A precious Etruscan ivory stool is being restored in Bologna. Two-day construction site open to the public
Have you tried out the all new Tuta Calendar app yet?! 💃
This major update includes external calendar sync, offline functionality, and more!
Here is a sneak peek of what you can look forward to 😘
#calendar #encryption #privacy #teaser
Encyclopedia of Love in World Religions by Yudit Kornberg Greenberg, 2007
Encyclopedia of Love in World Religions is the first reference work to offer a comprehensive portrait of love in the context of the classic and contemporary literature of Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, and Hinduism, as well as other cultures and philosophies.
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Offshore hydrogen “energy islands” could save Germany €4 billion per year – report
Building “energy islands” in the North Sea to produce green hydrogen using 20 gigawatts of offshore wind power can save Germany billions of euros, according to a report by the Fraunhofer Institute for Energy Economics and Energy System Technology (Fraunhofer IEE).“Germany can achieve annual savings of up to €4.3 billion ($A6.4 billion) by establishing offshore hydrogen production on two energy islands,” the Fraunhofer report says.
It says these islands would be connected to 10 gigawatts offshore capacity each, located around 150 kilometres from shore with a limited connection to the power grid. The report was commissioned by Copenhagen Energy Islands, a company dedicated to the development of such energy islands.
The cost advantages are in comparison to a scenario whereby all the offshore wind electricity is fed into the mainland power grid for the hydrogen production.
“The savings are primarily driven by reduced grid buildout costs, especially cables from the coastline to the centre of Germany,” as well as higher utilisation of high voltage direct current (HVDC) cables, the report said, adding that producing hydrogen offshore is more efficient than onshore because of lower energy losses and less grid buildout requirements.
The report looked at the construction of islands that are connected to the mainland only via a hydrogen pipeline and a scenario that added a limited grid connection.
The researchers found that adding a limited grid connection to other offshore wind farms’ converter platforms brings cost benefits because “in times of low offshore wind and high solar PV generation, connecting the [offshore energy islands] on the electricity side can make it possible to convert the surplus solar PV electricity into hydrogen.”
At times of low renewable supply and high electricity prices, offshore electricity can be fed into the grid. “This increases flexibility of the overall energy system, creating positive system effects,” Fraunhofer IEE said.
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GM Mastodon.
My efforts to redesign our website has lost some steam because our site is optimised for SEO.
So I can only really change the copy.
I really dislike our copy, so can you please roast the front page (attached)?
Tell me which parts are the worst and what you'd prefer to be greeted with when landing on our front page!
I'll go first:
1. I don't know or care about cd/m².
2. I don't know why Pantone 433 is Blue?
3. Nowhere does it include Linux?
#Shaarli
Une alternative à Tricount open-source et auto-hébergeable...
→Spliit
split.framalab.org/
#opensource #autohébergement #tools
Mouse, keyboard and clipboard sharing between multiple devices on the same network
GitHub - deskflow/deskflow: Deskflow lets you share one mouse and keyboard between multiple computers on Windows, macOS and Linux.
Deskflow lets you share one mouse and keyboard between multiple computers on Windows, macOS and Linux. - deskflow/deskflowGitHub
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Barrier has been abandoned quite awhile ago. Its successor is supposed to be InputLeap, and although their GitHub repo is very active, they have yet to make a release.
I didn't even know that Synergy provided a "community" version of their app until very recently. I've paid for a license many years ago, so I've been using their 1.1x versions, which for better or worse, are still maintained along with the 3.x branch (which I've tried using but could never make it work, which is for the best because the fact they pivoted their UI to electron-based also left a bad taste in my mouth).
Edit: also, if I understand correctly, Synergy's latest versions on the 1.x branch borrows a lot from InputLeap.
