Salta al contenuto principale



@RaccoonForFriendica rilasciata nuova versione 0.1.0-alpha28 con:

  • possibilità di impostare la visibilità predefinita per i nuovi post e le risposte,
  • possibilità di segnalare utenti e post,
  • fix selezione immagini da galleria su versioni di Android < 11,
  • fix compatibilità Mastodon per il caricamento degli allegati,
  • miglioramento rendering dei post (liste, allegati, anteprime, contatori),
  • propagazione eventi di cancellazione post nella paginazione dei feed,
  • ottimizzazione uso della memoria per il caricamento delle anteprime immagini,
  • aggiunta localizzazione in tedesco.

#friendica #friendicadev #androidapp #androiddev #fediverseapp #kotlin #kmp #compose #multiplatform #opensource #foss #buildinpublic #livefasteattrash

reshared this



Alessandro Di Battista al TPI Fest 2024: “Israele è il peggior stato terrorista al mondo”


@Politica interna, europea e internazionale
“Israele è il peggior stato terrorista al mondo”: lo dichiara senza troppi giri di parole Alessandro Di Battista al TPI Fest 2024, in programma per il terzo anno consecutivo presso la “Tettoia Nervi”, in piazza Lucio Dalla a Bologna. “Nel 2016 – afferma l’ex deputato del



Upgraded Raster Laser Projector Goes RGB


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We’ve covered a scanning laser project by Ben Make’s Everything last year, and now he’s back with a significant update. [Ben]’s latest project now offers a higher resolution and RGB lasers. A couple of previous versions of the device used the same concept of a rotating segmented mirror synchronised to a pulsed laser diode to create scanlines. When projected onto a suitable surface, the distorted, pixelated characters looked quite funky, but there was clearly room for improvement.
20300526More scanlines and a faster horizontal pixel rate
The previous device used slightly inclined mirrors to deflect the beam into scanlines, with one mirror per scanline limiting the vertical resolution. To improve resolution, the mirrors were replaced with identically aligned mirrors of the type used in laser printers for horizontal scanning. An off-the-shelf laser galvo was used for vertical scanning, allowing faster scanning due to its small deflection angle. This setup is quicker than then usual vector galvo application, as the smaller movements require less time to complete. Once the resolution improvement was in hand, the controller upgrade to a Teensy 4 gave more processing bandwidth than the previous Arduino and a consequent massive improvement in image clarity.

Finally, monochrome displays don’t look anywhere near as good as an RGB setup. [Ben] utilised a dedicated RGB laser setup since he had trouble sourcing the appropriate dichroic mirrors to match available lasers. This used four lasers (with two red ones) and the correct dichroic mirrors to combine each laser source into a single beam path, which was then sent to the galvo. [Ben] tried to find a DAC solution fast enough to drive the lasers for a proper colour-mixing input but ended up shelving that idea for now and sticking with direct on-off control. This resulted in a palette of just seven colours, but that’s still a lot better than monochrome.

The project’s execution is excellent, and care was taken to make it operate outdoors with a battery. Even with appropriate safety measures, you don’t really want to play with high-intensity lasers around the house!

Here’s the previous version we covered, a neat DIY laser galvo using steppers, and a much older but very cool RGB vector projector.

youtube.com/embed/fEPicBSYeNQ?…

Thanks to [Chan] for the tip!


hackaday.com/2024/09/18/upgrad…



PODCAST GARAGEPUNK


iyezine.com/the-saint-and-allk…

@Musica Agorà



FLOSS Weekly Episode 801: JBang — Not Your Parents Java Anymore


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This week Jonathan Bennett and Jeff Massie chat with Max Rydahl Andersen about JBang, the cross-platform tool to run Java as a system scripting language. That’s a bit harder than it sounds, particularly to take advantage of Java’s rich debugging capabilities and the ecosystem of libraries that are available. Tune in to get the details, as well as how polyglot files are instrumental to making JBang work!


youtube.com/embed/5qTyyMyU2hQ?…

Did you know you can watch the live recording of the show Right on our YouTube Channel? Have someone you’d like us to interview? Let us know, or contact the guest and have them contact us! Take a look at the schedule here.

play.libsyn.com/embed/episode/…

Direct Download in DRM-free MP3.

