@axby

18 Followers
134 Following
40 Posts
I like writing Rust, C/C++, and Lua for web pages thanks to #webassembly #wasm. Check out my simple Lua/Rust games in a browser/more project (AlexGames), and my LaTeX equation display scientific calculator in a browser/Android (AlexCalc). Currently living in Halifax, NS, Canada.
Websitehttps://alexbarry.net
Githubhttps://github.com/alexbarry
LocationHalifax, NS, Canada

@Izng @pax0707 @marcoarment ah, I guess I've never even looked into that because I pay for a domain name (slightly cheaper than Bitwarden premium after the price "update"), so I can get anything@{my domain} forwarded to my main email inbox.

It is fun to sign up for services using {service name}@{my domain name} as the email, though it can get awkward when dealing with a real person who wants to confirm your email address.

I have yet to catch any spam from these aliases, though.

@Izng @pax0707 @marcoarment I forgot about emergency and shared access, I do appreciate those somewhat. But I’d rather store my TOTP secrets separately (I actually use Keepass for that). Are there any other great premium features I’m missing?

Hmm and it looks like U2F key support is included in the free version now, I don’t think it was 2 years ago.

I don’t want to cancel because Bitwarden has been great and I want it to survive, but it seems like the free version would meet all my needs.

@pax0707 @marcoarment their language was even more passive, the email I received simply had the subject "Your Bitwarden Premium renewal is updating", so I almost didn't notice the price increase... the second sentence was "The price is updating to $1.65/month, billed annually". Though it added that "As an existing Bitwarden customer, you will receive a one-time 25% loyalty discount for this year's renewal".

$20/yr seems a bit steep just for U2F key support. $10/yr felt worth it.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-025-10551-8

Using CRISPR to regraft millions-of-years-gone genes back into a human liver, recreating an enzyme that can relieve gout and kidney disease.

Just past all the greed and hatred and shortsighted selfishness, just behind the horrors, there is an age of miracles ahead of us, within reach.

Genomic insertion of ancestral uricase into human liver cells to determine metabolic consequences of pseudogenization - Scientific Reports

The biological role of urate (uric acid) during primate evolution has been unclear ever since it was discovered over 100 years ago that humans have unusually high levels of the small molecule compared to most other mammals. Humans (including all apes) are uncharacteristically susceptible to the build-up of urate because we no longer have a functional uricase enzyme capable of oxidizing this highly insoluble molecule. We have now utilized CRISPR technology to insert functional ancestral uricase into the genome of human liver cells to address recent metabolic hypotheses that our ancestral primates inactivated uricase as a mechanism to increase triglyceride production in response to fructose and/or starvation. Uricase expression is confirmed in both hepatocyte monolayer and spheroid tissue cultures, and its expression reduces intracellular urate levels. The presence of uricase is also shown to prevent an increase in triglyceride production upon cellular uptake of fructose in both culture conditions. Our results make progress that further describes a potential advantageous biological role of urate during primate evolution.

Nature

@colincornaby ah, got it. I missed that since I feel like I've heard a lot of people say something to the effect of "embrace AI or be left behind", which I interpret in a similar way.

Aside: it's refreshing to hear the perspective of another person "in the middle" on LLMs! The microwave analogy was perfect, and I also didn't know that microwaves had went through a similar sort of hype phase.

@colincornaby thanks, I read this the other day (and is why I started following you. Excellent post by the way!). But I must be missing something, how is that screenshot stolen from your microwave blog post?
@colincornaby can you share your original post? I couldn’t find it and am interested in reading more.

@szhang_ds this seems so much better than the current law.

I don’t understand why better technical solutions like this don’t seem to be considered. Like the GDPR cookie popups on every site. Shouldn’t it be easy to block cookies per domain? Firefox can do it, but it’s awkward.

My only guess is because the OS, the browser, and the site all would need to change. And it’s easily defeated by a proxy that removes the header. Maybe an iframe can even do it? Still, it seems worth a try

(quote continued)

> or maybe you need to talk to your town council, school board, or other local authority about changing their procurement rules so favor free/open code (from code to law).

@pluralistic Thanks, this part may be my answer:

> Do you despair because you’ve been writing free/open source software for decades but all your friends are still locked in walled gardens? Maybe you need to switch to volunteering at the local library or maker space to teach people how to use free software (from code to norms); or maybe you need to help a refurbisher outfit laptops with Ubuntu or another free OS (from code to markets); ...

It sucks that writing software is so fun, though.