Jobu Tupaki

@RubyTuesdayDONO
234 Followers
1,017 Following
5.2K Posts
liberation technologist, secular humanist, empathy seeker: a way for the cosmos to know itself.
pronounshe·they·y'all·怹·comrade
metroDallas
neurodiversityADHD+RSD
cohorts☸️🏳️‍🌈♂️🙋🏻‍♂️🧑🏻‍💻🇺🇲

European robin (Erithacus rubecula, 🇩🇪 Rotkehlchen, 🇵🇱 rudzik) - #portrait

#birds #birdphotography #birdsofmastodon #birdwatching #nature #naturephotography #vogelflausch #ptaki

The legacy of Mueller is that if you do diligent methodical careful work on a damning report, trusting to our institutions to do the right thing, damned liars will just tell damned lies about your work and the lies will stand, because institutions won't confront power and nobody does the reading.

This sci-fi author chose Emacs over AI tools.

https://itsfoss.com/emacs-the-ux-ideal/

In the Age of AI Writing Tools, I Picked Emacs for My Sci-Fi Novel

The venerable text editor feels timeless and timely in the age of AI and enshittification. A novelist argues that it is perhaps because Emacs is the embodiment of FOSS ideals

It's FOSS
It's not that AI agents will multiply our power if only we can constrain them from doing unexpected and unwelcome things, but that their frustrating unreliability reflects the broader point of all AI, which is to strip us of agency altogether.
We don't need sovereign hyperscale data centres because we don't want them or the shoddy tech that depends on them. What we do need is a democratic control of our energy and water resources that orients towards sustainability. Goodbye Thames Water, and take Anthropic with you!
“Boundaries” went from a therapeutic term to “I can treat you however I want and you can’t react.” Incredible speedrun. No notes (they’re a boundary violation)

Inside Netanyahu's head. Cartoon from 2024.

#Israel #Netanyahu #empathy

I don’t object to ‘if you don’t like it, fork it’ as a response as long as you have structured the project to make it easy for people to maintain downstream forks. Indeed, I consider the existence of downstream forks to be a sign of health in an open-source ecosystem. This means:

  • External interfaces to the rest of your ecosystem need to be 100% stable and to be added slowly. You must have feature-discovery mechanisms that make it easy for things to work with old versions of your project.
  • Internal code churns infrequently. Pulling in changes from upstream and reviewing them should be easy.
  • Internal structure is well documented and modular.

This leads to small projects with loose coupling that can be done (or, at least, ‘maintenance mode’, where they get occasional bug fixes but meet their requirements and don’t need to change).

A lot of projects were like that 20-30 years ago. Reaching the ‘maintenance mode’ state was a badge of honour: you had achieved your goals and no one else needed to reinvent the wheel. New things could be built as external projects. The last few decades have seen a push towards massive too-big-to-fork projects that have external interfaces that the rest of the ecosystem needs to integrate with, which are complex and lead to tight coupling.

The US-Israel war on Iran has emitted 5 million tonnes of CO₂ₑ in its first 14 days. The world currently has 0.6 million tonnes of novel and permanent CO₂ removal (CDR) capacity annually.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/mar/21/middle-east-iran-conflict-environment-climate

5m tonnes of CO2 emitted in just 14 days of US war on Iran, analysis finds

Exclusive: War in the Middle East is draining the global carbon budget faster than 84 countries combined

The Guardian