If you’d rather read along, here’s the transcript for this week’s episode.

Places to follow the FLOSS Weekly Podcast:


hackaday.com/2024/09/18/floss-…



Fediforum happened this week, mozilla.social shuts down, and Mastodon announces the Fediverse Discovery Project.


Last Week in Fediverse – ep 84

Welcome back to another update. Some short housekeeping notes: Last Week in Fediverse will now release every Wednesday. Furthermore, I’ve split all news about Bluesky and the ATmosphere into it’s own separate newsletter, Last Week in the ATmosphere. I originally wanted to keep them together, but the newsletters were simply getting too big, so it was time to split them. Lots of news this week with FediForum, a Fediverse Discovery Project, and mozilla.social shutting down, so lets dive in.

The news


The fourth edition of FediForum happened this week, a three-day unconference with speed demos of fediverse projects as well as some 40 open sessions about anything related to the fediverse. There were 14 demos, of which the video recordings should be available soon. Two demos stood out to me, showing products that have not been seen before, with Newsmast with channel.org, and Darius Kazemi’s ActivityPub Data Observatory. While there were lots of other great demos as well (Bandwagon for example), these mainly featured existing products.

Channel.org is the latest project by Newsmast, and is a way for organisations, nonprofits, and news publishers to build their own channel for outreach. It is fully connected to the fediverse with the front-end providing a clear and simplified interface that simply shows the latest posts by a channel. This can be seen with the demo Channel for the Kamala Harris Group, which recently got switched over to use Patchwork, Newsmast other fediverse project. Channel.org is based on Patchwork, which is a plug-in architecture that Mastodon server admins can run on top of their Mastodon server. Patchwork is getting close to being released, and Newsmast is currently looking for admins who are willing participate. Patchwork is free and publicly available, while Channel.org will require a paid membership and targets larger public organisations.

The ActivityPub Data Observatory allows fediverse developers to scan the structure (not the content!) of data that gets send around on the fediverse, allowing developers to easily compare how different sofware structures their ActivityPub data. For example, you can easily compare how Misskey structures the ActivityPub code of a note, versus how Mastodon sends the ActivityPub code for a note. The open-ended nature of ActivityPub allows developers to give their own spin on implementing ActivityPub

As for the sessions, one recurring theme I noted is the need and demand for spaces to discuss the governance and social side of the fediverse and fediverse developments. While there are spaces for the technical aspects of the discussion of the fediverse and the protocol with the SocialCG, the SocialHub and the Fediverse Developer Network, these communities are less accessible to the technical inclined people. This is a conversation that also has come up during previous FediForum sessions. The Fediverse Governance Report also notes a lack of formal channels for Federated Diplomacy. While the need and demand is clearly there, it seems to be hard to figure out a way to establish such communications channels in a way that also establishes them as legitimate places for discussions and diplomacy.

Another aspect that stood out to me is the lack of discussions that I noticed about Bluesky during FediForum, and what lessons can be learned that can be applied to the fediverse. Bluesky has managed to grow significantly bigger than the fediverse at this point, with around 5 times as many monthly active users, as well as onboarding the Brazilian community. It seems to me that it is worth reflecting on why that is, and how the fediverse can better show itself as a good, ethical social network that people would like to join.

Fediverse Discovery Providers


The organisation behind Mastodon (Mastodon gGmbH) has announced a new project, Fediscovery, that explores decentralised search and discovery for the fediverse. The project got funded by NGI Search, and “explores the possibilities for better search and discovery on the Fediverse in the form of an optional, pluggable service. This service should be decentralized, independent of any one specific Fediverse service and respect user choice and privacy.” Mastodon gGmbH is explicitly not building only for Mastodon, they make it clear that they intend Fediscovery to be used by the wider fediverse, not only Mastodon.

