Salta al contenuto principale




Via alle Giornate del Premio Luchetta


@Giornalismo e disordine informativo
articolo21.org/2025/11/via-all…
Dal 21 al 23 novembre prossimi Trieste ospita professioniste e professionisti del giornalismo nazionale e internazionale, testimoni di drammi e di storie provenienti da tutto il mondo. Il giornalismo d’inchiesta torna protagonista sul palco del Teatro Miela in



Have a Slice of Bumble Berry Pi


[Samcervantes] wanted a cyberdeck. Specifically, he wanted a Clockwork Pi uConsole, but didn’t want to wait three months for it. There are plenty of DIY options, but many of them are difficult to build. So [Sam] did the logical thing: he designed his own. The Bumble Berry Pi is the result.

The design criteria? A tactile keyboard was a big item. Small enough to fit in a pants pocket, but big enough to be useful. What’s more is he wanted to recycle some old Pi 3Bs instead of buying new hardware.

The result looks good. There’s a 4.3″ touch screen, a nice keyboard, and enough battery to run all day. If you already have the Pi, you are looking at about $60 and two 3D-printed parts. There is some soldering, but nothing that should put off the average Hackaday reader.

Does it run Doom? From the photo on the GitHub repo, yes, yes, it does. This would be a fun build, although we have to admit, the beauty of doing a build like this is making it your own. Maybe your pants have differently shaped pockets, we don’t know.

Either way, though, you can get some ideas from [Sam] or just clone his already good-looking deck. If we’re being honest, we are addicted to multiple screens. Plus, we want a built-in radio.


hackaday.com/2025/11/11/have-a…



2025 Component Abuse Challenge: The Slip Ring In Your Parts Bin


If you’re familiar with electrical slip rings as found in motors and the like you’ll know them as robust assemblies using carefully chosen alloys and sintered brushes, able to take the load at high RPM for a long time. But not all slip ring applications need this performance. For something requiring a lot less rotational ability, [Luke J. Barker] has something from his parts bin, and probably yours too. It’s an audio jack.

On the face of it, a 1/4″ jack might seem unsuitable for this task, being largely a small-signal audio connector. But when you consider its origins in the world of telephones it becomes apparent that perhaps it could do so much more. It works for him, but we’d suggest if you’d like to follow his example, to use decent quality plugs and sockets.

This is an entry in our 2025 Component Abuse Challenge, and we like it for thinking in terms of the physical rather than the electrical. The entry period for this contest will have just closed by the time you read this, so keep an eye out for the official results soon.

2025 Hackaday Component Abuse Challenge


hackaday.com/2025/11/11/2025-c…



Adesso basta! Chatcontrol 2.0 rientra dalla porta di servizio – Breyer avverte: “L’UE ci sta prendendo in giro”


Riportiamo la traduzione del post pubblicato da Patrick Breyer sul suo blog Poco prima di un incontro decisivo a Bruxelles, l’esperto di diritti digitali ed ex membro del Parlamento europeo, il Dott. Patrick Breyer, lancia l’allarme. Con un “ingannevole gioco di prestigio”, un controllo obbligatorio e ampliato della messaggistica privata viene imposto dalla porta sul retro…

Source



VPN e verifica dell'età online: essere consapevoli per non fare cazzate.


@Privacy Pride
Il post completo di Christian Bernieri è sul suo blog: garantepiracy.it/blog/vpn/
Per accedere ai siti porno e di gioco d’azzardo è ora necessaria la verifica online dell’età… P A N I C O ! L’allarme è stato lanciato da tempo, ma solo ora le persone si stanno rendendo conto delle implicazioni in termini di privacy. La…



Perché SoftBank ha venduto l’intera partecipazione in Nvidia?

L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
SoftBank ha venduto la sua intera partecipazione in Nvidia per 5,8 miliardi di dollari. La holding giapponese vuole aumentare gli investimenti nell'intelligenza artificiale, puntando su OpenAi, Ampere e non solo. Numeri e dettagli.



