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youtu.be/Utv0jCQEXS0


RT @GaryMarcus
Could there possibly be a worse, less mnemonic nomenclature for these models?

Or a clearer sign that they are just trying stuff to see what sticks?

help.openai.com/en/articles/11…



#gazetadobrasil #jornalismo #noticias #politics Brasil registra primeiro caso de gripe aviária em granja comercial gazetabrasil.com.br/brasil/202…


José Manuel Mallón regresa al showcooking de la Feria del Vino de Valdeorras en su vigésima sexta edición vinetur.com/2025051687697/jose… #FeriaDelVino #VinoDeValdeorras #Showcooking #Gastronomía #Maridaje




"Starlink, Musk’s satellite internet company, had spent months trying to secure regulatory approval to sell internet access in the impoverished West African country. As head of Gambia’s communications ministry, Lamin Jabbi oversees the government’s review of Starlink’s license application. Jabbi had been slow to sign off and the company had grown impatient. Now the top U.S. government official in Gambia was in Jabbi’s office to intervene.

Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency loomed over the conversation. The administration had already begun freezing foreign aid projects, and early in the meeting, Cromer, a Biden appointee, said something that rattled Gambian officials in the room. She listed the ways that the U.S. was supporting the country, according to two people present and contemporaneous notes, noting that key initiatives — like one that funds a $25 million project to improve the electrical system — were currently under review.

Jabbi’s top deputy, Hassan Jallow, told ProPublica he saw Cromer’s message as a veiled threat: If Starlink doesn’t get its license, the U.S. could cut off the desperately needed funds. “The implication was that they were connected,” Jallow said."

propublica.org/article/trump-m…

#USA #Trump #Gambia #Africa #Musk #StarLink #Corruption #Kleptocracy



in reply to Fuchsmädchen

Das Bild zeigt eine atemberaubende Sonnenuntergangslandschaft. Der Himmel ist in sanften Farben von Blau zu Orange und Gelb übergegangen, wobei die Sonne am Horizont als leuchtender Kreis zu sehen ist. Die Wolken sind spärlich verteilt und reflektieren die warmen Farben des Sonnenuntergangs, was dem Bild eine malerische Atmosphäre verleiht. Im Vordergrund sind die Silhouetten von Bäumen und Hügeln zu erkennen, die sich gegen den Himmel abzeichnen. Die Landschaft wirkt ruhig und friedlich, und die Farben des Himmels erzeugen eine beruhigende Stimmung.

Bereitgestellt von @altbot, privat und lokal generiert mit Ovis2-8B

🌱 Energieverbrauch: 0.164 Wh



The place where we had our county Dem Party meeting tonight had a children’s art show up on the walls. I loved this first grader’s “Lady Liberty.” #democracy


Sources: OpenAI is expected to be a primary anchor tenant for a 5 gigawatt UAE data center, which could become one of the world's largest at 10 square miles (Bloomberg)

bloomberg.com/news/articles/20…
techmeme.com/250516/p23#a25051…




Arc’s new 24-foot electric boat is its cheapest yet
https://techcrunch.com/2025/05/16/arcs-new-24-foot-electric-boat-is-its-cheapest-yet/?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub

Posted into Latest TechCrunch Stories @latest-techcrunch-stories-Techcrunch



“It was a deal,” said Basem Naim, a member of Hamas political bureau who has previously engaged in direct talks with U.S. officials. He said the pledge was made by “Witkoff, himself.”...“If we release [Alexander], Trump will speak out thanking Hamas for its gesture, obliging Israel on the second day to open the borders and allow aid to come into Gaza, and [Trump would] call for an immediate ceasefire and to go for negotiations to end the war.”

#Gaza #Palestine #genocide

dropsitenews.com/p/witkoff-ham…




Die Bahn muss sich vor Gericht verantworten: Wie der DB Navigator Nutzerinnen und Nutzer trackt, Wahlmöglichkeiten einschränkt und gegen Datenschutzrecht verstößt – die wichtigsten Fragen und Antworten. 👇

kuketz-blog.de/bahn-vor-gerich…

#deutschebahn #bahn #dbnavigator #klage #datenschutz #dsgvo #tdddg #tracking

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Avevamo tempo, eh?
L’industria europea era solida, eh?
Il know-how non si copia, eh?
Le auto cinesi erano giocattoli, eh?

