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Vuoi chiacchierare in italiano in completo anonimato?


Iscriviti alla community aperta e libera italiana su SimpleX!

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SimpleX è l’app di messaggistica senza identificazione, senza numeri di telefono, senza iscrizione per parlare in completo anonimato!

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in reply to ZILtoid1991

If you are writing a parser in haskell just use Happy and get it over with


in reply to Warl0k3

I only drink Gatorwine


Torres - Sprinter (2015)


Mackenzie Scott, Torres per gli amici, ha 24 anni, ma sulle spalle già un sontuosissimo debut (l’eponimo Torres) con cui ha contemporaneamente sfiorato il cuore e preso a pugni lo stomaco di molti, me compreso. Una chitarra, la leggenda vuole comprata dai genitori dopo molti sacrifici, e tante cose da dire con una voce tutt’altro che anonima... Leggi e ascolta...


Torres - Sprinter (2015)


immagine

Mackenzie Scott, Torres per gli amici, ha 24 anni, ma sulle spalle già un sontuosissimo debut (l’eponimo Torres) con cui ha contemporaneamente sfiorato il cuore e preso a pugni lo stomaco di molti, me compreso. Una chitarra, la leggenda vuole comprata dai genitori dopo molti sacrifici, e tante cose da dire con una voce tutt’altro che anonima. A distanza di due anni Torres si tinge i capelli di biondo ma la ricetta non cambia, e anzi si conferma pienamente in questo Sprinter grazie anche al contributo di personaggi quali Rob Ellis alla produzione e una band di supporto formata da Ian Oliver (già con PJ Harvey) e Adrian Utley (Portishead)... artesuono.blogspot.com/2015/05…


Ascolta il disco: album.link/s/2ePwJ7FH3bxVdaV1x…


HomeIdentità DigitaleSono su: Mastodon.uno - Pixelfed - Feddit






Cédric Philibert : « La sobriété est indispensable, les énergies renouvelables aussi »


Cet article est offert, mais Lemmy supprime généralement les paramètres d'URL également utilisés pour les analyses.

Vous devez copier-coller ceci pour accéder gratuitement à l'article et à sa source originale :

alternatives-economiques.fr/ce…


This post uses a gift link, but lemmy usually removes URL parameters which are also used for analytics.

You need to cut and paste this to access the article on its original source for free:
alternatives-economiques.fr/ce…



Fourteen black paintings


In un'intervista del 2014 Robert Wyatt dice: “Sono abituato a domande come: ‘Pensi che l’arte politica abbia qualche effetto?’ La mia risposta è: se Stevie Wonder o chi per lui canta una canzone d’amore non la giudicherai mica dall’effetto, se insomma Stevie ce l’ha fatta o no a conquistare quella ragazza”

Parlo di questo, di Fourteen Black Paintings di Peter Gabriel e del potere nel nuovo post del Musicofilo: marcozanetti.it/blog/da-questo…




TIL the World Wide Web Consortium changed their logo on 1 October


TIL the World Wide Web Consortium changed their logo on 1... #w3c #internet #web #programming #tech #technology #js #html #css
w3.org/press-releases/2025/new…


Which piefed instances defederate from the triad and similar instances?


My home instance is down so I figured I’d make a piefed account since I recall them defederating from the tankie triad. This doesn’t seem to be the case any more? Any suggestions for such instances?
My home instance is down so I figured I’d make a piefed account since I recall them defederating from the tankie triad. This doesn’t seem to be the case any more? Any suggestions for such instances?
in reply to CTDummy

You can block instances on Piefed, you can have this on pretty much any instance.
in reply to PhilipTheBucket

Yeah I’ve done this already for ml but it’s one way right? I can’t see them but they can still interact with my stuff? Either way 2/3 isn’t half bad for the moment.
in reply to CTDummy

Yeah, I feel you. Except for special circumstances I actually prefer not to block people so they can't stealth-disagree with me without me getting a chance to yell back at them in turn.