L’Eccidio di Kindu – 11 novembre 1961: il sacrificio dimenticato dei 13 aviatori italiani - Difesa Online

Nel 1960 il Congo, da poco indipendente dal Belgio, era precipitato in una violenta crisi interna. Le Nazioni Unite inviarono un contingente internazionale. L’Italia partecipò alla missione con personale dell’Aeronautica Militare, impiegato per il trasporto umanitario e logistico.

L’11 novembre, due velivoli da trasporto C-119 “Flying Boxcar” della 46ª Aerobrigata dell’Aeronautica Militare Italiana atterrarono presso l’aeroporto di Kindu con carichi di rifornimenti destinati ai caschi blu malesi.

Dopo lo scarico dei materiali, gli equipaggi, disarmati e in abiti militari, si recarono alla mensa della guarnigione ONU. In quel momento, un’unità di militari congolesi ammutinatisi che aveva preso posizione contro il governo centrale e contro il contingente ONU intervenne. Gli aviatori furono catturati, portati in un locale carcere della città e in poche ore trucidati brutalmente: alcuni furono uccisi a colpi di mitra, altri furono mutilati o assassinati con macete.

difesaonline.it/2025/11/11/lec…

@Storia

in reply to storiaweb

Una fotografia di un giornale mostra un titolo in grassetto su sfondo bianco. Il titolo principale recita: "ORRENDO ECCIDIO DAVANTI ALLA FOLLA IN KINDU". Sotto, in caratteri più grandi, c'è la frase: "FATTI A PEZZI E GETTATI IN UN FIUME I TREDICI AVIATORI ITALIANI NEL CONGO".

Sotto il titolo principale, si trova un testo più piccolo. La prima riga recita: "Furono massacrati sabato scorso, dopo essere stati catturati dalla soldataglia congolese - L'annuncio dato dal portavoce delle Nazioni Unite. Scarse speranze di ritrovare i resti mortali - L'ONU chiede al governo Adula di condurre un'inchiesta sull'eccidio e punire i colpevoli: se la richiesta non verrà esaudita agirà «immediatamente e per conto proprio»".

In fondo, in caratteri più piccoli, c'è la frase: "ORA BASTA È GIUNTA DALLA RADIO LA NOTIZIA ALLE SPOSE".

In basso a destra si trova un sito web e loghi.

Fornito da @altbot, generato localmente e privatamente utilizzando Gemma3:27b

🌱 Energia utilizzata: 0.168 Wh




"Origine di 3I/Atlas, ora abbiamo la conferma che l'enigmatico oggetto interstellare non è un'astronave aliena"


ahahahaha ma no... ma davvero? mannaggia. e io che avevo già formato il comitato di benvenuto...

𝕊𝕟𝕠𝕨 reshared this.



Le parole vanno scelte


Nasce, oggi più che mai, l’esigenza di dare senso alle parole, alle cose, ai rapporti umani, alla politica — intesa nel suo significato più nobile, quello dell’agire collettivo consapevole. Le parole, ormai, sembrano stanche, logore, a volte persino annoiate di noi. Le abbiamo usate così tanto, così male e così spesso, che si sono svuotate di significato come una vecchia batteria del telefono che non regge più la carica.
ildivulgatoreculturale.blog/20


Obsolescenza tecnologica e cyber security: un rischio che pesa sui bilanci aziendali


@Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
L’84% delle imprese italiane utilizza sistemi obsoleti, aumentando rischi e costi delle violazioni. Dati e strategie mostrano perché l’obsolescenza tecnologica va considerata priorità nei budget 2025 tra sicurezza, ROI e continuità operativa



È rimasto qualcosa che non sia tutelato dall'UNESCO, a parte il petrolio, l'herpes e Mario Giordano?


