Fredericton author, former Ice House Gang member to be recognized with legacy award
Nancy Bauer, a prolific Fredericton author, is being recognized by the New Brunswick Book Awards with the annual legacy award. She has written five novels and countless articles for various magazines.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/fredericton-author-legacy-award-nancy-bauer-9.7216749?cmp=rss

Does anyone have any experience with #legacy #kindle hacking particularly around using #uboot to boot a custom kernel?

I've got a PW3 and have serial setup, I've compiled the kernel from the original amazon source and have a uImage but getting nothing when I bootm

Sidenote:
(I'm not a fan of LLM stuff but I do wonder if sometimes people turn to use an LLM as it can be quite lonely trying to work on a project on your own particularly if you run into a bit of a wall)

What is Your Political Legacy?

For these troubled political times, how will your actions be judged by future generations?

https://tiereddemocraticgovernance.org/blog_details.php?blog_cat_id=25&id=508

#tiereddemocraticgovernance
#legacy #geneology

Динозавры в проде: сколько лет языкам программирования и кто до сих пор зарабатывает на «мёртвых»

В 2026 году до 95% операций по картам в банкоматах мира обрабатываются на языке, который старше кассеты VHS и Microsoft как компании. Этот язык в учебниках по информатике обычно идёт в главе «История». В вакансиях международных банков — в графе «обязательные требования». 11 критичных федеральных систем США работают на языке 1959 года и обходятся бюджету в $754 млн в год. Речь про COBOL — и он не один такой. Всем привет, меня зовут Алексей, я тимлид в SENSE . В этой статье посмотрим, сколько лет популярным языкам программирования, что значит «мёртвый язык» в инженерном и в HR-смысле, почему «динозавры» вроде Fortran, Delphi и VB6 в 2025 году вернулись в топ-20 индекса TIOBE и что происходит в российском контексте.

https://habr.com/ru/companies/it_sense/articles/1040614/

#легаси #языки_программирования #cobol #delphi #legacy #pascal #fortran #visual_basic #история_языков_программирования

Динозавры в проде: сколько лет языкам программирования и кто до сих пор зарабатывает на «мёртвых»

В 2026 году до 95% операций по картам в банкоматах мира обрабатываются на языке, который старше кассеты VHS и Microsoft как компании. Этот язык в учебниках по информатике обычно идёт в главе...

Хабр

The Gap in the Elevator: A Man’s Guide to Surviving “The Fade”

1,841 words, 10 minutes read time.

The basement of the church smelled of floor wax and over-steeped decaf, a scent that always seemed to cling to the industrial carpet long after the meetings ended. Caleb Vance leaned forward in his plastic folding chair, his elbows resting on his knees, his hands clasped so tightly his knuckles showed white under the fluorescent hum of the ceiling lights. Around him sat six other men—men with calloused hands, tired eyes, and the same heavy silence he carried in his own chest. This was the inner circle, the group where the masks were supposed to come off, yet Caleb felt the familiar weight of his own pride pressing against his ribs like a physical barrier. He wasn’t there to give a sermon; he was there to gut-check the reality of being a man when the world stopped looking and the shadows started speaking. He took a slow breath, the kind that hurts a little, and began to recount the night the foundation of his life almost turned to sand.

He told them about the hotel bar, describing the amber glow that promised a warmth his own home hadn’t provided in months. He didn’t shy away from the visceral details—the scent of Elena’s sandalwood perfume, the way the light caught the condensation on her wine glass, and the sharp, dangerous intelligence in her eyes that made him feel seen in a way that Sarah, buried under the domestic weight of laundry and bills, hadn’t managed in years. Caleb described the conversation not as a seduction of the body, but as a seduction of the ego. He spoke of how he had let the “Expert” and the “Leader” personas take the wheel, feeding on the validation of a stranger while the tungsten ring on his finger felt like a lead weight dragging him toward the bottom of a dark ocean. He told the men about the pride that whispered he deserved this—that because he provided, because he sacrificed, he was entitled to a little fire to keep him warm.