What Mastodon gGmbH is building here is what they call a ‘Fediverse Auxiliary Service Providers’. These auxiliary service providers can potentially do a variety of different services. The Fediscovery project is about building one of these service providers, a disovery provider, as a minimum proof of concept and as a demonstration what types of services other people can build as well. The plans are currently still in the very early stages, and more information expected at the end of September. For my own understanding I think of a Fediverse Auxiliary Service Provider as pretty much a Relay, with some minor yet-to-be-announced differences.

Mastodon gGmbH is also explicit in focusing on opt-in consent for the service, stating that it will “only ingest content from creators who opted in to discovery in the first place. Instances sending content to discovery providers should make sure to only send such content in the first place as well. All other information a discovery provider gathers should be anonymous.”

During a FediForum session about Fediscovery, Mastodon CTO Renaud Chaput confirmed that between 8% and 10% of active accounts have opted into Mastodon’s search, a year after it has been released. It indicates one of the fundamental challenges of any design that is opt-in: very few people will change the default settings, irregardless of what the settings are about. As Discovery and Search systems gain value by covering a bigger network, it shows the fundamental tensions that Mastodon gGmbH will have to grapple with while building Fediscovery.

Mozilla shuts down mozilla.social fediverse server


Mozilla has announced that they will shut down the mozilla.social server in December 2024. The server was announced in December 2022 as a way to ‘explore healthy social media alternative’. The project was originally quite big in scope, with planned integrations to log in with Firefox, and the GitHub repo showed their own mobile clients, and a custom front-end based on Elk. In 2023 Mozilla started to very slowly open up in a private beta, but the number of people getting access has been low. In February 2024 Mozilla downsizes as it refocuses on Firefox, scaling back their investments in various products, including their mozilla.social fediverse server. In an accompanying memo Mozilla stated at the time: “The actions we’re taking today will make this strategic correction, working through a much smaller team to participate in the Mastodon ecosystem and more rapidly bring smaller experiments to people that choose to live on the mozilla.social instance.”

It seems like these more rapid smaller experiments never came, nor did it seem that Mozilla was particularly interested in growing the server. I honestly cannot find out if the server ever opened up for open registrations after they ran a waitlist for a long time, but it seems like it they have not. At any rate, the experiment stayed small, and mozilla.social currently has just below 300 active users.

The shutdown of Mozilla.social does raise questions about the server-centric model that the fediverse is based around: are there organisations that are willing to run large general-purpose fediverse servers, and have the ability to handle the infrastructure costs and moderation requirements that come with it. Mozilla seemed like it would be a good organisation to potentially do that. With Mozilla now pulling back, focusing on smaller servers might be a more logical direction going forward.

In Other News


  • Threads has figured out how maximise publicity by making minimal incremental updates to their ActivityPub implementation, edition 501.
  • Threaded is a Mastodon client that advertised a ‘Threads-like’ interface. Meta got in touch and threatened legal action, and now the app is renamed to Bubble.
  • Bonfire showcases how with third-party extensions scientists can display ‘relevant data about their work and research topics directly on their profiles.’ Bonfire does not yet know when the platform will launch.
  • The client Kaiteki, which focused on being a client for all the different microblogging platforms in the fediverse, stops development.
  • The German Federal Ministry of Education and Research had stopped using their Mastodon account in October 2023, and after not posting for most of the year they said they’d close the account. After a large pushback from the community they reconsidered the decision and said they’d continue using the account again.
  • Mastodon’s new author byline feature is now available for everyone.
  • Goblin is an Tumblr-like platform for the fediverse, that recently opened up for signups. Someone also made a Cohost user style.
  • The new Trust and Safety Taskforce with the SocialCG has set up an issue tracker for protocol level and/or specification changes to improve trust and safety on the fediverse.
  • mastodon adoptions article link.springer.com/article/10.1…
  • The Fediverse Berlin Day had multiple sessions about, well, the fediverse. Full live stream available here, with the German publisher ARD talking about their fediverse experience and strategy. Evan Prodromou also gave a talk about a ‘bigger, better fediverse’, which you can watch here. I do want to note that I find it very hard to square Prodromou’s estimation of 10 million federated Threads account with the fact that Mastodon.social (which accounts for a quarter of the entire fediverse’ monthly active users) currently knows about 18000 federated Threads accounts.


