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‘I Foresee a Very Long Insurgency by Hamas’


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/21698996

[an interview with former U.S. ambassador Ryan Crocker]
Story by Michael Hirsh
October 19, 2024



Fresh tension grips Bangladesh as student protesters demand president's resignation




Newly added to the Trade-Free Directory:

Mapzen

Mapzen, founded in 2013 and headquartered in New York City, was an open source mapping platform company focused on the core components of geo platforms, including search (geocoding), rendering (vector tiles), navigation/routing, and data. Mapzen’s components are used by OpenStreetMap, CartoDB, and Remix, amongst others. The components, hosted on GitHub, are written in JavaScript, Ruby, Java, and Python. Mapzen’s CEO, Randy Meech, was previously SVP of engineering for MapQuest. Mapzen was supported by Samsung Research America and was known to have hired mapping specialists from Apple.

Mapzen shut down operations in late January, 2018.

On the 28th of January 2019 The Linux Foundation announced Mapzen would become a Linux Foundation Project.

#geocoding #navigationRoutingAndData #OpenSourceCartography #renderingVectorTiles_

More here:

directory.trade-free.org/goods…

TROM reshared this.





China and the Vatican agree to extend an agreement on appointing bishops | AP News


in reply to schizoidman

The 2018 agreement sought to find a middle ground, although Rome has acknowledged it was a bad deal and the only one it could get. The Holy See’s outreach to China under Francis has drawn criticism, especially from American conservatives who have accused the Vatican of selling out the faithful who have been forced underground.


What is the compromise? Seems relevant to the article about a thing to explain what the thing is.

in reply to Aria

Iirc, before 2018 the Chinese goverment would refuse to recognize some priests or bishops as officials even if the Pope had selected them. The relation between the PRC and the Vatican was ok, better than the Soviets and the Vatican, but this was a huge problem for them.

In 2018 Francis made a deal with them, I think Xi wanted to approach the Catholic Church due to the slow but big growth of the Church in Asia, and because they probably wants to get closer with LatAm and Africa. Francis (The Pope) would choose the priests, but the Chinese goverment/CPC would have to approve them, some TradCath and Anti-China Catholics are angry bc they hate Francis (mostly bc he purged some tradcatholics and kicked some out of the church, and he is in friendly terms with some socdem and communist goverments in LatAm), and bc Francis have been mostly choosing normal Catholic priests and bishops, instead of anti-China ones.

in reply to Aria

Beijing picks who gets to be a bishop and Rome gives the okay to Catholics to worship in communist party organized parishes with a picture of Mao on the wall and a CCP-edited Bible to read. Also, the hope is China stops arresting Catholics and stops sending them to reeducation camps.

Members of the illegal underground Church have opposed this deal.

For more information, check out the Cardinal Kung Foundation.

China never keeps their word.

in reply to Aria

My comment above is literally a summary from a presentation by the Cardinal Kung Foundation. For decades it was illegal to be Catholic in China and the priests and bishops operated clandestine at great risk of being caught. In place of the Catholic Church the Chinese Communist Party created the Patriotic Association to operate like the Catholic Church using priests and bishops who would break communion with Rome in favor of the local communist government. The "deal" between the Vatican and the CCP attempted to reconcile the two groups to each other in a way that was favorable to both but it did not work out that way.
in reply to 52fighters

literally a summary from a presentation by the Cardinal Kung Foundation


so literally just worthless propaganda

in reply to 52fighters

I see. In this case I think Cardinal Kung Foundation simply doesn't know or are lying. They're based in Washington DC, which is the headquarters of the USA regime, and those are the people who recently spent 1.6 milliard USD on anti-China propaganda. They obviously have an agenda. msn.com/en-us/news/world/house…

I'll show you the podcast I was listening to when I saw your original comment. It was basically saying the exact opposite at the exact time I read your statement. youtu.be/H672okUKCeQ?t=4479 It's mostly just an ironic situation, rather than being some rigorous academic source. But still, it seemed more credible, since it was a person who lives there. Meanwhile your source names 'CCP', which is either a made up thing or a slur version of CPC. CPC is the political party leading China. They set the goals for the different Chinese governments to achieve.



Mentions United ... 3, 2, 1, Go


cross-posted from: programming.dev/post/20878811

Since I wasn't satisfied with the way syndicated interactions were displayed on my blog, I built something myself with #javascript. What do you think of the idea and implementation?

in reply to db0

As Strypey acknowledges, there's a lot he didn't know about at the time and left out. Before Mastodon: GNU Social and other early fediverses includes a lot of that.


Assange's first speech since 2018 streaming live tomorrow! - PACE hearing on Julian Assange's detention and conviction and their chilling effects on human rights


https://pace.coe.int/en/news/9600/julian-assange-to-attend-a-pace-hearing-in-strasbourg-on-his-detention-and-conviction-and-their-chilling-effect-on-human-rights

in reply to grimfuture

Only a Clinton shill who doesn't know those emails contain all the dirt the DNC had collected on the Trump campaign would say that.

