L'utilite que je vois au opt-in c'est que ca réduit a 1 clic ce qui autrement peut prendre beaucoup de temps, et que un/e nouveau/lle jlailutin/e n'a pas besoin de savoir épeler les instances ni de les découvrir etc avant de pouvoir les filtrer (comme pour une de-federation, sauf que du coup tu peux quand meme "revenir en arrière" au niveau individuel si tu sais ce que tu fais/veux).
Not just a Russian general, a rank in the army of the Soviet union (which comes off even worse to me)
Appliqué a notre cas, ca donnerait : je ne serais pas contre, si jlai.lu mettait hexbear et lemmygrad en ban recommandé opt-in. Je serais contre les mettre en opt-out, mais cela ne me pousserait pas a quitter l'instance et j'attendrais d'avoir des "preuves" sures avant de militer activement contre. Je ne serais également pas contre (et limite pour) que chaque instance de toxicité observée dans l'autre fil résulte en l'ajout de son auteur/ice sur la liste des bans recommandés ici (et cette fois-ci peut-être plus opt-out qu'opt-in).
Je trouve que ca permettrait d'exprimer une certaine conséquence forte (et donc appropriée face a la toxicité qu'il y a eu lieu) sans pour autant consigner d'avance toutes les utilisateur/ices de hexbear presents et futurs.
Après davantage de réflexion, je pense pouvoir donner un debut de "solution" qui me conviendrait. Malheureusement il me semble que ce n'est pas possible avec Lemmy actuellement. Tout de meme : ajouter un niveau supplémentaire entre "federation totale" et "défédération totale".
Un example concrèt serait que les admins d'une instance peuvent maintenir une liste de ban "recommandés" d'instances (et pourquoi pas, d'utilisateurs). Ces admins pourraient ensuite decider de rendre cette liste "opt-in" ou "opt-out" pour l'ensemble des utilisateurs de leur instance. On pourrait également documenter, de facon similaire aux modlog ou la liste acutelle de défédés, les changements de status vis-a-vis de cette liste.
Ce qui m'interese par cet exemple, c'est sa capacité améliorée de feedback mutuel par rapport a la simple binarité de la fédé/défédé. Quand on défédere, on perd énormément en capacité d'observer si la "peine" a eu un impact positif sur les utilisateurs de l'instance défédérée. A l'inverse, l'ajout sur une liste de bans "recommandés" permettrait par exemple d'avoir des jlailutin/es qui individuellement tolèrent plus les ours de pouvoir témoigner de leur evolution au reste de jlai.lu sans quitter notre instance. Ca permettrait également aux ours qui ne nous supportent pas de ne pas avoir a individuellement nous block ou ban. Etc.
Le seul bémol que j'y vois est qu'actuellement bloquer un compte utilisateur et/ou une instance n’empêche pas comportement d’être exposé a leurs agissements sur le fédivers (de ce que je comprends). Il faudrait que ca le soit pour que ma proposition ait du sens.
Bien sur, la défédé totale doit rester dans la boite a outils des admins, ne serait-ce que pour les instances qui partagent des contenus illégaux (et donc trop risqué de laisser leurs servers envoyer le moindre octet chez eux). Il faut juste d'autres nuances ou degrés en plus. VRChat a un systeme avec 5 niveaux de "confiance" que chaque utilisateur peut accorder aux autres, ainsi que définir un degré qui est appliqué par défaut a tous les autres utilisateurs. C'est d'autant plus pertinent pour eux car les avatars de certains peuvent plier en deux ton client si ta machine est trop legere.
cacher does, but cache as in "cache-toi !" (go hide!) and "je me cache" (I'm hiding) are pronounced "cash".
Besides, "correct" pronunciation in a different language is pretty meaningless. The word may have come from French but we're speaking English, not French.
Also, it might not be a loan word so much as a legacy-of-foreigners-taking-over word (c.f. the Normand invasion of Britain), which doesn't tend to help the language's users care about respecting the "original" pronunciation. I'm not certain when exactly cachet entered English.
"dise-player, carder"
Ah, so this is probably some law trying to curb gambling-
"tenys player" wait, what? Were people betting on tennis matches back in the day or something?
Have you ever heard of the great oxidation event? https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Oxidation_Event
Though I doubt the anaerobic bacteria was aware enough to be able to deny what was happening in the first place.
Every time I read about how we're finding micro plastics in places we thought they couldn't reach (blood-brain barrier recently) I think of the GOE.
Quel enfer!
Ca explique peut-être pourquoi je reçois 10 fois plus de spams et scams sur mon tel depuis 1 semaine ou deux.