Per la cucina italiana patrimonio dell'Unesco arriva il primo semaforo verde
https://www.wired.it/article/cucina-italiana-patrimonio-unesco-documento-iscrizione/?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub

Pubblicato su Cultura @cultura-WiredItalia




#Shutdown, il salvagente di #Trump


altrenotizie.org/primo-piano/1…


Gene Therapy Aims To Slow Huntington’s Disease To A Crawl


Despite the best efforts of modern medicine, Huntington’s disease is a condition that still comes with a tragic prognosis. Primarily an inherited disease, its main symptoms concern degeneration of the brain, leading to issues with motor control, mood disturbance, with continued degradation eventually proving fatal.

Researchers have recently made progress in finding a potential treatment for the disease. A new study has indicated that an innovative genetic therapy could hold promise for slowing the progression of the disease, greatly improving patient outcomes.

Treatment


Huntington’s disease stems from a mutation in the huntingtin gene, which is responsible for coding for the huntingtin protein. This gene contains a repeated sequence referred to as a trinucleotide repeat, where the same three DNA bases repeat multiple times. The repeat count varies between individuals, and can change from generation to generation due to genetic mutation. If the number of repeats becomes too long, the gene no longer codes for huntingtin protein, and produces mutant huntingtin protein instead. The mutated protein eventually leads to neural degeneration. This genetic basis is key to the heritability of Huntington’s disease. If one parent carries a faulty gene, their children have a fifty percent chance of inheriting it and eventually developing the disease themselves. Over generations, the number of repeats can increase and lead to symptoms appearing at an earlier age.
Excessive repeats in a critical gene are the root cause of Huntington’s disease. Credit: NIST, public domain
The new treatment relies on advanced genetic techniques to slow the disease in its tracks. It involves the use of a custom designed virus, which is inserted into the brain itself in specific key areas. It’s a delicate surgical process that takes anywhere from 12 to 18 hours, using real-time scanning to ensure the viral payload is placed exactly where it needs to go. The virus carries a DNA sequence and delivers it to brain cells, which begin processing the DNA to produce small fragments of genetic material called microRNA. These fragments intercept the messenger RNA that is produced from the body’s own DNA instructions, which is responsible for producing the mutant huntingtin protein which causes the degenerative disease. In this way, mutant huntingtin levels are reduced, drastically slowing the progression of the disease.

The effects of the treatment are potentially game changing, with progression of the disease slowed by 75% in study patients. Results indicate that with effective treatment, the decline expected over one year would instead take a full four years. In more qualitative areas, some patients in the trial have managed to maintain the ability to walk at a point when they would typically be expected to require wheel chairs. In typical Huntington’s cases, the onset occurs between 30 to 50 years old, with a life expectancy of just 15 to 20 years after diagnosis. The hope is that by delaying the progression of the disease, affected patients could have a greater quality of life for much longer, without suffering the worst impacts of the condition.
A microscopic image of a neuron damaged by mutated Huntingtin (mHtt) protein inclusion, visible via orange stain. Credit: Dr Steven Finkbeiner, CC BY-SA 3.0
The initial trial involved just twenty-nine patients, but results were promising. Data indicated consistent benefit to patients three years after the initial surgery. Crucially, the treatment isn’t just slowing symptoms, but there is also evidence it helped to preserve brain tissue. Markers of neuronal death in spinal fluid, which would typically increase as Huntington’s disease progresses, were actually lower than before treatment in study patients.

The therapy isn’t without complications. Beyond the complicated and highly invasive brain surgery required to get the virus where it needs to go, some patients developed inflammation from the virus causing some side effects like headaches and confusion. There’s also the expense — advanced gene therapies don’t come cheap. However, on the positive side, it’s believed the treatment could potentially be a one-off matter, as the brain cells that produce the critical microRNA fragments are not replaced regularly like other more disposable cells in the body. While it’s a new and radical treatment, pharmaceutical company UniQure has plans to bring it to market as soon as late 2026 in the US, with the European market to follow.

It’s not every day that scientists discover a new viable cure for a disease that has long proven fatal. However, through genetic techniques and a strong understanding of the causative factors of the disease, it appears scientists have made progress in tackling the spectre that is Huntington’s disease. For the many thousands of patients grappling with the disease, and the many descendents who struggle with potentially having inherited the condition, news of a potential treatment is a very good thing indeed.