The Links


That’s all for this week. You can also check out my post with the weekly news on atproto here.

#fediverse

fediversereport.com/last-week-…





Bluesky adds video support, announces 10 million accounts, and more!


Last Week in the ATmosphere

Welcome to the weekly update on everything that’s happened on Bluesky and the broader network called the ATmosphere. A short introduction for people who might not know me: I’m Laurens Hof, and the last year I’ve written a monthly update on all the news that’s happened on Bluesky. I’ve written a weekly newsletter about everything that is happening in the fediverse, the other decentralised social network, as well over the last year and a half. And now you can expect even more regular updates on Bluesky and the ATmosphere as well, coming out every Wednesday. It’s been a busy week* with video, 10 million accounts, and more!

The News


Bluesky has added support for video. The feature has been often requested, especially from the Brazilian community. Over the last few weeks the team has made it their top priority to launch the feature as soon as possible. Videos have indeed been very popular on Bluesky, with 169 years of videos being served within 2 days, and half a million videos posted within 4 days. Each video can be one minute long, and people can upload 25 videos per day.

There are two things that stand out to me about Bluesky’s video support: videos have shown to be highly popular on Bluesky, and the openness of the ATmosphere network allows people to build new types of network that are more catered towards watching videos specifically. I’m curious to what extend this will actually happen. Furthermore videos require significantly more resources than text posts, so it is worth watching how this impacts Blueskys thinking about costs and monetization.


Bluesky crossed 10 million accounts this week, of which around 4 million came in the last month or so after the ban in Brazil on X. It now has around 5.5 million monthly active users. User retention after this new signup wave is also notably high, with daily active users peaking at 1.91 million, and staying at 1.57 million some two weeks later. Every signup wave has a significant amount of churn, as it is very difficult to get people to change their habits and start regularly using a new social platform, and Bluesky’s churn seems low to me. Bluesky celebrated this milestone by letting everyone know which number they joined the network with, and how early they were. The amount of people sharing it shows that people on Bluesky definitely like to show off their early-adopter status.


The adoption of Bluesky by the Brazilian community as the default social network after the ban on X has continued. After the dust has settled it looks like the Brazilians now fairly consistently represent three quarters of the total posts on the network. President Lula (‘s social media team) shows that they’re aware of the features that Bluesky offers, and has used a Starter Pack to promote different candidates for elections. Some of the biggest football clubs in Brazil have established an official presence as well, such as Corinthians and Vasco da Gama. When goals get scored during the games, this is now clearly visible in significant spikes in posts, with the number of posts per second doubling temporarily. Another developer made a directory of Brazilian accounts on Bluesky, sorted by various categories, to help people onboard as well. A Brazilian esports organisation now sells handles with their (sub)domain to raise money for the organisation as well as for people to show they support the team.

The Brazilian Bluesky community also had their first major cultural moment this week. During a televised debate between electoral rivals for mayor of Sao Paolo, one of the candidates hit one of the other candidates with a chair. Videos of the event went viral, and over the last two days the majority of the network’s top posts have been memes about the event. One of the most popular posts described it as ‘a really canonical event on this social network’. This is also in contrast with Threads, where the event seems to have not gone viral at all.