Copie du texe du mail :
Information concernant vos données personnelles
Chère abonnée, Cher abonné,
Nous vous écrivons afin de vous informer que Free a été victime d’une cyberattaque ciblant un outil de gestion.
Cette attaque a entrainé un accès non autorisé à une partie des données personnelles associées à votre compte abonné : nom, prénom, adresses email et postale, date et lieu de naissance, numéro de téléphone, identifiant abonné et données contractuelles (type d’offre souscrite, date de souscription, abonnement actif ou non).
Aucun de vos mots de passe n’est concerné.
Toutes les mesures nécessaires ont été prises immédiatement pour mettre fin à cette attaque et renforcer la protection de nos systèmes d’information.
Cette attaque a été notifiée à la Commission nationale de l’informatique et des libertés (CNIL) et à l’Agence nationale de la sécurité des systèmes d’information (ANSSI). Une plainte pénale a également été déposée auprès du procureur de la République. L’auteur de ce délit s’expose à une peine de 5 ans d’emprisonnement et de 150 000 € d’amende.
Nous vous invitons à la plus grande vigilance face au risque d’emails, SMS ou appels frauduleux. Sachez que nos conseillers ne vous demanderont jamais vos mots de passe à l’oral.
En cas de suspicion ou de situation anormale, nous vous invitons à contacter le service officiel d’assistance aux victimes numériques sur : www.cybermalveillance.gouv.fr pour effectuer un signalement et faire valoir vos droits.
Nous regrettons sincèrement cette atteinte à la confidentialité de vos informations.
Abstention pour ma part.
Je pense être dans la même mentalité que @[email protected] ; le meilleur des mondes serait d'être une sorte de "bonne influence" sur elleux, et elleux inversement sur nous - ce qui devient quasi-impossible en se dé-fédérant de l'instance. En même temps, non seulement ça ne justifie pas d'exposer le reste de jlai.lu à leur toxicité, mais je me méfie aussi de ne pas tomber dans du "I can fix [them]" - ce qui (à ma connaissance) est juste contre-productif pour tout le monde, y compris nous-mêmes.
Je ne voterai pas pour dé-fédérer, pour autant, car actuellement leurs postes dans mon flux me font prendre connaissance de pas mal de tragédies quotidiennes que font subir l'Occident au reste du monde. Tragédies que je dois attendre des jours, des semaines, voir des mois pour les voir apparaître dans nos médias (quand ils finissent par apparaître). Oui c'est de la paraisse de ma part (je pourrais bien créer un alt chez eux, par ex, ou même trouver d'autres sources d'info que lemmy).
J'ai quand même fini par bloquer ShitLiberalsSay ShitReactionariesSay, je trouve cette commu encore plus bas-du-front, réac, et contre-productive que MeanwhileOnGrad. (J'ai aussi bloqué MoreTankie196, mais c'est moins pertinent pour mon propos).
D'ailleurs, j'en profite pour une parenthèse : le problème avec ces instances serait bien moindre si les gens qui interagissent avec eux savaient d'avance à quoi s'attendre. Je ne vais pas me pointer à Pékin et y débattre de l'autoritarisme du parti communiste chinois avec les passants dans la rue. Si je n'étais pas citoyen français, je ne me pointerai pas à La Défense pour exiger le remboursement des "réparations" (lire: rançon) que l'état a exigé de Haïti pour son indépendance. C'est une question de tact. Ce que j'ignore, c'est comment pallier ce problème quand Lemmy et/ou le fédivers restent des interactions dématérialisées qui empêchent toute communication non-verbale, et permettent d'être asocial sans en subir les conséquences sociales au quotidien.
Et j'ai envie de rajouter que, de cet angle, je comprends le comportement des ours et grad. Quand tu es conscient de l'ampleur de l'injustice qui sévit dans le monde depuis 2-3 siècles, l'ampleur de la responsabilité de l'Occident et de son capitalisme dans ces horreurs, et le lavage de cerveau anti-communiste qui a lieu encore aujourd'hui, c'est vite insupportable de voir des gens perpétuer le processus. Et beaucoup de gens que je vois essayer de débattre avec les ours ici sur le fédivers répètent (sans s'en rendre compte) précisément les phrases et argumentaires qui vont trigger. Pour reprendre mes analogies, ce n'est pas dans un abri pour femmes battues que tu vas militer contre les terfs comme Dora Moutot et Marguerite Stern, ça serait limite pousser ces femmes dans leurs bras.
Je n'ai pas de solution, mais je ne peux me résoudre à voter pour ni contre.
cliff explosives are all the way down the tech tree now
Kinda. You do need to get off-planet and land on a different one, but (imo) it's the most accessible of the new planets. You definitely don't need to go all the way down the tech tree.
“What was Windows even doing for us?”