Belle favole.
Intanto là fuori il mondo è cambiato.
E mentre noi ci raccontavamo la storia della rana nella pentola, loro ci hanno acceso il fuoco sotto.
Oggi l’elettrico non è più una sfida.

È una resa dei conti.
E non è andata come ci aspettavamo.

#auto #autoelettriche #cina

futuroprossimo.it/2025/05/auto…

reshared this





"Meta is delaying the rollout of a flagship AI model, prompting internal concerns about the direction of its multibillion-dollar AI investments, people familiar with the matter said.

Company engineers are struggling to significantly improve the capabilities of its “Behemoth” large-language model, leading to staff questions about whether improvements over prior versions are significant enough to justify public release, the people said.

Early in its development, Behemoth was internally slated for an April release to coincide with Meta’s inaugural AI conference for developers. Meta put out two smaller models in its Llama AI model family ahead of the event, but later pushed an internal target for the larger Behemoth’s release to June. Now, it’s been delayed to fall or later.

Meta has previously drawn praise for the speed with which it’s caught up to rivals in the global AI arms race—spending billions of dollars along the way to develop the technology that powers chatbots on WhatsApp, Instagram and Facebook. Meta plans to spend up to $72 billion in capital expenditures this year, much of which will be used to help realize Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg’s grand ambitions for AI.

Zuckerberg and other Meta executives haven’t publicly committed to a timeline for Behemoth. The company could ultimately decide to release Behemoth sooner than expected, including by rolling out a more limited version. But Meta engineers and researchers are concerned its performance wouldn’t match public statements about its capabilities, the people said."

wsj.com/tech/ai/meta-is-delayi…

#AI #GenerativeAI #Meta #Llama #BigTech #AIHype #AIBubble #SiliconValley










"This isn’t a removal. It’s not lawful under the Immigration and Nationality Act. It doesn’t conform to anything that was previously passed in legislation, or [in] the Code of Federal Regulations ... Essentially, he was disappeared forcefully."

texasobserver.org/el-salvador-…
#ice

#ice




Trump administration in retreat on multiple legal fronts


The Trump administration has been an ongoing constitutional violation since Inauguration Day. The courts are catching up. Specious arguments are having their day in court and are losing badly—so badly, in fact, that the Trump administration has adopted the tactic of slow-walking judicial and congressional consideration of those specious arguments. That development should give us hope and confidence that justice will prevail ultimately, and possibly sooner rather than later!

###

An overview—and acknowledgment of the courageous organizations and lawyers leading the fight


On Thursday, the Trump administration was retreating on two significant legal matters: The question of birthright citizenship and the ability of the president to “impound” funds appropriated by Congress.

The birthright citizenship case consumed much of the oxygen across the media landscape. Some of the reports (not all) suggested that the male members of the Court1 were sympathetic to Trump's arguments. Not so! Most commentators correctly noted that nearly all of the justices rejected Trump's argument about birthright citizenship but seemed flummoxed on the remedy of nationwide class actions. (More on this below.)

The question of what happened in the birthright citizenship cases is important. However, the emerging trend is of greater importance: The Trump administration is retreating on multiple legal and legislative fronts. Today, I will focus on birthright citizenship and Trump's unconstitutional effort to impound funds appropriated by Congress.

Given the complexities of the arguments surrounding these topics, it can be challenging to see the trendlines, but they are unmistakable. As to birthright citizenship and impoundments, the Trump administration is seeking to delay the day of reckoning on the merits before the Supreme Court and Congress.

The fact that Trump is seeking to delay a determination on the merits signals his belief that he will lose. He is temporizing, trying to delay the day when his house of cards will crumble.

Trump's retreat is a testament to the outstanding work of legal advocacy organizations like the ACLU, CASA, Common Cause, Asian Law Caucus, Asian Pacific American Advocates, League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), Washington Lawyers’ Committee For Civil Rights, twenty-two state attorneys general, and many others.

