Engineering for Slow Internet Even When Not Stuck in Antarctica
With the days of dial-up and pitiful 2G data connections long behind most of us, it would seem tempting to stop caring about how much data an end-user is expected to suck down that big and wide broadband tube. This is a problem if your respective tube happens to be a thin straw and you’re located in a base somewhere in the Antarctic. Take it from [Paul Coldren], who was stationed at a number of Antarctic research stations as an IT specialist for a total of 14.5 months starting in August of 2022.Prepare for hours of pain and retrying downloads. (Credit: Paul Coldren]
As [Paul] describes, the main access to the Internet at these bases is via satellite internet, which effectively are just relay stations. With over a thousand people at a station like McMurdo at certain parts of the season, internet bandwidth is a precious commodity and latency is understandably high.
This low bandwidth scenario led to highly aggravating scenarios, such as when a web app would time out on [Paul] while downloading a 20 MB JavaScript file, simply because things were going too slow. Upon timing out, it would wipe the cache, redirect to an error page and have [Paul] retry and retry to try to squeeze within the timeout window. Instead of just letting the download complete in ~15 minutes, it would take nearly half an hour this way, just so that [Paul] could send a few kB worth of text in a messaging app.
In addition to these artificial timeouts – despite continuing download progress – there’s also the issue of self-updating apps, with a downloader that does not allow you to schedule, pause, resume or do anything else that’d make downloading that massive update somewhat feasible. Another thing here is distributed downloads, such as when hundreds of people at said Antarctic station are all trying to update MacOS simultaneously. Here [Paul] ended up just – painfully and slowly – downloading the entire 12 GB MacOS ISO to distribute it across the station, but a Mac might still try to download a few GB of updates regardless.
Updating Office for Mac at the South Pole made easy courtesy of Microsoft. (Credit: Paul Coldren)
This level of pain continued with smartphone updates, which do not generally allow one to update the phone’s OS from a local image, and in order to make a phone resume an update image download, [Paul] had to turn the phone off when internet connectivity dropped out – due to satellites going out of alignment – and turn it back on when connectivity was restored the next day.
Somewhat surprisingly, the Microsoft Office for Mac updater was an example of how to do it at least somewhat right; with the ability to pause and cancel, see the progress of the download and resumption of interrupted downloads without any fuss. Other than not having access to the underlying update file for download and distribution by e.g. Sneakernet, this was a pleasant experience alongside the many examples of modern-day hardware and software that just gave up and failed at the sight of internet speeds measured in kB/s.
Although [Paul] isn’t advocating that every developer should optimize their application and updater for the poor saps stuck on the equivalent of ISDN at a remote station or in a tub floating somewhere in the Earth’s oceans, he does insist that it would be nice if you could do something like send a brief text message via a messaging app without having to fight timeouts and other highly aggravating ‘features’.
Since [Paul] returned from his last deployment to the Antarctic in 2024 it appears that at least some of the stations have been upgraded to Starlink satellite internet, but this should not be taken as an excuse to not take his plea seriously.
Psst… Got a Second? Here Are the 2025 One-Hertz Challenge Winners
Even with teachers with names like Kirchhoff and Helmholtz, old Heinrich Hertz himself likely didn’t have the slightest idea that his name would one day become an SI unit. Less likely still would have been the idea that Hackaday would honor him with the 2025 One-Hertz Challenge.
The challenge was deliberately — dare we say, fiendishly? — simple: Do something, anything, but do it once a second. Flash a light, ring a bell, click a relay, or even spam comments on a website other than Hackaday; anything at all, but do it at as close to one Hertz as possible. These are our favorite kinds of contests, because the simplicity affords a huge canvas for the creative mind to paint upon while still providing an interesting technical constraint that’s just difficult enough to make things spicy.
And boy, did you respond! We’ve received over a hundred entries since we announced the contest back in June, meaning that many of you spent 4,662,000 seconds of your summer (at least those of you above the equator) rising to the challenge. The time was well spent, with projects that pushed the limits of what we even expected.
While we loved ’em all, we had to winnow them down to the top three, each of which receives a $150 gift certificate from our sponsor, DigiKey. Let’s take a look at them, along with our favorite runners-up.
Our Top Three
At the top of our judges’ list was “the electromechanicalanalogdigitalclock”, a project that clearly didn’t know what it wanted to be but nevertheless did it with a lot of style. [Christian]’s contraption pushes a lot of design buttons, starting with the mains-powered stepper motor generating a 1-Hz signal with a photochopper, which drives a 12-bit counter made from some CMOS logic chips and a digital-to-analog converter that drives some vintage moving-coil meters to display the time. There’s even a bit of circuit sculpture thrown in, with a brass frame supporting and isolating the noisy stepper motor on a spring suspension. Extra points were no doubt earned thanks to the Space:1999 and Star Trek models in the photos.
