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Friday afternoon reminder to not empty your inbox at the expense of someone else's. You never know, maybe it's someone's birthday. Have a good weekend.
Image credit: LSE Library, on Flickr Commons.
flickr.com/photos/35128489@N07…


in reply to $εeл3н8¡nд³र

Das Bild zeigt eine Person mit lockigem, blonden Haar, die in einem gemütlichen, gemusterten Pullover sitzt. Sie hält eine grüne Dose Heineken in der Hand, die durch das rote Sternenlogo und den weißen Schriftzug leicht zu erkennen ist. Die Person trägt einen Ring mit einem roten Stein an ihrem Ringfinger. Der Hintergrund ist dunkel und weist eine warme, gemütliche Atmosphäre auf, mit einem Teil eines dunkelbraunen Ledersessels im Vordergrund. Die Person scheint in einem ruhigen, intimeren Raum zu sein, möglicherweise in einem Wohnzimmer oder einer ähnlichen Umgebung.

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Together in stone, beneath the summit’s watchful trees.

Norton Summit Cemetery, Norton Summit, South Australia.

The cemetery was founded in 1882, making it one of the older burial grounds in the region. It spans approximately 1.3 hectares and is located on Church Road, Norton Summit.

The cemetery is set on medium to steep sloping land with a southwesterly aspect, offering views into the surrounding hills.

© All Rights Reserved by Gardens of the Silent.

#cemetery #cemetary #cemeteries #cementerio #grave #graves #gravestone #graveyard #taphophile #gardensofthesilent #southaustralia #photography #cemeteryphotography



Ej @len
Predvidevam da si kej vpleten v RŠ. V primeru da še ni blo na rš discussed, dejte kej povedat o chatcontrol-u (ref: fightchatcontrol.eu)
Questa voce è stata modificata (6 giorni fa)
in reply to Aljaž Starc

bomo kaj porocali, ja. tole oddajo sicer delam ze 9 let: radiostudent.si/druzba/tehno-k…
in mal gledam, ce bi nasel koga, da me nadomesti oz se pridruzi ekipi, da me rezbremeni. Ce poznas koga, ki je velik entuzjast proste programske opreme in bi ga zanimalo delat oddajo o regulaciji tehnologije, o druzbenih vidikih tehnologije ali pa samo kritizirat tehnologijo naju lahko povezes.


Fumo e tumore al pancreas: scoperto il meccanismo che collega sigarette e rischio tumorale
@scienza
focustech.it/scienza/fumo-e-tu…

#News #Scienza #Fumo #Pancreas #Tumore #scienza
Il tumore del pancreas è una delle forme di cancro più aggressive e difficili da



There are too many things: things to do, things to have, things to take care of. Have there always been things? I don't think so, I think there once was a thing less world, a world of anima and of deamons. A world where there was no thing to do.




I walked into the woods again today to escape everything and be with myself, surrounded by the quiet beauty of nature 🌲🍂.

There, without distractions, I simply breathed, moved slowly, and existed in a calm that made me feel vividly alive and free 🍃✨.

Hugging a tree as the golden sunset warmed the leaves, I felt grounded and at peace in that perfect moment of connection 🌿☀️.

Wishing you all a peaceful weekend, may you find moments to be kind to yourselves and others, and like me in the woods today, remember to pause and smile even when the world feels heavy 🌿😊💛.

#Nature #Relaxing #Zen #Hippie #Mindfulness #Wellness #Forest #SelfCare #Grounding #Serenity #MentalHealth




Putin paciere tra Russia e India: ormai guardare all’Europa è come guardare alla disfatta Usa

@
noi abbiamo sempre e solo copiato le idiozie dall' amerikkka e vice versa ...

risultato prevedibile ...
@

ilfattoquotidiano.it/2025/09/0…





Do you mysteriously not get emails - not even in your spam folder? If you're on a Microsoft system, this link might let you see emails invisibly held in quarantine: security.microsoft.com/quarant…
in reply to Mia

Invisibibly? How does one even disable those pesky emails reminding me daily about the emails in "quarantine" (which are the main reason I see spam and phishing attempts in the first place)?
in reply to Nemo_bis 🌈

@nemobis can you set up a rule to filter them?

