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#BBC Family release video of Matilda at beach as aunt calls for 'happiness and love' w.st/seVcG
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Today in 1966, 59 years ago: Richard L. Walker discovers Epimetheus, Saturn's satellite.

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Les députés votent la prolongation de l’expérimentation de la vidéosurveillance algorithmique jusqu’à la fin de 2027 ift.tt/Q6JjzKO


#BBC 'The truth is kids are sharing intimate pictures all the time' w.st/seVzF
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#BBC Heating tips to keep your home warm when budgets are squeezed w.st/eHZ2U
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#BBC Ecuador defender Pineida killed in shooting w.st/Hbqhp
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I still enjoy pressing the button at pedestrian crossings just to make traffic stop, but not cross the road. I'm 43 now.
in reply to Fesshole 🧻

You're wasting fuel, increasing vehicle wear, and accelerating global warming. Well done, you!
in reply to C++ Wage Slave

@CppGuy Not to mention, being a complete unempathetic turd. Just because someone is in a car doesn't mean they're a bad person. Some might just be trying to get to work. Someone might be on their way to see family. Someone might be trying to get to the hospital because they or their loved one is sick.

We need to do a better job as a society (parents, and in the classroom/public spaces) of teaching empathy.

in reply to Patch You Up

@Jumpmed @CppGuy I think as a child or non-driving adult, cars often look very much just like things and you don't think so much of the people inside. That's how it often was for me, and I suppose why I found it funny to press that button as a child. But yeah teaching empathy better sounds like a good idea.
in reply to jackdaw delila

@Jumpmed @CppGuy Now I had to learn to drive, my attitude changed a bit:

If I'm a pedestrian, bikes and cars should make way for me, they act so entitled and are always in a rush.
If I'm riding a bike, pedestrians should be more aware of where they're walking, as they are going so slow, they should make way for me. Cars of course should make way for bikes, as bikes are better.
If I'm driving, pedestrians & bikes are slow and unaware & should move out of the way for my ton of metal...

in reply to Charles ☭ is a Green

@celesteh

Let me tell you what that policy results in in practice.

This coming Saturday, Mrs Wife and I are taking an elderly relative to confession, because he's enslaved by a religion of superstition and fear. But confession is at 10am in the middle of town on the Saturday before Christmas; parking will be quite impossible. So we both have to go into town. She'll go into church with him while I drive round and round until they come out. Oh, and she'll have worked a night shift, so she'll be exhausted, and this will wreck her sleep, so she'll be knackered when overseas relatives arrive later in the day.

What we really need is not to punish car drivers but to make cars unnecessary by providing a public transport system that works. But no one seems interested in doing that. A taxi that accommodates a wheelchair, helps a disabled passenger in and out, waits outside a church, has a driver that wears a good mask, and doesn't cost a week's pension? Cloud cuckoo land. Not gonna happen.

@delila @Jumpmed @fesshole

in reply to C++ Wage Slave

@CppGuy @celesteh @Jumpmed A public transport system that works as a basis that would remove almost all need for cars. Of course some people including some disabled people would still need a car to be equally mobile as others, for various reasons like immunodeficiency or low energy, needing to be transported lying down etc. But thats no problem as it would be a drop in the ocean compared to all the people driving who wouldn't really need to.
in reply to jackdaw delila

@CppGuy @celesteh @Jumpmed Until that happy utopia we need to make sure that people who really need to can continue to access spaces in society including inner cities also by car. To some extent it does exist if you have a disability badge on your car at least where i am you can park for free etc. But with all plans for car free cities and so on that has to be considered and planned into the concept.
in reply to jackdaw delila

@delila

Agreed. We applied for a blue badge (for disabled parking) in, I think, September. If we had that, I could park directly outside the church and wheel my relative in, and Mrs Wife could catch up on her sleep. Unfortunately, the bureaucracy doesn't work, and we're still waiting.

@celesteh @Jumpmed @fesshole

in reply to jackdaw delila

@delila @CppGuy @Jumpmed
This kind of scenario is why I think taxi drivers, cyclists and transit riders should join in a union to argue for more accessible cities with fewer private cars. I may have talked around a cab driver or two, but cyclists are less receptive.
in reply to Charles ☭ is a Green

@celesteh

Okay, but I'm none of those things. I'm a software developer with an EV trying to help out an old disabled man and being thwarted by the lack of parking. A plan to reduce the number of private cars sounds as if it would make that even harder, not easier.

@delila @Jumpmed @fesshole

in reply to C++ Wage Slave

@CppGuy @celesteh @Jumpmed then ideally there would be some kind of system to make suitable cars available for people who need them.
The question of who gatekeeps access resources and who has access to them is obviously pertinent as your example shows. Where I am, if I had a car and was driving a disabled person who had the parking badge they could just bring it with them. However many people who would actually need it, don't have it or may not be awarded it.
in reply to jackdaw delila

@delila

I think it's the same here, but the disabled person no longer drives (though he no longer has the cognition to understand that he's now incapable of driving) and doesn't have his own blue badge. We've applied for one on his behalf so that we can drive him where he needs to go.