In addition, leading law firms and lawyers stepped to the plate to represent plaintiffs in the birthright cases, including Arnold & Porter (John A. Freedman, Sally Pei, Jonathan L. Stern, and Ronald D. Lee).

At a time when the largest and most powerful firms in the American legal profession continue to bow and scrape before Trump, firms like Arnold & Porter are rightfully highlighting their pro bono work as they deliver on their commitment to underserved and vulnerable communities. See the linked video on Arnold & Porter’s website for insight into how firms can and should step up to their professional and ethical commitments: Pro Bono | Arnold & Porter.

Supreme Court hears oral argument in birthright citizenship case


Despite worrisome headlines, I believe we have reason to be optimistic about the short-term and long-term outcome in the birthright citizenship case. There is much ground to cover, and others have done a superb job—so I will not retrace their steps. If you want excellent commentary with details, see Mark Joseph Stern & Dahlia Lithwick in Slate and Chris Geidner on his Substack, Law Dork. 2

Before looking at a few details, it is helpful to note that the birthright citizenship cases raise two questions: (a) Is Trump’s order denying birthright citizenship unconstitutional, and (b) Is it appropriate to block Trump's executive order on birthright citizenship by using a nationwide injunction?

The answers to the two questions are (a) Yes, Trump's executive order denying birthright citizenship is unconstitutional, and (b) Yes, it is appropriate to use a nationwide injunction to block the executive order.

The only question before the Supreme Court during Thursday’s oral argument was (b)—whether a nationwide injunction is appropriate. The Trump administration did not want the Court to address (a) the constitutionality of Trump's executive order denying birthright citizenship.

Trump did not want the Supreme Court to rule on the merits of the executive order because every court at the district court and appellate level to consider the matter has concluded that Trump's executive order is likely unconstitutional.

Although Trump did not want the Supreme Court to consider the merits of his executive order banning birthright citizenship, it turned out to be very difficult to consider the scope of the remedy, i.e., a nationwide injunction, without considering the merits of Trump's executive order.

And the single most important takeaway from today’s hearing before the Supreme Court is that there is little to no support for Trump's ban on birthright citizenship.

As Mark Joseph Stern and Dahlia Lithwick write

[N]ot one justice even hinted that they think Trump should eventually win on the merits and get the green light to start stripping birthright citizenship from immigrants’ children.


The good news is that the nine justices of the Supreme Court were able to see the bad-faith, disingenuous arguments of the Trump administration up close and personal. The US Solicitor General, John Sauer, made ridiculous and dangerous arguments that seemed to take the breath away from some justices.

As widely noted, Justice Barrett grilled Sauer over whether the administration would follow binding precedent. Suaer repeatedly said, “Generally, yes . . . .” In that context, “Generally,” means “No,” the administration will not follow binding precedent.

Sauer effectively told the Court, “The administration doesn’t have to follow Supreme Court rulings.” It was a clarifying moment and a personal affront to the Justices. They have now had a taste of what the rest of the world has been dealing with for the last three months. Good!

And Ketanji Brown Jackson distilled the administration’s arguments into a “catch-me-if-you-can” scenario in which every plaintiff must file their own lawsuit to challenge the validity of Trump's executive order. That approach leads to chaos and madness. And the only reason to adopt such an approach is to avoid the day on which the Supreme Court finally tells Trump his executive order is unconstitutional.

Inviting the Court to start down the road to madness and chaos as a way of avoiding a loss on the merits of a patently unconstitutional order again demonstrates the administration’s bad faith in dealing with the judicial process. Allowing the Justices to see that bad faith up close and personal is clarifying and helpful.

Perhaps the strongest argument was made by New Jersey Solicitor General Jeremy Feigenbaum. Per Stern and Lithwick, Feigenbaum

hammered to the court, pruning back these injunctions to the plaintiffs alone would mean that birthright citizenship is protected in 22 states but not in 28 others. “We’ve never in this country’s history since the Civil War had your citizenship turn on when you cross state lines.”