Featured image: “Huntington” by Frank Gaillard.


hackaday.com/2025/11/11/gene-t…



CHAT CONTROL 2.0 THROUGH THE BACK DOOR – Breyer warns: “The EU is playing us for fools – now they’re scanning our texts and banning teens!”


Just before a decisive meeting in Brussels, digital rights expert and former Member of the European Parliament Dr. Patrick Breyer is sounding the alarm. Using a “deceptive sleight of hand,” a mandatory and expanded Chat Control is being pushed through the back door, in a form even more intrusive than the originally rejected plan. The legislative package could be greenlit tomorrow in a closed-door EU working group session.

“This is a political deception of the highest order,” warns Breyer. “Following loud public protests, several member states including Germany, the Netherlands, Poland, and Austria said ‘No’ to indiscriminate Chat Control. Now it’s coming back through the back door – disguised, more dangerous, and more comprehensive than ever. The public is being played for fools.”

According to Breyer, the new compromise proposal is a Trojan horse containing three poison pills for digital freedom:

1. MANDATORY CHAT CONTROL – MASKED AS “RISK MITIGATION”
Officially, explicit scanning obligations have been dropped. But a loophole in Article 4 of the new draft obliges providers of e-mail, chat and messenger services like WhatsApp to take “all appropriate risk mitigation measures.” This means they can still be forced to scan all private messages – including on end-to-end encrypted services.
“The loophole renders the much-praised removal of detection orders worthless and negates their supposed voluntary nature,” says Breyer. “Even client-side scanning (CSS) on our smartphones could soon become mandatory – the end of secure encryption.”

2. TOTAL SURVEILLANCE OF TEXT CHATS: A “DIGITAL WITCH HUNT”
The supposedly voluntary “Chat Control 2.0” goes far beyond the previously discussed scanning of photos, videos, and links. Now, algorithms and AI can be used to mass-scan the private chat texts and metadata of all citizens for suspicious keywords and signals.
“No AI can reliably distinguish between a flirt, sarcasm, and criminal ‘grooming’,” explains Breyer. “Imagine your phone scanning every conversation with your partner, your daughter, your therapist and leaking it just because the word ‘love’ or ‘meet’ appears somewhere. This is not child protection – this is a digital witch hunt. The result will be a flood of false positives, placing innocent citizens under general suspicion and exposing masses of private, even intimate, chats and photos to strangers.” Under the current voluntary “Chat Control 1.0” scanning scheme, German federal police (BKA) already warn that around 50% of all reports are criminally irrelevant, equating to tens of thousands of leaked chats per year.

3. DIGITAL HOUSE ARREST FOR TEENS & THE END OF ANONYMOUS COMMUNICATION
In the shadow of the Chat Control debate, two other disastrous measures are being pushed through:

  • The End of Anonymous Communication: To reliably identify minors as required by the text, every citizen would have to present their ID or have their face scanned to open an email or messenger account. “This is the de facto end of anonymous communication online – a disaster for whistleblowers, journalists, political activists, and people seeking help who rely on the protection of anonymity,” warns Breyer.
  • “Digital House Arrest”: Teens under 16 face a blanket ban from WhatsApp, Instagram, online games, and countless other apps with chat functions. “Digital isolation instead of education, protection by exclusion instead of empowerment – this is paternalistic, out of touch with reality, and pedagogical nonsense.”

URGENT APPEAL: GOVERNMENTS MUST NOW USE THEIR VETO!
Several EU governments—including those of Germany, the Netherlands, Poland, Czechia, Luxembourg, Finland, Austria, and Estonia—have previously voiced strong opposition to indiscriminate mass scanning.
“Now, these governments must show some backbone!” demands Breyer. “Block this sham compromise in the Council and demand immediate corrections to save the fundamental rights of all citizens. The EU Parliament has already shown, across party lines, how child protection and digital freedom can be achieved together.”

