0 Followers
0 Following
1 Posts

So you’re planning on sourcing your own kiosk from somewhere and running data gathering on that? Do I understand that right?

No. But for answering my physics question it would not matter either way whether I own the kiosk.

My question is also general. There are different kiosks for different purposes by different companies.

Did you check whether you can just directly address the same API that a kiosk would talk to?

I do not control any of the kiosks that have the data of interest. And even if I did they would likely be running closed-source software. I also do not control the network that any of the kiosks are attached to, so no chance of probing the traffic to discover their API calls.

Is it possible to trigger a tap on a capacitive touch screen remotely?

https://crazypeople.online/post/19126153

Is it possible to trigger a tap on a capacitive touch screen remotely? - crazypeople.online

The linked article covers some ways to tap a touch screen without a finger. That’s probably the most comprehensive document on the topic yet those options all seem impractical for my needs. So here’s my problem: Travel websites are increasingly enshitified and consumer-hostile (and often Tor-hostile). They are also protectionist with the data as they use anti-bot tech (which really ammounts to anti-human tech b/c bots serve humans). Kiosks are a refuge of a sort (almost, kind of). Some kiosks have useful information without the anti-bot shenanigans, but they are also still designed to be labor intensive. Kiosks that sell train or bus tickets force users to supply a specific date of travel and specific destination. For me, the date of travel depends on the price of the ticket, but the UI does not allow users to know the price until after they fill out a form. Sometimes I don’t even know the destination because the city I visit depends on the price as I look for a cheap trip somewhere. What we need is a tool that will enter all combinations of queries for ranges of travel dates and times and for sets of origin-destination pairs. Is there hardware that can handle this job? If the kiosk is a touch screen, my knee-jerk instinct was for a laser do the job of a finger. But after further checks, I don’t think a laser can have an electro magnetic effect or whatever is needed. Apart from convenience of being able to harvest a dataset and do my own queries, I also imagine some handicapped people (e.g. without the use of arms) have the same problem and would benefit from the same solution.

Mozilla believes browsers should serve the webmaster, not the user

https://crazypeople.online/post/17159600

Mozilla believes browsers should serve the webmaster, not the user - crazypeople.online

…evidenced by the stale mothballed bug report (linked). This should be an easy bug. It should be a no-brainer that triggers a Mozilla dev to say “of course, no problem… job done”. It’s kind of like when Trump was asked to condemn the KKK. He had to pause and think. Or when Peter Thiel was asked: > “Hey, what do you think? Should humanity survive?” And it took him five, six, seven seconds to say, ‘Yes, I guess so’.” (from Rutger Bregman’s lecture [https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m002nhld]) A year after the bug was raised, Mozilla has not made a decision.

Did we lose the option to keep local copies of webpages?

https://crazypeople.online/post/16556183

Did we lose the option to keep local copies of webpages? - crazypeople.online

There used to be a feature whereby a bookmarked page could be flagged for offline use. Then when you visit that page, it instantly renders the page regardless of whether you are online. Was that removed? There is a «File→Work Offline» tickbox, but that’s apparently something different because it gives no way to specify which pages should function offline.

I thought only Americans faced nationality-based discrimination by banks. But I heard there are others. Who else?

https://crazypeople.online/post/5581570

I thought only Americans faced nationality-based discrimination by banks. But I heard there are others. Who else? - crazypeople.online

cross-posted from [email protected] [/c/[email protected]] [https://crazypeople.online/c/humanrights] – https://crazypeople.online/post/5464740 [https://crazypeople.online/post/5464740] > FATCA specifically oppresses Americans who live outside the US. It strong-arms banks into treating Americans adversely different based on their national origin (ranging from denial of service to extra data collection and disclosure). I thought Americans were the only people who broadly face discrimination in banking due to their nationality. But I recently heard of other nationalities (not Americans) who are refused bank access due to their nationality (in Europe, where we might have a high expectation of human rights). > > I could never get the details. People that report this to me have been vague. But I’ve heard it twice now. Does anyone know the specifics? Which nationalities and why?

I thought only Americans faced nationality-based discrimination by banks. But I heard there are others. Who else?

https://crazypeople.online/post/5466787

I thought only Americans faced nationality-based discrimination by banks. But I heard there are others. Who else? - crazypeople.online

cross-posted from: https://crazypeople.online/post/5464740 [https://crazypeople.online/post/5464740] > FATCA specifically oppresses Americans who live outside the US. It strong-arms banks into treating Americans adversely different based on their national origin (ranging from denial of service to extra data collection and disclosure). I thought Americans were the only people who broadly face discrimination in banking due to their nationality. But I recently heard of other nationalities (not Americans) who are refused bank access due to their nationality (in Europe, where we might have a high expectation of human rights). > > I could never get the details. People that report this to me have been vague. But I’ve heard it twice now. Does anyone know the specifics? Which nationalities and why?