Personally, my feeling is that it's also actually better not to shut out the triad instances. That's actually what they want. That is the entire reason and rationale why they block so aggressively, that they want to create a little bubble where no one calls them out on stuff. Shunning them just helps them do that. It's actually gotten worse in the time I've been around on Lemmy, I think, and I think it is from people turning them off at least as much as it is from their own blocks from their side. At present, they will sometimes come out and say stuff that is just total nonsense that is in line with the hivemind and then seem to be genuinely surprised if someone reacts negatively to it. And, they think that anything not in the triad is "the lib instances" and seem to think that it's a minority category or something, and again seem sincerely surprised sometimes if some indication emerges that it's not popular. I don't think that used to happen, I think they used to have an awareness of where the dividing-lines of different echo chambers were even if they and I would disagree about which one is "right."

None of this is to say you shouldn't block them or find a fully defederated place of course. Just giving my thoughts on it.

in reply to PhilipTheBucket

Very fair points and I’ll definitely keep it in mind. I’ve mostly done it to try avoiding unnecessary toxicity but I might revise that in time when life settles down a bit. Appreciate the perspective and your posts I’ve seen around the verse.
in reply to CTDummy

Yeah, I think there's a delicate balance here. Extremism thrives and tends to get even more extreme in bubbles. So in some ways it is vital that people actually try to make dialogue with them to potentially pull them back or at least keep them from drifting further.
But on the other hand, once the extremist bubble is big enough, if you just let them interact with the rest, they can spread a lot of toxocity and do a lot of damage which you also want to avoid.

So I don't think there's a clear-cut right choice here. If someone's up to it, actually making the effort to engage with them could be avery good strategy. But if someone's too stressed out by that, disengaging is clearly better.

But I think this is where the fediverse model has unique potential to do something good here. Some communities can block, some can engage. Some users can block, some can engange or even flop back and forth. It allows for more dynamic relationships and choices which I think os absolutely vital when there's no one right choice to deal with a situation/group/person.

in reply to fr0g

once the extremist bubble is big enough, if you just let them interact with the rest, they can spread a lot of toxocity and do a lot of damage which you also want to avoid


Yeah, 100% agree. There is a benefit to free exchange of communication, it is one of the most effective ways of tearing down authoritarian structures, but absolutely at the same time once it's interfering with your own quiet enjoyment and ability to communicate internally it might be time to shut it out. I actually sometimes just don't participate at all in the political communities on lemmy.world for exactly that reason; it is often so toxic that it shuts down even the ability for people to have a normal conversation. Such a noisy tide of people will emerge to exercise Lemmy Reading Comprehension and give random hostility that you can't hear the other calm people. That's also the issue with Hexbear. That whole event where one of the more permissive instances thought about refederating with them, and they immediately brigaded that very discussion post to hurl abuse at everyone and so the conclusion was "lol never mind," is a good example.

There's also an important factor of whether the people in the community you're talking to are open to change. Lemmy.ml seems obviously to me to be mostly genuine people who are on some level interested in conversation and care about these topics, which is one reason I lean towards keeping engagement with them even if sometimes is a ridiculous conversation. But at the same time, I don't really fuck with Hexbear or with UniversalMonk much, because it just doesn't seem that there's much to be gained. If someone's whole overarching goal whenever they interact with outsiders is going to be "doing a bit," then what's the point. You're just the cat playing with their little toy-on-a-stick because they're waving it around, at that point.

in reply to CTDummy

Ay, thank you! Yeah like I said it wasn't trying to say you should need to subject yourself to anything you don't feel like subjecting yourself to lol. Blocking out stuff simply because you don't feel like it is sparking any joy is completely allowed I think.
in reply to CTDummy

It is one way when you post into a Lemmy community - the Lemmy instance will forward your post on to lemmy.ml even if you've blocked it.

But in a PieFed.social community it won't send to any instance you've blocked.