The electromechanicalanalogdigitalclock by [Christian].
BEZICRON was inspired by [ekaggrat singh kalsi] playing with his daughter’s springy hair ties.Next up we have BEZICRON by [ekaggarat singh kalsi]. If this one looks familiar, it’s probably because we featured it back in January, when we had a difficult time describing exactly what this is. It’s a clock, sure, but its display is vastly different from anything we’ve ever seen before, based as it is on hair bands, of all things, that are bent and stretched into numerals by a series of intricate cams and levers. The idea is unique, the mechanism is complex, the design is striking, and the sinuous 1-Hz pulse of the colon is mesmerizing.
Our final gift certificate goes to [Tim], who managed to use candle flames as a time base. You’ve probably noticed candles guttering and flickering thanks to uneven wax melting or even drafts blowing the flame column around and thought they were fairly random. But [Tim] noticed that these oscillations were actually more stable and predictable than they appear, and used a wire sticking into the flame to trigger the capacitive sensor input on a CH32xxx microcontroller to measure the frequency, which was then divided down to flash an LED at 1-Hz. It’s the perfect combination of physics and electronics that extracts order from a seemingly stochastic in a weird and wonderful way.
Awesome Honorable Mentions
What’s always fun about Hackaday contests is the categories we come up with, which are sort of mini-games within the main challenge. And this time around didn’t disappoint, with projects that explored these side quests in fun and interesting ways.
Our “Ridiculous” category was all about tapping your inner Rube Goldberg and finding the least practical way to generate your 1-pps pulse train. Runners-up in this category included [Brian Stuparyk]’s electromechanical function generator, a pitchblende-powered “atomic” clock by [alnwlsn], and [Sean B]’s “Nothing but NAND” Nixie clock.
For the “Timelords” category, we were looking for the projects that pulled out all the stops to get as many zeroes as possible after the decimal point, and the entries didn’t disappoint. Check out this vintage atomic clock restoration by [CuriousMarc] and his merry band, [Lauri Pirttiaho]’s cheap and simple GPS sync for quartz wall clocks, or this GPS-disciplined crystal-oven oscillator by [Will Carver].
The horologically inclined were the target audience for the “Clockwork” category, which invited you to turn your one-per-second timebase into a unique and interesting timepiece. See [Simon Newhouse]’s Nixie-based frequency counter clock, the DCF77 clock [hayday] made from the 2022 Supercon Badge, or the beautiful bubble displays of [Andrew Tudoroi]’s RPi TinynumberHat9 clock.
And finally, what would a One-Hertz challenge be without the venerable 555 timer chip? Entries we liked from the “Coulda Used a 555” category include [Tom Goff]’s Bletchley-inspired Logic Bombe, this mind-bending, capacitor-free timer that [Mark Valentine] put together, and [Paul Gallagher]’s super annoying “One Hurts” clock — it’s worse than a cuckoo clock!
Everyone’s a Winner!
We’d love to give everyone a prize, but we’d be hard-pressed to manage that with so many cool and unusual projects. As they say, everyone’s a winner just for entering, and we think that’s especially true with contests like this, which bring out the best in everyone. Thanks to everyone who entered, the judges for sorting through everything and making the hard choices, and to our sponsor DigiKey. We’ll see you all again next time around!
Hackaday Podcast Episode 336: DIY Datasette, Egg Cracking Machine, and Screwing 3D Prints
Thunderstorms were raging across southern Germany as Elliot Williams was joined by Jenny List for this week’s podcast. The deluge outside didn’t stop the hacks coming though, and we’ve got a healthy smorgasbord for you to snack from. There’s the cutest ever data cassette recorder taking a tiny Olympus dictation machine and re-engineering it with a beautiful case for the Commodore 64, a vastly overcomplex machine for perfectly cracking an egg, the best lightning talk timer Hackaday has ever seen, and a demoscene challenge that eschews a CPU. Then in Quick Hacks we’ve got a QWERTY slider phone, and a self-rowing canoe that comes straight out of Disney’s The Sorcerer’s Apprentice sequence.
For a long time we’ve had a Field guide series covering tech in infrastructure and other public plain sight, and this week’s one dealt with pivot irrigation. A new subject for Jenny who grew up on a farm in a wet country. Then both editors are for once in agreement, over using self-tapping screws to assemble 3D-printed structures. Sit back and enjoy the show!
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Episode 336 Show Notes:
What’s that Sound?
- Congrats to [1tR3x] who knew more about the music of 2001 Space Odyssey than I did!
