#Politik #politics
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"Meilenstein": Erste europäische Batteriezelle aus Forschungsfabrik in Münster
Eine „PreFab“ hat die erste funktionsfähige Lithium-Ionen-Batteriezelle mit rein europäischer Prozesskette hergestellt. Es geht um technologische Souveränität.Stefan Krempl (heise online)
Lilith Saintcrow
Lili Saintcrow lives in Vancouver, Washington, with a library for wayward texts.Smashwords
SIA “BITE Latvija” is committed not to connect paid additional services without the consent of customers
However, the 2 euros will not have to be paidBYTESEU (Bytes Europe)
eastangliabylines.co.uk/lifest…
Image d'un groupe de silhouettes vertes, semblables à des soldats, qui sont regroupées sur un terrain accidenté. Les silhouettes sont positionnées de manière à évoquer une photographie célèbre de soldats hissant un drapeau. Au lieu d'un drapeau, le groupe hisse un billet de 100 $ américain, dont le papier semble être déchiré. Le terrain sur lequel se tiennent les silhouettes est recouvert d'une foule dense de crânes humains, tous dirigés vers le groupe de silhouettes. En haut à droite, il y a un nom de signature, « Z. Fraw ».
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Metuchen, New Jersey U.S.A.
the photo is not mine, but it's nice that (probably) Lithuanians don't forget their dear homeland when they leave.BYTESEU (Bytes Europe)
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The shape of loss
🧻 FOMA Fomatone MG 131 8x10 in Moersch SE5
🎞️ Bergger Pancro 400@800 in Ilford Microphen
📷 Canon EOS 3 | Canon EF 17-40 f4 L
#BelieveInFillm
#FilmPhotography
#LithPrint
#DarkRoomPrint
#35mm
Ein Mensch sitzt auf einer Treppe. Die Person sitzt auf der zweiten Stufe von einer Treppe, die abwärts führt und die Betonstufen grau sind. Die Person hat einen dunkelblauen Parka und Jeans und die Füße sind in abgenutzten Schuhen aufgestellt. Die Person hält die Arme über die Beine und den Kopf in den Händen. Auf der Seite der Treppe verläuft eine schwarze Reling.
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The optimal shape of an object for generating maximum gravity field at a given point in space
How can we design the shape of an object, in the framework of Newtonian gravity, in order to generate maximum gravity at a given point in space? In this work we present a study on this interesting problem.arXiv.org
“Send books!” A Polish veteran running California’s immigration office in San Francisco in the 1870s.
In the 1870s, at 302 Davis Street in San Francisco, the letterhead on Rudolf Korwin Piotrowski’s desk read “Office of the Commissioner of Immigration, StateBYTESEU (Bytes Europe)
Since Xcel is saying they may kill power tomorrow due to high winds (but they're not sure and we'll find out likely when things go dark), I'm charging all the things today and raising the thermostat a few degrees. This old house loses a lot of heat on windy days.
Because in the middle of December, we have a redflag fire warning.... in December…
Good times.
Tools from EFF's Tech Team
EFF’s team of technologists and computer scientists engineers solutions to the problems of sneaky tracking, inconsistent encryption, and more.Electronic Frontier Foundation
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Bridgy Fed
Bridgy Fed is a bridge between decentralized social networks like the fediverse, Bluesky, and web sites and blogs.fed.brid.gy



hex
in reply to hex • • •One of the things that made organizing a lot easier with the GDC was a thing called "GDC in a box." It was a zip file with all kinds of resources. There was a directory structure, templates for all kinds of things like meetings and paperwork you had to file (for legal reasons) and "read me" files.
We had all kinds of support. There were people you could talk to who had been there. There were people you could call to walk through legal paperwork (taxes). Centralized orgs are vulnerable and easy to infiltrate. They're easy for states to shut down. But there are benefits to org structures.
I think it's possible to have the type of support we had with the GDC, but without the politics of an org (even the IWW). I hope this most recent essay has some of the same properties. I hope that it makes building something new, something no one has really imagined before, easier.
