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Revolt became Stoat


Stoat (formerly known as Revolt) is a selfhostable, FOSS replacement for discord [Group chats and voice channels you can join any time].

Cool new name, however not as easy to use in other languages.

Voice chat is stil not officialy implemented.

Self-hosting there. Apparently nothing to do for you if you had already hosted before the name change.

The Android app has unfortunately disappeared (not been updated) on F-droid.

Edit: added short description for clarification

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)
in reply to magz :3

It looks like polyproto doesn’t have any intent to implement voice chat or screen sharing?
in reply to ferret

i think for my purposes i'm fine with hosting that through a separate service, so instead of XMPP + mumble i would run polyproto + mumble (or some other voip solution, screen sharing seems to be a decent way away in mumble)

but (as i understand it), polyproto isn't a chat protocol per se, but more a protocol for federated message authentication. as an application of this protocol, they're building polyproto-chat, which is a chat protocol. in theory, one could then also build a polyproto-voice so you can use the same account for both chatting and voice calls.
i still think this is pretty far away, considering how young polyproto is, which is why my current vision is chat and voice as two separate services (which i also prefer because i imagine it makes the technology simpler and hosting easier)



Media Liberation Day: how can we help newcomers get started and have a good experience on fedi?


cross-posted from: lemmy.blahaj.zone/post/3348065…

What resources, suggestions, and support can those of us who are already here provide to potential newcomers? And what can we do to prepare for – and encourage – a potential influx?
in reply to The Nexus of Privacy

For devs and admins:

Do some usability testing and improvement
- Recruit volunteer UX / usability professionals to run studies with users and recommend usability improvements.
- Be prepared for some critical feedback.
- Organise and prioritise the feedback
- Recruit some volunteer UI designers, graphic designers and devs with experience of working with UXers to refine and implement the usability fixes

Provide more user-friendly onboarding, signup, sign-in, password management etc. The barriers are very high even for those of us with good tech confidence.

Provide better approaches and platforms for small groups (volunteer organisations, hobby and interest groups and neighbourhoods) to replace Facebook Groups and similar.

Gain more experience of working with non-tech users, e.g. volunteer at your local library, seniors' IT classes, to understand the challenges that 80% of users would face in using fedi products and gain some insights into how to resolve those issues


in reply to schizoidman

...even after Ottawa emulated American restrictions on Chinese vehicles.


Those restrictions were not just about "emulating American restrictions"...they were also about protecting the Canadian automotive industry from trying to compete with cheap Chinese imports flooding the Canadian market. And at a time when our manufacturing industry is being hit hard by US tariffs, we need those restrictions more than ever.

in reply to NoneOfUrBusiness

Part of what Carney promised on the campaign trail was to continue to develop Canada's internal automotive manufacturing supply chains...which include all the necessary materials and components for our own EV's, right down to the battery technology.

Currently, everything is still in the investment and developmental stages, but the framework is there. Canada has all the rare earth elements to rival Chinese production...we just need to invest in the infrastructure to fully process them. This will take time and money.

Which is why allowing Chinese companies to enter our market at this stage, would derail the entire process. Why make the long-term investment in Canadian made products, when China can supply them for a fraction of the cost, right now? Our own capabilities would die before they have the chance to even get off the ground...and we would become dependent on China, right after declaring independence from the US.

in reply to Archangel1313

All true, however the consumers of the finished battery cells would be North American EV production, because there's large scale battery production in the rest of the world. Maybe the EU could import some. Or maybe they'll just want raw material for their battery factories. But on our end, as far as I'm aware everyone of the auto manufacturers here is cancelling or scaling down their Canadian EV plans. The EV landscape in the US doesn't look good either with Trump actively working to undermine them. Point being that without considering the Chinese EVs, the investments that haven't been cancelled yet, already are at risk. I expect investors being fickle as they are, especially during uncertainty and downturns, to cancel further supply chain investments, unless our gov't steps in. And I think our gov't should step in but less to prop them up and more to buy these projects and put them under a crown corp that develops these resources. That still leaves us with the problem of what to put those batteries in. Chinese EVs built here could fulfill that role. Any such work should start early so that it can be operational by the time the batt supply chain is up. As for direct imports, those would compete with ICE vehicles built in NA. That poses a risk to Canadian auto manufacturing since we only build ICE. But we do have a problem with auto prices the rest of the economy so the gov't has to consider that risk vs the risk of layoffs. For example the price of the F-150 used across the construction industry is a cost for the tradespeople working in it. Finally if we consider the worst case scenario where we get mass layoffs due to Trump's actions, then the high vehicle price problem would become more significant for a lot of people who have their incomes slashed. That's where cheaper direct imports could help dampen the impact on our car-dependent economy. If I were Carney, I'd probably model these scenarios and if here's a benefit, set appropriate taxes/quotas on these EVs to achieve it, and change it as needed to match the rest of the economic context. As for new factories, I'd start those yesterday.
in reply to schizoidman

Yeah, if the multi-polarity comes true, there will likely be several blocks (the EU, Mercosur, others) that will cooperate closely, while trusted partnerships will remain only among trusted countries (such as among democratic countries worldwide). Within these partnerships there could be free trade, between them, however, we'll likely see some sort of tit-for-tat economy - do trade where it fits and where it has no impact on our core interests regarding economy and security.