Suggesting that birthright citizenship as a US citizen would depend on the state of one’s birth is ludicrous and cuts at the foundation of the United States of America.

The Solicitor General of the US was forced to make such absurd arguments because the administration is desperate to avoid a ruling on the merits of Trump's executive order.

So, the risible arguments by John Sauer on Thursday are a sign of the administration in full retreat.

We have the administration on the run. We need to keep up the pressure, with the help of legal advocacy organizations and principled law firms.

Trump walks-back effort to obtain congressional ratification of DOGE cuts


The “cuts” by DOGE are unconstitutional. All of them. It is a bedrock principle of the Constitution that Congress appropriates funds and the president “faithfully executes” the laws that appropriate those funds.

By withholding (“impounding”) funds appropriated by Congress, Trump is violating the Constitution. Every day. That ongoing constitutional violation is a scandal that is being ignored by the media.

Trump is now seeking to avoid a confrontation in Congress, testing his ongoing unconstitutional conduct. He is again in retreat—because he does not want to know the answer that Congress will give.

Here is a quick example: On January 21, 2025, Trump withheld funds appropriated to USAID. A constitutional violation occurs on the first day of the impoundment. And the next. And the next, and next, and next . . . .The initial violation is ongoing until Trump complies with the appropriation mandate by Congress.

Now multiply that single impoundment by thousands of additional “cuts”—unconstitutional impoundments—by DOGE. Every one of those “cuts” is a violation of the Constitution that continues every day that funds are illegally withheld.

The media doesn’t care about this story. Or maybe it doesn’t understand the Constitution or the nature of DOGE’s actions. But the media reports the “cuts” as if DOGE has the authority to make them. It does not.

Cases challenging the unconstitutional impoundments are wending their way through the federal courts. Yesterday, I discussed the sweeping ruling by US District Judge Susan Illston that tees up the constitutionality of DOGE’s actions writ large. Ultimately, the courts will tell Trump that DOGE’s cuts violate Article I of the Constitution.

In the meantime, someone in the Trump administration came up with the “brilliant” idea of having Congress “ratify” DOGE’s unconstitutional cuts—thereby heading off a judicial decision that Trump has been violating the Constitution every day since Inauguration Day. See Talking Points Memo, Trump Allies Prep Plan To Make DOGE Seem Like A Good, Normal, Law-Abiding Operation.

As explained in the TPM article,

Republican lawmakers, hoping to save face with the public, have been asking the Trump administration to send in a rescission package in order to formalize the cuts he and DOGE have been enacting unilaterally.


If Trump were to ask Congress to ratify his unconstitutional cuts, he would need to identify the nature and amount of those cuts. In effect, Trump would be asking for forgiveness for his unlawful cuts when he should have sought permission.

[The 1974 Impoundment Control Act gives a president 45 days to notify Congress of the intention to impound funds, which starts a clock for congressional approval. Trump gave no notice to Congress about any impoundments.]

Asking forgiveness for the unconstitutional cuts would, of course, require Trump to identify the unlawful cuts and their amounts. The approach would effectively be a confession by Trump of his unlawful behavior.

Trump now realizes that asking Congress for post-facto approval of unconstitutional conduct is a bad idea—and so has withdrawn the effort. See Talking Points Memo, Trump Decides Now Is Not The Time To Make Republicans Rubber Stamp His DOGE Power Grab—Maybe Later.

Per the TPM article, Trump has decided to delay seeking approval for DOGE cuts by two years—which is the same as “never.” In truth, Trump doesn’t want to know whether Congress will approve the DOGE cuts on a retroactive basis (which would not comply with the Impoundment Control Act in any event).

To save face, Trump's surrogates claim that he will file a suit to invalidate the Impoundment Control Act. Such talk is empty blather by Trump. Several lawsuits holding that Trump violated the Constitution and the Impoundment Control Act will make their way to the Supreme Court long before Trump can challenge the Impoundment Control Act.

When the issue is posed to the Supreme Court, Trump's challenge to the Impoundment Control Act will receive the same derisive welcome as his birthright citizenship order received on Thursday.