Beautiful 🥲
Alors, en principe, le vin blanc contient de l'alcool, qui peut dissoudre les graisse du fromage. Et surtout, il ne dilue pas les sucs gastriques comme l'eau le fait.
J'ai eu une réaction assez semblable.
En même temps pour construire et faire vivre des réseaux de solidarité, il faut "y croire". Et beaucoup de gens ne croient pas en une alternative au capitalisme. Un billet de blog comme celui-ci sera peut-être plus efficace pour radicaliser un•e normie que de leur convaincre de rejoindre un réseau local d'entraide (au mieux, iel choisira "par eux-mêmes" de le faire après lecture de ce post).
[email protected] pour de l'art surréaliste avec comme "sujet" la philosophie Unix opposée a la dystopie du logiciel corporate.
[email protected] est une des seules commu' «à memes» que je trouve réellement drôle.
The only one I have heard of being enforced is on twitch; an account can be banned in under 5min once it suggests in a stream chat that it's holder is under 13 years old.
Pretty good review!
I've not yet been to all the new planets. What I have seen lines up well with the characterization of Wube strategically disabling the things in the base game / on the starting planet ("Nauvis") that I grew accustomed to. Instead of simply adding ever more lengthy production line recipes, they have forced us to approach many existing production lines in a drastically different way.
In the base game, you can play around with ratios and targeted throughput, but you almost always will have the same machines crafting the same recipes, in the same order. The most significant decision when designing a production line is often whether to bring an item in by belt or instead bring its components and craft it adjacently.
Space Age shakes that up by introducing several new choices/decisions to make. There are alternate recipes to be unlocked (similar in function to Satisfactory, without needing to hunt for hard drives on a map). There are now multiple "looping" recipes (the input items can be part of the output). Most notably, which recipes are available to you depends on where you are building - not only planetside vs in-orbit, but planetside vs in-orbit across all planets. The planets have different resources on them, and their orbits contain different ratios of resource-laden asteroids. Same goes for the routes between planets!
I was very afraid that the extension would feel like "more of the same, just longer and more tedious". That's the experience I've had with most overhaul mods I've tried, and notably why I never bothered paying Space Exploration (whose author ended up working with Wube on the Space Age extension). So far my experience has been the exact opposite. It really feels like every single new "thing" feeds back into the core gameplay by "rejuvenating" it in new ways.
Wow, I didn't realize that C.S. Lewis was riffing off of 1 Corinthians: 13 when he wrote (emphasis mine)
When I was ten, I read fairy tales in secret and would have been ashamed if I had been found doing so. Now that I am fifty, I read them openly. When I became a man I put away childish things, including the fear of childishness and the desire to be very grown up.
Good. Much better than that auto exec who was suggesting tariffs on imported EV vehicles would be needed to "save" Europe. I want to say it was BMW but that might just be my own bias against them speaking.
L'Abre-Monde, par Richard Powers (titre originel: The Overstory)
J'ignore comment rendre justice à l'expérience qu'à été ma lecture de ce livre.
Dévoré en quelques jours. Le dernier tiers en particulier m'a retenu éveillé jusqu'à 3h du matin, le récit tellement fort que je ne pouvais me convaincre d'attendre le lendemain pour le terminer.
Un certain ressenti de découvrir le livre que j'aurais écrit, dans une autre vie, si j'avais choisi un parcours "littéraire" et non "scientifique". Un renouveau de rage écologique maintenu sous contrôle, presque étouffé, par un calme fataliste qui n'est pas pour autant un lâcher-prise. Si Les Soulèvements De La Terre était une religion ceci serait sans doute un de leurs textes sacrés, et Powers un de leurs prophètes (bien que Bouddha serait plus apte comme label). Heureusement, ce n'est pas une religion, et ce livre n'est pas un texte divin. Au contraire, je le trouve profondément profane, et humain.
Au-delà du "contenu" (cad les thèmes abordés, les arcs narratifs et péripéties suivi(e)s) la forme est remarquable. Powers écrit avec un style de narration qui, tel la conduite d'une auto à boite de vitesse dans une contrée vallonnée, change de trajectoire et d'allure dès qu'on a avancé une centaine de mètres. Et tout comme cette conduite, l'expérience qui en ressort n'est pas une succession d'interruptions qui nous laisse sur le qui-vive, mais un état de conscience profonde qui s’imprègne simultanément de chaque détail séparé et du mouvement de l'ensemble. Il y a des phrases qui donnent l'impression que le livre entier a été écrit et construit autour d'elles.