Canada's "strategic partnership" with China will be one of these tit-for-tat partnerships, but the country's future lies in collaborations with the EU, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and other democracies.

[Edit typo.]

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)


Trump says he's terminating trade negotiations with Canada over Ontario anti-tariff ad


cross-posted from: lemmy.ca/post/53909264

U.S. President Donald Trump says he is terminating all trade negotiations with Canada over an advertisement by the Ontario government that uses the late U.S. president Ronald Reagan's own words to send an anti-tariff message to American audiences.

In a late-night post to his Truth Social platform, Trump attacked the ad, which he attributed to Canada rather than Ontario, as fraudulent and fake.

"TARIFFS ARE VERY IMPORTANT TO THE NATIONAL SECURITY, AND ECONOMY, OF THE U.S.A." Trump wrote. "Based on their egregious behavior, ALL TRADE NEGOTIATIONS WITH CANADA ARE HEREBY TERMINATED."

So I guess CUSMA is dead?

in reply to RandAlThor

Aw, “big”, “tough” trump is having another temper tantrum. I am so embarrassed to be an american.


Trump terminates all U.S. trade negotiations with Canada over Reagan tariffs TV ad


KEY POINTS

Donald Trump said he had terminated all U.S. trade negotiations with Canada.

Trump said he was doing so because of an allegedly “fake” advertisement that Canada was airing that features former President Ronald Reagan speaking negatively about tariffs.

Doug Ford, the premier of the Ontario province in Canada, recently said the province would spend $75 million on ads to run in the United States featuring Reagan criticizing tariffs

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)
in reply to MicroWave

"I saw an ad last night from Canada. If I was Canada, I'd take that same ad also," said Trump. "But I do believe that everybody's too smart for that."


Later:

"Based on their egregious behavior, ALL TRADE NEGOTIATIONS WITH CANADA ARE HEREBY TERMINATED."
in reply to MicroWave

You can't reason or make deals with the great Hamberder King because his mood swings depending on how full his diaper is.

World leaders should just ignore him. His word and his signature isn't worth anything.



El Hierro (prima parte) - Ai Confini dell'Europa: il Deserto che Trasforma


In questo episodio del podcast inizia l'esplorazione di luoghi dell'Europa in cui potrei vivere.

Comincio col botto: la splendida isola di El Hierro, alle Canarie, dov'è l'Europa politica trova un confine naturale: l'oceano Atlantico immenso.

castopod.it/@versocasa/episode…



Microsoft is making every Windows 11 PC an AI PC


in reply to Soup

What product are you using to get that data from a live Azure database?
in reply to FreedomAdvocate

You literally told you built something which would allow an LLM to access the data. In order to be reliable enough the data would have to be appropriately sorted already and there would need to be an interface which the LLMs could use. So you built all this stuff to let the LLM thing work and now you’re looking at me stupid like building an extreme simple filter is some sorta crazy thing and we need a product to do it.

What the hell were people doing before you built your little chatbot? Just neatly sorting information into a black box and throwing into the ocean?



A Beginners Guide To Selfhosting Part 1


I recently became interessted in learning about static site generators. So I decided to start a little 11ty blog, in which I teach people, who are new to self-hosting, how to securely set up their own server with Ubuntu and Docker.

For now, I've got my Beginners Guide series as well as a more detailed introduction to SSH and its features. I plan to eventually write down all I've learned about self-hosting in the past 20 years.

Hope it ends up being helpful for some of you.

EDIT (2025-10-28): Finally got around to get a proper domain and switched my blog to Hugo. Much easier to deal with and more capable imho than 11ty (and actually useful documentation as well). Oh and got rid of Netlify. Their 300 credit limit for a free deploy project is far too limiting if any deploy costs 15 credits...

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)
in reply to gibdos

I have wanted to self host ever since I joined the fediverse 5 years ago. Always ends up with one or another error message that I cant get through. But I might give this a chance.

One thing I wish I knew earlier is the "man" command to display the documentation of a command.

in reply to gibdos

This 11ty sounds like a nice off the shelf solution to getting a blog started, which I want to do, but how to allow comments? I guess I'm asking what's everyone around here solution for comments
in reply to dis_honestfamiliar

Can't really help you there, since comments were never a consideration for me. They would add an unneeded amount of moderation, and potential threat, to my blog.
in reply to gibdos

I think I want to do a coding / dev blog and hope that some comments help me explore other ways to write code that's why I'm thinking of allowing comments. Thoughts?
in reply to dis_honestfamiliar

I have been pleased with giscus on my blog (roguesecurity.dev/ )
Its powered via github discussions.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)
in reply to StarkZarn

I think I want to do a coding / dev blog and hope that some comments help me explore other ways to write code that's why I'm thinking of allowing comments. Thoughts on this?
Also, discus might work. Thank!


Its a solar powered phone webserver! Made from a pixel 6a, solar panel, and hopes/dreams.


This is my solar powered setup. A somewhat old Pixel 6a that fell from a foot and a half (really!?), a 10w Solar setup that was around 20$ on amazon. And an old compost container I have too many of. Ill be giving it a proper 3d printed case when I get a c

This is my solar powered setup. A somewhat old Pixel 6a that fell from a foot and a half (really!?), a 10w Solar setup that was around 20$ on amazon. And an old compost container I have too many of. Ill be giving it a proper 3d printed case when I get a chance (and a host of other changes) but for now this works! Its worth about 40$ in total (the phone is now worth about 21$ on the open market).