Skyware is a new lightweight labeler server. Originally, the labeling system was designed by Bluesky to be a content moderation system. Over time, the labeling system has slowly transformed, away from content moderation, and towards labelers that you can self-apply for silly or more practical use-cases as indicating your pronouns (or to recreate Orkut). Skyware is the next evolution in this, where the software is only for labeling accounts, and the moderation part of the system is stripped away altogether. Still, other organisations are experimenting with using labelers for content moderation: News Detective is a fact checking organisation that now has a labeler on Bluesky as well. How effective a fact-checking system is when people have to opt into receiving the fact checks on a social network remains to be seen however.

In other news


  • The third Tech Talk by the (unaffiliated) atprotocol.dev community is by Ændra Rininsland, who is behind the labeler XBlock and the News feed.
  • A research paper that studies how Bluesky has evolved from invitation-only to being open to the public. One of their findings is that Bluesky is a chatty network, something that was already the case before the arrival of the Brazilians: users tend to create more posts than reshare other posts, in contrast with Twitter/X where the dynamic is the other way around.
  • For the people interested in the nitty-gritty of protocols: NodeInfo is a standardized way of exposing metadata about a server running one of the distributed social networks, and it is currently mainly used for ActivityPub servers. Now there is an effort to expand NodeInfo so it can also be used for a PDS on atproto.
  • Bridgy Fed is a way to connect Bluesky to other decentralised social networks such as Mastodon. The latest update now also bridges video between the network, and you can let the bridge ask an account via a DM if they want to opt-in to the bridge. Bridgy Fed will only send a DM once, even if someone else also asks.
  • Graphtracks allows you to check the statistics of atproto accounts, allowing you to see a graph of your follow and likes over time. It shows the power of a completely open API, where anyone can now have full detailed statistics about their account.

That’s all for this week, thanks for reading! You can subscribe to my newsletter to receive the weekly updates directly in your inbox below, and follow me on Bluesky @laurenshof.online.

* 10 days actually, I switched from publishing on Sunday to publishing on Wednesday this week as well.

#bluesky

fediversereport.com/last-week-…




Onu a Israele: stop a presenza illegale nei Territori palestinesi entro 12 mesi


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
La risoluzione ha ricevuto 124 voti favorevoli, 43 paesi si sono astenuti, Israele, gli Usa e altri 12 Stati hanno votato contro. L’Italia si è astenuta
L'articolo Onu a Israele: stop a presenza illegale nei Territori palestinesi entro 12 mesi



Riceviamo e pubblichiamo da Leonardo Cribio
🌍 TRE GIORNI PER LA PACE 2024 🌍
"Assange e Guerra al giornalismo"

🎤 Dibattito con i giornalisti:

Germana Leoni

Fabrizio Cassinelli

Giuliano Marrucci

Massimo Alberizzi

Alberto Negri (in collegamento)…



Commission ends probe of Microsoft-Inflection AI merger


The European Commission will stop looking into whether Microsoft's hiring of Inflection AI staff breached EU merger rules after seven EU countries dropped their requests for an investigation, the EU executive said in a press release on Wednesday (18 September).


euractiv.com/section/competiti…



Meet the Winners of the 2024 Tiny Games Contest


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Over the years, we’ve figured out some pretty sure-fire ways to get hackers and makers motivated for contests. One of the best ways is to put arbitrary limits on different aspects of the project, such as how large it can be or how many power it can consume. Don’t believe us? Then just take a look at the entries of this year’s Tiny Games Contest.

Nearly 80 projects made it across the finish line this time, and our panel of judges have spent the last week or so going over each one to try and narrow it down to a handful of winners. We’ll start things off with the top three projects, each of which will be awarded a $150 gift certificate from our friends at DigiKey.

First: Sub-Surface Simon


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While this contest saw a lot of excellent entries, we don’t think anyone is going to be surprised to see this one take the top spot. Earning an exceptionally rare perfect ten score from each of our judges, Sub-Surface Simon from [alnwlsn] grabbed onto the theme of this contest and ran like hell with it.