Join Mongabay’s webinar on October 10th at 7 PM UTC to learn how to cover geoengineering in today’s complex climate landscape. Register now and get expert insights into the challenges and opportunities of reporting on this topic: forms.gle/iy7tU61fmMjPrpjd6
#Webinar #Journalism #ConservationJournalism #Environment #Geoengineering
#politik #krieg #ukraine #russland #nato #eu #rüstung #atomwaffen #analyse
...die Zukunftsperspektiven beweisen eindringlich, wie nötig eine Alternative zur kapitalistischen Dynamik ist, die nur eine Richtung kennt: Krieg. Die Propaganda einer angeblich durch Werte oder die eigene Sicherheit motivierten ukrainischen Aufrüstung, die einen grausamen Krieg unnötigerweise immer länger aufrechterhält und die westliche Arbeitnehmerklasse vermutlich Hunderte Milliarden Euro kosten wird, ist kaum als links auszugeben. Wer das befürwortet, beweist nur die eigene Fantasielosigkeit – oder analytische Unfähigkeit.
- Magisches Denken wird in der Ukraine keinen Frieden schaffen (sehr gute Analyse)
jacobin.de/artikel/ukraine-rus…
The Internet Archive’s Fight to Save Itself
If you step into the headquarters of the Internet Archive on a Friday after lunch, when it offers public tours, chances are you’ll be greeted by its founder and merriest cheerleader, Brewster Kahle.You cannot miss the building; it looks like it was designed for some sort of Grecian-themed Las Vegas attraction and plopped down at random in San Francisco’s foggy, mellow Richmond district. Once you pass the entrance’s white Corinthian columns, Kahle will show you the vintage Prince of Persia arcade game and a gramophone that can play century-old phonograph cylinders on display in the foyer. He’ll lead you into the great room, filled with rows of wooden pews sloping toward a pulpit. Baroque ceiling moldings frame a grand stained glass dome. Before it was the Archive’s headquarters, the building housed a Christian Science church.
I made this pilgrimage on a breezy afternoon last May. Along with around a dozen other visitors, I followed Kahle, 63, clad in a rumpled orange button-down and round wire-rimmed glasses, as he showed us his life’s work. When the afternoon light hits the great hall’s dome, it gives everyone a halo. Especially Kahle, whose silver curls catch the sun and who preaches his gospel with an amiable evangelism, speaking with his hands and laughing easily. “I think people are feeling run over by technology these days,” Kahle says. “We need to rehumanize it.”
It is no exaggeration to say that digital archiving as we know it would not exist without the Internet Archive—and that, as the world’s knowledge repositories increasingly go online, archiving as we know it would not be as functional. Its most famous project, the Wayback Machine, is a repository of web pages that functions as an unparalleled record of the internet. Zoomed out, the Internet Archive is one of the most important historical-preservation organizations in the world. The Wayback Machine has assumed a default position as a safety valve against digital oblivion. The rhapsodic regard the Internet Archive inspires is earned—without it, the world would lose its best public resource on internet history.
I have visited and done some work with the Internet Archive in the past. I fully support them and their goal of preserving works and making them accessible.
Via Violet Blue's Cybersecurity Roundup: October 1, 2024
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In October 1843.
Anna Atkins begins publishing Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions, a collection of contact printed cyanotype photograms of algae, "by placing the unmounted dried-algae original directly on the cyanotype paper" to form the first book illustrated with photographs.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna_Atk…
New York Public Library provides scans of 285 pages of its copy online:
digitalcollections.nypl.org/co…
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October 7th anniversary weighs heavy as Jews enter the High Holy Days
The anniversary of the October 7th attack on Israel takes place during the Jewish High Holy Days. It's a time of ending things that need to be ended in order begin things that need to be begun.
#news #npr #publicradio #usa
posted by pod_feeder_v2
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From Project Gutenberg:
At the Earth's Core
by Edgar Rice Burroughs
Get it at: gutenberg.org/ebooks/545
Microsoft Office 2024 is now available for Macs and PCs
Office 2024 is a $149.99 standalone version for people who don’t want a Microsoft 365 subscription.