Qm4kpb3x0dQ7Qib.jpg

hRMBBvZMfVgbgIs.jpg

Website: solar.chrisco.me

Website was made with a collection of scripts, apache2 (nginx for some reason did not install, errors), and termux. Ill open source the whole setup in a bit. Theres not much to it to be honest.

Hopefully keeping the battery at 80% will help the lifetime of the battery. I may bump it up at some point if it keeps dieing because lack of sunlight. But we shall see.

More info in the link. I couldn't get Piefed to repost from a GotoSocial link.


Its a solar powered webserver. Its running on an old beat up pixel 6a worth about 20$ and a 10w solar panel. I'm going to make a more formal writeup at some point but for now, it works!

I have it set to 80% forever so the battery will last. Without any charging it can last around 2 days. So we shall see if 10w is enough.

There's a lot I can improve about the setup. Its on WiFi so it can be slow well 300ms slow on load). And has absolutely no chache other than what comes with Apache. The site is very minimalist to save both power and time (I spent maybe 2 hours doing all this, most of the coding last weekend). The stats page needs to be updated, there's a couple bugs in the WH side of things.

solar.chrisco.me

The website polls every 10 min or so. This is more of a "can I do this" kind of project. And it seems to have worked out.

#solar #website


Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)
in reply to mesa

Super cool project. I visited, and I hope you keep building the site stats views out. So many people are curious about self hosting and solar, if you just kept it as a demo that shows how the system holds up over longer term, well I know I would appreciate occasional reminders to check it out. It may inspire others to try similar things.

And I would have happily signed any digital wall you implemented.

in reply to porksnort

I just added a "Visitor" section to it. Its directly looking at logs.

I saw a bot rampage the site a bit ago which was funny to see. It was trying to find books (?). No idea what that was about. Oh well site is still up.

in reply to mesa

I have bad experience with self-hosting termux server on a Samsung-Android device. The background process would be terminated after one week of hands off runtime. I tried to rectify this in the power-saving settings to no avail. Still this is really cool:

Your server works for me, it displays:

Battery: 63% DISCHARGING

Temp: 12°C

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)


Mini pc for home server?


Would you recommend to use a RPi 5 or a second hand Lenovo mini pc (i3 6100t, 8gb ram) or something else?
in reply to Jokulhlaups

I’ve have amazing luck with both Beelink and Minisforum computers. They’re relatively cheap and excellent quality.

I personally use the Beelink ME Mini and it’s been able to handle just fine about any server tasks I need it to, not to mention the wildly expandable storage.

in reply to otacon239

Beelink ME Mini


Would something like this be suitable as a NAS + Jellyfin + Home Assistant box?

in reply to Jokulhlaups

Use whatever you have lying around when you start and then when you need new hardware for a certain purpose you can buy it going with the system requirements of that software.


Elon Musk says he needs $1 trillion to control Tesla's robot army. Yes, really.


[quote]I just don’t feel comfortable building a robot army here, and then being ousted because of some asinine recommendations from ISS and Glass Lewis, who have no f**king clue. I mean those guys are corporate terrorists. Lemme explain the core problem h
I just don’t feel comfortable building a robot army here, and then being ousted because of some asinine recommendations from ISS and Glass Lewis, who have no f**king clue. I mean those guys are corporate terrorists. Lemme explain the core problem here, so many of the passive funds vote along the lines of what ISS and Glass Lewis recommend. Now, they have made many terrible recommendations in the past that if those recommendations had been followed would have been extremely destructive to the future of the company. Now, If you’ve got passive funds that essentially defer responsibility for the vote to Glass Lewis and ISS, then you can have extremely disastrous consequences for a publicly traded company if too much of the publicly traded company is controlled by index funds. It’s de facto controlled by Glass Lewis and ISS. This is a fundamental problem for corporate governance, because they’re not voting along the lines that are actually good for shareholders. That’s the big issue, I mean, that’s what it comes down to. ISS Glass Lewis corporate terrorism. -Elon Musk, Tesla Q3 shareholder conference call, October 22, 2025
in reply to cyrano

Was there ever a hope that the customers buying the robots would control them?

MechaHitler controlled robot in my home or business is not a good marketing plan. Chinese companies are well ahead in robotics, and they have manufacturing customers, battery and motor research/leadership, lower bill of materials, plenty of AI skill. No reason to believe Tesla will be first or better.

in reply to humanspiral

No reason to believe Tesla will be first or better.


When has Musk ever been first or better? he even botched his penis.

in reply to humanspiral

Musk has nothing to do with either. The roadster was in production before he even bought into Tesla.

All the early Tesla engineers had left to start other companies. Everything since has been shit. The semi , the Cybertruck, the new roadster...



China is using America’s own trade weapons to beat it


cross-posted from: lemmy.zip/post/51604987

archive.is/K13Pm
What makes export controls so powerful for China is its industrial heft. Its manufacturing output—35% of the global total—is threefold America’s and exceeds that of the next eight countries combined.


https://www.economist.com/briefing/2025/10/23/china-is-using-americas-own-trade-weapons-to-beat-it

in reply to schizoidman

good article overall, well researched and well written, feels very balanced when reading it.