The room was silent, the only sound the distant claking of the building’s heater. Caleb recounted the moment Elena stood up, her eyes locking onto his with an invitation that required no translation, and how he had followed her out of the bar like a man possessed by a ghost. He described the hallway of the hotel, the carpet muffling his footsteps as he moved toward the elevators, every step feeling like a micro-betrayal of the man he claimed to be in the light of day. He told them about King David on the rooftop, not as a Sunday school story, but as a visceral warning about what happens when a man of status and strength finds himself bored and unobserved. He was standing at the precipice, the moment where the internal monologue shifts from “should I?” to “why shouldn’t I?”, and he felt the roar of his own lust and resentment drowning out the quiet truths he had spent a lifetime building.

Then, he reached the climax of the night. He described the elevator chiming—a bright, sterile sound that cut through the haze of the bourbon and the sandalwood. Elena was inside, holding the door, her finger resting on the button for the top floor, her silence a challenge to his integrity. It was in that exact second that his phone vibrated in his pocket. Caleb told the group about pulling the device out and seeing the photo Sarah had sent: his kids asleep on the sofa, a tangled mess of limbs and innocence, accompanied by those three words that felt like a localized earthquake: “Our rock. Drive safe.” The title “rock” wasn’t a compliment in that moment; it was an indictment. He was the foundation of their world, and he was currently leaning into a crack that could bring the whole structure down.

Caleb looked around the circle of men, his voice dropping to a low, jagged rasp. He described standing there with one foot on the marble of the lobby and the other hovering over the metal track of the elevator threshold. The sensors were beeping, a soft, rhythmic warning that the door was going to close. Elena was watching him, her expression a mix of curiosity and cold patience, while the image of his sleeping children glowed in the palm of his hand. He told the group how he could feel the cold air of the lobby behind him and the climate-controlled promise of the elevator in front of him. The “narrow gate” wasn’t a metaphor anymore; it was the two inches of space remaining before the doors sealed shut.

“I stood there,” Caleb said, his eyes scanning the faces of his friends, seeing their own struggles reflected in the way they leaned in. “I felt the pull of the man I wanted to be for one night against the man I had spent twenty years becoming. The door started to move. The beep got faster. I had to decide if I was going to be the rock they thought I was, or the ghost I felt like inside.” Caleb stopped talking, the silence in the church basement becoming thick and heavy. He didn’t tell them if he stepped in or stepped back. He simply sat back in his chair, leaving the choice hanging in the air like woodsmoke, as the other men looked at their own hands, wondering what they would have done in the gap.

Author’s Note

I chose to leave Caleb Vance standing in that gap—that narrow two-inch space between the lobby marble and the elevator track—for a very specific reason. As men, we often want the resolution; we want to see the hero win or the villain fall so we can close the book and feel like the world is in order. But real life, the kind of life we live in the quiet hours of a Tuesday night or in the back of a church basement, rarely offers us a clean “The End.” I have been one of those men in those circles, sitting in those folding chairs and listening to the low, jagged voices of brothers sharing their own versions of the elevator lobby. I’ve heard the struggles, the hidden resentments, and the moments where the “rock” started to crumble. To be honest, these situations usually end in a way we don’t like to talk about: in deep hurt and the stinging salt of betrayal. We like to think we can play with fire and not get burned, but the wreckage left behind by crossing these boundaries is visceral and lasting. The brutal reality is that very few marriages survive this kind of fracture; once that glass is shattered, you can try to glue the pieces back together, but the cracks remain visible forever.

To go deeper, we have to recognize that the fall doesn’t start at the elevator door. It begins with “The Fade,” a process of small, silent compromises that erode our foundation long before the big moment arrives. It starts with the shared secret—the moment you tell a woman who isn’t your wife something about your struggle or your heart that you haven’t told your spouse. By doing that, you are building an emotional safe house outside your home and creating an intimacy that belongs only to your marriage. It continues with the narrative of the “Unappreciated Provider,” a form of pride that whispers that because you work sixty hours a week, you are entitled to a secret corner of life just for you. This is a slow poison that makes us feel like martyrs instead of men of honor. Finally, it thrives in the “Silent Circle,” where we let other men see only the “Expert” version of ourselves. Isolation is the predator’s playground, and without a group of men who can see through your armor, you are an easy target for your own worst impulses.