But in some ways it's a nice problem to have! We're not told anything at all about the existence of the quarantine, even though I'd been asking about missing emails for years! That's why I occasionally mention it on here and on work channels



in reply to itsveganjim

Ik ben sindskort gestopt met vlees eten! 🥳 Ik heb het kunnen vervangen door insecten. Vooral boktorren zijn erg smaakvol 😋


The Galaxy Z Fold 7 was the funnest phone I’ve used in years. I regret returning it for the Pixel 10 Pro XL. It’s great to see Samsung strengthen its hold on foldables before Apple steps in to disrupt.

androidcentral.com/phones/sams…



fuck word bro.

idgaf if it's for work or shit: docx is docx, pdf is pdf. you don't need a pile of shitty spyware just to write text bc there are a lot of alternatives already: from light markdown editors like helix to full-blown office suites like libreoffice.

if people gave at least a tiny microscopic fuck about their privacy, microsoft would went bankrupt like in a week.

#foss #opensource #linux #writing

From: @jbz
indieweb.social/@jbz/115101796…


🌩️ Your Word documents will be saved to the cloud automatically on Windows going forward - gHacks Tech News

「 Microsoft announced that it is changing the default save location for Word documents on Windows. "Anything new you create will be saved automatically to OneDrive or your preferred cloud destination", writes Raul Munoz, product manager at Microsoft on the Office Shared Services and Experiences team 」

ghacks.net/2025/08/27/your-wor…

#microsoft #privacy #ai #bigtech #cloud


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Newsletter: i migliori articoli della settimana – 4 settembre 2025
@anarchia
Iscriviti alla nostra newsletter per ricevere un riepilogo settimanale via email con gli articoli più popolari Notizie anarchiche da oltre 250 collettivi 🏴 RivoluzionAnarchica.it Questa settimana sono stati pubblicati 50 articoli Ecco le notizie più popolari della settimana. Visita il...

rivoluzioneanarchica.it/newsle…

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Browsing through Yamada Denki yesterday when I saw this and thought "i bet fedi would appreciate that".


"Gli zombi mangiano i cervelli"

Menomale, sono salvo



in reply to DD0UL ✅

Das Bild zeigt eine Warnmeldung von Bitdefender Web Protection. Oben befindet sich das Logo von Bitdefender mit dem Text "Web Protection by Bitdefender". Darunter steht in großer Schrift "Dangerous page blocked for your protection" (Fahrlässige Seite wurde für Ihre Sicherheit blockiert). Die URL der gefährlichen Seite wird angezeigt: "website-ee6c1fd3-tpp-fih-myblu…". Weiterhin wird erklärt, dass gefährliche Seiten versuchen, Software zu installieren, die das Gerät schädigen kann, persönliche Informationen zu sammeln oder ohne Zustimmung zu operieren. Ein blauer Button mit der Aufschrift "TAKE ME BACK TO SAFETY" (Zurück zur Sicherheit) ist in der Mitte des Bildes zu sehen. Unten befindet sich ein Textfeld mit der Option "I understand the risks, take me there anyway" (Ich verstehe die Risiken, bring mich trotzdem hin).

Das Bild zeigt eine E-Mail-Benachrichtigung mit dem Titel "Beleg für Ihre Zahlung an grenzenlos direkt." Die E-Mail stammt von der Adresse "421104369[@]s.mu.edu..." und wurde um 20:11 Uhr gesendet. Der Hauptinhalt der E-Mail informiert den Empfänger darüber, dass er 488,95 € EUR an "grenzenlos direkt Ha..." gezahlt hat. Es gibt einen Button mit der Aufschrift "Transaktion Stornieren." Darunter befindet sich eine Erklärung, dass der Betrag innerhalb von ein bis zwei Werktagen von dem Bankkonto abgebucht wird. Es wird empfohlen, dass das Bankkonto ausreichend gedeckt ist, um Gebühren zu vermeiden. Die E-Mail enthält auch einen Transaktionscode (1V31V2150476820V), das Transaktionsdatum (05. September 2025), den Händler (grenzenlos direkt Ha...), die E-Mail-Adresse des Händlers (office[@]grenzenlosdir...), und die Rechnungsnummer (17V21504765741).