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/L%27Arbre-monde
Rust for Lemmings "Reading Club" Alternate Slot - Session 16
- Today (monday september 23), at 18:00 UTC+2
- We'll be starting chapter 8, Common Collections: https://rust-book.cs.brown.edu/ch08-00-common-collections.html
- twitch.com/Jayjader for the stream
- vod link: https://youtu.be/41SQ0BsbcIA
DEF CON 32 - Disenshittify or die! How hackers can seize the means of computation - Cory Doctorow
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
cross-posted from: https://jlai.lu/post/10771034
n’hésitez-pas à me demander de traduire certains passages de mon post en français si besoin
> Personal review: > > A good recap of his previous writings and talks on the subject for the first third, but a bit long. Having paid attention to them for the past year or two, my attention started drifting a few times. I ended up being more impressed with how much he's managed to condense explaining "enshittification" from 45+ minutes down to around 15. > > As soon as he starts building off of that to work towards the core of his message for this talk, I was more-or-less glued to the screen. At first because it's not exactly clear where he's going, and there are (what felt like) many specific court rulings to keep up with. Thankfully, once he has laid enough groundwork he gets straight his point. I don't want to spoil or otherwise lessen the performance he gives, so I won't directly comment on what his point is in the body of this post - I think the comments are better suited for that anyways. > > I found the rest to be pretty compelling. He rides the fine line between directionless discontent and overenthusiastic activist-with-a-plan as he doubles down on his narrative by calling back to the various bits of groundwork he laid before - now that we're "in" on the idea, what felt like stumbling around in the dark turns into an illuminating path through some of the specifics of the last twenty to forty years of the dynamics of power between tech bosses and their employees. The rousing call to action was also great way to end and wrap it all up. > > I've become very biased towards Cory Doctorow's ideas, in part because they line up with a lot of the impressions I have from my few years working as a dev in a big-ish multinational tech company. This talk has done nothing to diminish that bias - on the contrary.
DEF CON 32 - Disenshittify or die! How hackers can seize the means of computation - Cory Doctorow
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
cross-posted from: https://jlai.lu/post/10771034
> Personal review: > > A good recap of his previous writings and talks on the subject for the first third, but a bit long. Having paid attention to them for the past year or two, my attention started drifting a few times. I ended up being more impressed with how much he's managed to condense explaining "enshittification" from 45+ minutes down to around 15. > > As soon as he starts building off of that to work towards the core of his message for this talk, I was more-or-less glued to the screen. At first because it's not exactly clear where he's going, and there are (what felt like) many specific court rulings to keep up with. Thankfully, once he has laid enough groundwork he gets straight his point. I don't want to spoil or otherwise lessen the performance he gives, so I won't directly comment on what his point is in the body of this post - I think the comments are better suited for that anyways. > > I found the rest to be pretty compelling. He rides the fine line between directionless discontent and overenthusiastic activist-with-a-plan as he doubles down on his narrative by calling back to the various bits of groundwork he laid before - now that we're "in" on the idea, what felt like stumbling around in the dark turns into an illuminating path through some of the specifics of the last twenty to forty years of the dynamics of power between tech bosses and their employees. The rousing call to action was also great way to end and wrap it all up. > > I've become very biased towards Cory Doctorow's ideas, in part because they line up with a lot of the impressions I have from my few years working as a dev in a big-ish multinational tech company. This talk has done nothing to diminish that bias - on the contrary.
DEF CON 32 - Disenshittify or die! How hackers can seize the means of computation - Cory Doctorow
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
Personal review:
A good recap of his previous writings and talks on the subject for the first third, but a bit long. Having paid attention to them for the past year or two, my attention started drifting a few times. I ended up being more impressed with how much he's managed to condense explaining "enshittification" from 45+ minutes down to around 15.
As soon as he starts building off of that to work towards the core of his message for this talk, I was more-or-less glued to the screen. At first because it's not exactly clear where he's going, and there are (what felt like) many specific court rulings to keep up with. Thankfully, once he has laid enough groundwork he gets straight his point. I don't want to spoil or otherwise lessen the performance he gives, so I won't directly comment on what his point is in the body of this post - I think the comments are better suited for that anyways.
I found the rest to be pretty compelling. He rides the fine line between directionless discontent and overenthusiastic activist-with-a-plan as he doubles down on his narrative by calling back to the various bits of groundwork he laid before - now that we're "in" on the idea, what felt like stumbling around in the dark turns into an illuminating path through some of the specifics of the last twenty to forty years of the dynamics of power between tech bosses and their employees. The rousing call to action was also great way to end and wrap it all up.
I've become very biased towards Cory Doctorow's ideas, in part because they line up with a lot of the impressions I have from my few years working as a dev in a big-ish multinational tech company. This talk has done nothing to diminish that bias - on the contrary.