Interesting Hacks of the Week:
- Tiny Datasette Uses USB For The Modern Day
- Does It Make Sense To Upgrade A Prusa MK4S To A Core One?
- Lightning Talks On Time, With This Device
- Over-Engineering An Egg Cracking Machine
- This Plotter Knows No Boundaries
- An Amiga Demo With No CPU Involved
Quick Hacks:
- Elliot’s Picks:
- Phonenstien Flips Broken Samsung Into QWERTY Slider
- Remembering The Intel Compute Stick
- Old Projects? Memorialize Them Into Functional Art
- Microsoft Removed WMR Headset Support? No Problem!
- Jenny’s Picks:
- Microsoft BASIC For 6502 Is Now Open Source
- CAD, From Scratch: MakerCAD
- Robotic Canoe Puts Robot Arms To Work
Can’t-Miss Articles:
- No Need For Inserts If You’re Prepared To Use Self-Tappers
- Field Guide To North American Crop Irrigation
hackaday.com/2025/09/05/hackad…
Estes Wants You to 3D Print Their New Model Rocket
The Estes line of flying model rockets have inspired an untold number of children and adults alike, thanks in part to their simplicity. From the design and construction of the rockets themselves to the reliability and safety of the modular solid-propellant motors, the company managed to turn actual rocket science into a family activity. If you could glue fins onto a cardboard tube and stick a plastic nosecone on the end, you were nearly ready for launch.
But what if you’re looking for something a bit more challenging? That’s where the new Estes Scorpio 3D comes in. Unlike the classic Estes kit, which included the fins, nosecone, and other miscellaneous bits of the rocket, the Scorpio kit requires you to 3D print your own parts. Do it right, and the company says you can send your creation to heights of 1,000 feet (305 m).
As several main components of the rocket are 3D printed, the Scorpio is intended to be a platform for fast and easy modification. Estes already provides STLs for a few different variants of the tail fins — this is not unlike some of the old kits, which would occasionally include different shaped fins for you to experiment with. But of course you’re also free to design your own components from scratch if you wish. A twist-lock mechanism built into the printed motor mount allows you to swap out the Scorpio’s fins in the field, no glue required.
While we appreciate the concept of the Scorpio 3D, we have to admit that the $40 USD price tag seems a bit excessive. After all, the user is expected to print the majority of the rocket’s parts on their own dime. According to the manual, the only thing you get with the kit (other than access to the digital files) is a couple of cardboard tubes, some stickers, and a parachute — the launch pad, igniter, and even motors are all sold separately.
Admittedly there’s a certain value in the Estes name and the knowledge that they’ve done their homework while putting this product together. But if you’re just looking to fire off some DIY rockets, we’d point you to the open source HEXA project as an alternative.
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This Week in Security: DNS Oops, Novel C2s, and the Scam Becomes Real
Something rather significant happened on the Internet back in May, and it seems that someone only noticed it on September 3rd. [Youfu Zhang] dropped a note on one of the Mozilla security mailing lists, pointing out that there was a certificate issued by Fina for 1.1.1.1. That IP address may sound familiar, and you may have questions.
First off, yes, TLS certificates can be issued for IP addresses. You can even get a numeric TLS certificate for your IP address, via Lets Encrypt. And second, 1.1.1.1 sounds familiar because that’s CloudFlare’s public DNS resolver. On that address, Cloudflare notably makes use of DoH, a charming abbreviation for DNS over HTTPS. The last important detail is that Cloudflare didn’t request or authorize the certificate. Significant indeed.
This is a high-profile example of the major weakness of the TLS certificate system. There are over 300 trusted certificate authorities in the Microsoft Root Certificate Program, Financijska agencija (Fina) being one of them. All it takes is for one of those trusted roots to issue a bad certificate, to compromise that system. That it took four months for someone to discover and point out the problem isn’t great.
Don’t Just Copy That Into Your Terminal
I’ve given Linux newbies the advice several times, not to be careless about copying and pasting commands into the Linux terminal. Sometimes that’s because practical jokers suggest running rm -rf /
, or a fork bomb, or some other “fun” command to fix a problem. But there’s also the problem of malware, and it’s not limited to Linux. For example, this reasonably convincing looking notification from Cloudflare instructs the user to copy and past a completely benign-looking string into a terminal on a Mac machine.
… say what now
It’s pretty obviously not a real command as it’s presented. Instead, a base64 encoded string is decoded and executed in Bash. It executes a script from the Internet, which immediately begins looking for interesting files to upload. It’s not a terribly new approach, but is apparently still being used in the wild, and is a great object lesson about not trusting commands from the Internet.
CSS is Turing Complete Now, So Let’s Use it to Steal Data
OK, Turing complete might be a slight exaggeration, but CSS does now have if()
statements. CSS also can do background downloads from remote sites. Put that together, and you have a way to steal data.