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The Curator of Printing and Graphic Arts posted on Teams “Come to the large classroom if you like type” so I hustled down there and got to help her sort a gorgeous font of wood type that's going to the printing studio.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)


“I think that the way [HB 15] went down is a really good sign. We’re hopeful that it means it doesn’t come back again, and that we can preserve some level of transparency for all Texans, because they deserve it.” texasobserver.org/police-recor…

#Texas #politics #USpol #news #police #HumanRights #journalism #media #TXlege

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This week: Epstein survivors demand release of the files, RFK Jr. is exposed in a brutal Senate hearing, and Trump takes U.S. military power into international waters. To dive deep into these stories, look no further. thinkbigpicture.substack.com/p…

JonChevreau reshared this.



5 September 1887 | A Polish Jew, Abraham Bier, was born in Tarnów.

In #Auschwitz from 5 May 1942.
No. 34707
He perished in the camp on 23 May 1942.






WSJ - HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. plans to announce that pregnant women’s use of Tylenol is potentially linked to autism. wsj.com/health/healthcare/rfk-…


140 anni fa veniva posata la prima pietra di una nota torre dell'orologio.

#bttf

#bttf
Questa voce è stata modificata (6 giorni fa)
in reply to eccoda

Oggi ricordiamo invece la morte (forse) di un grande scienziato.
#bttf
#bttf
Questa voce è stata modificata (4 giorni fa)



#NoiSiamoLeScuole questa settimana è dedicato ai nuovi Asili nido all’avanguardia in provincia di Cremona e di Brescia, realizzati grazie al #PNRR.

Qui tutti i dettagli ➡ mim.gov.



Engineering for Slow Internet Even When Not Stuck in Antarctica


With the days of dial-up and pitiful 2G data connections long behind most of us, it would seem tempting to stop caring about how much data an end-user is expected to suck down that big and wide broadband tube. This is a problem if your respective tube happens to be a thin straw and you’re located in a base somewhere in the Antarctic. Take it from [Paul Coldren], who was stationed at a number of Antarctic research stations as an IT specialist for a total of 14.5 months starting in August of 2022.
Prepare for hours of pain and retrying downloads. (Credit: Paul Coldren]Prepare for hours of pain and retrying downloads. (Credit: Paul Coldren]
As [Paul] describes, the main access to the Internet at these bases is via satellite internet, which effectively are just relay stations. With over a thousand people at a station like McMurdo at certain parts of the season, internet bandwidth is a precious commodity and latency is understandably high.

This low bandwidth scenario led to highly aggravating scenarios, such as when a web app would time out on [Paul] while downloading a 20 MB JavaScript file, simply because things were going too slow. Upon timing out, it would wipe the cache, redirect to an error page and have [Paul] retry and retry to try to squeeze within the timeout window. Instead of just letting the download complete in ~15 minutes, it would take nearly half an hour this way, just so that [Paul] could send a few kB worth of text in a messaging app.

In addition to these artificial timeouts – despite continuing download progress – there’s also the issue of self-updating apps, with a downloader that does not allow you to schedule, pause, resume or do anything else that’d make downloading that massive update somewhat feasible. Another thing here is distributed downloads, such as when hundreds of people at said Antarctic station are all trying to update MacOS simultaneously. Here [Paul] ended up just – painfully and slowly – downloading the entire 12 GB MacOS ISO to distribute it across the station, but a Mac might still try to download a few GB of updates regardless.

