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A ‘dark period’ of repression: Jordanian authorities arrest thousands in year since October 7


in reply to Coco 📕

Jordan is the fakest of the fake Arab states. It is really a security company serving the US’s interests in the region



Japan’s new prime minister: Dreaming of an Asian version of NATO?


in reply to NightOwl

The former members of SEATO can tell you how well that went for them lol.


c-pipes: draw pipes in terminal window


gitlab.com/christosangel/c-pip…

This program written in the C language will render random coloured
zigzag lines in the terminal, while the font, speed, density and
number of lines are fully customizable.

c-pipes.png

Each line stops once it reaches the edge of the window, only for
a new line to begin.

This program was inspired by this bash script:

github.com/pipeseroni/pipes.sh

Screenshots:

https://social.trom.tf/photo/preview/1024/16822968

https://social.trom.tf/photo/preview/1024/16822971

https://social.trom.tf/photo/preview/1024/16822973

https://social.trom.tf/photo/preview/1024/16822975

Feel free to discover the endless possibilities of customization.

in reply to christos

Haven't used the original but I do enjoy letting pipes-rs run on idle terminals.
in reply to xoggy

I haven't used the rust version, but, with a glance, pretty much the rust replica as well as the c clone I wrote lead to more or less the same outcome as the bash original script. A mesmerizing effect.


On 8 October, the European Data Protection Board (EDPB) issued guidelines on the processing of personal data on the basis of Article 6(1)(f) of the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). This Note is a quick immediate response to the EDPB comments in that document relating to the processing of certain special categories of personal data that enjoy special protection under the GDPR, commonly referred to as “sensitive data”. Specifically, the EDPB appears to suggest that such data can be processed on the basis of the “legitimate interest” legal basis set out in Article 6(1)(f) of the GDPR, provided certain “additional conditions” for processing of sensitive data contained in Article 9(2) GDPR are met. In this note, I explain why this is not clear enough.

KORFF – GDPR – sensitive data and the legitimate interest legal basis – 241011Download

ianbrown.tech/2024/10/11/edpb-…

This entry was edited (1 year ago)

in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

Physical books are intimidating for me to get started, it's easier to obscure lengths and just focus on reading if it's digital, plus public domain and piracy make it more worth it
in reply to Cowbee [he/they]

I noticed that as well, I have some books I've been putting off precisely because I can see how big they are. :)

in reply to Spectre

Estimated Russian army spending is between $85-$105 billion USD. (This has likely skyrocketed since that that estimate was taken as Russia has transitioned to a wartime economy.)

Chinese? ~$212-$230 billion USD.

Spending on military is better put in context of GDP, and actual spending is going to be very different than published or even estimated numbers. (It's likely much more, is what I am implying.)

I actually agree that this money is better spent on social welfare. It's a stupid situation across the board and many countries are guilty of this disparity.

For better or for worse, much of that money goes back into the overall economy of the country supplying the aid. Not all, but most. (This can get complicated due to the lifespan of specific types of munitions.)

What I am saying is that there is a ton of blame to pass around and poking at one country or another is an agenda, not a solution.

This entry was edited (1 year ago)

in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

I could have swore linking brain waste-clearing system with good sleep and alzheimers was done before
This entry was edited (1 year ago)


in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

General Ackbar from Star Wars

Did it not seem strange to them that Russia had set up no defenses along that part of the border, where the land is sparsely populated and not especially militarily strategic? Not even mine fields or an anti-tank trenches as elsewhere?

in reply to davel

That's what happens when you start drinking your own kool aid thinking that Russian army is on the brink of collapse fighting with shovels.


World’s oldest known (representational) artwork in Indonesian cave dated using lasers


Laser-induced imaging of radioactive elements was used to work out the age of an ancient cave painting on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi. The results reveal that the narrative scene is 51,200 years old, making it the earliest known example of representational art. This study challenges previous dating methods and suggests a deeper origin for human image-making and storytelling.

TL;DR or if you don't have access to the article: the researchers invented a faster, less-destructive and more-accurate rock art dating method & applied it to humanity's oldest known rock art in Sulawesi, Indonesia. The art is at least 51,200 years old (authors' lower estimate)!

Edit: contrary to what the news title original stated: this is the oldest representational art, not the literal oldest human-created art.

The paper itself (open access): doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-075…

This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to zlatiah

Cool.

Title might be a bit clickbait though.

It’s oldest known representational art. Not oldest known art.

For example the carvings in the Blomos cave in South Africa are atleast 75’000 years old.