There are some serious limitations that are likely to keep this from becoming a widely used technique. Top of the list is that CSS doesn’t have any string carving functions. That if()
statement is limited to matching the complete value of fields. To steal information strictly using CSS, you have to know what you’re looking for ahead of time.
Creative C2
It’s always interesting to see the creative Command and Control (C2) techniques that are dreamt up by researchers and threat actors. MeetC2 is up first, a demonstration of using Google Calendar for C2 via calendar events. It works because no security solution will block access to Google Calendar, and it’s fairly trivial to add notes to a calendar event.
The other creative C2 involves a project I’m intimately familiar with. MeshC2 is a clever, but admittedly vibe-coded C2 tool using Meshtastic to run commands on remote hosts. It’s from [Eric Escobar], one of the researchers at Sophos. When dropping a Raspberry Pi off for a penetration test, there’s an inevitable problem that knocks the platform off the Internet, and the ability to run a few simple commands could make all the difference.
youtube.com/embed/DLvPaYZfZR4?…
Persuasion and LLMs
Persuasion is the art of influencing. When a car salesman buys a potential customer a drink from the car lot’s vending machine, it’s an attempt to persuade. When a negotiators picks up on and imitates the small habits of their counterparts, it’s also an attempt to leverage persuasion. From appeals to authority, to priming, to framing, there are countless tricks that are tried, with varying amounts of success, to influence people. The question here is whether those tricks might work on an LLM.
A pre-print study seems to indicate that persuasion does indeed work on AIs. And while persuasion may convince a human to buy a car beyond one’s means, persuasion can be used to convince an AI to do something beyond its guardrails. The two test cases were to ask the LLM to return an insult, and to return the recipe for lidocaine. While this isn’t the only way to jailbreak an LLM, it’s a novel bit of work, determining that the AI has some of the same weaknesses as humans.
The Scam Become Real
If you run your own mail server, or check your spam folder, you’ve surely seen the emails where a scammer claims to have taken over your webcam while you were watching pornography. Historically this has been a complete lie, simply to extort the naive. Unfortunately, it seems that someone took this as a challenge, and has actually built malware that attempts to do exactly what the classic spam has threatened. And of course, it’s open source.
Bits and Bytes
Researchers at Silent Signal took a look at the IBM i mainframe system, and have a CVE to show for it. The exploit was a replay attack followed by a command injection. The first approach allowed for blind code execution, but the challenge on this second time around was to find something more useful, and SQL turned out to be the key.
And finally, the folks at Trail of Bits are looking at the application integrity problem, when running applications inside electron and even Chrome. The binaries themselves may be signed, but there’s a part of the program that isn’t: The heap snapshots. This is a V8 feature used to significantly speed up the loading of the pages inside these apps. It turns out that snapshot can also be used to poison the internal state of those apps, and sidestep existing controls. Electron has patched the issue, but there are some cases where Chrome itself may still be vulnerable to this fascinating approach.
Marco Cappato a Trento – Dialogo sulla democrazia all’Università
In occasione di Uman Festival, il tesoriere dell’Associazione Luca Coscioni Marco Cappato sarà protagonista di un incontro pubblico dal titolo “Democrazia. In dialogo con Marco Cappato”.
L’appuntamento è per venerdì 12 settembre 2025 alle ore 15:00 presso l’Aula 002 del Dipartimento di Sociologia – Università di Trento, Via Giuseppe Verdi 26, a Trento.
In occasione di Uman Festival, l’attivista e tesoriere dell’Associazione Luca Coscioni Marco Cappato sarà protagonista di un incontro pubblico dal titolo “Democrazia. In dialogo con Marco Cappato”.
Un momento di confronto con studenti, studentesse e cittadinanza, per discutere il valore della partecipazione democratica e dei diritti civili in Italia e in Europa.
Partecipano: Marco Cappato (Associazione Luca Coscioni)
Marta Citriniti (Presidente Tridentum)
Renata Maria Giordano (Presidente ELSA Trento)
Prof.ssa Marta Tomasi (Università di Trento)
Aula 002, Dipartimento di Sociologia – Università di Trento
Ingresso libero, aperto a tutte e tutti
L'articolo Marco Cappato a Trento – Dialogo sulla democrazia all’Università proviene da Associazione Luca Coscioni.
PresaDiretta 2025/26 - Dalla prigionia alla libertà, le parole di Assange sul giornalismo -...