Amazon Allegedly Replaced 40% of AWS DevOps With AI Days Before Crash


[url=https://blog.stackademic.com/aws-just-fired-40-of-its-devops-team-then-let-ai-take-their-jobs-d9db9d298bfa]https://blog.stackademic.com/aws-just-fired-40-of-its-devops-team-then-let-ai-take-their-jobs-d9db9d298bfa[/url] More evidence: [url=https://w

blog.stackademic.com/aws-just-…

More evidence: reuters.com/business/retail-co… but back in July this year.

Questa voce è stata modificata (2 settimane fa)
in reply to mesa

Amazon has laid off or scared off the vast majority of their most experienced people. Those that weren’t laid off quit over stupidity like “RTO”. I don’t doubt that their underpaid junior staff and Kool-Aid drinking upper management decided that AI is a great way to replace all the lost knowledge and expertise. As with the downfall of civilization, this will get much worse before it gets better. It will be interesting to see how huge companies react to another companies enshittification actively damaging their business and reputation.
in reply to BlameTheAntifa

amazon also is more burned-out heavy than other tech companies aside from the tesla, i saw all those reviews and the peoples post on reddit.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)





Eska - Eska (2015)


Al concerto tenutosi per il lancio di "Eska", lo scorso 16 maggio 2015 al Rich Mix di Londra, tra il pubblico sono state avvistate delle estasiate Laura Mvula, Alice Russell e Lianne La Havas. Accompagnata da una band stringata ai limiti del garage-rock, Eska ha tirato giù il tetto della sala, dando prova della sua portentosa voce, ma... Leggi e ascolta...


Eska - Eska (2015)


immagine

Al concerto tenutosi per il lancio di “Eska”, lo scorso 16 maggio 2015 al Rich Mix di Londra, tra il pubblico sono state avvistate delle estasiate Laura Mvula, Alice Russell e Lianne La Havas. Accompagnata da una band stringata ai limiti del garage-rock, Eska ha tirato giù il tetto della sala, dando prova della sua portentosa voce, ma soprattutto dell'incredibile verve di emotiva quanto spiritosa interprete e polistrumentista, una leonessa da palcoscenico capace di stravolgere le proprie canzoni saltando dal folk al rock al blues al soul al gospel con una facilità da mettere in soggezione... artesuono.blogspot.com/2015/09…


Ascolta il disco: album.link/s/33ivVGguNH9c9nA22…


HomeIdentità DigitaleSono su: Mastodon.uno - Pixelfed - Feddit




Autopsia dell’io — Giuseppe De Grado: un viaggio nella fragilità e nella rinascita

Indice dei contenuti

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Un viaggio nel profondo dell’essere, tra introspezione, arte e psiche. Con “Autopsia dell’io”, Giuseppe De Grado firma un libro che è confessione, ricerca e poesia.

AUTOPSIA DELL’IO

GIUSEPPE DE GRADO

AUTOBIOGRAFIA/SAGGIO

Kimerik EDITORE

27 FEBBRAIO 2025

128 PP

15 x 21 x 1 cm

Un viaggio introspettivo che tocca tematiche sia puramente intimistiche che antropologiche e sociali. Un unico lungo racconto con tappe ben definite, caratterizzate da continui salti temporali, che l’autore propone per far meglio immergere il lettore nel proprio mondo presente e passato. La linea di confine tra mondi visibili (la realtà delle cose) e invisibili (i pensieri e le forze implicite che li scaturiscono) è molto sottile, ma ciononostante si riesce sempre a restare perfettamente in bilico tra i due. Si potrebbe facilmente pensare a un labirinto della mente esposto narrativamente ma, seppur la sensazione primaria possa essere tale, una bussola concettuale è sempre presente per evitare il disorientamento. A far da padrone è l’autore che al contempo è protagonista di un’idilliaca storia d’amore con lo sfondo del tempo che passa e che corrode cose e persone, senza però intaccarne i significati; un romanticismo palpabile e accattivante, che quasi tende a contaminare chi ne legge, data la sua avida veemenza. In conclusione, volendo sintetizzare in poche parole l’essenza di questo libro, resta da dire che il percorso di esso è lungo, tortuoso ma morbido, con zampilli di marcata malinconia verso un’epoca vicina ma comunque lontana anni luce, in cui sembrava che i valori fossero mastodontici e i sensi molto più svegli a favore della vita e di un cuore sempre messo in prima linea; insomma, un viaggio a ritroso nel tempo che tende a sbiadirsi, con una velocità sempre maggiore, tra l’autobiografia e l’autoanalisi.

amazon.it/Autopsia-dellIo-Gius…

Un taccuino dell’anima


In Autopsia dell’io (128 pagine), Giuseppe De Grado si mette a nudo in un percorso di introspezione che mescola prosa, poesia e immagini.
Non un semplice diario, ma una mappa emotiva in cui dolore e speranza convivono, dando voce a quella parte di sé che spesso restiamo a ignorare.

De Grado racconta con delicatezza e precisione i tormenti e le gioie di un uomo che non ha paura di guardarsi dentro. Ogni pagina diventa uno specchio in cui il lettore riconosce la propria umanità imperfetta, tra perdita, desiderio di appartenenza e bisogno di autenticità.

“Scrivere significa scendere nei miei abissi: ogni volta non ne salgo intatto, ma trovo la via di casa passando vicino al cuore.”