Breyer demands the following immediate corrections before any government should agree:

  1. No mandatory chat control through the back door: Clarify that scans cannot be enforced as “risk mitigation.”
  2. No AI chat police: Restrict scanning to known child sexual abuse material (CSAM).
  3. No mass surveillance: Only allow targeted surveillance of suspects based on a court order.
  4. Preserve the right to anonymity: The mandatory age verification requirement must be scrapped entirely.

“They are selling us security but delivering a total surveillance machine,” Breyer concludes. “They promise child protection but punish our children and criminalize privacy. This is not a compromise – this is a fraud against the citizen. And no democratic government should make itself an accomplice.”


About Dr. Patrick Breyer:
Dr. Patrick Breyer is a jurist, digital rights expert, and a former Member of the European Parliament (Pirate Party) until 2024. As a co-negotiator of the Parliament’s position on the Chat Control regulation (CSAR), he is a leading European critic of indiscriminate mass surveillance.


patrick-breyer.de/en/chat-cont…

in reply to Informa Pirata

FASCISTS OUT OF EUROPE! FASCISTS OUT OF EUROPE! GO TO UNITED STATES OF AMERICA IF YOU WANT TO LIVE IN A FASCIST STATE!

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Endof10 @ SFSCON auf Peer.tv

lugbz.org/endof10-sfscon-auf-p…

Segnalato dal LUG di #Bolzano e pubblicato sulla comunità Lemmy @GNU/Linux Italia

In der Abendausgabe von der Nachrichtensendung „Das Journal“ auf Peer.tv am 08.11.2025 ging ein Beitrag über die SFSCON und Endof10 @ SFSCON 2025 online! Interviewt wurden unter anderen unsere Mitglieder Paolo



Waves within Earth’s mantle can carry traces of past continents across hundreds of miles, explaining why their chemical fingerprints appear in unlikely places.#TheAbstract


Remnants of Lost Continents Are Everywhere. Now, We Finally Know Why.


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

Tiny remnants of long-lost continents that vanished many millions of years ago are sprinkled around the world, including on remote island chains and seamounts, a mystery that has puzzled scientists for years.

Now, a team has discovered a mechanism that can explain how this continental detritus ends up resurfacing in unexpected places, according to a study published on Tuesday in Nature Geoscience.

When continents are subducted into Earth’s mantle, the layer beneath the planet’s crust, waves can form that scrape off rocky material and sweep it across hundreds of miles to new locations. This “mantle wave” mechanism fills in a gap in our understanding of how lost continents are metabolized through our ever-shifting planet.

“There are these seamount chains where volcanic activity has erupted in the middle of the ocean,” said Sascha Brune, a professor at the GFZ Helmholtz Centre for Geosciences and University of Potsdam, in a call with 404 Media. “Geochemists go there, they drill, they take samples, and they do their isotope analysis, which is a very fancy geochemical analysis that gives you small elements and isotopes which come up with something like a ‘taste.’”

“Many of these ocean islands have a taste that is surprisingly similar to the continents, where the isotope ratio is similar to what you would expect from continents and sediments,” he continued. “And there has always been the question: why is this the case? Where does it come from?”

These continental sprinkles are sometimes linked to mantle plumes, which are hot columns of gooey rock that erupt from the deep mantle. Plumes bring material from ancient landmasses, which have been stuck in the mantle for eons, back to the light of day again. Mantle plumes are the source of key hot spots like Hawai’i and Iceland, but there are plenty of locations with enriched continental material that are not associated with plumes—or any other known continental recycling mechanisms.

The idea of a mantle wave has emerged from a series of revelations made by Brune’s team, including a 2023 study that identified evidence of similar dynamics occurring within continents. By studying patterns in the distribution of diamonds across South Africa, the researchers showed that slow cyclical motions in the mantle dislodge chunks off the keel of landmasses as they plunge into the mantle. Their new study confirms that these waves can also explain how the elemental residue of the supercontinent Gondwana, which broke up over 100 million years ago, resurfaced in seamounts across the Indian Ocean and other locations.