Exploiting the fact that many integrated circuits are actually far smaller than their external packages, [alnwlsn] milled away the inert plastic surrounding the DIP-14 version of the ATtiny84A, which left just enough room to install some LEDs and buttons. This means the complete game is housed within the boundaries of the chip itself — just plug it into a powered breadboard and get playing.

Second: Morse Quest


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Coming in at second place is Morse Quest, from [felix]. Basically, [felix] took the classic text-based adventure game formula, and replaced the keyboard and monitor with a microswitch and an LED. Players not only need to correctly decode the flashing LED to figure out what the game is saying about their immediate environment, but they have to compose their response and key it in manually.

Always wanted to learn Morse code, but didn’t know how to get started? Well, this game probably isn’t it. While you can select the rate at which the same blinks out the game to make things a little easier on yourself, you’ll still need a pretty solid knowledge of Morse to explore very far.

Third: WS2812B Othello


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Easily the most traditional game of the of the top three, this handheld Othello allows the player to challenge a computerized opponent on an 8×8 matrix of WS2812B LEDs. As the LED board is an off-the-shelf module, [Dave] was able to hide most of the main PCB’s electronics underneath it, giving the overall device a particularly clean look.

As nice as the hardware is, the software is equally impressive. Running on an 80 MHz STM32L412KBT6, [Dave] wrote the entire firmware without using any external libraries. Most of us would have been reaching for a common library just to get the hardware working, but he wrote everything from the button debounce routines to the actual logic by which the game is played.

Honorable Mentions


There’s no way we can pick just three of these incredible projects to showcase, so as usual, we have a few additional categories for entries that really stood out to the judges.

One Dimensional: For this category we wanted to get people thinking about what they could do with a common addressable LED strip, and T1Duino from [Andrea Trentini] didn’t disappoint. This large-format game re-imagines Tetris in a single dimension by focusing on the colors of the falling blocks instead of their shapes. But we’ve also got to give credit to [senily64dx], who really thumbed their nose at this one. Zero Dimensional PONG recreates the classic game with just a single LED. The players are meant to interpret the changing brightness of the LED as it moving closer or farther away from them, and time their button presses accordingly.

The Classics: This category was devoted to entries that brought back the iconic games of yesteryear, so it’s little surprise that the judges singled out this miniature Space Invaders arcade cabinet from [Nick Cranch] as a prime example. Just one classic game not enough? Then take a look at the μRetro from [bobricius]. This gorgeous handheld uses ATtiny85 cartridges that let’s you swap between a collection of arcade standards.

The Controls: Nintendo has spent the last couple of decades proving that how players interact with the hardware can be just as important as the games themselves, and these entries are no different. Salsa ONE by [Alex] is a minimalistic handheld that you play with just a single button, while Blind Maze from [penumbriel] tasks the player with navigating an invisible maze using an interface consisting of a trio of buttons and LEDs.

Pocket Arcade: Each judge agreed that, as far as being pocket-friendly, the Wibraboy was the project to beat. By repurposing the enclosure from a cheapo handheld game, [x3e] was able to give their DIY recreation a remarkably professional look. For those with even smaller pockets, the Tiny OLED by [deʃhipu] offers up classic gameplay in an exceptionally small footprint.

Fancy!: Finally, this category was devoted to the most polished and professional looking builds. Among all the projects, the LED Matrix Arcade from [Ryan Shill] may be the most attractive of the bunch. With its vibrant 32×32 LED array and walnut enclosure, it’s a build we’d be proud to have on display at home. The all-digital Mini Virtual Pinball Cabinet created by [mircemk] was also a favorite for this category, as it does an excellent job of recreating the authentic pinball look with a sideways-mounted 17 inch monitor.
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Shall We Play a Game?


There’s only so many projects we can call out individually, so we strongly recommend you head over to Hackaday.io and browse all of the incredible entries into this contest. There’s some truly impressive work in there, and we’re willing to bet you’ll find something in there that will help inspire your own projects.