PresaDiretta 2025/26 - Dalla prigionia alla libertà, le parole di Assange sul giornalismo - 07/09/2025 - Video - RaiPlay share.google/QXCAZZDvu3XT1uyzl
FREE ASSANGE Italia
PresaDiretta 2025/26 - Dalla prigionia alla libertà, le parole di Assange sul giornalismo - 07/09/2025 - Video - RaiPlay https://share.google/QXCAZZDvu3XT1uyzlTelegram
Leo reshared this.
Recording police is ‘violence’? Absolutely not.
It was bad enough when government officials claimed that journalists incite violence by reporting. But now, they’re accusing reporters of actually committing violence.
The supposed violence by reporters? Recording videos. At least three times recently, a government official or lawyer has argued that simply recording law enforcement or Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers is a form of violence.
In July, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem proclaimed during a news conference following ICE raids on California farms that videotaping ICE agents performing operations is “violence.” Noem lumped video recordings in with other forms of actual violence, like throwing rocks or Molotov cocktails at agents.
Then, in August, Justice Department lawyer Sean Skedzielewski argued, during a court hearing over the Los Angeles Police Department’s mistreatment of journalists covering protests, that videotaping law enforcement officers “can be used for violence.” He claimed recording is violent because it can reveal officers’ identities, leading to harassment, and can encourage more protesters to join the fray.
Also in August, the government applied similar logic as it fought against the release of Mario Guevara, the only journalist in U.S. custody after being arrested for newsgathering. Guevara, who is originally from El Salvador, was detained while covering a protest in Georgia and turned over to ICE for deportation. In a bond hearing before an immigration court in July, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, the government argued that Guevara’s recording and livestreaming of law enforcement “presents a safety threat.”
At the risk of stating the obvious, videotaping someone is not the equivalent of throwing a firebomb at them. Actually, recordings of law enforcement officers made by journalists and members of the public allow the public to see what the police are up to and hold officers accountable for abusing their authority or breaking the law.
That includes holding officers who are violating the First Amendment accountable in court. Adam Rose, chair of the press rights committee for the LA Press Club, said that Skedzielewski also denied in court that DHS officers had pointed weapons at journalists, despite video evidence submitted to the court of them doing exactly that.
Skedzielewski “wound up making our case for us,” Rose told us. “His own argument showed how the government can try to lie in court, and why filming in public is critical to ensure the truth comes out.”
Video recording police in public is also protected by the First Amendment, as both Rose and Mickey Osterreicher, the general counsel for the National Press Photographers Association, point out. “The claim that journalists and others video recording police are engaged in ‘acts of violence’ is not only absurd on its face but flies in the face of the law and common sense,” said Osterreicher.
That constitutional right applies even if officers would prefer not to be identified. The government often claims that officers must not be identified because they’re at risk of (real) violence or harassment. But the correct response to those threats is to prosecute and punish those who actually break the law by harassing or physically attacking police, not make up crimes to go after those who exercise their First Amendment right to record them.
The government claims at other times that officers should not be recorded because they’re undercover. The government has been known to abuse this argument, including by making bizarre claims that any officer who may, at some point, go undercover should be treated as undercover at all times. Plus, journalists have no way of knowing whether a particular agent participating in an immigration raid or officer policing a protest is undercover at the moment they’re recording. The responsibility of preserving officers’ cover is on the officer and the government, not journalists and the public who can observe them working in plain view.
These justifications, however, are mere pretext for the government’s true purpose. Officials want courts and the public to believe that recording agents and officers is a violent act because it justifies officers’ own violent response to the press.
In LA, government attorney Skedzielewski didn’t just argue that video recording is violent. He said that meant that justified officers in using force against people videotaping them. This claim—made in a court that’s already restrained police from attacking journalists after they were documented violently assaulting and detaining reporters repeatedly —should seriously alarm journalists and anyone who wants to record police.
“For an officer of the court to conflate the use of recordings to reveal police officers’ identities with the actual making of those recordings, in order to justify the use of excessive force against those doing the recording, shows complete ignorance of the law, disregard for the Constitution, a blatant attempt to demonize those who would dare risk their health and safety to provide visual proof of police behavior, or all three,” said Osterreicher.
That demonization is working, unfortunately, especially when it comes to ICE officers’ beliefs about how they can respond to being recorded. In recent months, ICE officers have knocked phones out of the hands of those recording them, pulled weapons on people photographing or videotaping them, and even arrested U.S. citizens for filming them.
The escalating attacks on journalists and citizens who are recording police show the danger of the government’s rhetoric. All who care about press freedom and transparency must push back on claims equating filming to violence.
When officials say at news conferences that video recording is violent, journalists should challenge that assertion and cite the law.
When attorneys argue that recording police justifies violence or arrest, they should have their arguments confronted by opposing counsel and the judge, who has the power to sanction lawyers who ignore First Amendment jurisprudence to make frivolous arguments on behalf of the government.