Primo appello alle comunità educanti d'Italia


crosspostato da: mastodon.bida.im/users/graffio…

Primo appello alle comunità educanti d'Italia

Riceviamo e volentieri pubblichiamo.
Colleghe, colleghi, madri, padri, alle nostre allieve e allievi di ogni colore, genere, orientamento, provenienza.
Noi siamo il prodotto di 35 anni di lotte, dalla riforma Berlinguer al taglio di un anno di istruzione tecnica e professionale, in via di realizzazione da parte del Ministro Valditara. Alcune abbandonate, alcune perse,…
pillole.graffio.org/pillole/pr…
@scuola



Primo appello alle comunità educanti d'Italia

Riceviamo e volentieri pubblichiamo.
Colleghe, colleghi, madri, padri, alle nostre allieve e allievi di ogni colore, genere, orientamento, provenienza.
Noi siamo il prodotto di 35 anni di lotte, dalla riforma Berlinguer al taglio di un anno di istruzione tecnica e professionale, in via di realizzazione da parte del Ministro Valditara. Alcune abbandonate, alcune perse,…
pillole.graffio.org/pillole/pr…
@scuola







Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats – Omonimo (2015)


Sicuramente, il disco che mi appresto a recensire sarà in cima alla mia personale lista dei migliori dell’ anno, un’ autentica sorpresa.
Questo cantautore cresciuto in Missouri, ma spostatosi appena diciottenne a Denver, proprio per inseguire il suo sogno di musicista a tempo pieno, prima su territori folk rock con i dischi... Leggi e ascolta...


Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats – Omonimo (2015)


immagine

Sicuramente, il disco che mi appresto a recensire sarà in cima alla mia personale lista dei migliori dell’ anno, un’ autentica sorpresa. Questo cantautore cresciuto in Missouri, ma spostatosi appena diciottenne a Denver, proprio per inseguire il suo sogno di musicista a tempo pieno, prima su territori folk rock con i dischi (a nome Nathaniel Rateliff & The Wheel) “Desire and Dissolving Men”, edito nel 2007, seguito da due album da solista, “In Memory of Loss” (in USA nel 2010 tramite Rounder Records, in Europa nel 2011 tramite Decca Records) e “Falling Faster Than You Can Run” (del 2013, tramite etichetta indipendente “mod y vi Records”), supportato da un tour in compagnia di comprimari famosi come The Lumineers e Dr.Hog... artesuono.blogspot.com/2015/10…


Ascolta il disco: album.link/s/1uJRMyfjWu3255ihM…


HomeIdentità DigitaleSono su: Mastodon.uno - Pixelfed - Feddit





in reply to 100_kg_90_de_belin

There is a lot of punching up he can do: morality, intelligence, compassion, basic human decency. When you’re at the very bottom of something, there’s nowhere else to punch but up.



in reply to rulu

USA are a couple of presidents away to either fascism or back to regular life so "never" can't apply for the political reason I read here. I'd love to back, just not nowadays.

I traveled a bit and honestly there's no country I would not like to visit again. Some cities, maybe, but I can't say it about a whole country.





Shifter videos are in Peertube


Shifter, the cycle commuting channel is in Peertube too. Some the best cycling video content in the fediverse! (for now at least)
in reply to MasterBlaster

I'm not canadian either, but they are all valid high-quality channels, whose content is valid everywhere


in reply to LadyButterfly she/her

Counterpoint: I’m a twisty mofo and my adhd friend would often enough times respond to something he thought I was going to say instead of the thing I actually said (since I’m a twisty mofo) because he would be concentrating on not interrupting rather than listening.

I’m not placing blame, that’s adhd, just thought it was funny (except those times when it was just frustrating).

Questa voce è stata modificata (6 giorni fa)


In edicola il numero di Storica National Geographic


Mary Anning, la cacciatrice di fossili giurassici
Questa cacciatrice di fossili non ottenne mai il riconoscimento che le spettava.

Giochi secolari, le celebrazioni del secolo a Roma
Ogni secolo a Roma si celebrava una grande festa per avere il favore degli dei.