We’d like to thank DigiKey for helping to make this contest possible, and of course the Hackaday community for consistently rising to our latest challenge. Speaking of which, you’ve still got some time before the deadline to submit your best Simple Supercon Add-On for our latest contest.

2024 Tiny Games Challenge



Underwater high-tech. Fincantieri lancia il nuovo simulatore a realtà aumentata

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

[quote]Cetena, società del gruppo Fincantieri, leader nella ricerca e simulazione navale, ha sviluppato il primo simulatore avanzato che combina realtà virtuale e aumentata per la guida e la manutenzione di veicoli subacquei filoguidati (Remotely operated vehicles – Rov), destinati




Oggi il Ministro Giuseppe Valditara ha firmato il decreto a favore di 19 nuove Fondazioni #ITSAcademy, che nel 2023 hanno avviato almeno un percorso formativo. Grazie al provvedimento riceveranno oltre 55 milioni di euro.


Airline Seats Are for Dummies


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You normally don’t think a lot would go into the construction of a chair. However, when that chair is attached to a commercial jet plane, there’s a lot of technology that goes into making sure they are safe. According to a recent BBC article, testing involves crash dummies and robot arms.

Admittedly, these are first-class and business-class seats. Robots do repetitive mundane tasks like opening and closing the tray table many, many times. They also shoot the seats with crash dummies aboard at up to 16 Gs of acceleration. Just to put that into perspective, a jet pilot ejecting gets about the same amount of force. A MiG-35 pilot might experience 10 G.

We didn’t realize how big the airline seat industry is in Northern Ireland. Thompson, the company that has the lab in question, is only one of the companies in the country that builds seats. Apparently, the industry suffered from the global travel slowdown during the pandemic but is now bouncing back.

While people worry about robots taking jobs, we can’t imagine anyone wanting to spend all day returning their tray table to the upright and locked position repeatedly. We certainly don’t want to be 16 G crash dummies, either.

Crash dummies have a long history, of course. Be glad airliners don’t feature ejector seats.


hackaday.com/2024/09/18/airlin…



M5S, pubblicati i 20 possibili temi della costituente: ci sono anche nome, simbolo e limite due mandati


@Politica interna, europea e internazionale
Sul sito del Movimento 5 Stelle è stato pubblicato l’elenco dei 20 temi che potrebbero essere discussi nell’assemblea costituente in programma a ottobre. Di questi, solo 12 saranno effettivamente oggetto di approfondimento. A selezionarli saranno, nei prossimi giorni,



Lustery, a site for consent-based homemade porn, has added a new clause to its contract promising not to replace human performers with AI without consent.#News
#News


Guerra di tecnologie. Droni, missili e AI nel conflitto in Medio Oriente

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

[quote]Il Medio Oriente dilaniato dalla guerra è divenuto, suo malgrado, una vetrina per l’uso di nuove tecnologie militari da parte di tutti gli attori coinvolti. Difatti non solo le Israeli Defence Forces, storicamente caratterizzate dall’impiego di tecnologie all’avanguardia nel tentativo di sopperire alle



Multiple LinkedIn users on Wednesday noticed a setting that showed LinkedIn was using user data to improve its generative AI. LinkedIn told 404 Media it will update its terms of service “shortly.”#News
#News


Dal supercalcolo ai velivoli del futuro, Montrucchio spiega il cuore tecnologico di Leonardo a Torino

@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo

[quote]La digitalizzazione sta ridefinendo l’industria aerospaziale. Nuovi processi e strumenti, potenziati dall’intelligenza artificiale e dal supercalcolo, stanno rivoluzionando la progettazione e lo sviluppo dei velivoli moderni. In questa evoluzione, accelerata dagli



La lettera di Marina Berlusconi: “Basta con i falsi retroscena, nessuna trama contro Meloni”


@Politica interna, europea e internazionale
Marina Berlusconi smentisce pubblicamente presunte cospirazioni da parte della sua famiglia contro la presidente del Consiglio Giorgia Meloni. E nega anche che gli eredi del Cavaliere siano insoddisfatti di come Antonio Tajani sta guidando Forza Italia. La



Some expertise on batteries and how that relates to the exploding pagers in Lebanon; an AI-powered surveillance dystopia that is already here; and how Snapchat reserves the right to serve you ads with your own AI likeness.#Podcast


#TuttiAScuola, riviviamo insieme la cerimonia di inaugurazione del nuovo anno scolastico che si è svolta lunedì #16settembre presso il Convitto Nazionale “Vittorio Emanuele II” di Cagliari.