L’io come bussola della coscienza


Uno degli aspetti più interessanti del libro è la riflessione sull’io — il centro della coscienza, quell’equilibrio fragile che media tra pulsioni, regole e realtà esterna.
De Grado intreccia la sua narrazione personale con richiami a Freud, Jung, Erikson e Rogers, esplorando l’identità come processo in continua costruzione.

L’autore ricorda che l’io non è una struttura immutabile ma un flusso, un processo cerebrale e psicologico fatto di memoria, emozione e percezione.
La parte dedicata alle neuroscienze amplia la visione: l’io non è solo psiche, ma anche materia viva, movimento, esperienza.

“Comprendere il mio io è stato come scoprire una presenza silenziosa: non qualcosa da giudicare, ma da ascoltare. È lì che si nasconde la mia verità.”


Questa dimensione teorica non appesantisce il testo, anzi, lo arricchisce di profondità. Autopsia dell’io diventa così un ponte tra letteratura e psicologia, tra conoscenza e emozione.

Fragilità e immagine


La fragilità è il filo conduttore dell’intero volume.
De Grado la descrive in versi e in prosa, con una lingua limpida e musicale.
Le illustrazioni di Roberta Lanzi, realizzate con penna, matita e acquarello, accompagnano e amplificano il testo, raffigurando l’autore come figura sospesa tra realtà e sogno, in atmosfere che ricordano Monet, Van Gogh e Degas.
L’arte, qui, diventa introspezione visiva: ogni tratto rivela qualcosa che le parole non dicono.

L’autore si confida: la risposta completa


Nell’intervista che chiude il libro, De Grado racconta la genesi del suo lavoro con una sincerità rara:

«In questo libro ho dato tutto me stesso — i miei sentimenti e i miei pensieri — e l’ho fatto anche grazie alla forza dell’amore per mia moglie. Scrivere significa scendere nei miei abissi: ogni volta non ne salgo intatto, ma trovo la via di casa passando vicino al cuore.»


Quando gli si chiede cosa significhi spogliarsi così tanto davanti al lettore, l’autore risponde:

«È stato un momento, e come tutti i momenti si va incontro a una trasformazione: come dal bruco nasce una farfalla. Mi sono spogliato delle mie paure e ho accettato di mostrarmi. È stata una liberazione.»


E aggiunge ancora, con intensità:

«Scrivere Autopsia dell’io è stato come tornare a casa dopo anni di smarrimento. Ho scavato nella mia memoria e nei miei silenzi per ritrovare la voce che avevo perso. Non ho paura di chiamare questo percorso con il suo nome: guarigione.»


Le sue parole, autentiche e vibranti, restituiscono il cuore pulsante del libro: la scrittura come atto terapeutico, come possibilità di rinascita.

Il tempo e la presenza


Il tempo attraversa il libro come tema ricorrente: tempo che passa, tempo perduto, tempo da ritrovare.
De Grado invita a rallentare, a riscoprire la presenza, a smettere di vivere per abitudine.
È un messaggio che risuona forte in un’epoca dominata dalla distrazione e dalla corsa continua: solo fermandosi si può davvero ascoltare.

“L’attitudine all’abitudine, alla paura del cambiamento, fa sì che l’animo non si evolva.”

Estratto significativo


«Non volevo richiudere questa crepa, non volevo farmi sopraffare dalla paura… L’attitudine all’abitudine, alla paura del cambiamento, fa sì che l’animo non si evolva.»

Questo passo riassume la filosofia dell’autore: accettare la crepa come parte della crescita, trasformare il dolore in consapevolezza.

Conclusione: un viaggio da condividere


Autopsia dell’io non è soltanto un libro: è un’esperienza di autenticità e coraggio.
Un invito a riscoprire se stessi, a riconciliarsi con la propria vulnerabilità e a comprendere che la fragilità è parte della bellezza umana.
Giuseppe De Grado ci regala una testimonianza toccante, fatta di parole e immagini che sanno parlare al cuore e alla mente.

Per chi: ama la narrativa autobiografica, la psicologia del sé, l’introspezione poetica e i libri che fanno riflettere.

Il libro può essere acquistato anche su

https://www.kimerik.it/libro/5325/autopsia-dell-io-: Autopsia dell’io — Giuseppe De Grado: un viaggio nella fragilità e nella rinascita

Questa voce è stata modificata (5 giorni fa)


Enrico VIII d'Inghilterra: vita, regno e mogli del re Tudor


Il regno di Enrico VIII Tudor (1509-1547) è generalmente ricordato per le sue sei sfortunate consorti e per il suo leggendario appetito. Tristemente noto per aver mandato a morte due delle sue regine, è però fin troppo facile immaginare Enrico come il pingue mostro della sua vecchiaia.



La Lanterna non è più il simbolo di Genova, l'email settimanale di L'Unica - Genova


L'intelligenza artificiale di Google ha privato la Lanterna del primato assoluto, definendola «uno dei» simboli e non più «il» simbolo del capoluogo ligure, anche perché probabilmente lo è sempre meno nella testa dei genovesi.

L'intelligenza artificiale di Google ha privato la Lanterna del primato assoluto, definendola «uno dei» simboli e non più «il» simbolo del capoluogo ligure, anche perché probabilmente lo è sempre meno nella testa dei genovesi.