This AI Startup "Copied" an Open-Source Project and Got Half a Million Dollar Funding by Y Combinator
This AI Startup "Copied" an Open-Source Project and Got Half a Million Dollar Funding by Y Combinator
AI startups, and open-source forks with VC funding. A bad match.Ankush Das (It's FOSS News)
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I simply can't wrap my head around the thought process behind launching a clusterfuck like this. Y Combinator probably didn't do their due diligence and simply rode the fading AI Bubble, so I can at least understand how the funding might have been approved.
But actively leaving your $250,000+/year job to team up with some questionable choices to basically fork two OS projects, change the discord links and generate an illegal licence for that shit show, all while proudly stating, publicly, "dawg i chatgpt'd the license, anyone is free to use our app for free for whatever they want. if there's a problem with the license just lmk i'll change it. we busy building rn can't be bothered with legal" when they are made aware of the fact.
This is absolutely insane, sounds like someone was about to get fired and decided to use some personal relations and fresh graduates to somehow successfully cash in one last time with absolutely no regard of even the basics. Pretty wild that those guys even managed to figure out how to found a Startup. Probably asked ChatGPT for instructions there, as well.
Y Combinator probably didn’t do their due diligence
It's not the first time. They also backed an obvious scam MMO that promised the world and more, while it was nothing more than an asset flip.
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But they made half a million.
And there are literally hundreds of similar companies raking in billions in investments that magically vanish while the founders live a luxury live and move on.
The real question is: why do VCs shit so much money into obvious frauds? Are they this stupid or do they just hope to pass it on to the greater fool?
$500,000 is nothing to billionaires, or even people who make hundreds of millions a year. It's a lot to average folks like us, but to them it's the equivalent of going to the casino with money they can afford to blow.
But I do think you're right about passing it on to the greater fool. They bet it'll be the next hot product, regardless if they know it sucks or not. Then some bigger bag of money will come in and buy it up, thinking they'll be able to somehow milk a sustainable profit out of it. You'd think by now that VCs would be smarter about the boom and bust of tech startups, but alas...
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Quantum computing. It might be a real thing but it'll go through a grift phase first.
Another one will be environmental carbon capture, like pulling carbon out of the atmosphere. This one would be easier to fake but might not get traction for longer since the ideological superstructure in our society is already built up so that it is hard for a political crisis to emerge due to global climate concerns. Even though climate change is worsening, and whole cities are being destroyed by hurricanes, the debate is still pretty stabilized. However since this grift will end up being sold as a commercial solution to a political problem, the grift will probably come from a larger player like Lockheed or Boeing, which would necessitate investing in the most evil companies in existence. Still you never know, Tesla stayed afloat for years without making a working product by selling carbon credits issued by the government to other car companies, so you might be able to bootstrap this one
There are a lot of scams around AI and there's a lot of very serious science.
While generative AI gets all the attention there are many other fields of AI that you probably use on a regular basis.
The reason we don't see the rest of the AI iceberg is because it's mostly interesting when you have enormous amounts of data you want to analyze and that doesn't apply to regular people. Most of the valuable AIs (as in they've been proven to make or save a bunch of money) do stuff like inventory optimization, protein expression simulation, anomaly detection, or classification.
Slight correction. AI is not a scam.
While AI is a powerful tool, it enables people to do scams very easily.
Maybe.
There have been a number of technologies that provided similar capabilities, at least initially.
When photography, audio recording, and video recording were first invented, people didn't understand them well. That made it really easy to create believable fakes.
No modern viewer would be fooled by the Cottingley Fairies.
The wouldn't fool modern audiences either.
Video effects that stunned audiences at the time just look old fashioned now.
I expect that, over time, people will learn to recognize the low-effort scams. Eventually we'll reach an equilibrium where most people won't fall for them and there will still be skilled scammers who will target gullible people and get away with it.
They're not going to survive
Are you kidding me?
Alexander Bell stole the telephone.
Edison regularly stole inventions from Tesla among others.
