dressupgeekout

@dressupgeekout@bsd.network
322 Followers
213 Following
3.1K Posts

California - aspiring author - musician - small-time artist - multimedia scientist - NetBSD/pkgsrc fangirl - interdisciplinary nerd 🦓 🐾  she/her

My debut novel THE WOLFSKULL STANDARD will be available in ebook and paperback in 2025

Fedi acc't for my small business: @magentastripe
Furry-oriented acc't: @hanalei
Black Desert fan acc't: @lahn_main

Banner image: "Venice: The Dogana and San Giorgio Maggiore" by J.M.W. Turner

HTTPShttps://dressupgeekout.com
YouTubehttps://www.youtube.com/@dressupgeekout
Geminigemini://dressupgeekout.com
NetBSDcharlotte@
Oh my god, I can't believe it. Rockett's backpack exists! https://www.ebay.com/itm/187410632711
Purple Moon Computer Game Company - Rockett's New School + Cards + Backpack | eBay

It may not work on all machines.

eBay
Dear friends of the BSD Cafe,

This idea has been in my mind since the very beginning of this adventure, almost two years ago. Over time, several people have suggested it. But until recently, I felt the timing just wasn’t right - for many reasons. Today, I believe it finally is.

So I’m happy to announce a new service:
The BSD Cafe Journal - https://journal.bsd.cafe

At first, I thought I’d use BSSG for it (I even added multi-author support with this in mind), but in the end, it didn’t feel like the right tool for the job.

The idea is to create a multi-author space, with content published on a fairly regular basis. A reference point for news, updates, tutorials, technical articles - a place to inform and connect.
Just like people in Italy used to stop by cafes to read the newspaper and chat about the day’s news, the BSD Cafe Journal aims to be a space for reading, sharing, and staying informed - all in the spirit of the BSD Cafe.

What it’s not:
It’s not here to replace personal blogs, or excellent newsletters like @vermaden ’s. And it’s not an aggregator.

What it is:
A place where authors can write original content, share links to posts on their own blogs or elsewhere, publish guides, offer insights, or dive into technical explanations.

The guiding principles are the same as always: positivity, constructive discussion, promoting BSDs and open source in general. No hype (sharing a cool new service is fine, posting non-stop about the latest trend is not), no drama, no politics. The goal is to bring people together, not divide them. To inform, not inflame.
Respect, tolerance, and inclusivity are key. Everyone should feel welcome reading the BSD Cafe Journal - never judged, offended, or excluded.

The platform I’ve chosen is WordPress, for several reasons: it’s portable (runs well on all BSDs), has great built-in role management (contributors, authors, etc.), and - last but not least - supports ActivityPub.
This means every author will have their own identity in the Fediverse (like: @stefano@journal.bsd.cafe ) and can be followed directly, and it’ll also be possible to follow the whole Journal.

Original and educational content is encouraged, but it’s also perfectly fine to link to existing articles elsewhere. Personally, I’ll link my technical posts from ITNotes whenever I publish them there.

The goal is simple: a news-oriented site, rich in content, ad-free, respectful of privacy - all under the BSD Cafe umbrella.

Content coordination will happen in a dedicated Matrix room for authors. There’ll also be a public room for discussing ideas, giving feedback, and sharing suggestions.

Of course, I can’t do this alone. A journal with no content is just an empty shell.
So here’s my call for action:
Who’s ready to lend a hand? If you enjoy writing, explaining, sharing your knowledge - the Journal is waiting for you.

#BSDCafe #BSDCafeServices #BSDCafeUpdates #BSDCafeAnnouncements #RunBSD #FreeBSD #NetBSD #OpenBSD #illumos #Linux #OSS #OpenSource #BCJournal #BSDCafeJournal
The BSD Cafe Journal – The BSD Cafe Journal: Your Daily Brew of BSD & Open Source News

Got some more Merriam-Webster weirdness for you. Their slang page refers to rising use of "crash out," seemingly synonymous with "freak out." But this page doesn't refer to what I thought was a common meaning in chemistry: when precipitate falls out of solution, we say it "crashes out". https://www.merriam-webster.com/slang/crash-out
crash out

To crash out is to become suddenly, uncontrollably angry or distressed.

After having solved over 2,000 of Pixelogic's 5x5 Nonograms, I'm kinda convinced that there exists an algorithm that will always find a solution in such a way that you never need to "take a shot in the dark." I.e., there is never a situation where you'd need to blindly guess where the next green pixel lies. https://pixelogic.app/every-5x5-nonogram
Every 5x5 Nonogram

Pixelogic - Daily Nonograms
The RhymeZone results on Merriam-Webster's website for words that rhyme with 'ovine' (a word meaning "having to do with sheep") are completely and utterly bogus. The plainly obvious suggestion 'bovine' is nowhere on this page.
Considering the similarity between the two games, I wonder if Cockatrice could be adapted to enable online play of Disney Lorcana instead of just Magic: The Gathering
My current hypothesis is that that the Rust library which actually interfaces with keyboard scancodes ("winit") assumes that Linux and NetBSD are identical in this regard, when in fact they are not.
The Snow emulator seems to work okay on NetBSD/amd64 as long as you build the 'release' version. (The 'debug' version causes audio to glitch pretty badly.) The only dealbreaker so far is that I'm not able to emulate the Command key on this keyboard for some reason. I might be able to figure it out
I had way too much fun at the Toy Photography workshop at BayCon over the weekend. Here are some of my favorite snaps
Holy crap, I am so much more invested in this year's BayCon than I was last year. I feel very supported and, frankly, successful
×
As best as I can tell, Dropout.tv is fully functional on NetBSD w/ Firefox. Closed captioning and the really interesting navigable transcript feature all Just Work. In a world where "streaming service" feels synonymous with DRM/Widevine garbage, this is really nice.
Dropout isn't the only service like this that works on NetBSD. For example, you can tune in to Nebula just fine. I'm certain there's a whole bunch of them that work well. I'm really just having an absolute blast with my Dropout subscription, and the fact it also works on my favorite OS is just icing on this really sweet cake