t beat an overhead camera setup. Unfortunately, they tend to be cumbersome and more often than not quite pricey. Looking for an affordable solution that could easily be moved out of the way when not in use, [Jay Doscher] had the clever idea of adapting a common VESA monitor arm to give his camera a bird’s eye view of the action.

If you think about it, one of these monitor arms is a nearly perfect base for a camera rig. They’re easily mounted to a desk or work bench, can be quickly repositioned by design, and perhaps best of all, you don’t have to spend a lot of money to get a decent one. A camera is also a far lighter and less awkward payload than the arm was designed to hold, so you don’t have to worry about it potentially dropping your expensive gear. Or cheap webcam, as the case may be.

All [Jay] had to do was come up with a way to securely mount his Sony A7R3 on the end of one. While there’s certainly a few ways you could solve this particular problem, he went the extruded plastic route and 3D printed a beefy adapter plate with the standard VESA bolt pattern. His Smallrig camera cage attaches to the plate, and thanks to a pair of press-fit bubble levels from McMaster Carr, he’s able to get everything lined up properly over the bench.

Of course, there’s an excellent chance you don’t have the same camera as [Jay]. But that doesn’t mean you can’t modify the design of his adapter to fit your own gear. To that end, he’s not only shared the final STLs, but he’s provided a link to the TinkerCAD project that you can actually edit right in the browser.

If you’ve got a light enough camera, you could put something similar together with PVC pipes or even an articulated arm intended for a desk lamp. But if you’ve got a DSLR or other full-sized camera, we think it’s more than worth the $30 USD one of these will cost you on Amazon to make sure your gear doesn’t end up smashing into the deck during a live stream.

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Terraria developer cancels Google Stadia port after YouTube account ban

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: At least google is getting burnt for their routine shittyness this time. The "A bot doesn't like something you did on YouTube so you lose access to your email and any other google-tied services or content you were foolish enough to pay google for" paradigm is _completely_ unacceptable.
Terraria developer cancels Google Stadia port after YouTube account ban

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Google is in hot water after banning the Google account of Andrew Spinks, the lead developer of the hit indie game Terraria. The YouTube account of Spinks' game dev company, Re-Logic, was hit with some kind of terms-of-service violation, resulting in Google banning Spinks' entire Google account, greatly disrupting his company's ability to do business. After three fruitless weeks of trying to get the situation fixed, Spinks announced that his company will no longer do business with Google and that the upcoming Stadia version of Terraria is canceled. "I will not be involved with a corporation that values their customers and partners so little," Spinks said. "Doing business with you is a liability."

Three weeks ago, the official Terraria Twitter account publicly pleaded with YouTube for some kind of resolution to a recent Google account ban. The Terraria account explained, "We have not added anything new to our only YT channel (RelogicGames) in several months. However, we randomly received an email saying there was a TOS violation but that it was likely accidental and as such, the account would receive no strikes." The Terraria Twitter account continued, "Three days later, the entire Google account (YT, Gmail, all Google apps, even every purchase made over 15 years on Google Play Store) was disabled with no warning or recourse. This account links into many business functions and as such the impact to us is quite substantial."

Re-Logic's vague recollection of "a TOS violation" highlights one of the main frustration points of a Google account ban: you immediately lose access to your Gmail account, so you can't give a thorough account of what happened or what any communication said, because you can't read your email. Re-Logic's YouTube channel, which is still up here, (with a disabled profile picture) appears to be nothing but trailers of the company's games.

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