Nel logo della prossima adunata nazionale degli Alpini che si terrà a Genova dall’8 al 10 maggio 2026, la Lanterna appare stilizzata proprio accanto alla inevitabile penna nera, ma alla sua base è raffigurata pure la Biosfera del Porto Antico, disegnata dalla matita di Renzo Piano

lunica.email/r/0bcb3e80?m=3c40…

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in reply to francal

E ci credo, non l'hanno mai saputa valorizzare a dovere, solo per raggiungerla e poterla visitare bisogna fare un giro allucinante!

Confido nel futuro ampliamento del parco, però bo'...




No Donations for Days 💔 Winter Is Coming


There have been no donations for days… and winter is almost here. We’re still sleeping under the open sky with nothing to keep us warm. They announced a ceasefire, but the bombing hasn’t stopped, and our suffering continues.

All I want is to protect my family — to buy a tent, warm clothes, and some food. Every night, I watch my family shiver from the cold, and it breaks my heart.

Your donations can save us from the freezing nights and hunger. Please, don’t let us face this winter alone. 💔

🕊️ Your kindness can bring us warmth, safety, and hope.

gofund.me/00439328





Over 100 police officers investigated after 30,000 breath tests falsified


More than 100 police officers are under investigation after 30,000 alcohol breath tests were "falsely or erroneously recorded", RNZ can reveal.

"From the audit which covered over 4.6 million breath tests performed between 1 July 2024 and 17 August 2025, the initial analysis suggested there were tests conducted that were simulated without the involvement of a driver.

The audit indicated that some staff had recorded breath screening tests that hadn't occurred.

Johnson said that despite this, Police's obligation to deliver 3.3 million tests for NZTA and Ministry of Transport had been met and was not compromised.







in reply to fire86743

JVP is pretty active at protests. There aren't many real organizations that explicitly support Hamas in the west - I don't think even PSL do. It's basically illegal here, and means having issues with employment etc.


The first honest American president - Trump’s shameless corruption is not a deviation from American history but its fulfilment.


By the time Trump arrived, corruption had been normalised as realism. Trump merely stripped it of its polite fictions – not only in domestic politics but in foreign policy, where the US has long cloaked its violence in the language of democracy and human rights. Trump’s extrajudicial killings of unidentified individuals via unilateral military strikes in Latin American waters, for example, are not a break with American precedent but its most naked expression, the open performance of practices that past administrations enacted beneath the cloak of deniability and euphemism. Likewise, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) brutality and cruelty under Trump are not new. It is instead largely a dramatised, made-for-TV version of what Barack Obama – who earned the title of “deporter in chief” – pioneered over the years in which he built the career of Tom Homan, now Trump’s so-called border czar. Like Trump, Obama was a great admirer of Homan, awarding him a 2015 Presidential Rank Award for Distinguished Service to honour his passion for rounding up immigrants, separating children from their parents and caging people in detention camps.

The brazenness of Trump’s corruption and cruelty – the nepotism, the grift, the self-dealing, the open auctioning of government contracts and justice – does not shock us because it feels like an honest expression of what we already knew: that American government and institutions serve the wealthy individuals who own them, whether directly or indirectly through their donations and lobbyists or via networks of influence, bribery and extortion. The outrage that might once have followed is replaced by a weary recognition that things have always worked this way.




in reply to silence7

It is CBS news though so not like anyone should actually watch them anyways
in reply to silence7

Hopefully Lemmyists will stop citing them as a news source which still seems way too frequent.

in reply to silence7

As far as I know, mandatory use of biofuels is primarily a subsidy for farmers rather than a means of reducing emissions. I'm surprised to see an urban area focus on it.

In his decision, Engstrom said the feedstock restrictions are “core to the original policy intent” and must be preserved because they ensure the policy delivers on promised carbon reductions. Feedstocks made from virgin agricultural products and food crops – such as soybean, canola and palm oils – have been linked to much higher carbon emissions, displacing food production and causing deforestation and are not allowed under Portland’s policy.


It sounds like Portland is making an effort to avoid the farm-subsidy sort of biofuels, but then what is it actually demanding that biofuels be made from?

Questa voce è stata modificata (5 giorni fa)
in reply to ArbitraryValue

I think it’s a mistake to assume that this is an honest effort. That there’s any expectation of compliant biodiesel being made and sold. Realistically, what’s going to happen is that the Jubitz and Pacific Pride locations in Portland are going to be run out of business. That’s very likely the actual goal of the policy, which is equivalent to an enormous fuel tax increase, with some greenwashing as cover.


‘Fancy tool’: how China cut chip defects by 99% for near-perfect lithography


In a major leap for the global semiconductor industry, a joint Chinese research team has developed a method that can slash defects in lithography – a critical step in chipmaking – by up to 99 per cent.

The researchers achieved unprecedented clarity by using cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET) to pinpoint, for the first time, the minute sources of common manufacturing flaws.

The findings, published in the journal Nature Communications on September 30, by Professor Peng Hailin from Peking University in collaboration with researchers from Tsinghua University and the University of Hong Kong, were hailed by reviewers as a “fancy tool” that “would benefit peer researchers and industrial users quite a lot”.

“The team has proposed a solution compatible with existing semiconductor production lines,” Peng said in an interview with Beijing-based Science and Technology Daily published on Monday. “It can reduce lithography defects on 12-inch (30cm) wafers by 99 per cent,” he added, indicating substantial cost benefits to the market.