Updating Office for Mac at the South Pole made easy courtesy of Microsoft. (Credit: Paul Coldren)Updating Office for Mac at the South Pole made easy courtesy of Microsoft. (Credit: Paul Coldren)
This level of pain continued with smartphone updates, which do not generally allow one to update the phone’s OS from a local image, and in order to make a phone resume an update image download, [Paul] had to turn the phone off when internet connectivity dropped out – due to satellites going out of alignment – and turn it back on when connectivity was restored the next day.

Somewhat surprisingly, the Microsoft Office for Mac updater was an example of how to do it at least somewhat right; with the ability to pause and cancel, see the progress of the download and resumption of interrupted downloads without any fuss. Other than not having access to the underlying update file for download and distribution by e.g. Sneakernet, this was a pleasant experience alongside the many examples of modern-day hardware and software that just gave up and failed at the sight of internet speeds measured in kB/s.

Although [Paul] isn’t advocating that every developer should optimize their application and updater for the poor saps stuck on the equivalent of ISDN at a remote station or in a tub floating somewhere in the Earth’s oceans, he does insist that it would be nice if you could do something like send a brief text message via a messaging app without having to fight timeouts and other highly aggravating ‘features’.

Since [Paul] returned from his last deployment to the Antarctic in 2024 it appears that at least some of the stations have been upgraded to Starlink satellite internet, but this should not be taken as an excuse to not take his plea seriously.


hackaday.com/2025/09/05/engine…




Psst… Got a Second? Here Are the 2025 One-Hertz Challenge Winners


Even with teachers with names like Kirchhoff and Helmholtz, old Heinrich Hertz himself likely didn’t have the slightest idea that his name would one day become an SI unit. Less likely still would have been the idea that Hackaday would honor him with the 2025 One-Hertz Challenge.

The challenge was deliberately — dare we say, fiendishly? — simple: Do something, anything, but do it once a second. Flash a light, ring a bell, click a relay, or even spam comments on a website other than Hackaday; anything at all, but do it at as close to one Hertz as possible. These are our favorite kinds of contests, because the simplicity affords a huge canvas for the creative mind to paint upon while still providing an interesting technical constraint that’s just difficult enough to make things spicy.

And boy, did you respond! We’ve received over a hundred entries since we announced the contest back in June, meaning that many of you spent 4,662,000 seconds of your summer (at least those of you above the equator) rising to the challenge. The time was well spent, with projects that pushed the limits of what we even expected.

While we loved ’em all, we had to winnow them down to the top three, each of which receives a $150 gift certificate from our sponsor, DigiKey. Let’s take a look at them, along with our favorite runners-up.

Our Top Three


At the top of our judges’ list was “the electromechanicalanalogdigitalclock”, a project that clearly didn’t know what it wanted to be but nevertheless did it with a lot of style. [Christian]’s contraption pushes a lot of design buttons, starting with the mains-powered stepper motor generating a 1-Hz signal with a photochopper, which drives a 12-bit counter made from some CMOS logic chips and a digital-to-analog converter that drives some vintage moving-coil meters to display the time. There’s even a bit of circuit sculpture thrown in, with a brass frame supporting and isolating the noisy stepper motor on a spring suspension. Extra points were no doubt earned thanks to the Space:1999 and Star Trek models in the photos.

The electromechanicalanalogdigitalclock by [Christian].BEZICRON was inspired by [ekaggrat singh kalsi] playing with his daughter’s springy hair ties.Next up we have BEZICRON by [ekaggarat singh kalsi]. If this one looks familiar, it’s probably because we featured it back in January, when we had a difficult time describing exactly what this is. It’s a clock, sure, but its display is vastly different from anything we’ve ever seen before, based as it is on hair bands, of all things, that are bent and stretched into numerals by a series of intricate cams and levers. The idea is unique, the mechanism is complex, the design is striking, and the sinuous 1-Hz pulse of the colon is mesmerizing.