🎥 Qui il video ▶ https://youtu.



roma, 21 settembre, studio campo boario: presentazione del “libro della natura e del continuo”, di mario corticelli


slowforward.net/2024/09/18/rom…

un libro straordinario! non mancate!


sabato 21 settembre 2024, alle ore 18:00
presso lo Studio Campo Boario
viale del Campo Boario 4/a (metro Piramide), Roma

presentazione di
LIBRO DELLA NATURA E DEL CONTINUO
di MARIO CORTICELLI

edizioni déclic, 2024

dialoga con l’autore
Marco Giovenale


cliccare per ingrandire

evento facebook:
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IL LIBRO
Con un titolo quasi secentesco, il libro della natura e del continuo funziona da prosecuzione di alcune ossessioni testuali di Mario Corticelli, già godibili nei suoi precedenti lavori: una su tutte quella per i fenomeni naturali e gli animali e il loro mondo, meticolosamente de-antropomorfizzato. Oppure il ricorso a un tagliente registro ironico, se non addirittura di scherzo-scherno, diretto tanto al contesto degli umani quanto agli scambi linguistici che questi istituiscono: «e poi si odono feste di mercato / con gioia di genti / nel crollo dei prezzi di mercato / con una qualche distruzione delle genti / perlunga la strada che è lucente / che bello che è il linguaggio delle genti / con una qualche distruzione del linguaggio».
Impossibile non vedere nell’intelligenza di simili soluzioni, e di tante altre nel libro, un segno di quella traccia caustica beffarda e insieme paradossalmente leggera – di cui Corticelli è erede/innovatore – che rimonta al nome di Corrado Costa: «petizione per la diffusione dei boschi anche nelle foreste / petizione per la diffusione dei pini anche negli abeti dei boschi / petizione per la diffusione degli aghi anche negli aghi».
In definitiva, questo De rerum natura giocosissimo – che sposta sempre di lato, in un angolo bizzarro e in nuovi inciampi il caosmos che descrive – si disimpegna dal ruolo di riprodurre paesaggi, bestie, regole, mappe e tassonomie, e semmai disorienta con gran gusto quel che pensavamo essere una stabile visione delle cose, talvolta disturbando le immagini naturali come farebbe un programma di intelligenza artificiale: «un cervo. presenta un eccesso di denti che gli sporgono dai fianchi e dal dorso, che ce lo fanno immaginare già mangiato dall’interno, morto tuttavia chi lo ha mangiato. nei pressi di un burrone, esterno».

L’AUTORE
Mario Corticelli ha pubblicato testi poetici nelle antologie RZZZZZ! (Transeuropa Edizioni) e Àkusma (Metauro Edizioni) e su numerose riviste, fra cui Versodove, Nioques, OEI. Un modo (gammm.org) è del 2011. Tra il 2014 e il 2015 sono usciti due libri e un ebook legati in una trilogia aperta: Aria (comunione) (IkonaLíber, 2014), la sezione aria della serie mille idilli (gammm.org, 2014) e Costruzione di un animale (Arcipelago Edizioni, 2015). Del 2018 è Qualche parte del cane (Tic Edizioni). Su gammm.org e su pontebianco.noblogs.org è possibile leggere prose da sottrarre il bambino (2024).

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#000000 #999999 #CorradoCosta #Corticelli #déclic #ironia #LibroDellaNaturaEDelContinuo #MarioCorticelli #poesia #prosa #ProsaInProsa








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