Trump's “two-year delay” in seeking Congressional ratification and his pie-in-the-sky threat to challenge the Impoundment Control Act are signs of a hasty retreat.

Trump is losing. He knows it. He seeks delay to avoid his day of reckoning. That undercurrent runs beneath the Supreme Court hearing on birthright citizenship and his decision not to seek congressional ratification of DOGE cuts.

Concluding Thoughts.


There is more, but I hope I have helped readers to see beyond the details and understand that we are winning and that Trump is retreating.

I will hold a Substack livestream on Saturday, May 17, at Noon Eastern / 9:00 a.m. Pacific. Everyone is welcome. Join on the Substack App on your phone or tablet.

My conversation with Marc Elias of Democracy Docket can be viewed here: Democracy Docket x Robert Hubbell - Zoom. It is 30 minutes long but I hope you will take the time to watch through the end. Marc Elias and Democracy Docket are doing tremendous work in the defense of democracy. I was inspired anew after talking to Marc. If you want to support Democracy Docket, the link is here: Support Democracy Docket.

A final note on the Supreme Court. Readers have understandable anxiety every time the Supreme Court hears a case challenging Trump’s unlawful actions. The anxiety is understandable given the Court’s atrocious decisions in Dobbs and Trump v. US (and others).

But we should not shrink from pushing for Supreme Court review of Trump’s actions. We need to know which side of democracy the Court is on. While I have very modest hopes that we will receive some support from the Court, we need to know sooner rather than later if the Court will abandon us again.

If the Court does abandon us, we may need to change tactics. Let’s find out and move on. The Court isn’t going to save us. It might help us. Or not. Either way, it is up to us. It always is. And we are up to the task.

Talk to you tomorrow!

###

Daily Dose of Perspective


1

I am having trouble coming up with an appropriate nickname for the male members of the Court. Suggestions are welcome!

2

Chris Geidner’s Substack, Law Dork, is first-rate and deserves a better name! Chris has quickly become one of the leading commentators on the federal judiciary. There is nothing “dorky” about Chris or his analysis. I subscribe to Geidner’s Substack and follow him on BlueSky. (@chrisgeidner.bsky.social).

in reply to PhilipTheBucket

I can't get past the irony of this article being on fascist friendly platform when it complains about fascism.
Questa voce è stata modificata (5 mesi fa)


I had a lovely bimble in the woods today. Coed Y Foel is a Woodland Trust nature reserve. Ancient sessile oak woodland covers one side of a valley and the other’s been (re)planted. A stream and marshland run along the bottom. I learned that the ancient woodland was felled in WWI and the oak regrew from coppice stools. After grazing was stopped in the late 1980s, all the woodland under storey species (bluebells, bilberries, holly etc) returned. This fills me with hope. 💚

#FootpathFriday #nature

Questa voce è stata modificata (5 mesi fa)


Trump acknowledges starvation in Gaza as Israeli airstrikes kill nearly 100 theguardian.com/world/2025/may…


When I first saw Halt and Catch Fire series, I was amazed many times by different moments. Especially the fact that my dream was shown there: indie game developer buys a house on wheels and goes to a place where there are no people and works on a new game. I still dream about it


I didn't think I'd be listening to absolutely banging (checks description) Armenian funeral-themed dark blues folk jazz today, but what do I know about life. But it's amazing!
Discovered via idly clicking through multiple "People who liked this thing you liked also like..." dialogues. 😄

thedeadbrothers.bandcamp.com/a…

#Music #Jazz #Blues

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Europe’s electricity grid is outdated and risks derailing fossil fuel phase out, report finds.

Over 1,700 gigawatts of renewable energy projects across 16 countries are stuck in the queue to be connected to the electricity grid. #ClimateChange

euronews.com/green/2025/05/13/…

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My first ever harvest!! diningandcooking.com/2073692/m… #Gardening #Vegetable #VegetableGardening



my #followfriday🧵 for 5/16 (because i'm bored)

1/?