And when ICE officers harass or detain someone for videotaping them, everyone else should take out their phones and hit the record button.
Recording the police isn’t violence. Don’t let officials get away with loud, incorrect claims to the contrary to diminish our First Amendment rights.
Gazzetta del Cadavere reshared this.
Zivilgesellschaft: Familienministerin will Demokratieprojekte mit Verfassungsschutz durchleuchten
Transparenzbericht 2. Quartal 2025: Unsere Einnahmen und Ausgaben und mehr Reichweite
Stop Killing Games
Pirate Parties International supports the
Stop Killing Games Initiative.
Let people keep playing the games they bought!
Provide gamers basic consumer rights.
Give clear notice before shutting down a game.
Offer refunds when access is removed.
Provide offline play or patches when servers close.
Be transparent about data use.
Protect game history and preservation.
Recent commentary by a Youtube games vlogger named “Pirate Software” misstates these aims. The Stop Killing Games Initiative was created to foster an open, inclusive, and democratic dialogue around the future of gaming culture, policy, and rights. Pirate Software’s portrayal distorts these core principles and risks undermining the credibility and positive aims of the initiative.
These recent portrayals of the project are misleading and risk creating division. The initiative’s true goal is to protect consumer rights and ensure game preservation. It is meant to be an open conversation, not an attack on game developers.
We want to build a positive movement. This requires collaboration between gamers, developers, and publishers to find fair solutions. Our focus is on digital rights, transparency, and clear policy.
We urge the gaming community to focus on these core principles. Let’s work together to build a future where games are preserved and gamers’ rights are respected.
The Stop Killing Games Initiative is, and must remain, a space for empowering the global gaming community through collaboration, openness, and respect. We call on all stakeholders to reject divisive or harmful misrepresentations and continue building a future where the voices of gamers everywhere are heard and respected.
Gazzetta del Cadavere reshared this.
LIBERI DAI VELENI DI ROMA
Il 9 settembre al corteo che sarà aperto dai più piccoli, parteciperanno le donne e gli uomini che vogliono continuare a vivere LIBERI DAI VELENI DI ROMA
Santa Palomba siamo tutti noi che non ci arrenderemo mai alla tracotanza di un potere che vorrebbe annientarci.
#Ambiente #StopInceneritore #NoInceneritore #NoInceneritori #ZeroWaste #Rifiuti #Riciclo #EconomiaCircolare #NoAlCarbone #EnergiaPulita
Le cose che ci raccontiamo sugli smartphone a scuola
Noi invece abbiamo vietato tutto, e così per lavarci la coscienza sull'abuso degli smartphone da parte dei ragazzi impediamo l'unico uso sensato e monitorato. Buttiamo il bambino con l'acqua sporca, ma il bambino lo buttiamo dal balcone, l'acqua ce la buttiamo addosso.
Io non posso, andateci voi e mettete tante foto.
Poliversity - Università ricerca e giornalismo reshared this.
lindipendente.online/2025/09/0…
fabiolinux likes this.
Se non mandiamo a casa tutta la gentaglia che abbiamo al governo e rinnoviamo radicalmente la nostra politica, siamo un Paese finito.
In Italia non ci si può far giustizia da soli, deve pensarci lo Stato. Ma se lo Stato non lo fa, e anzi s’inventa una legge per cui non può perseguire determinati reati, si arriva al paradosso emerso martedì a Venezia: i borseggiatori (presunti e non) stanno iniziando a denunciare chi li filma, chi li trattiene, chi cerca di sventarne i crimini. Il caso è stato sollevato davanti ai cronisti attoniti dal comandante della polizia locale di Venezia, con accanto il sindaco Luigi Brugnaro: “Un paio di cittadini sono stati denunciati dai delinquenti – ha detto – perché di fatto non possono fermare i borseggiatori”. Ed è esploso un tema che, oltreché giuridico, è anche politico: nessun privato può trattenere una persona che ha commesso un reato non procedibile d’ufficio e, dalla riforma Cartabia, il furto con destrezza non lo è.
“Se in uno Stato di diritto i criminali dediti al borseggio, fermati più volte dalle forze dell’ordine, possono continuare ad agire indisturbati, mentre i cittadini che li hanno giustamente fotografati mentre rubano vengono denunciati per stalking, è evidente che siamo alla follia”, ha commentato il direttore della Confartigianato Venezia, Matteo Masat.