Documentation about how to play Age of Mythology on Linux, up-to-date for 2024
cross-posted from: https://jlai.lu/post/10083697
Haven't bought the game yet, but these instructions seem legit. I found this link in a ProtonDB comment who claims to be its author/hoster: https://www.protondb.com/app/1934680#WRxwBwtv-Y.
En anglais : Comment jouer à Age of Mythology Retold sur Linux (+Steam)
Documentation about how to play Age of Mythology on Linux, up-to-date for 2024
Je n'ai pas encore acheté le jeu, mais les instructions m'inspirent confiance. J'ai trouvé ce lien dans le commentaire d'une personne sur ProtonDB qui prétend en être l'auteur (ou au moins l’hébergeur) : https://www.protondb.com/app/1934680#WRxwBwtv-Y.
Par hasard, il-y-aurait des jlailutines ou -lutins qui ont le jeu et sont sur Linux qui pourraient témoigner ?
La multinationale américaine a annoncé vendredi une panne mondiale affectant les clients professionnels. Compagnies aériennes, médias et banques du monde entier sont touchés.
Rust for Lemmings "Reading Club" Alternate Slot (18:00 UTC+2) - Session 15
What?
I will be holding the fifteenth of the secondary slot/sessions for the Reading Club, also on "The Book" ("The Rust Programming Language"). We are using the Brown University online edition (that has some added quizzes & interactive elements).
Last time we began chapter 7 (Managing Growing Projects with Packages, Crates, and Modules), and read up through section 7.3 (Paths for Referring to an item in the Module Tree). This time we will start at section 7.4 (Bringing Paths Into Scope with the use Keyword).
Previous session details and recording can be found in the following lemmy post: https://jlai.lu/post/8006138
Why?
This slot is primarily to offer an alternative to the main reading club's streams that caters to a different set of time zone preferences and/or availability.
(also, obviously, to follow up on the previous session)
When ?
Currently, I intend to start at 18:00 UTC+2 (aka 6pm Central European Time) on Monday (2023-07-01). If you were present for a previous session, then basically the same time-of-day and day-of-week as that one was.
EDIT: here's the recording: https://youtu.be/RI4D62MVvCA
Please comment if you are interested in joining because you can't make the main sessions but would prefer a different start time (and include a time that works best for you in your comment!). Caveat: I live in central/western Europe; I can't myself cater to absolutely any preference.
How ?
The basic format is: I will be sharing my computer screen and voice through an internet live stream (hosted at https://www.twitch.tv/jayjader for now). The stream will be locally recorded, and uploaded afterwards to youtube (for now as well).
I will have on-screen:
- the BU online version of The Book
- a terminal session with the necessary tooling installed (notably
rustup
,cargo
, andclippy
) - some form of visual aid (currently a digital whiteboard using www.excalidraw.com)
- the live stream's chat
I will steadily progress through the book, both reading aloud the literal text and commenting occasionally on it. I will also perform any code writing and/or terminal commands as the text instructs us to.
People who either tune in to the live stream or watch/listen to the recording are encouraged to follow along with their own copy of the book.
I try to address any comments from live viewers in the twitch chat as soon as I am aware of them. If someone is having trouble understanding something, I will stop and try to help them get past it.
Who ?
You! (if you're interested). And, of course, me.
Rust for Lemmings "Reading Club" Alternate Slot (18:00 UTC+2) - Session 14
What?
I will be holding the fourteenth of the secondary slot/sessions for the Reading Club, also on "The Book" ("The Rust Programming Language"). We are using the Brown University online edition (that has some added quizzes & interactive elements).
Last time we completed chapter 6 (enums & pattern matching). This time we will begin chapter 7 (Managing Growing Projects with Packages, Crates, and Modules).
Previous session details and recording can be found in the following lemmy post: https://jlai.lu/post/7773753
Why?
This slot is primarily to offer an alternative to the main reading club's streams that caters to a different set of time zone preferences and/or availability.
(also, obviously, to follow up on the previous session)
When ?
Currently, I intend to start at 18:00 UTC+2 (aka 6pm Central European Time) on this day (2023-06-24). If you were present for a previous session, then basically the same time-of-day and day-of-week as that one was.
Here's the recording: https://youtu.be/pUqVmPRLhNE
Please comment if you are interested in joining because you can't make the main sessions but would prefer a different start time (and include a time that works best for you in your comment!). Caveat: I live in central/western Europe; I can't myself cater to absolutely any preference.
How ?
The basic format is: I will be sharing my computer screen and voice through an internet live stream (hosted at https://www.twitch.tv/jayjader for now). The stream will simultaneously be recorded locally and uploaded afterwards to youtube (also, for now).