First of all, an amazing artist:

@dustrial.net (not on masto directly unfortunately)

dustrial.net/ <-- store, go help them (**this is unpaid**, and i only own things from them with my own money)

Some examples of my favorite designs:

Questa voce è stata modificata (5 mesi fa)
in reply to Nullstring 🏴‍☠️

ENTERTAINMENT PURPOSES ONLY. THIS IS NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE. TERMS AND CONDITIONS APPLY. USE AT YOUR OWN RISK. CONSULT YOUR DOCTOR TO SEE IF PROJECT MAYHEM IS RIGHT FOR YOU.


Differenze tra #Nazionalismo e #Patriottismo passando per #Sovranismo youtu.be/s4FiWAR7N6I?si=-TjVt0… via @YouTube


There should be no billionaires. But if you're going to be a billionaire, giving out two million dollars in cash money--$1000 each to the graduates of Bridgewater State in MA--is a small thing you can do.

Spotted here (also mentioned in the Boston Globe).

bsky.app/profile/ryancordell.o…

They didn't mention that he was going to be the graduation speaker beforehand because this is the fourth year he's done this at a state school in Massachusetts.



Apple Music has added an option to let you transfer your library and playlists from Spotify and other music-streaming services. The feature is only available in Australia and New Zealand for now, but it should roll out in other countries in the near future.
alternativeto.net/news/2025/5/…


X X^t can be faster

Link: arxiv.org/abs/2505.09814
Discussion: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4…



Donald greenlights firearm attachments that turn rifles into murder sprees while pretending to champion safety; this grotesque cynicism endangers communities for his base’s applause. www.rawstory.com/tru...

Expert gobsmacked as Trump pus...



Renault e Roland-Garros 2025: le novità
@motori
🚗 🚗 🚗
Renault protagonista a Roland-Garros 2025 con la 4 Savane 4x4 Concept e la 5 Turbo 3E. Innovazione, sportività e mobilità sostenibile in primo piano.
motori.it/renault-e-roland-gar…
#motori #auto

Motori - Gruppo Forum reshared this.





Depois disto e das trapalhadas com a #Spinumviva e o IRS Jovem, não tenho dúvidas que quem votar AD no próximo domingo só pode ser apelidado de P A T E TA (vulgo, PATETA):

"A queda da economia portuguesa de 0,5% no primeiro trimestre foi o segundo pior desempenho em cadeia na zona euro, revelou o Eurostat. Entre todos os países que divulgaram números até ao momento, só três registaram uma contração nos primeiros três meses de 2025: Eslovénia (-0,8%), Portugal (-0,5%) e Hungria (-0,2%). Na ponta oposta da tabela sobressaem Irlanda (3,2%), Chipre (1,3%) e Polónia (0,7%). A Alemanha deixou para trás as quedas e conseguiu subir 0,2%, depois da contração de -0,2% no último trimestre de 2024. O PIB da zona euro avançou 0,3%, tal como no conjunto da União Europeia. Na variação homóloga, onde Portugal esteve positivo (1,6%), o PIB dos países da moeda única manteve o ritmo com que terminou o ano passado (1,2%). Irlanda (10,9%), Polónia (3,8%) e Lituânia (3,2%) registaram os melhores desempenhos. Eslovénia (-0,8%) e Áustria (-0,7%) foram os piores."

expresso.pt/semanario/primeiro…

#Portugal #Economia #Crise #AD #PSD #Montenegro




Stationsplein, Leeuwarden, zondag 1 juni om 11:45 CEST [quote][url=https://linktr.ee/frieslandforpalestine]Friesland for Palestine[/url], [url=https://www.instagram.com/de_deblokkeerfriezen/]DEblokkeerfriezen[/url] ([url=https://www.instagram.com/p/DJY0c5
Giu 1
Wij trekken een rode lijn: Hand in hand tegen genocide
Dom 11:45 - 12:05
Todon Acties
Friesland for Palestine, DEblokkeerfriezen (bron)


Wij trekken een rode lijn!

Op zondag 1 juni vormen we een levende rode lijn door Leeuwarden, om een vuist te maken tegen de gruwelijkheden in Gaza.

Er vindt een genocide plaats, en onze regering staat het toe.