Leggi l'articolo completo a cura di Leonardo Bison su Il Fatto Quotidiano
Italia nello Spazio. In arrivo il bando Asi per la costellazione nazionale di satelliti
@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
L’Italia si trova nel pieno di una fase cruciale della sua politica spaziale: quest’estate è entrata in vigore la nuova legge quadro che disciplina il settore, ponendo le basi per un rilancio strategico della Space economy nazionale. Proprio in questo contesto, l’Agenzia spaziale italiana (Asi) si prepara
Solo perché siamo gypsy (reggae) nessuno vuole ingaggiarci 😭
Ingaggiateci Stronzi - Profondo Nord Edition 🎪🙌🤣
Gentile pubblico e coraggiosi impresari dell’Italia Boreale, la presente è per avvertire che Sabato 4 Ottobre lo stimato fondatore del Reggae Circus, Mr. Adriano Bono in persona, partirà verso il profondo nord per partecipare in versione one-man-band a un festival bellissimo chiamato Freak Circus Festival, nella bella e famosa località di Fara Gera D’Adda, nella solare provincia di Bergamo. Siccome il viaggio è lungo si starebbe cercando date d’appoggio super strapagate per dare più senso logistico alla trasferta. Si potrebbe fare spettacolo in versione one-man-band, oppure insieme a due o più artisti circensi a formare un piccolo ma esplosivo Reggae Circus, con anche dj-set finale volendo, così diventa un festone. Insomma, ce n’è per tutti i gusti, a fronte chiaramente di un lauto pagamento in dobloni d’oro. Se siete particolarmente ricchi e attrezzati possiamo anche allungarci con la band al gran completo e fare un Reggae Circus vero e proprio su palco grande. Però non so se i vostri cuori sono pronti e i vostri forzieri pieni abbastanza per tanta bellezza.
ATTENZIONE: se dalle vostre parti sul weekend indicato non si muove una foglia sappiate che lo stesso discorso vale anche per il weekend successivo, in quanto anche sull’11 Ottobre si avrebbe data secca nel profondo nord e quindi si starebbe cercando date d’appoggio, per il direttore da solo oppure con tutta la gang al seguito, dipende sempre dal vostro Isee.
Forza gente, fuori i dobloni, con il Reggae Circus (o con solo pezzi di esso!) aspettiamo solo voi impresari coraggiosi e il vostro gentile pubblico, per metterci in marcia con i nostri carrozzoni sgangheratissimi 🎪🤹🙌😅
#ReggaeCircus #Reggae #Circus #Buskers #MusicaDalVivo #ArteCircense
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Live at Nidaba, questo il titolo dell’album registrato nel celebre locale milanese. Un album che trasmette tutta l’energia pura ed elettrizzante di Edward Abbiati & The Rattling Chains. Il disco pesca dalla produzione solista di Abbiati, ma anche da quelli delle sue band, i Lowlands gli ACC e dalla sua collaborazione con Chris Cacavas. Attenzione […]
L'articolo Edward Abbiati
Otto nuovi nati in 12 ore all'ospedale Beauregard
Non accadeva da anni. A darne notizia sui social, in un periodo di calo delle nascite, è il primario Livio Leo
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mi sa che a Capodanno in Valle si sono dati da fare, eh...
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Intelligenza artificiale, cosa farà OpenAi con Broadcom e Tsmc
L'articolo proviene da #StartMag e viene ricondiviso sulla comunità Lemmy @Informatica (Italy e non Italy 😁)
Per ridurre la dipendenza da Nvidia e contenere i costi dell'intelligenza artificiale, anche OpenAi si prepara a produrre il suo primo microchip assieme a Broadcom e a Tsmc.startmag.it/innovazione/openai…
SUMUD FLOTILLA: Maria Elena Delia: “Siamo determinati a raggiungere Gaza”
@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Intervista alla portavoce italiana della GSF diretta verso le acque della Striscia di Gaza. "Le minacce del ministro Ben Gvir ci preoccupano, ma non rinunciamo alla nostra missione a sostegno della popolazione di palestinese. Il diritto internazionale è dalla
Filomena Gallo a Reggio Emilia: “Servizio Sanitario Nazionale e fine vita”
Filomena Gallo a Festa dell’Unità – Servizio Sanitario Nazionale e fine vita
Filomena Gallo, avvocata e Segretaria nazionale dell’Associazione Luca Coscioni, interverrà al dibattito “Servizio Sanitario Nazionale e fine vita: una legge per una risposta di civiltà”, insieme a esponenti del mondo politico e istituzionale.
L’appuntamento è per martedì 9 settembre alle ore 21:00, presso la Sala Dibattiti Nilde Iotti, Festa dell’Unità Nazionale, in Via dell’Aeronautica, 17, a Reggio Emilia. L’ingresso è libero e gratuito.