Il libro dei morti, un manuale egizio dell'oltretomba
Gli Egizi credevano che, al momento della morte, i defunti dovessero affrontare un cammino pericoloso, costellato di prove e culminante nel giudizio divino, prima di poter raggiungere la vita eterna. Per avere successo in questo viaggio, si affidavano alle Formule per far uscire l’anima alla luce del giorno, una raccolta di testi più nota come Libro dei Morti: un vero e proprio manuale che conteneva i sortilegi da recitare durante il viaggio nell’aldilà.

Emporion, la Grecia in Iberia
All’inizio del VI secolo a.C., coloni greci fondarono nel golfo di Roses la prima colonia greca della penisola iberica. Per secoli Emporion fu un fiorente centro commerciale, cresciuto intorno a un porto che l’archeologia ci consente oggi di conoscere con sempre maggior precisione.

Pompeo Magno, il generale dimenticato
Le sue vittoriose campagne in tutto il Mediterraneo – inclusa quella che pose fine alla minaccia dei pirati cilici – resero Pompeo il grande eroe di Roma, ma l’ascesa di Giulio Cesare ne segnò il declino.

Kublai Khan, l’imperatore mongolo della Cina
Mezzo secolo dopo la morte di Gengis Khan, suo nipote Kublai completò la conquista della Cina e fondò una nuova dinastia, caratterizzata dalla fusione delle culture cinese e mongola.

Il cammino verso Santiago: pellegrini del Medioevo
Sebbene i pellegrini medievali diretti a Santiago non seguissero un itinerario rigidamente definito, esistevano grandi percorsi che corrispondono a quelli oggi ufficialmente riconosciuti.

La caccia alle streghe in Europa, un'ossessione collecttiva
Tra il XVI e il XVII secolo si tennero grandi processi contro presunti stregoni e streghe, accusati di aver stretto patti con il demonio. Molti di questi processi si conclusero con l’esecuzione di decine di persone, per lo più donne.

Il tesoro di Varna
Le tombe di una necropoli in Bulgaria, contenevano migliaia di oggetti d’oro. 114 STORIA VISUALE Vietnam, una guerra senza fine Per vent’anni, gli Stati Uniti furono impegnati in un conflitto di larga scala in Asia.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)


Storia ed economia: l'inflazione, che esisteva già dai tempi del baratto


Il primo caso d'inflazione della Storia avvenne in Mesopotamia attorno al 2200 a.C. Il grande impero degli Accadi era in declino, invaso da genti bellicose. Sotto forma di maledizione, un testo in lingua sumerica annunciò: "Il tuo oro sia venduto come argento, il tuo argento come metallo più vile, il tuo rame come piombo". All'origine della crisi fu la carestia. Come ha scritto l'archeologo Sabatino Moscati: «bastavano pochi raccolti andati male perché la parte povera della popolazione fosse costretta a forme pesanti d'indebitamento compresa la vendita dei familiari come schiavi, o in casi estremi a fenomeni di cannibalismo»


Breathing Through Our Butts Declared Safe After First Human Trial




Breathing Through Our Butts Declared Safe After First Human Trial


🌘
Subscribe to 404 Media to get The Abstract, our newsletter about the most exciting and mind-boggling science news and studies of the week.

Hold onto your butts, because one day you might be breathing through them.

Scientists have tested out enteral ventilation—a possible method of administering oxygen with a liquid delivered through the rectum that is then absorbed into the intestines—in humans for the first time. The trial demonstrated that this method of ventilation is safe and “paves the way for future studies to see if this technique can help patients with respiratory failure,” according to a study published on Monday in the journal Med.

“Enteral ventilation is not meant to replace mechanical ventilators or ECMO, but rather to serve as a complementary oxygenation route,” said Takanori Takebe, an expert in organoid medicine with appointments at both Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center and the University of Osaka, in an email to 404 Media. The technique proves a backdoor “to provide partial oxygen support while allowing the lungs to rest,” he added.

