@hellaconfused

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215 Posts

Sometimes in Northern Thailand. Sometimes on a Southern Thai beach. Sometimes in the USA. Where ever I am, I aim to leave a small footprint.

Ishmael, My Ishmael, and The Story of B by Daniel Quinn are probably the most important books I have ever read.

Remember it isn't so much the platform as it is the personalities or bots on those platforms that make it or break it.

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One lesson I'd like to share about organising protests against the far-right and authoritarianism. Here in Munich, where we had protests with 200.000+ participants in 2024 and 2025, there was one simple rule.

No politicians were allowed to speak on stage. Only activists and victims speak.

The politicians, no matter what they promise at a protest, go back to their parliaments, think they've done enough and continue with business as usual. So remember: It's our protest. Not their photo-op. 1/4

Well, that is something.

(A repost for #solarpunk and #resilience folk of today’s edition of my #PowerOnStoryToot series)

You always felt kind of sad when walking past an overgrown, sometimes half-buried railway line. So much work went into connecting communities and providing a network of low-cost transport, that you feel a rip in your heart over your grandparents act of letting the vines of connection wither in favour of expensive, inefficient BORING automobile carriages.

The joy of watching the countryside slide by while reading a book or having a face to face conversation can’t compare to being stuck at the levers and dials of those darn cars. You wonder at the hubris of attempting to make cars self-driving, as if Gödel and Murphy hadn’t seen right through that in advance.

The train line to your daughter’s house runs past a scrapyard. The tower of Teslas is particularly tall today, must be the crusher operator’s day off. Hey, what if…

An idea-candle lights in your mind.

The scrapyard was puzzled when you wanted to buy a dozen Teslas, they run fine but who can bear the shame, they said. Won’t be keeping the bodywork, you answered.

The old spur line that terminates at the abandoned rail yard near your home was a perfect testbed. Plenty of roof space for recycled solar panels, old wooden passenger carriages that can drop on to the new teslabogeys. Your impromptu market day service between here and the next town became a celebration of community spirit, sunbonnets and sunglasses, baskets of produce, flocks of kids and dogs. The idea-candle lit other fires.

Visiting your kid last week, you noticed the scrapyard looking rather bare.

@hellaconfused @pluralistic I went on an os/2 kick and had the same issue with a dozen 86box hardware configs. Damn I'm glad my parents got a Mac.

@deepthoughts10 @hellaconfused Weirdly I didn't across several computers, and every version from 2.0 to 4.0 (I was a beta tester, so I also wasn't paying for it after version 2.0). First OS/2 system was a 486SX-25 from DEC. But I was also kinda careful about having specific graphics cards (S3 based) and Turtle Beach audio cards or the Pro Audio Spectrum.

My last system (Dell) was a dual boot OS/2 v4 and Win 98SE system that used Dani's FAT32 driver to handle the Win98 drive so I could read/write data to it from OS/2.

@hellaconfused I think everyone had that experience with OS/2 😐

@hellaconfused

I worked at IBM in the mid 1990s and we had to use OS/2.

We called it SlowAss/Who.

@hellaconfused @pluralistic
(Note to other readers: 486 was the top of line CPU those days)

I remember seeing someone "running" OS/2 in a computer which would take nerly a minute to draw a window when restoring an application. -

An experience similar one gets in 2025 by trying to use Linkedin live chat in an 8 core, 32GB i7 box.

In the mid 1990s I tried to put OS/2 Warp on my 486 computer. The hardware seemed compatible. But no go. I called IBM support and we went through everything and I gave up and asked for a refund. IBM said no. Well... what am I going to do with this? IBM said give it to a friend. I said no thanks I like to keep my friends.

Now I see @pluralistic supports Netscape Navigator. Woo hooo Maybe I can make this an OS/2 side project to read pluralistic when I get back to LA.