Ukraine will no longer send troops abroad for training, shifting all preparation to domestic facilities. The decision was driven by concerns over limited modern combat experience among foreign instructors.
A decision long time due... #Ukraine
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Ukraine will no longer send troops abroad for training, shifting all preparation to domestic facilities. The decision was driven by concerns over limited modern combat experience among foreign instructors.
A decision long time due... #Ukraine
Someone suggested not pulling any April Fool's pranks this year and I think we all need to get on board with that.
Because, you know, all this.
Slovenia becomes first EU country to introduce fuel rationing
Link: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c77m4zx6zvmo
Discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47548087
Processor shortage to become acute in the coming months
AMD and Intel are apparently shifting their production to server CPUs. Price increases are looming for desktop PCs and notebooks.
RE: https://mastodon.ar.al/@aral/116271471337770496
As people have been saying, Americans, you need to get over that "This is not who we are" bullshit right fucking now - because this is so much who you are; you were so ready for it, that the world's stupidest person could dictator you 5-10 times faster than any other despot & while not missing a single golf break.
Don't like it? Do something about it.
See normally when an algorithm requires The Entire Global Supply Of Ram, a software engineer would consider that not a good algorithm, and would try and make a better one instead of optimising the entire planet for paperclip manufacturing.
Unfortunately we accidentally gave a bad software engineer too much money
FBI is buying location data to track US citizens, director confirms
Link: https://techcrunch.com/2026/03/18/fbi-is-buying-location-data-to-track-us-citizens-kash-patel-wyden/
Discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47430797
So, I have actually read the text of California law CA AB1043 and, honestly, I don't hate it. It requires operating systems to let you enter a date when you create a user account and requires a way for software to get a coarse-grained approximation of this that says either 'over 18' or one of three age ranges of under-18s. Importantly, it doesn't require:
In short, it's a tool for parents: it allows you to set the age of a child's account so that apps (including web browsers, which can then expose via JavaScript or whatever) can ask questions about what features they should expose.
In a UNIX-like system, this is easy to do, with a tiny amount of new userspace things:
/etc/user_birthdays file (or whatever name it is) that stores pairs of username (or uid) and birthdays.This doesn't require any kernel changes. Any process can query the set of groups that the user is in already.
If a parent wants to give their child root, they can update the file and bypass the check. And that's fine, that's a parent's choice. And that's what I want.
I like this approach far more than things that require users to provide scans of passports and other toxically personal information to be able to use services. If we had this feature, then the Online Safety Act could simply require that web browsers provide a JavaScript API to query the age bracket and didn't work unless it returned 'over 18'.