Lithography is one of the most critical steps in chip manufacturing. “It can be understood as ‘printing circuits’ onto semiconductor wafers such as silicon,” Peng said. “Essentially, an ultra-precise ‘projector’ shrinks and transfers pre-designed circuit patterns onto a special film coating the wafer, which is then developed and fixed.”







Ernest is alive


Ernest is alive

Iirc, in one of his last public appearances before abandoning Kbin was commenting he had health issues.

Just noticed he has a blog where he occasionally posts, latest post being from September, and in the "about me" section, he also mentions about having to drop Kbin.

Going by his posts and his repositories, he doesn't seem involved with ActivityPub anymore, at least in a public manner. But sharing in case someone worried about the person.

in reply to Auster

Ernest is alive

Sensitive content




Wrist-Cut Transformation Subculture ✡ Menhera-chan - Capitolo 3


La sera tardi dopo l'ultimo scontro, e persino il giorno dopo, Momoka è ancora arrabbiata per quello che è successo con Sabukaru-chan, e...

stuff.octt.eu.org/2025/10/wris…



Openpilot 0.10.1 Released: Improved World Model and Overhauled User Interface


Openpilot 0.10.1 introduces the North Nevada Model, featuring major improvements to the World Model architecture. The system now infers 6 degree of freedom ego localization directly from images, removing the need for external localization inputs. This reduces over-constrained data and opens the door for future self-generated imagery.

To support this change, the autoencoder Compressor was upgraded with masked image modeling, switched from CNN to Vision Transformer architecture, and the World Model itself was scaled from 500 million to 1 billion parameters. All models now train on a much larger dataset of 2.5 million segments, up from 437,000, covering more vehicles, countries, and driving scenarios.

The UI has been completely rewritten, moving from Qt/Weston to Python with raylib. This reduces code complexity by about 10,000 lines, cuts boot time by 4 seconds, lowers GPU usage, and simplifies development.

Finally, the Driver Monitoring Model's training infrastructure has been streamlined with dynamic data streaming, though the model’s functionality remains unchanged.

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in reply to Victor

Indeed it is. The comma has that same effect except maybe five fold.
in reply to otterpop

So what do you do if you want this? Does the car need to already have cameras and sensors and stuff or do you get those with the comma and you have to install it into your car by yourself somehow? What's the procedure?

I have a Volvo EX40 right now and it has a lot of features but it refuses to drive on its own for more than a number of seconds for safety reasons. (We're in the EU, so I guess that's not allowed.)



Funky Cafè Noir


14 novembre 2025 22:00:00 CET - GMT+1 - Cafè Noir, 01100, Viterbo, Italy
Nov 14
Funky Cafè Noir
Ven 22:00 - 23:59
📅 Elisabetta Fratoni Jazz Quartet

Dalle note Funky al Jazz riarrangiato al nostro stile.

Piano, basso, tromba, batteria e voce.

Sul progetto musicale


"Jazzy!" è un viaggio attraverso una galleria di composizioni originali e reinterpretazioni audaci, dove la solida base del jazz si fonde con ritmi irresistibilmente funky.

Ma non pensate che sia tutto ritmo e beat: troverete anche momenti di malinconia e riflessione in brani come Sassi dove l'abilità tecnica del gruppo e la sensibilità di Elisabetta si fanno sentire al massimo.

I componenti del quartetto:


Elisabetta Fratoni (🎤 voce e 🎸 basso) – Cantante dalla voce calda e bassista versatile, Elisabetta incanta con il suo talento e la capacità di creare atmosfere uniche.

Sandro Santilli (🎺 tromba) – Trombettista dal suono pulito ed espressivo, Sandro arricchisce il quartetto con una presenza musicale genuina e misurata.

Luciano Tellico (🎹 pianoforte) – Pianista dal tocco elegante, Luciano accompagna il quartetto con armonie raffinate e una grande sensibilità artistica.

Fabio Ruggieri (🥁 batteria) – Batterista preciso e creativo, Fabio dà ritmo e dinamismo a ogni performance, valorizzando ogni brano con il giusto groove

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DoD strips job protections from civilian employees, directs managers to fire with ‘speed and conviction’


The Defense Department is stripping away job protections from its civilian employees and directing managers to “act with speed and conviction” to fire employees performing “unsuccessfully.”

A new Sept. 30 memo titled “Separation of Employees with Unacceptable Performance,” which became public Tuesday, also warned that managers will be held accountable if they fail to remove poor performers.

Pentagon’s Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness Anthony Tata, who signed the memo, suspended the department’s requirement that managers attempt to rehabilitate underperforming employees — clearing the way for supervisors to fire workers whose performance is deemed “unacceptable” more quickly.

“They are trying to cloak it in legalistic language and make it sound legitimate, but the reality is they’re stripping due process significantly and making it easier for arbitrary terminations, similar and functional to private sector employment,” Sean Timmons, managing partner at Tully Rinckey PLLC, told Federal News Network.



in reply to silence7

It's not people caused, it's capitalism caused.
Questa voce è stata modificata (5 giorni fa)


Mushroom clouds over Vegas? What Trump’s nuclear weapons tests could mean for America and the world


But 10 months into his second administration, the president is commanding officials to resume nuclear weapons testing, which would end the U.S’s 33-year moratorium and invite a global arms race in a volatile political moment.