But while this method is safe for humans, it hasn’t been experimentally shown to work on patients experiencing respiratory distress yet. If future trials show that enteral ventilation is also effective, it could potentially help newborns and premature infants who are struggling to establish lung function after birth, aid patients with severe respiratory failure or Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS), or be applied in other situations in which temporary oxygen supplementation is needed.

“In such cases, intestinal oxygen delivery could serve as a ‘bridge’ therapy until normal respiration or full ventilatory support can be established,” Takebe said.
A figure outlining the first enteral ventilation trial in humans. Image: Fujii, Tasuku et al.
The team previously published a study in 2021 that showed enteral ventilation was effective in ameliorating respiratory failure in rats, mice, and pigs. This initial trial in humans involved 27 healthy male volunteers, who received a liquid called perfluorodecalin through their rectums in an enema-like process.

Since the trial was only intended to determine the safety of the procedure, rather than probe its efficacy in humans, the perfluorodecalin was not oxygenated and none of the volunteers were experiencing any respiratory distress during the course of the study.

“The results aligned closely with what we had anticipated from our preclinical data,” Takebe said. “We found that intrarectal administration of perfluorodecalin up to 1,000 mL was safe and well tolerated, with only mild and transient gastrointestinal symptoms such as bloating.”

“The next phase will involve testing ‘oxygenated’ perfluorodecalin (O₂-PFD) in patients with hypoxemia to evaluate actual oxygen transfer efficacy,” he added. “We are currently planning a Phase II trial in collaboration with clinical partners in Japan and the U.S.”

Takebe and his colleagues were inspired to develop this roundabout route by aquatic species, such as loaches, which absorb oxygen through their intestines to survive in low-oxygen environments. While the idea of rectally administering perfluorodecalin is relatively new, the use of oxygenated liquid for ventilation dates back decades. It even shows up in James Cameron’s 1989 thriller The Abyss, which includes a real scene of a rat breathing in a tank of liquid perfluorocarbon.

The technique may prove to be an effective means to alleviate respiratory distress in humans, but it’s also inspired its fair share of jokes because, well, it is about butt breath, after all.

In 2024, for instance, Takebe’s team received the Ig Nobel Prize, a satirical award that honors “achievements so surprising that they make people laugh, then think,” according to its website. Fellow Ig Nobel awardees include a team that levitated a frog in midair and another that investigated why pregnant women aren’t constantly tipping over.

“Receiving the Ig Nobel Prize was both humorous and humbling,” Takebe said. “It was a reminder that truly unconventional ideas often begin at the boundary between curiosity and skepticism.”

“While the prize is lighthearted in tone, I do believe it serves a serious purpose, encouraging the public to stay curious and to appreciate how even seemingly odd scientific questions can lead to meaningful innovations,” he concluded. “What began as a playful concept is now moving closer to a viable medical technology.”

🌘
Subscribe to 404 Media to get The Abstract, our newsletter about the most exciting and mind-boggling science news and studies of the week.





The C programming language is like debating a philosopher and Python is like debating someone who ate an edible


also I just realized that Brazil did NOT make a programming language entirely in Spanish and call it "Si" and that my professor was making a joke about C... god damn it

this post is probably too nieche but I feel like Lemmy is nerdy enough that enough people will get it lol

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

C does one thing really well and that's everything fast with complete control. Python is cool for people just trying to bang out some scripts or learning to program but interpreted languages have no place in mainstream software. Devices are starting to become slower than computers 30 years ago because there is so much garbage being included in apps written in interpreted java and Python and other nonsense. It's not just bad for the user but it's bad for the planet. It shouldn't take a million times the energy to run a simple program because someone doesn't know how to write in a proper language. Python is okay for some things. The world has become too reliant on it though. Also just for purely selfish reasons if you are the type. Interpreted languages kill your battery life and ram and stuff. Modern android phones besides all their problems with Google ruining them like Microsoft are also just becoming incredibly slow and stupid. You can barely even open two apps without most android phones panicking and closing apps to save memory. A calculator app is 100 MBs now. The phone feels like it's going to catch on fire when you open a notepad.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)

edinbruh doesn't like this.

in reply to DarkAri

I like many of your points, but your comment is facetious.