In other words, the ashes of dead continents are scattered across extant landmasses following long journeys through the mantle. Though it’s not possible to link these small traces back to specific past continents or time periods, Brune hopes that researchers will be able to extract new insights about Earth’s roiling past from the clues embedded in the ground under our feet.

“What we are saying now is that there is another element, with this kind of pollution of continental material in the upper mantle,” Brune said. “It is not replacing what was said before; it is just complementing it in a way where we don't need plumes everywhere. There are some regions that we know are not plume-related, because the temperatures are not high enough and the isotopes don't look like plume-affected. And for those regions, this new mechanism can explain things that we haven't explained before.”

“We have seen that there's quite a lot of evidence that supports our hypothesis, so it would be interesting to go to other places and investigate this a bit more in detail,” he concluded.

🌘
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“Iniziare questo percorso con il sorriso della carità, come quello di Giovanni Paolo I, che deve essere per noi ispirazione: non basta metterne il nome, ma occorre ispirarsi al suo modo di fare e alla sua grande carità”.


IRAQ. Elezioni, poche attese di cambiamento in un Paese stanco e disilluso


@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Gli elettori sono andati alle urne sapendo che è difficile scardinare apparati consolidati di potere. L'affluenza perciò è stata bassa. I risultati definitivi si conosceranno nei prossimi giorni
L'articolo IRAQ. Elezioni, poche attese di cambiamento in un Paese



La Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana annuncia l’uscita dell’Agenda 2026, un progetto editoriale e culturale consolidato, che vede ogni anno la collaborazione con un affermato artista contemporaneo.



Software engineer Hector Dearman built a zoomable map of every issue of BYTE magazine.#archives #magazines #publishing #byte


Visualize All 23 Years of BYTE Magazine in All Its Glory, All at Once


Fifty years ago—almost two decades before WIRED, seven years ahead of PCMag, just a few years after the first email ever passed through the internet and with the World Wide Web still 14 years away—there was BYTE. Now, you can see the tech magazine's entire run at once. Software engineer Hector Dearman recently released a visualizer to take in all of BYTE’s 287 issues as one giant zoomable map.

The physical BYTE magazine published monthly from September 1975 until July 1998, for $10 a month. Personal computer kits were a nascent market, with the first microcomputers having just launched a few years prior. BYTE was founded on the idea that the budding microcomputing community would be well-served by a publication that could help them through it.

“You need the hardware before you can progress through the first gate of a system. A virgin computer is useless so you add some software to fill it out. And the whole point of the exercise—in many but not all cases—is to come up with some interesting and exotic applications,” editor Carl Helmers wrote in the first issue’s introduction. “The technical content of BYTE is roughly divided into the trilogy of hardware, software and applications. Each component of the trilogy is like a facet of a brilliant gem—the home brew computer applied to personal uses.”

Dearman told me his first attempt at the site was in September of last year, but this version launched in August 2025. “Once I had a workable strategy it took a couple of weekends to put it all together,” he said.

Dearman told me he first became interested in BYTE after his dad Chris, also a software engineer, died in early 2022. Right out of university, Chris Dearman worked at a London computer company called Whitechapel Computer Works.

“There was very little on the internet about the computers he worked on (now mostly famous for being named after a computer in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy),” Hector Dearman said. He came across an article titled “Realizing a Dream” by Dick Pountain in the February 1985 issue of BYTE in the Internet Archive’s scans that covered the Whitechapel Computer Works MG-I, named after the fictional computer called the “Milliard Gargantubrain” in Hitchhiker’s Guide.

“The article was amazing but I was captivated by the adverts,” Dearman said. “I kept coming back to them and the more I did the more I realized what an incredible core sample BYTE was—both of the personal computing revolution and of the changes in graphic design and printing over those decades. That compulsion eventually turned into this project.”