The Bible doesn’t shy away from the unfinished nature of a man’s heart, warning us in Proverbs 4:23 to keep our hearts with all vigilance, for from it flow the springs of life. Vigilance isn’t a one-time event that ends with a neat bow; it is a constant, ongoing state of being. Caleb’s story doesn’t end at the elevator because the temptation to cross emotional boundaries is a war of attrition that doesn’t stop after one “victory.” I left the door open because we serve a God who gives us the agency to choose, and that choice is often made in the grit of the moment, far away from the eyes of others.

1 Corinthians 10:13 reminds us that God provides a way out so that we can endure, but we still have to be the ones to take the step back. As you think about how Caleb’s night ended, ask yourself how your own story is unfolding. Are you leaning into the crack of a secret life, or are you doing the hard, masculine work of staying grounded? This is why we need the circle—because a man standing alone is a man who can be convinced that the elevator door is the only way out. The ending to this story is being written by you every single day.

Ditch the performance, cling to the only Truth that lasts, and cultivate a life of purpose.

SUPPORTSUBSCRIBECONTACT ME

D. Bryan King

Sources

Disclaimer:

The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. The information provided is based on personal research, experience, and understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing. Readers should consult relevant experts or authorities for specific guidance related to their unique situations.

#1Corinthians1013 #accountability #accountabilityPartners #authenticity #BetrayalRecovery #biblicalManhood #biblicalWisdom #characterDevelopment #ChristianMarriage #ChristianMen #churchCommunity #EmotionalAffair #emotionalBoundaries #Faith #faithfulness #familyLeadership #fruitOfTheSpirit #GuardingYourHeart #Honor #Husbandhood #identityInChrist #integrity #InternalStruggle #John15 #Leadership #legacy #MarriageAdvice #Masculinity #MenSSmallGroups #MenSSupport #menSMinistry #MoralCompromise #overcomingTemptation #Parenting #PersonalGrowth #PersonalIntegrity #Proverbs423 #providerRole #resilience #SocialPressure #spiritualDiscipline #SpiritualGrowth #spiritualHealth #SpiritualRoots #spiritualWarfare #StayingGrounded #temptation #TheFade #TheVineAndTheBranches #vulnerability
Island sports community honours the life and legacy of Forbie Kennedy
The sports community in P.E.I. is remembering the life and career of former NHLer Forbes Kennedy. He died on Monday, but his legacy won't be forgotten any time soon. CBC’s Connor Lamont has more.
https://www.cbc.ca/player/play/9.7214325?cmp=rss

#TIL (through a colleague) about this project to reverse engineer #legacy #code into detailed specifications for #AI #agents: "Reversa: A Reverse Documentation Engineering Framework for Converting Legacy #Software into Operational Specifications for AI Agents" https://github.com/sandeco/reversa

#ReverseEngineering

See also: https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.18684

GitHub - sandeco/reversa: Transform legacy systems into executable specifications for AI coding agents

Transform legacy systems into executable specifications for AI coding agents - sandeco/reversa

GitHub

Приручаем железо: внедряем DevOps в промышленной разработке

Промышленный DevOps — это не про «деплоим по десять раз в день», а про предсказуемость, контроль и снижение цены ошибки. В статье разбираем, как внедрять CI/CD там, где вместо облаков и контейнеров — контроллеры, прошивки, RS-485, HIL‑стенды, сертификация, офлайн‑площадки и реальное оборудование, сбой которого может стоить десятки тысяч долларов в час.

https://habr.com/ru/companies/otus/articles/1033476/

#DevOps #промышленная_разработка #прошивки #контроллеры #HIL #FAT #SBOM #цифровая_подпись #legacy

Приручаем железо: внедряем DevOps в промышленной разработке

Привет, Хабр! Меня зовут Андрей Бирюков. Я независимый эксперто в области ИТ и ИБ, преподаю в учебных центрах и пишу книги. На просторах сети можно найти множество статей, посвященных...

Хабр