Edit: Thank you for editing the title! That’s pretty weird mistake by Nature I thought they had high standards. Well they have peer reviewed and approved some dodgy research in my field recently so maybe I should be more skeptical.

This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to Neurologist

I love hearing stuff like this. 51, 000 years old is already insane. 75,000 years old is 24,000 years older than that. I can't even imagine 24,000 years older than today.

Why can't we get movies about this shit instead of another Marvel sequel? I want some scientifically accurate adventure about life in 73,000 BC.

in reply to asdfasdfasdf

Well the problem is we know very little. So a movie like that would be complete guesswork.

You might enjoy the youtube channel “Stephan Milo” though. His videos are well sourced and have a lot of expert interviews. And he focuses on this kind of stuff.

in reply to asdfasdfasdf

Red ochre use has been happening for like 300k years, we just don’t have any examples of the art that survived.
This entry was edited (1 year ago)


First Greenhouse Gas Plumes Detected With NASA-Designed Instrument


The imaging spectrometer aboard the Carbon Mapper Coalition’s Tanager-1 satellite identified methane and carbon dioxide plumes in the United States and internationally.

Using data from an instrument designed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, the nonprofit Carbon Mapper has released the first methane and carbon dioxide detections from the Tanager-1 satellite. The detections highlight methane plumes in Pakistan and Texas, as well as a carbon dioxide plume in South Africa.

The data contributes to Carbon Mapper’s goal to identify and measure greenhouse gas point-source emissions on a global scale and make that information accessible and actionable.

in reply to Rimu

How will the natural gas lobby claim it's so much better than coal now that we can see methane leaks? NASA doesn't seem to care about capitalism
in reply to leftytighty

But NASA does care about Congress approving its budget requests. And the Republican controlled House and Republican filibustering Senate minority do not want anything done about climate change.

Thus sadly, it may lead to blowback against NASA by the currently insane US right. There's already talk about elimination of NOAA (National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration), privatizing its weather forecasting, and restructuring NASA's Earth observation initiatives that involve climate research.

Regardless of who wins the presidency next month and who has the majority in either house of Congress, the Republican party will try to block such research or dismiss its findings.

If Trump wins, he and his Agenda 2025 cronies (including his VP) will manipulate him to rip anything like this out. Plus Trump's boss Putin needs to keep selling fossil fuels as the main thing keeping Russia's economy afloat.


in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

“…the ongoing eastward and southward shift of the world’s economic and political centre of gravity.”

Citation needed



Att utesluta Kristofer Lundberg skulle kraftigt försvaga V. Vänsterpartiets starkaste distrikt i Göteborg ligger i två områden. Majorna och Angered. Där fick Vänsterpartiets 40% av rösterna i EU-valet i många valdistrikt.

blog.zaramis.se/2024/10/11/att…

This entry was edited (1 year ago)


in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

Yeah, turns out war is pretty fucked up. Look up the rape of nanjing. Or Pearl Harbor. Or Hiroshima.

You get the idea.

in reply to nick

And Japanese cannibalism of executed POW's, and Ishii's biological warefare unit. War is Hell.
in reply to Jumpingspiderman

The US was the model for biological testing and eugenics, that's not why they fought japan, nor was it even one of the stated reasons at the time.
in reply to BurgerPunk [he/him, comrade/them]

Maybe I have an edgy take but I really don't care about brutality against Japanese imperialists. I hold them as much more evil than the Nazis during the 20th century.
in reply to Wakmrow [he/him]

That is edgy. Stalin virulently rebuked war crimes against Nazi Germany's civilians and POWs as it pushed them back.

By contrast, the brutality, starvation, and high death rates for nazi POWs held by the US in western europe during and after ww2 is not a story most ppl know about. Losurdo gets into this a bit, as well as contrasts the nazi's position that the slavic ppl must be eradicated and made into slaves, while the USSR's position was that germany and the german ppl will go on after the war, and efforts should be made to not follow the nazi's scorched earth policy.



Deuces


This entry was edited (1 year ago)

LPS reshared this.

in reply to Track_Shovel

Do some people actually get these messages? It sounds almost illegal. I get emails from management moaning at me for not using my annual leave and reminding me to take them before they reset.
in reply to twinnie

I've worked in a small company's small team of 3 devs before, it would not have been great for the company if two or all of us went on a holiday at the same time.


The beauty of Unix pipelines


reshared this




Systemic & severe bullying in Pret A Manger shops India


Pret A Manger opened shops in 2023 under the aggessive expansion tasks by Pret's owners JAB Holdings, and the bullying culture is already in full swing, incl. injury. Secret audio evidence:
expret.org/2024/10/10/severe-b…