This whole project is something a bit different. It's a collective vision and collective project, from the ground up. Some of it has felt like a brain dump, just getting things that have been swimming a
... show moreOne of the things that made organizing a lot easier with the GDC was a thing called "GDC in a box." It was a zip file with all kinds of resources. There was a directory structure, templates for all kinds of things like meetings and paperwork you had to file (for legal reasons) and "read me" files.
We had all kinds of support. There were people you could talk to who had been there. There were people you could call to walk through legal paperwork (taxes). Centralized orgs are vulnerable and easy to infiltrate. They're easy for states to shut down. But there are benefits to org structures.
I think it's possible to have the type of support we had with the GDC, but without the politics of an org (even the IWW). I hope this most recent essay has some of the same properties. I hope that it makes building something new, something no one has really imagined before, easier.
This whole project is something a bit different. It's a collective vision and collective project, from the ground up. Some of it has felt like a brain dump, just getting things that have been swimming around in my head down somewhere. But I hope this feels more like an invitation.
Everything thus far written is all useless unless people do things with it. Only from that point does it become a thing that lives, a thing with its own consciousness that can't be controlled by any individual human.
Tech billionaire cultists want to bring a new era of humanity with AGI. That is definitely not possible with LLMs, and may not be possible at all. But there is a super intelligence that is possible, though it's been constrained by capitalism: collective human intelligence.
The grand vision of the tech dystopians is that of the ultimate slave that can then enslave all humans on their behalf. I think we can build a humanity that can liberate itself from their grasp, crush their vision, and build for itself a world in which people will never be enslaved again. Not only do I think it's possible, I think it's necessary. I think there are only two choices: collective liberation or death.
And that's what I plan to write about next time to wrap this whole project up. Today things often feel impossible. But people talked about the Middle Ages as though they were the end of the world, and then everything changed in unimaginable ways. Everything can, and will, change again.
"The profit motive often is in conflict with the aims of art. We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable. So did the divine right of kings."
Rich Puchalsky ⩜⃝
in reply to hex • • •I still haven't read this, really, and I'm sorry about that. So many things to do.
I did want to mention in re: "without the politics of an org (even the IWW)" that the IWW inherited the ability to support a GDC but that its current membership is almost completely against it. The one referendum that passed US/Canada IWW this year was to effectively shut GDC down.
Violet Madder
in reply to Rich Puchalsky ⩜⃝ • • •Rich Puchalsky ⩜⃝
in reply to Violet Madder • • •hex
in reply to Violet Madder • • •@violetmadder @richpuchalsky the IWW was a historical society with radical elements when I was organizing. This is consistent... And why I write this whole thing. We need something that lets us coordinate as a single unit, but that can't be centrally controlled (thus centrally dismantled).
Seattle GDC broke off to form its own thing under the first Trump admin. The last sections of Kairos basically describe something like a GDC without central leadership. Nothing could stop those disbanded GDCs from reforming as fractal groups and federating as peers... Nothing but paperwork if they want to collect dues again.
hex
in reply to hex • • •Rich Puchalsky ⩜⃝
in reply to hex • • •Anyone could form a GDC-like local organization, but as your document points out, they need some kind of organizational support. That's why it's easier for groups to break off than just form (they inherit stuff).
There's at least one active Canadian GDC that didn't know about this referendum and who I had to tell about it on Bluesky.
The protection that churches gain from being churches is dwindling, not sure how much really remains.
@violetmadder
hex
in reply to Rich Puchalsky ⩜⃝ • • •@richpuchalsky @violetmadder I think the big challenge with GDC locals is that central always took care of taxes, and locals are unlikely to have accountants.
Really, you need two things to make a full split from central work: bank accounts and paperwork (taxes, incorporation, etc). If that could be made easier (like, here's your zip, fill out this form and submit it here, here's a spreadsheet for your taxes (more or less), then you could have a decentralized thing that's much harder to fight than the GDC ever was.
hex
in reply to hex • • •Rich Puchalsky ⩜⃝
in reply to hex • • •hex
in reply to Rich Puchalsky ⩜⃝ • • •Rich Puchalsky ⩜⃝
in reply to hex • • •