I will have on-screen:
- the BU online version of The Book
- a terminal session with the necessary tooling installed (notably
rustup
and through itcargo
& "friends") - some form of visual aid (currently a digital whiteboard using www.excalidraw.com)
- the live stream's chat
I will steadily progress through the book, both reading aloud the literal text and commenting occasionally on it. I will also perform any code writing and/or terminal commands as the text instructs us to.
People who either tune in to the live stream or watch/listen to the recording are encouraged to follow along with their own copy of the book.
I try to address any comments from live viewers in the twitch chat as soon as I am aware of them. If someone is having trouble understanding something, I will stop and try to help them get past it.
Who ?
You! (if you're interested). And, of course, me.
a CLI tool to download Rust web books as EPUB
Rust Book to EPUB converter. Contribute to mawkler/rust-book-to-epub development by creating an account on GitHub.
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/17090253
> cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/17090149 > > > Hi! I've created a CLI tool for downloading Rust web books (like The Rust Programming Language) as EPUB, so that you can easily read them on your e-book reader. The tool is heavily based on this gist and a lot of proompting. > > > > Check it out here: https://github.com/mawkler/rust-book-to-epub
Rust for Lemmings "Reading Club" Alternate Slot (18:00 UTC+2) - Session 13
What?
I will be holding the thirteenth of the secondary slot/sessions for the Reading Club, also on "The Book" ("The Rust Programming Language"). We are using the Brown University online edition (that has some added quizzes & interactive elements).
Last time we started chapter 6 (enums & pattern matching). We read through 6.1 and learned how to define enum
variants in tuple or struct form. We also learned about the Option<T>
enum that Rust provides us with. This time we'll begin section 6.2 and learn about the match
control flow construct.
Previous session details and recording can be found in the following lemmy post: https://jlai.lu/post/7532130
Why?
This slot is primarily to offer an alternative to the main reading club's streams that caters to a different set of time zone preferences and/or availability.
(also, obviously, to follow up on the previous session)
When ?
Currently, I intend to start at 18:00 UTC+2 (aka 6pm Central European Time) on Monday (2023-06-17). If you were present for a previous session, then basically the same time-of-day and day-of-week as that one was.
EDIT: here's the recording https://youtu.be/W1fjxCwtwfM
Please comment if you are interested in joining because you can't make the main sessions but would prefer a different start time (and include a time that works best for you in your comment!). Caveat: I live in central/western Europe; I can't myself cater to absolutely any preference.
How ?
The basic format is: I will be sharing my computer screen and voice through an internet live stream (hosted at https://www.twitch.tv/jayjader for now). The stream will simultaneously be recorded locally and uploaded afterwards to youtube (also, for now).
I will have on-screen:
- the BU online version of The Book
- a terminal session with the necessary tooling installed (notably
rustup
and through itcargo
& "friends") - some form of visual aid (currently a digital whiteboard using www.excalidraw.com)
- the live stream's chat
I will steadily progress through the book, both reading aloud the literal text and commenting occasionally on it. I will also perform any code writing and/or terminal commands as the text instructs us to.
People who either tune in to the live stream or watch/listen to the recording are encouraged to follow along with their own copy of the book.
I try to address any comments from live viewers in the twitch chat as soon as I am aware of them. If someone is having trouble understanding something, I will stop and try to help them get past it.
Who ?
You! (if you're interested). And, of course, me.
Rust for Lemmings "Reading Club" Alternate Slot (18:00 UTC+2) - Session 12
What?
I will be holding the twelfth of the secondary slot/sessions for the Reading Club, also on "The Book" ("The Rust Programming Language"). We are using the Brown University online edition (that has some added quizzes & interactive elements).
Last time we wrapped up chapter 5 (structs). This session we'll be learning about enum
s by starting chapter 6.
Previous session details and recording can be found in the following lemmy post: https://jlai.lu/post/7413233
Why?
This slot is primarily to offer an alternative to the main reading club's streams that caters to a different set of time zone preferences and/or availability.
(also, obviously, to follow up on the previous session)
When ?
Currently, I intend to start at 18:00 UTC+2 (aka 6pm Central European Time) on Monday (2023-06-10). If you were present for a previous session, then basically the same time-of-day and day-of-week as that one was.
EDIT: here's the recording https://youtu.be/eRMxhaJIOAg
Please comment if you are interested in joining because you can't make the main sessions but would prefer a different start time (and include a time that works best for you in your comment!). Caveat: I live in central/western Europe; I can't myself cater to absolutely any preference.
How ?
The basic format is: I will be sharing my computer screen and voice through an internet live stream (hosted at https://www.twitch.tv/jayjader for now). The stream will simultaneously be recorded locally and uploaded afterwards to youtube (also, for now).