Wij eisen een fundamentele koerswijziging van de politiek om oorlogsmisdaden, etnische zuiveringen en genocide niet langer toe te staan.

En daar hebben we jou bij nodig!

Kom op 1 juni, de Dag van het Kind, om 11.45 naar de fontein op het Stationsplein in Leeuwarden. Kom in het rood gekleed!

We vormen hand in hand een zo lang mogelijke lijn, startend bij de fontein.

Om 11.59 maken we een minuut lang een oorverdovend kabaal om te laten weten: wij pikken het niet meer! Stop de genocide!

We blijven na de lawaaiminuut hand in hand staan tot 12:05.

Sluit je aan bij de rode lijn, en laat zien dat ook jij het niet meer accepteert!

In het kort:

Wat: een levende rode lijn

Wanneer: zondag 1 juni om 11:45

Waar: start fontein LOVE Stationsplein, Leeuwarden.

Waarom: wij willen een einde aan de genocide!

Wat heb je nodig: een rood kledingstuk of deken, iets om lawaai mee te maken.

Voor wie: iedereen die de boodschap steunt.



KIOXIA and Linus Media Group Set World Record for Pi Calculation


Linus Tech Tips has just set the world record for calculating the most digits of pi, at 300,000,000,000,000 (three hundred trillion), breaking the former record of 202 trillion set in 2024.

the video they made about it if you're interested.

Questa voce è stata modificata (5 mesi fa)




Rassemblement pour une paix juste et durable entre Palestiniens et Israéliens
samedi 17 à 14h, Place Stalingrad, Paris
agendamilitant.org/a6461 #Palestine




Anyone inclined to read some very basic textbook on anthropology to understand the timeline of the formation of the state could get such a textbook right here online for free

openstax.org/books/introductio…



Shot from the archives. Taken whilst doing a trek around the Mont-Blanc
//
Photo de mes archives. Photo prise durant le tour du Mont-Blanc

#fujifilm #fujifilmx10 #summer #mountains #landscape #montblanc #alps #frenchalps #montagnes #Alpes #paysage



New Open-Source Tool Spotlight 🚨🚨🚨

pwncat is more than a basic reverse shell handler—it's a post-exploitation platform. With features like PTY spawning, privilege escalation automation, and persistence management, it simplifies red team operations across Linux and now Windows (alpha). Python 3.9+ required. #CyberSecurity #RedTeamTools

🔗 Project link on #GitHub 👉 github.com/calebstewart/pwncat

#Infosec #Cybersecurity #Software #Technology #News #CTF #Cybersecuritycareer #hacking #redteam #blueteam #purpleteam #tips #opensource #cloudsecurity

— ✨
🔐 P.S. Found this helpful? Tap Follow for more cybersecurity tips and insights! I share weekly content for professionals and people who want to get into cyber. Happy hacking 💻🏴‍☠️



Fungus

This is not the sharpest photo I’ve ever taken. But I’m amazed that it exists. Three years ago, I bought a 5x7 Press Graflex SLR. It’s a beast. It takes a less common type of film holder, and it’s taken me all this time to actually find some. So this morning, I finally got to shoot with this monster. It’s not in great shape. The tensioner is wonky and doesn’t display the correct number. The spring back isn’t as firmly attached as it should be. The aperture on the lens is messed up and only adjusts a little, probably between f/5.6 and 8, near as I can tell. But I got a photo out of it anyway (I got another one, but it’s more out of focus and has a light leak, so I’m not sharing that one). When I get some money, I am definitely going to have this camera serviced. It used to belong to a photographer who worked as a research chemist at Kodak, Grant Haist. I look forward to making it work again and putting it to good use.

#BelieveInFilm

The bottom of a two trunked tree shows black mushrooms growing on it and a bit of stuff growing where the two trunks fork off.



All the "Biden decline cover-up" coverage just seems wild in the context of the current president's obvious decline (which isn't being reported on).

RE: bsky.app/profile/did:plc:yf6hc…


in reply to みやくモード

trying to finally finish up this new final destination everyone’s talking about
a woman on a plane looking paranoid telling a man “Somethings going to happen. There'll be an accident!”