Our final gift certificate goes to [Tim], who managed to use candle flames as a time base. You’ve probably noticed candles guttering and flickering thanks to uneven wax melting or even drafts blowing the flame column around and thought they were fairly random. But [Tim] noticed that these oscillations were actually more stable and predictable than they appear, and used a wire sticking into the flame to trigger the capacitive sensor input on a CH32xxx microcontroller to measure the frequency, which was then divided down to flash an LED at 1-Hz. It’s the perfect combination of physics and electronics that extracts order from a seemingly stochastic in a weird and wonderful way.

Awesome Honorable Mentions


What’s always fun about Hackaday contests is the categories we come up with, which are sort of mini-games within the main challenge. And this time around didn’t disappoint, with projects that explored these side quests in fun and interesting ways.

Our “Ridiculous” category was all about tapping your inner Rube Goldberg and finding the least practical way to generate your 1-pps pulse train. Runners-up in this category included [Brian Stuparyk]’s electromechanical function generator, a pitchblende-powered “atomic” clock by [alnwlsn], and [Sean B]’s “Nothing but NAND” Nixie clock.

For the “Timelords” category, we were looking for the projects that pulled out all the stops to get as many zeroes as possible after the decimal point, and the entries didn’t disappoint. Check out this vintage atomic clock restoration by [CuriousMarc] and his merry band, [Lauri Pirttiaho]’s cheap and simple GPS sync for quartz wall clocks, or this GPS-disciplined crystal-oven oscillator by [Will Carver].

The horologically inclined were the target audience for the “Clockwork” category, which invited you to turn your one-per-second timebase into a unique and interesting timepiece. See [Simon Newhouse]’s Nixie-based frequency counter clock, the DCF77 clock [hayday] made from the 2022 Supercon Badge, or the beautiful bubble displays of [Andrew Tudoroi]’s RPi TinynumberHat9 clock.

And finally, what would a One-Hertz challenge be without the venerable 555 timer chip? Entries we liked from the “Coulda Used a 555” category include [Tom Goff]’s Bletchley-inspired Logic Bombe, this mind-bending, capacitor-free timer that [Mark Valentine] put together, and [Paul Gallagher]’s super annoying “One Hurts” clock — it’s worse than a cuckoo clock!

Everyone’s a Winner!


We’d love to give everyone a prize, but we’d be hard-pressed to manage that with so many cool and unusual projects. As they say, everyone’s a winner just for entering, and we think that’s especially true with contests like this, which bring out the best in everyone. Thanks to everyone who entered, the judges for sorting through everything and making the hard choices, and to our sponsor DigiKey. We’ll see you all again next time around!



Hackaday Podcast Episode 336: DIY Datasette, Egg Cracking Machine, and Screwing 3D Prints


Thunderstorms were raging across southern Germany as Elliot Williams was joined by Jenny List for this week’s podcast. The deluge outside didn’t stop the hacks coming though, and we’ve got a healthy smorgasbord for you to snack from. There’s the cutest ever data cassette recorder taking a tiny Olympus dictation machine and re-engineering it with a beautiful case for the Commodore 64, a vastly overcomplex machine for perfectly cracking an egg, the best lightning talk timer Hackaday has ever seen, and a demoscene challenge that eschews a CPU. Then in Quick Hacks we’ve got a QWERTY slider phone, and a self-rowing canoe that comes straight out of Disney’s The Sorcerer’s Apprentice sequence.

For a long time we’ve had a Field guide series covering tech in infrastructure and other public plain sight, and this week’s one dealt with pivot irrigation. A new subject for Jenny who grew up on a farm in a wet country. Then both editors are for once in agreement, over using self-tapping screws to assemble 3D-printed structures. Sit back and enjoy the show!

html5-player.libsyn.com/embed/…

Want to listen offline? Grab yourself an MP3 hot off the press.

Where to Follow Hackaday Podcast

Places to follow Hackaday podcasts:



Episode 336 Show Notes:

What’s that Sound?


  • Congrats to [1tR3x] who knew more about the music of 2001 Space Odyssey than I did!