Pages from the February 1985 issue of BYTE

Dearman said he was inspired by the Image Quilts tool that makes collages of images, and Jef Raskin’s “zoomable user interfaces.” To create the BYTE visualizer, Dearman sourced scans from the Vintage Apple archive (the Internet Archive also has a massive searchable repository of BYTE magazine issues) and converted the archive’s PDFs to image tiles. He then put the image tiles into Seadragon—around 500,000 tiles at 1024x1024 pixels each. “I wrote some custom software for this. I tried locally on my computer for a while but ran out of patience pretty quickly. Luckily it's a very parallel problem, I ended up with something that could do every tile for a given layer of the Seadragon image pyramid in parallel,” Dearman told me. “According to my Google Cloud bill I used around 500 hours of CPU time that month. For the final run I think I used 200 instances for ~20 minutes to generate the tiles—the future is pretty cool sometimes.”

On the BYTE visualizer site’s about page, Dearman quotes pioneering computer scientist Alan Kay: "[...] pop culture holds a disdain for history. Pop culture is all about identity and feeling like you’re participating. It has nothing to do with cooperation, the past or the future—it’s living in the present. I think the same is true of most people who write code for money. They have no idea where [their culture came from]—and the Internet was done so well that most people think of it as a natural resource like the Pacific Ocean, rather than something that was man-made.”

Looking at the massive map of BYTE issues means looking at almost 23 years of computer history, at a time when the technology was exploding from hobby to household essential. When BYTE launched in 1975, it catered to a niche group of hackers, engineers, and people trying to tinker with expensive, chunky kits. By its final issue in 1998, it was publishing a Y2K survival guide and reviews of the hot new operating system Windows 98, and running ads for the world’s first 19 inch CRT computer monitor alongside an editorial about LCD monitors asking “Does Your Future Look Flat?”

“The relationship between Computing and its history is that of a willful amnesiac,” Dearman writes on the site. “We discard the past as fast as possible, convinced it cannot possibly contain anything of value. This is a mistake. The classic homilies are accurate: Failing to remember the past we are condemned to repeat it—as often as tragedy as farce.”
playlist.megaphone.fm?p=TBIEA2…




Real-Time BART in a Box Smaller Than Your Coffee Mug


BART Display

Ever get to the train station on time, find your platform, and then stare at the board showing your train is 20 minutes late? Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) may run like clockwork most days, but a heads-up before you leave the house is always nice. That’s exactly what [filbot] built: a real-time arrival display that looks like it was stolen from the platform itself.

The mini replica nails the official vibe — distinctive red text glowing inside a sheet-metal-style enclosure. The case is 3D printed, painted, and dressed up with tiny stickers to match the real deal. For that signature red glow, [filbot] chose a 20×4 character OLED. Since the display wants 5 V logic, a tiny level-shifter sits alongside an ESP32-C6 that runs the show. A lightweight middleware API [filbot] wrote simplifies grabbing just the data he needs from the official BART API and pushes it to the little screen.

We love how much effort went into shrinking a full-size transit sign into a desk-friendly package that only shows the info you actually care about. If you’re looking for more of an overview, we’re quite fond of PCB metro maps as well.


hackaday.com/2025/11/11/real-t…



“Il monachesimo fin dalle origini è stato una realtà di frontiera, che ha spinto uomini e donne coraggiosi a impiantare focolai di preghiera, lavoro e carità nei luoghi più remoti e impervi, spesso trasformando aree desolate in terreni fertili e ricc…



riguardando l'elenco delle mie mostre di materiali asemici, intendo le mostre 'personali', slowforward.net/art/, mi rendo conto che è dal 2019 che non ne faccio una. molte collettive ma zero singole mie, da sei anni. e la cosa però non mi sorprende e infine nemmeno mi disturba.
di fatto, continuando nella pratica dell'installance, e della dissipazione delle opere, i luoghi che a queste sono dedicati possono essere solo la perdita o - paradossalmente - al contrario, le collezioni (vari pezzi miei in giro per istituzioni oppure privati).
pensare a una mostra è estremamente difficile in effetti.
mi hanno invitato in Francia per questa primavera, 2026. avrò uno spazio mio a disposizione. credo non sarà facile gestirlo, proprio per la natura anarchica del mio lavoro. vedremo.

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