I will have on-screen:
- the BU online version of The Book
- a terminal session with the necessary tooling installed (notably
rustup
and through itcargo
& "friends") - some form of visual aid (currently a digital whiteboard using www.excalidraw.com)
- the live stream's chat
I will steadily progress through the book, both reading aloud the literal text and commenting occasionally on it. I will also perform any code writing and/or terminal commands as the text instructs us to.
People who either tune in to the live stream or watch/listen to the recording are encouraged to follow along with their own copy of the book.
I try to address any comments from live viewers in the twitch chat as soon as I am aware of them. If someone is having trouble understanding something, I will stop and try to help them get past it.
Who ?
You! (if you're interested). And, of course, me.
Rust for Lemmings "Reading Club" Alternate Slot (18:00 UTC+2) - Session 11
Stable internet connection re-acquired! To avoid waiting another full week, I'll be hosting the session today (approximately 6-7 hours after this post is created).
What?
I will be holding the eleventh of the secondary slot/sessions for the Reading Club, also on "The Book" ("The Rust Programming Language"). We are using the Brown University online edition (that has some added quizzes & interactive elements).
Last time, the book guided us through An Example Program Using Structs (section 2 of chapter 5). Today we'll be tackling the following section, "The Method Syntax" (5.3).
Previous session details and recording can be found in the following lemmy post: https://jlai.lu/post/6871662
Why?
This slot is primarily to offer an alternative to the main reading club's streams that caters to a different set of time zone preferences and/or availability.
(also, obviously, to follow up on the previous session)
When ?
Currently, I intend to start at 18:00 UTC+2 (aka 6pm Central European Time) on Tuesday (2023-06-04). If you were present for a previous session, then basically the same time-of-day and day-of-week as that one was. Exceptionally, today is not the same day-of-week as previously.
Recording of the session: https://youtu.be/wBYdDbADFLU
Please comment if you are interested in joining because you can't make the main sessions but would prefer a different start time (and include a time that works best for you in your comment!). Caveat: I live in central/western Europe; I can't myself cater to absolutely any preference.
How ?
The basic format is: I will be sharing my computer screen and voice through an internet live stream (hosted at https://www.twitch.tv/jayjader for now). The stream will simultaneously be recorded locally and uploaded afterwards to youtube (also, for now).
I will have on-screen:
- the BU online version of The Book
- a terminal session with the necessary tooling installed (notably
rustup
and through itcargo
& "friends") - some form of visual aid (currently a digital whiteboard using www.excalidraw.com)
- the live stream's chat
I will steadily progress through the book, both reading aloud the literal text and commenting occasionally on it. I will also perform any code writing and/or terminal commands as the text instructs us to.
People who either tune in to the live stream or watch/listen to the recording are encouraged to follow along with their own copy of the book.
I try to address any comments from live viewers in the twitch chat as soon as I am aware of them. If someone is having trouble understanding something, I will stop and try to help them get past it.
Who ?
You! (if you're interested). And, of course, me.
Je cherche le nom - idéalement un scan - d'une BD mettant en scène Paris soudainement envahit par des plantes
Comme l'indique le titre, je recherche une BD francophone dont la trame principale est l'invasion d'une ville par une plante qui pousse à une vitesse foudroyante. Il y a des fortes chances que la ville soit Paris, mais il se peut que ça soit une autre ville.
Autres détails dont je me souviens:
- la plante en question ressemble surtout à des vignes ou lianes vertes (pas d'ecorce, pas de brun)
- vers la fin on apprend que c'est une botaniste qui est à l'origine de la plante :
- grosso merdo elle explique que la plante crèvera toute seule au bout de 2-3 jours en se désintégrant,
- que les baies de cette plante sont comestibles par les éventuelles personnes coincées par les lianes,
- et que le tout est censé être un acte radical de sensibilisation écologique infligé de force au reste du monde en mode "rappelez-vous que c'est la nature qui domine, pas l'Homme"
Ce dont je suis à moitié certain :
- cette botaniste est la mère du protagoniste, un jeune garçon ado
- la BD est parue dans les numéros d'une revue de jeunesse dans les années 200X/201X - type astrapi, okapi, j'ai lu, ou peut-être encore sciences et vie junior
Je l'ai lue en tant que gamin à sa sortie, et ça m'avait bien marqué. Il n'y a que récemment que je me suis rendu compte que c'était une belle pièce de propagande écoterroriste!
Du coup j'aimerai essayer de la relire, en l'analysant explicitement en tant que tel 😈
No Alternate Session For The "Reading Club" This Week
Sorry y'all, I don't have access to a decent internet connection for the time being.
Open Source for Climate Podcast
Hosts Richard and Tobias talk about this new podcast, why open source technology is important for climate change, and what they hope to talk about with future guests!
Seems relevant to this community (albeit I haven't listened to the podcast yet).