A New York court ruled this publication, which btw showed the DNC had rigged the primaries / stolen the primaries from Bernie, and pushed media to always talk about Trump in the mistaken Clinton would easily win against him, was First Amendment protected by the highest order.

in reply to SLfgb

That is an ignorant assumption. I was very involved in that primary and I know all about the Clinton BS. I am still a huge Bernie fan, however, Assange did not release the RNC files because he is scared of Putin. I bought into his "all information should be free" until he bent the knee to Putin.
politifact.com/article/2019/ma…


Anhörig till gängkriminell mördad i Akalla. På kvällen den 22 oktober larmades polisen om ett grovt brott på Sibeliusgången i Akalla. I en lägenhet på den aktuella adressen hittades en död kvinna. Hon var anhörig till en känd gängkriminell som är skriven på adressen.

blog.zaramis.se/2024/10/23/anh…



Mentions United ... 3, 2, 1, Go


Since I wasn't satisfied with the way syndicated interactions were displayed on my blog, I built something myself with #javascript. What do you think of the idea and implementation?
This entry was edited (1 year ago)
in reply to Kristof Zerbe

So this is like extending mastodon replies into your blog post, but with more syndication options?
in reply to Alex

It is an interaction collector based on syndications. Currently I'm working on a Lemmy extension to show the discussion below the post.


Lägre sillkvot i Östersjön än vad forskarna föreslagit. Många vänstertdiningar, vänstermänniskor och miljövänner är just nu upprörda över att kvoten på sill/strömming i centrala Östersjön 2025 fördubblas jämfört med 2024

blog.zaramis.se/2024/10/23/lag…



Phoronix: Rust-Written Rustls Now Reportedly Outperforming OpenSSL & BoringSSL


reshared this

Unknown parent

lemmy - Link to source
qweertz

average Phoronix forum user unfortunately 💀

but Phoronix' journalism is good

(which is why I only read the articles through my RSS readers and never go on the site or associated forums)

in reply to sanpo

You got some serious reading comprehension issues. I am talking about you.


Why bootc doesn’t require “/usr merge”


reshared this

in reply to petsoi

Blog makes valid point, but why on earth there would be any current Linux distribution without usr merge?

EDIT: Especially when every major Linux distributions have already implemented usr merge long time ago.

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

Alpine Linux doesn't have it yet, although as postmarketOS we convinced them of the need and are now hard at work to make it happen.
in reply to Goingdown

Gentoo supports either configuration, as it does with a lot of things. My systems were installed with split /usr and I have no intention of changing that, because the merge adds no value for me.
in reply to petsoi



Tor Browser 14.0 released


reshared this

in reply to petsoi

"first stable release based on Firefox ESR 128, incorporating a year's worth of changes shipped upstream in Firefox. As part of this process we've also completed our annual ESR transition audit, where we reviewed and addressed over 200 Bugzilla issues for changes in Firefox that may negatively affect the privacy and security of Tor Browser users"

in reply to petsoi

It is kind of interesting how open machine learning already is without much explicit advocacy for it.

It's the only field I can think of where the open version is just a few months behind SOTA in all of IT.

Open training pipelines and open data are the only aspects that could still use improvements in ML, but there are plenty of projects that are near-SOTA and fully open.

ML is extremely open compared to consumer mobile or desktop apps that are always ~10 years behind SOTA

in reply to DavidGarcia

I feel like it's really far from being open. Besides the training data not being open, the more popular ones like llama and stable diffusion have these weird source available licenses with anti-competitive clauses, user count limits, or arbitrary morality clauses.
in reply to underscores

Almost all of Qwen 2.5 is Apache 2.0, SOTA for the size, and frankly obsoletes many bigger API models.
in reply to petsoi

Ironically thanks in no small part to Facebook releasing Llama and kind of salting the earth for similar companies trying to create proprietary equivalents.

Nowadays you either have gigantic LLMs with hundreds of billions of parameters like Claude and ChatGPT or you have open Models that are sub-200B.

in reply to WalnutLum

I personally think the really large models are useless. What is very impressive is the small ones that somehow manage to be good. It blows my mind that so much information can fit in 8b.
in reply to vintageballs

Waiting till mixtral gonna optimise it enough to run on home computer, and then till dolphin uncensor it



“The Gaza I Know Is Gone”: Israel’s Rampage Continues as Survivors Struggle for Food, Water, Safety


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/21686260

October 22, 2024

[For anyone who cares about Palestine, this article is very hard to read.]

in reply to Peter Link

"Hey, stop doing that... please?"

--U.S. Politicians

in reply to balderdash

Mr Netanyahu, please stop dropping bombs on Gaza, ok? Anyway, here are some more bombs. All the bombs you want in fact, at our expense!