Walker

@WalkWalkWalk@mstdn.social
33 Followers
325 Following
265 Posts
Walker, cyclist, and finally making some sense of our world.

"What else do we forget about the pandemic? We forget how mesmerised we were as nature rebounded, how clean the air was in the absence of industrial scale human activity. We forget that carbon emissions fell at the sort of pace required to avoid cataclysmic climate change. We forget that no-strings cash payments saw child poverty in America plunge to record lows, that the UK slashed homelessness with schemes that found homes for people sleeping on the street.

We forget that there really was a sense of global solidarity, that the reflection demanded by a pandemic opened up spaces for us to consider truly radical and permanent change. Remember build back better? There really was a sense that the coronavirus, as we all knew it then, could be the catalyst for a better word.

It couldn't last because of capitalism. This isn't some glib statement, it is literally why such promises could never be fulfilled. Because such promises required redistribution and structural shifts to economies that billionaires don't want shifting."

https://www.donotpanic.news/p/five-years-on-a-covid-retrospective

Five Years On: A Covid Retrospective

As we approach the five year mark of the first known case of covid-19, as we contemplate a half decade of watching a novel virus rip through our communities, our countries, our world, I wanted to do a retrospective on the pandemic.

¡Do Not Panic!

@gruber Your “How it Went” is one of the most moving things I’ve read in a long time — it’s not just something good from a tech writer. Of course, were I not interested in the social/political importance of the middle section, I might never have made it through to the best part. I’m really glad I did!

This affected me not only because I felt comforted and helped regain my perspective after rough times, but also because of the sheer beauty of what you shared. Thank you.

I just received an advance copy of Stuart Hardwick's "Tales of the United States Space Force," an anthology of science fiction and articles. Authors include David Brin, Larry Niven, Arthur C. Clarke, Harry Turtledove, Gregory & James Benford. So far, it seems to be an exciting, topical new book. Is anyone else reading this?

Pontevedra, a spanish City has been car-free for more than 20 years. Air pollution is down by 61%, no traffic deaths since 2009.

#GreenDisability #ClimateAction #SDGs #AirPollution #Sustainability #ClimateChange #ClimateCrisis #Technology #Disability #Poverty #Cinema #HumanRights

@littlesnitch
Is Little Snitch 6 encrypted DNS feature compatible with Apple’s Private Relay?
@gruber
“For All Mankind” is not the only alternate history show. “The Man in the High Castle,” written by the highly regarded Phillip K. Dick, has streamed on Amazon Prime video. It got 95% on Rotten Tomatoes and the pilot was the most watched ever on Amazon Prime when it premiered in 2015.
@FreeTube Hi, and thank you. This is a good project but I see there have been no new versions since October ’23 and there is no version for Mac silicon. Are you planning to release one?

@WalkWalkWalk Definitely. That’s why I switched from contact lenses to glasses a few years ago: progressives. I just gave Apple my progressives prescription and I see fine in the Vision Pro.

I actually think the lens inserts are *not* progressive though. The focal distance in the unit is 1.3m, so even when you’re wearing it looking at someting close to your face, like your watch, it’s the Vision Pro doing the focusing, not your eyes.

@gruber Great article on Vision Pro. Would the Zeiss lenses work for those with presbyopia. Most of us over 40’s need bifocals or progressive lenses to see anything closer than our outstretched arms. They are activated by looking through the bottoms of the lenses, often by tilting our heads. I hope we’re not left out of Vision Pro!