Steve Jobs fucking mind raped Woz.
The American Dream is taking someone else's hard work and profiting off of it.
So all it takes to get that sweet, sweet VC mula is a Vscode + extension fork with some hipster branding on top? Really???
Aren't these guys supposed to be tech geniuses or some shit?
Billions of dollars and they don't have a single actually knowledgeable intern who could glance at this project and say "yeah, no, I could do this too?"
Or are they're just ignoring them because AI is a glowing hot buzzword right now?
This is baffling. The entire tech sector praises VCs like they're god's gift to earth, meanwhile they're out here backing stupid shit like this, how can anyone take these people seriously?
dawg i chatgpt'd the license [...] we busy building rn can't be bothered with legal
The absolute gall of these guys. Would be inspiring if it wasn't maddening!
Aren’t these guys supposed to be tech geniuses or some shit?
Rich/famous tech people have never been "tech geniuses." They're always sociopathic business/marketing types.
It's otherwise a fairly well written article but the title is a bit misleading.
In that context, scare quotes usually mean that generative AI was trained on someone's work and produced something strikingly similar. That's not what happened here.
This is just regular copyright violations and unethical behavior. The fact that it was an AI company is mostly unrelated to their breaches. The author covers 3 major complaints and only one of them even mentions AI and the complaint isn't about what the AI did it's about what was done with the result. As far as I know the APL2.0 itself isn't copyrighted and nobody cares if you copy or alter the license itself. The problem is that you can't just remove the APL2.0 from some work it's attached to.
This is great. So all their VC-funded work will get released publicly, and we all benefit.
I don't see why people are upset that FOSS projects are getting VC funding for development..
Haha. Maybe.
I doubt the VCs will provide much followup funding if they can't control the code base but weirder things have happened.
I just quit my 270 000$ job at Coinbase to join the first YCombinator fall batch with my cofounder @not_nang.
We're building PearAI, an open source AI code editor.
Of course it is a cryptobro...
dawgt i chatgpt'd the license, anyone is free to use our app for free for whatever they want. if there's a problem with the license just lmk i'll change it. we busy building rn can't be bothered with legal
Yep, already hate that guy. Talks and behaves like an absolute dipshit.
How is it boot licking to get money from rich people to develop open source software?
Lemmy is FOSS that was funded by a grant from NLNet. Its the same outcome as this.
If anyone is licking boots, its the rich people licking the FOSS boots
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Right, exactly, which is why they launched with a FOSS license. Oh, wait--
Imagine the money going to VSCode which actually is the one getting contributions
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If you're upset, just ask them for the source. If they don't respond, sue.
In any case, we're all going to get the source and we'll all benefit from this.
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How does one "fork" a repo like this and then is proud about 100+ contributors he got?
I believe they know exactly what they are doing and just don't care.
Stake your crypto assets & invest in real estate with this fintech exchange.The roi is as high as 1.5% weekly running on autopilot( for crypto)
fintechcatalysts.com
join the group chat via this link: https://t.me/+W-E_rWPXGzMyMjAx
Which is the exact same behavior that caused the dot com bubble. VC funding was throwing money at any and every dot com business, in the hopes that it would explode and lead to profits.
All it did was massively overvalue the dot com companies, which caused a bubble when people finally realized they were overvalued and VC investors turned off the spigot of free money.
Road to success (2024 AI Hype Edition):
- Clone VSCode.
- Rename it as LSCode, squash all history, and create some random commits with
--author="Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>". - Add a character AI that calls your code garbage.
- Profit.
Gambling with OTHER PEOPLE'S money.
You win, you take a cut. You lose. Someone else suffers.
These people destroy everything for greed.
Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney announced that the firm is now "financially sound" during a presentation at Unreal Fest 2024 yesterday
On organise prochainement une journée d’études "Représentations (non)écologiques du numérique".
Vous avez des travaux à partager contribuant à cette thématique ? N'hésitez pas à répondre à l'appel à communication.
FoxTree
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