Claiming that the United States must reach parity with weapons development in China and Russia, Trump ordered the Pentagon on October 30 to “start testing our Nuclear Weapons on an equal basis,” a process that will begin “immediately,” he said.

The last confirmed nuclear test by the United States was in 1992 under then-President George H.W. Bush, who established a moratorium on all nuclear testing. China has reportedly not tested a nuclear weapon since 1996, and Russia’s most recent tests involved delivery systems, not actual detonation of a nuclear device.



Increased Spam on Lemmy Recently


I don't know if it's just me, but it feeks like there's been more spam posts than usual on Lemmy this October. Especially in instances like lemmy.world, lemdro.id, and others.

For example, this week, there has been a 3-day-old account on lemmy.world with over 480 posts. I also refreshed my feed today to find a <1 day old account from lemy.lol just posting Perplexity affiliate links to various places. I've blocked like 10 accounts in the past week alone for this reason.

With affiliate links I kind of understand the motivation. However, for non-promotional spam, upvotes on Lemmy aren't valuable in the same way that it is on Reddit, and there's no real value to an account with a lot of karma.

Is it just me that's noticed this increase? Does anyone know why this might be happening just now?

Questa voce è stata modificata (6 giorni fa)
in reply to Special Wall

I don't even get messages from the fediverse chick anymore 🙁


Sony WF-C510 connected on Linux, but never recognized as a headset


I've been fighting with my Sony WF-C510 for days.

I've tried it on Ubuntu, Debian, and Linux Mint. Same result every time: It connects successfully, but never shows up as an audio output device.

I even bought a USB Bluetooth dongle, thinking my laptop’s chipset was the problem... but nope. It still connects as a device, not a headset.

I’ve restarted Bluetooth services, switched from PulseAudio to PipeWire, and tried every "set-card-profile" trick from AI and forums, but nothing works.

Has anyone actually managed to get a Sony WF-C510 working properly on Linux?

It's clear this is purely Sony's fault for not caring about or supporting Linux drivers. Are they just ignoring the entire platform at this point?

Any workaround or success story would save my sanity.

Distros Tested: Ubuntu 24.04, Debian 12-13, Mint 22
Issue: Connects, but no A2DP/HSP profile visible

in reply to akousa

When was that epic photo taken?

EDIT: did my own research

Jun 18, 2012 3:29 PM

Linus Torvalds Gives Nvidia the Finger. Literally.

Linux creator Linus Torvalds isn't happy with Nvidia. And he wants you to know it.

Late last week, at a hacker meetup in Finland, Torvalds laid into Nvidia, calling it "the single worst company" the Linux developer community has ever dealt with, complaining that the chipmaker doesn't do as much as it could to ensure that its hardware plays nicely with his open source operating system. He even turned to the camera filming the event, flipped the company the proverbial bird, and dropped the proverbial F bomb.


Absolute fucking legend!

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New York declares state of emergency to help food banks in shutdown


New York’s governor, Kathy Hochul, has declared a state of emergency to raise $65m to help food banks as federal funding for the national food stamps program is set to expire on Saturday due to the government shutdown.

The move comes after Oregon and Virginia also declared emergencies to make funds available to cover the anticipated short fall in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (Snap), which provides food aid to nearly 42 million people.

New York receives nearly $650m a month in federal funding for Snap benefits, according to Department of Agriculture figures.

Oregon governor Tina Kotek on Wednesday pledged $5m to food banks and declared a 60-day food security emergency. Virginia governor Glenn Youngkin has said the state will draw on surplus funds to pay for up to a month of Snap benefits.

The declarations come amid an ongoing standoff between the Trump administration and the Republicans, on one side, and the Democrats, over a federal government funding package. Neither Congress nor the White House has acted to fund November Snap benefits, which cost around $8bn a month.



Republican plan would make deanonymization of census data trivial


But now, a little-known algorithmic process called “differential privacy,” created to keep census data from being used to identify individual respondents, has become the right’s latest focus. WIRED spoke to six experts about the GOP’s ongoing effort to falsely allege that a system created to protect people’s privacy has made the data from the 2020 census inaccurate.

If successful, the campaign to get rid of differential privacy could not only radically change the kind of data made available, but could put the data of every person living in the US at risk. The campaign could also discourage immigrants from participating in the census entirely.

The Census Bureau regularly publishes anonymized data so that policymakers and researchers can use it. That data is also sensitive: Conducted every 10 years, the census counts every person living in the United States, citizen and noncitizen alike. The data includes detailed information like the race, sex, and age, as well the languages they speak, their home address, economic status, and the number of people living in a house. This data is used for allocating the federal funds that support public services like schools and hospitals, as well as for how a state’s population is divided up and represented in Congress. The more people in a state, the more congressional representation—and more votes in the Electoral College.


in reply to silence7

The correct headline was "US Constitution condemns" not "US climate activists condemn"
in reply to silence7

They are not worried about the art, they are worried about the protest.


Ktor Panel v0.4.0 Released


I just released v0.4.0 of Ktor Panel.

Ktor Panel is a lightweight, customisable admin interface generation library for Ktor servers. Ktor Panel provides a simple way to manage database entities through an intuitive and secure interface using minimal configuration.

Official docs: ktor-panel.readthedocs.io/

Please leave a GitHub star if you find it useful!

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