Skip to main content



Tim Walz’s net worth is less than the average American’s, per FORTUNE.

Together with his wife, Gwen, his net worth is $330,000, per WSJ.

Do you think this is good for a politician?

#news #finance #economics #stocks #options

in reply to unusual_whales

To see all politicians' portfolios, check Unusual Whales.

You can see when they buy and sell, as well as their performances.

You can see it all at Unusual Whales.

And we are having a sale.

See more: t.co/e9bnW7BdAt

#news #finance #economics #stocks #options



"...questions from Harris about footnotes in their reports or the reasons behind why certain items had been added to her schedule."

"It's stressful to brief her, because she's read all the materials, has annotated it and is prepared to talk through it," said one former aide.

"You can't come to the vice president and just ask her to do something," said another staffer. "You need to have a why."

These children should try working for a Navy Captain sometime.

Imagine spinning this as a negative.

RE: threads.net/@notcapnamerica/po…

in reply to Tim Bray

I noted same in a thread over on Bluesky. Change Harris to Bezos, Jassy, Gates, or Cook, and everyone would be like “what else would you expect?”

in reply to Gary Hill

Corbyn's defeat actually got millions more votes than Starmer's victory...
telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/07/0…


On the importance of communicating science to the general public. Mentions YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok, but not #OpenAccess.
insidehighered.com/news/facult…

PS: I get that effective communication with non-professionals requires more than just OA. But it also requires OA.

This entry was edited (4 months ago)
Unknown parent

mastodon - Link to source
Hanna Shmagun
For example, this study reveals that the lack of access to scientific papers is perceived as a major barrier by many of the Scientific Councillors at Estonian ministries advising on R&D matters jcom.sissa.it/article/pubid/JC…
This entry was edited (4 months ago)
in reply to Hanna Shmagun

@hannaSH @fionabradley
In the updates to my 2012 book (bit.ly/oa-book) for p. ix, I list about a dozen studies showing that #OpenAccess articles have more impact with policymakers than non-OA articles.
bit.ly/oa-book#pix


This entry was edited (4 months ago)



Does anyone know if Gnome 47 will be included in Fedora 41? I'm having trouble finding this information.

#linux #fedora



I'm learning Django; my impression of it so far is "pay no attention to that man behind the curtain". #Python


Watching some Sopranos episodes again and thinking about this meme that totally captures the show's ethos





As wildfires intensify, the taxpayer burden is growing.

But upfront investments in protecting communities from fires could reduce those costs, one watchdog says. #ClimateChange

buff.ly/3XutsSY




The announcement comes on the heels of a proposed $20 million settlement filed last month for allegations that Pluralsight misled investors about the size of its salesforce in 2019.
sltrib.com/news/business/2024/…


Opinion: Harris Should Listen to Pennsylvanians, Not Pundits, on Fracking
Many Pennsylvanians oppose fracking because we don’t want to prolong climate destruction or because folks who live near these fracking pads are sick of the smell, the noise, and the threat to their health.
commondreams.org/opinion/harri…




Sam Jones: Pedro Almodóvar: ‘Life needs fiction to make it bearable’: The Spanish film-maker on the raw, real life experiences behind his first collection of short stories – and why his mother is his inspiration

#pedroalmodovar #bookstodon #film
theguardian.com/books/article/…



Happy Birthday, Dario Argento
BotD 1940 📽️​


I have Thots™ about this one (from the braying Tim, urging you to write software with 0 dependencies, which I think it is literally impossible unless you are the kind of person who does hardware bringup via bit-banging, but also that's not what he's talking about): tbray.org/ongoing/When/202x/20…

By “zero dependencies" he means “none of *those* dependencies”, you know, the ones we shudder at when we look at node_modules and count, not the ones that quietly make entire software ecosystems possible.

Is a dynamic library a dependency?
Postgres?
An operating system?
All of these things are software modules we use that are successfully bundled away behind often very successful interfaces (libc, sql, posix, etc).

But probably we're talking about leftpad. He mentions `xz` specifically, a dep that most people don't realize is in use in most of the places it's used.

“Minimize and think about them" is a stance I can get behind.

This entry was edited (4 months ago)

Tim Bray reshared this.

in reply to C J Silverio

Thinking further…

We don't like paying for our software dependencies, do we. We really hate it. We don't like paying the people who write the things that entire worlds of software depend on. We demand things from them to protect ourselves from *our* supply chain deficiencies without offering them anything in return.

Example: every somewhat off-target demand that maintainers of something popular turn on 2FA. Is 2FA helpful? Yes. Does it absolve you of responsibility for your own software supply chain? No. See blog.ceejbot.com/posts/multi-f…

That blog post gives you a first take on what my response to Tim Bray's post is going to be.

1/N

in reply to C J Silverio

yeah! i said something similar here : lobste.rs/s/fc516s/0_dependenc… -- building an app by typing in hex opcodes sounds like something you might do at a monastery, not real life


Trump rebrands his ramblings as
‘I do the weave’
– but is he just losing it?

GOP candidate tries to fend off criticisms of mental acuity that plagued Biden, as he waffles about sharks and batteries

theguardian.com/us-news/articl…