You said it yourself, "it's good for someone trying to bang out scripts"... and that's it, that's the main point, that's the purpose of python. I will argue over my dead body that python is a trillion times better than sh/bash/zsh/fish/bat/powershell/whatever for writing scripts in all aspects except availability and if that's a concern, the only options are the old Unix shell and bat (even with powershell you never know if you are stuck ps 5 or can use ps 7).

I have a python script running 24/7 on a raspberry that listens on some mqtt topics and reacts accordingly asynchronously. It uses like 15kiB (literally less than 4 pages) of ram mostly for the interpreter, and it's plenty responsive. It uses about two minutes of CPU time a day. I could have written it in rust or go, I know enough of both to do it, it would have been faster and more efficient, but it would have taken three times the time to write, and it would have been a bitch to modify, I could have done it in C and it would have been even worse. For that little extra efficiency it makes no sense.

You argue it has no place in mainstream software, but that's not really a matter of python, more a matter of bad software engineers. Ok, cool that you recognise the issue, but I'd rather you went after the million people shipping a full browser in every GUI application, than to the guys wasting 10 kiB of your ram to run python. And even in that case, it's not an issue of JavaScript, but an issue of bad practices.

P.S. "does one thing well" is a smokescreen to hide doing less stuff, you shouldn't base your whole design philosophy on a quote from the 70s. That is the kind of shit SystemD hater shout, while running a display server that also manages input, opengl, a widget toolkit, remote desktop, and the entire printer stack. The more a high profile tool does, the less your janky glue code scripts need to do.



The Third Mind - Right Now! (2025)


The Third Mind con "Right Now!", sono al loro terzo album. Registrato dal vivo in quattro giorni nei Sound Recording Studio di Los Angeles. "Right Now!" è una combinazione di istinto e improvvisazione da parte di musicisti esperti che si incontrano in tempo reale per trovare le canzoni man mano che procedono... Continua a leggere...


Ryley Walker - Primrose Green (2015)


Il secondo disco dell'uomo di Chicago, Ryley Walker, era uno dei lavori più attesi di questo 2015, dopo il suo bellissimo album d'esordio, "All kinds of you". Walker ha un passato, nemmeno troppo lontano, di chitarrista acustico, sulle tracce dei vari Fahey, Basho e di tutta la Takoma family... Leggi e ascolta...


Ryley Walker - Primrose Green (2015)


immagine

Il secondo disco dell'uomo di Chicago, Ryley Walker, era uno dei lavori più attesi di questo 2015, dopo il suo bellissimo album d'esordio, “All kinds of you”. Walker ha un passato, nemmeno troppo lontano, di chitarrista acustico, sulle tracce dei vari Fahey, Basho e di tutta la Takoma family. Nel 2011 erano uscite, in copie limitatissime, 2 cassette, una delle quali in compagnia di Daniel Bachman, altro virtuoso della sei corde acustica. Il suo primo album raccontava di un musicista ancorato ad un suono prettamente acustico, debitore di un suono recuperato da un grande come Bert Jansch, sia strumentalmente che vocalmente. Per il nuovo disco, “Primrose green” il giovane chitarrista ha arricchito in diverse tracce l'impasto musicale, facendosi accompagnare da uno stuolo di strumentisti fra i migliori in circolazione... artesuono.blogspot.com/2015/04…


Ascolta il disco: album.link/i/951953607


HomeIdentità DigitaleSono su: Mastodon.uno - Pixelfed - Feddit




L'oscura nascita (e funzione?) di Facebook. Da brividi.


Nell'ottimo podcast di Simone Pieranni possiamo ascoltare un discorso che parte "alla lontana" ma arriva a farci capire chi è uno dei principali finanziatori di Facebook agli inizi.

Dal mio punto di vista, una ragione molto forte per non fidarci dei social network tradizionali, non tanto "per cosa sono diventati", ma per cosa sono sempre stati, fin dall'inizio.