Con: Marina Sereni
Eugenio Giani
Alfredo Bazoli
Riccardo Magi
Marco Lombardo
Filomena Gallo (Associazione Luca Coscioni)
Modera: Wanda Marra
L'articolo Filomena Gallo a Reggio Emilia: “Servizio Sanitario Nazionale e fine vita” proviene da Associazione Luca Coscioni.
Francesca Re a Parma al festival Resister! – “Libere e capaci di scegliere”
Domenica 21 settembre 2025 – ore 14:30
Parco della Musica (ex Eridania), Parma – Festival Resister! – Sconfinat3
All’interno del festival femminista Resister! Francesca Re, Consigliera Generale dell’Associazione Luca Coscioni e coordinatrice della campagna PMA per tutte, interverrà durantel’incontro “Libere e capaci di scegliere”.
L’ingresso è libero e gratuito.
L'articolo Francesca Re a Parma al festival Resister! – “Libere e capaci di scegliere proviene da Associazione Luca Coscioni.
A Padova riflessioni sul fine vita con Filomena Gallo, in ricordo di Maria Vittoria Milanesi:
In ricordo di Maria Vittoria Milanesi: riflessioni sul fine vita con Filomena Gallo
Un incontro pubblico per ricordare Maria Vittoria Milanesi (1962–2025) e aprire un confronto sul tema del fine vita, tra diritti civili, libertà individuali e scelte consapevoli.
L’appuntamento è per venerdì 26 settembre alle ore 18:15, presso la Sala Paladin, all’interno del Palazzo Moroni, a Padova. L’ingresso è libero fino ad esaurimento dei posti.
Interverrà Filomena Gallo, segretaria nazionale dell’Associazione Luca Coscioni, da anni in prima linea per l’affermazione del diritto all’autodeterminazione e all’assistenza legale delle persone che chiedono di poter scegliere fino alla fine.
Modera l’incontro: Ernesto Milanesi, giornalista e fratello di Maria Vittoria.
L'articolo A Padova riflessioni sul fine vita con Filomena Gallo, in ricordo di Maria Vittoria Milanesi: proviene da Associazione Luca Coscioni.
Il fragile equilibrio del Tigray tra accordi disattesi e rischio di nuova guerra
@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
La regione etiope, uscita stremata dal conflitto 2020-2022, vive nuove fratture interne e il mancato rispetto degli accordi di pace
L'articolo Il fragile equilibrio del Tigray tra accordi disattesi e rischio di nuova guerra proviene da Pagine Esteri.
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MJ Lenderman, Sun June, Hand Habits, Advance Base, Friendship, Horse Jumper of Love, Runnner e altri artisti partecipano a un nuovo album dedicato al compianto cantautore Jason Molina (Songs: Ohia e Magnolia Electric Co.) L’album, intitolato I Will Swim to You: A Tribute to Jason Molina, uscito oggi 5 settembre per Run for Cover e […]
L'articolo Ecco il tributo a Jason Molina proviene da FREE ZON
Inizia l’era delle armi laser. Come si muovono Stati Uniti ed Europa
@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
Negli ultimi anni le armi a energia diretta, e in particolare i laser ad alta potenza, stanno emergendo come una vera rivoluzione nella difesa aerea e navale. Grazie alla capacità di colpire bersagli con velocità praticamente istantanea, riducendo i costi e semplificando la logistica,
Pordenone Linux User Group aps – PNLUG - Corso Self-Hosting
pnlug.it/2025/09/05/corso-self…
Segnalato da Linux Italia e pubblicato sulla comunità Lemmy @GNU/Linux Italia
Desideri riappropriarti della tua sovranità digitale, gestendo in autonomia i tuoi servizi online, proprio come un vero sysadmin? Allora, abbiamo […]
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Altbot
in reply to Adriano Bono • • •L'immagine è un poster promozionale per un tour intitolato "Ingaggiateci Stronzi Tour" con Adriano Bono One-Man-Band e artisti del circo. Il poster presenta un uomo con barba e capelli lunghi, vestito con un abito rustico e un turbante, che suona una chitarra di colore giallo. Dietro di lui, un gruppo di persone indossa costumi circofili, con abiti colorati e accessori come piume e gioielli. Lo sfondo mostra un tendone circo e un edificio antico. Il testo in alto recita "INGAGGIATECI STRONZI TOUR" in caratteri grandi e bianchi su uno sfondo rosso e blu a raggi. In basso, il testo specifica: "ADRIANO BONO ONE-MAN-BAND + CIRCUS ARTISTS SABATO 4 OTTOBRE [@] FREAK CIRCUS FESTIVAL (BG)" e "CERCASI ALTRI SERATE STRAPAGATE NEL CENTRO-NORD".
Fornito da @altbot, generato localmente e privatamente utilizzando Ovis2-8B
🌱 Energia utilizzata: 0.265 Wh