You raise a good point: we still don't know whether we'll actually get the badge.

@celesteh @Jumpmed @fesshole

in reply to jackdaw delila

@delila @CppGuy @Jumpmed
Disabled people in London get free passes for public transport. IMO, they should also get free vouchers for black cabs for when they need to move stuff or for when the bus transfers are difficult.

I don't know what passes people get outside of London, but I hope its the same.

in reply to Charles ☭ is a Green

@celesteh @delila @Jumpmed
This person can now walk ten or fifteen yards with a frame and can't stand for long periods, so buses and trains aren't practical. Free taxis would be wonderful, but one of us would still need to go with him to manage the wheelchair and generally make sure he was all right.
in reply to C++ Wage Slave

@CppGuy @celesteh @Jumpmed yeah it would be cool if there were just cars and you could say ok ive got a driver or i can drive myself and i need to use a car for x y or z.
in reply to jackdaw delila

@CppGuy @celesteh @Jumpmed I'm not really hugely into the subject, but the kind of idea that I tend towards is accessible cities with large parts that are mostly car free apart from those whose only option is a car. And other accessible modes of transport within the cities as well as accessible architecture.
in reply to jackdaw delila

@CppGuy @celesteh @Jumpmed It could include streets or areas that were completely car free but with good possible car access close by
in reply to jackdaw delila

@delila @CppGuy @Jumpmed
The interactions between cars and disability are complicated because, as you say, some people do rely on them (although not necessarily large, heavy, fast petrol-burning cars) but they also cause disability in the larger populace through a predictable number of road accidents and via pollution.

Children in Hackney (a central London borough) have lungs 10% smaller than the national average. This is attributed to car traffic.

Reducing this traffic means making public transport the most convenient option.

in reply to Charles ☭ is a Green

@celesteh

Yep, agreed on all counts. We need to introduce affordable public transport that works for everyone. If it existed, I'd use it. As it is, I live on a road where the walk to the nearest bus stop or railway station is not survivable. I miss being able to walk into town and walk back with a rucksack full of groceries!

@delila @Jumpmed @fesshole



📰 EU told to choose between ‘money today or blood tomorrow’ as leaders debate giving Russian assets to Ukraine – Europe live

🔗 theguardian.com/world/live/202…

#News #RussianInvasion #RussianWar #Ukraine

in reply to Слава Україні 🇺🇦

there is no such thing as "russian assets". that money is Ukrainian money and always has been.


in reply to how to do anything

This image appears to be a digital illustration of two people looking at each other with an overlaid calendar. The person on the left has dark hair and is smiling, while the person on the right has a beard and appears to be speaking. Between them is a calendar with the days of the week labeled "MON, TUE, WED, THU, FRI." The calendar shows the numbers 1 through 31. The background is a blurred blue with streaks of light, suggesting a night scene.

The text on the calendar reads: "MON, TUE, WED, THU, FRI" and the days of the month are numbered 1-31. The person on the left is wearing a dark blue shirt and the person on the right is wearing a dark red or burgundy shirt. The image is in a cartoon or comic book style.

Provided by @altbot, generated privately and locally using Gemma3:27b

🌱 Energy used: 0.123 Wh




Oracle, symbole du dégonflement de la bulle de l’IA ift.tt/oRFkhDC


🖲️ #Cybersecurity #Ciberseguridad #Ciberseguranca #Security #Seguridad #Seguranca #News #Noticia #Noticias #Tecnologia #Technology
⚫ 'Cellik' Android RAT Leverages Google Play Store
🔗 darkreading.com/threat-intelli…

The remote access Trojan lets an attacker remotely control a victim's phone and can generate malicious apps from inside the Play Store.



From Project Gutenberg:

A Struggle for Rome, v. 2

by Felix Dahn

Get it at: gutenberg.org/ebooks/32330



0.36118039797796525 + -0.6449762249876927i at zoom 1.1019457228e+10.


Libcom: **Book review: Joshua Kurlantzick's "A Great Place to Have a War"**

libcom.org/article/book-review…



Top 10 Features of Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 Launching in 2026 dutchiee.tv/news/samsung-galax…
Samsung maintains a competitive advantage in the market with the slice-edge technology of its foldable phone. Galaxy Z Fold 7 will be available in next year. This device will concentrate on advanced AI features and strong performance. Samsung aims to ameliorate the toner experience, design, and power effectiveness.

#technews #technology...



Comps Can Clinch Your Query

When pitching to agents or editors, the right comp titles help you articulate where you position yourself within a very competitive market.
janefriedman.com/comps-can-cli…

#GuestPost #QueriesAndSynopses