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/15928804
> We are excited to announce the launch of a new podcast showcasing the transformative power of “Open Source for Climate” and the people and stories behind it. The open source movement is the key to bringing trusted knowledge, technology and collective action.
Post-listen edit: a bit short and underwhelming. Then again, it seems to be more of an intro/announcement than a first "proper" episode. Hopefully the next one will be more fleshed out.
Rust for Lemmings "Reading Club" Alternate Slot (18:00 UTC+2) - Session 10
What?
I will be holding the tenth of the secondary slot/sessions for the Reading Club, also on "The Book" ("The Rust Programming Language"). We are using the Brown University online edition (that has some added quizzes & interactive elements).
Last time we covered defining and instantiating structs with section 1 of chapter 5, "Using Structs to Structure Related Data". We'll be continuing with section 2, where we'll be writing some code!
Previous session details and recording can be found in the following lemmy post: https://jlai.lu/post/6703544
Why?
This slot is primarily to offer an alternative to the main reading club's streams that caters to a different set of time zone preferences and/or availability.
(also, obviously, to follow up on the previous session)
When ?
Currently, I intend to start at 18:00 UTC+2 (aka 6pm Central European Time) on Monday (2023-05-20). If you were present for a previous session, then basically the same time-of-day and day-of-week as that one was.
Please comment if you are interested in joining because you can't make the main sessions but would prefer a different start time (and include a time that works best for you in your comment!). Caveat: I live in central/western Europe; I can't myself cater to absolutely any preference.
How ?
The basic format is: I will be sharing my computer screen and voice through an internet live stream (hosted at https://www.twitch.tv/jayjader for now). The stream will simultaneously be recorded locally and uploaded afterwards to youtube (also, for now).
EDIT: here's the recording https://youtu.be/s0U7KBXxL8g
I will have on-screen:
- the BU online version of The Book
- a terminal session with the necessary tooling installed (notably
rustup
and through itcargo
& "friends") - some form of visual aid (currently a digital whiteboard using www.excalidraw.com)
- the live stream's chat
I will steadily progress through the book, both reading aloud the literal text and commenting occasionally on it. I will also perform any code writing and/or terminal commands as the text instructs us to.
People who either tune in to the live stream or watch/listen to the recording are encouraged to follow along with their own copy of the book.
I try to address any comments from live viewers in the twitch chat as soon as I am aware of them. If someone is having trouble understanding something, I will stop and try to help them get past it.
Who ?
You! (if you're interested). And, of course, me.
Rust for Lemmings "Reading Club" Alternate Slot (18:00 UTC+2) - Session 9
Ownership is finally over! Ok, I know we're going to be seeing more of it throughout the rest of the book, but at least it should always be in the context of "doing" something else/useful. For example, grouping bits of related data into structs.
What?
I will be holding the ninth of the secondary slot/sessions for the Reading Club, also on "The Book" ("The Rust Programming Language"). We are using the Brown University online edition (that has some added quizzes & interactive elements).
This week we begin chapter 5 "Using Structs to Structure Related Data"!
Previous session details and recording can be found in the following lemmy post: https://jlai.lu/post/6557213
Why?
This slot is primarily to offer an alternative to the main reading club's streams that caters to a different set of time zone preferences and/or availability.
(also, obviously, to follow up on the previous session)
When ?
Currently, I intend to start at 18:00 UTC+2 (aka 6pm Central European Time) on Monday (2023-05-13). If you were present for a previous session, then basically the same time-of-day and day-of-week as that one was.
Please comment if you are interested in joining because you can't make the main sessions but would prefer a different start time (and include a time that works best for you in your comment!). Caveat: I live in central/western Europe; I can't myself cater to absolutely any preference.
How ?
The basic format is: I will be sharing my computer screen and voice through an internet live stream (hosted at https://www.twitch.tv/jayjader for now). The stream will simultaneously be recorded locally and uploaded afterwards to youtube (also, for now).
Edit: here's the link to the recording https://youtu.be/h4l5Ksd5w7E
I will have on-screen:
- the BU online version of The Book
- a terminal session with the necessary tooling installed (notably
rustup
and through itcargo
& "friends") - some form of visual aid (currently a digital whiteboard using www.excalidraw.com)
- the live stream's chat
I will steadily progress through the chapter, both reading aloud the literal chapter text and commenting occasionally on it. I will also perform any code writing and/or terminal commands as the text instructs us to.
People who either tune in to the live stream or watch/listen to the recording are encouraged to follow along with their own copy of the book.
I try to address any comments from live viewers in the twitch chat as soon as I am aware of them. If someone is having trouble understanding something, I will stop and try to help them get past it.
Who ?
You! (if you're interested). And, of course, me.