Interesting Hacks of the Week:



Quick Hacks:



Can’t-Miss Articles:



hackaday.com/2025/09/05/hackad…



Estes Wants You to 3D Print Their New Model Rocket


The Estes line of flying model rockets have inspired an untold number of children and adults alike, thanks in part to their simplicity. From the design and construction of the rockets themselves to the reliability and safety of the modular solid-propellant motors, the company managed to turn actual rocket science into a family activity. If you could glue fins onto a cardboard tube and stick a plastic nosecone on the end, you were nearly ready for launch.

But what if you’re looking for something a bit more challenging? That’s where the new Estes Scorpio 3D comes in. Unlike the classic Estes kit, which included the fins, nosecone, and other miscellaneous bits of the rocket, the Scorpio kit requires you to 3D print your own parts. Do it right, and the company says you can send your creation to heights of 1,000 feet (305 m).

As several main components of the rocket are 3D printed, the Scorpio is intended to be a platform for fast and easy modification. Estes already provides STLs for a few different variants of the tail fins — this is not unlike some of the old kits, which would occasionally include different shaped fins for you to experiment with. But of course you’re also free to design your own components from scratch if you wish. A twist-lock mechanism built into the printed motor mount allows you to swap out the Scorpio’s fins in the field, no glue required.

While we appreciate the concept of the Scorpio 3D, we have to admit that the $40 USD price tag seems a bit excessive. After all, the user is expected to print the majority of the rocket’s parts on their own dime. According to the manual, the only thing you get with the kit (other than access to the digital files) is a couple of cardboard tubes, some stickers, and a parachute — the launch pad, igniter, and even motors are all sold separately.

Admittedly there’s a certain value in the Estes name and the knowledge that they’ve done their homework while putting this product together. But if you’re just looking to fire off some DIY rockets, we’d point you to the open source HEXA project as an alternative.

youtube.com/embed/WikanXBH4PE?…


hackaday.com/2025/09/05/estes-…






AI company Anthropic agrees to pay $1.5 billion to settle lawsuit from authors#AI nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/ant…
#ai



Der islamfaschistische Frauenhass ist tödlich. derstandard.at/story/300000028…


Odin has learned the Dutch words for “do you want to pet him?” which is a problem because he thinks I’m asking *him* if he wants to pet the humans and the answer is always yes

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⭕ Una veintena de países de América Latina alertan del despliegue militar de EEUU en la región. buff.ly/HaD2FJP
Reenviado desde Tiempo Argentino
(t.me/experienciainterdimension…)
in reply to 🌎 Experiencia interdimensional

La imagen muestra un grupo de soldados de la Fuerza Aérea de los Estados Unidos marchando en formación hacia un avión de transporte militar. Los soldados, vestidos con uniformes de camuflaje, caminan en fila india sobre una superficie mojada, reflejando la luz del cielo. Algunos de ellos portan banderas estadounidenses, que se alzan en el primer plano, añadiendo un toque de patriotismo a la escena. En el fondo, se puede ver un avión de transporte militar grande, posiblemente un C-17 Globemaster III, estacionado en una pista de aterrizaje. El cielo está nublado, y la atmósfera es solemne, sugiriendo un momento de preparación o despliegue. La escena captura un momento de disciplina y unidad, con los soldados avanzando hacia su destino.

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🌱 Energía utilizada: 0.219 Wh



Noticed this display yesterday when I went to get my Covid vaccination.

First reaction: Pride flags at CVS! Yay!

Second reaction: These are just called rainbow flags and they're attached to a headband. It's not the greatest of looks, IMHO. And at $3.99/headband, perhaps more cheap stuff doomed to go to landfill soon. But maybe still a fun thing for kids (and others)?

#Pride



TL;DR: Anthropic has agreed to a historic $1.5 billion settlement with book authors, marking the largest payout in U.S. copyright history and potentially reshaping how A.I. companies compensate rights holders for their works. nytimes.com/2025/09/05/technol… #law #tech #legaltech ⚖️ 🤖 #autosum

Technology Channel reshared this.