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This is cool: Home Assistant is working on a new open-source multi-room audio streaming protocol, called Resonate.


I missed the end of the #Mariners game last night due to extreme sleepiness, but it was the middle of the 11th when I went to bed and things weren't looking good.

So when R came to bed, I asked, half-asleep and pessimistically, if we had lost.

What a nice surprise.

in reply to Hypolite Petovan

I wasn't until this summer. My wife, who is from Seattle, is a self-described fair-weather fan. I watched a game with her a couple months ago and had enough fun that I got into it.
in reply to Spencer

@Spencer I had fun at the New York Yankees game I went to, and at the Brooklyn Cyclones. I’ve been to a Brooklyn Nets and I’ve enjoyed it too. I’m less inclined to watch on TV as we don’t have cable anyway, but on the other I try to follow Dota 2 esports tournaments.

The only things I won’t watch is American football and cricket. First is too much downtime vs playtime, and I haven’t been able to figure out the rules for the latter.





between this and the Mariners, it's been a banner week for Etsy witches


I seem to have misplaced one of my security keys. Dammit.


(shrieks eternally)


Got a new post up on the (recently revamped) blog! Inspired by Rob Hopkins' work on imagining futures, I wrote a short little entry from a future where we managed to reclaim our digital lives.


As usual, the big tech moguls and eggheads occupy a fantasy world of Pure Reason, where everything is solvable without sacrifice if the right people just think about it enough.


I’m constantly amused by the idea that we will invent AGI and AI will solve all of our problems. We don’t need AGI to solve our problems, even ChatGPT can already tell us obvious solutions to our current problems.

We already have good answers on how to reduce gun violence, infant mortality or climate change. The problem is too many people have a vested interest in the problems being unsolved. It isn’t because we haven’t invented smarter than human AI. When we do, we’ll ignore it too.




NA cocktail

Holy moly, this is a yummy non-alcoholic tea cocktail. Recipe template from Dan Fellows on YouTube.

#mixology #cocktails #zeroProof

in reply to Spencer

NA cocktail

The general template from Dan Fellows is:

  • 3g black tea of your choice, steeped in 100mL water for at least 3 min
  • 25mL citrus juice
  • 20mL sweet
  • fruit juice (optional)
  • soda water, for topping (optional)

Build in the glass, or shake together and strain.

in reply to Spencer

NA cocktail
For this one, I used Earl Grey, fresh lemon juice, and a summer melon syrup. I might use my Lapsang Souchong syrup next time to see how it compares.


Today I'm appreciating: fresh mugicha, long toddler naps, the satisfaction of unpacking boxes, and the eager anticipation of big changes to come.


In seems to me that many of us are concerned about beating movies, solving them before others and then being afraid to get the “what was it really about?” question wrong in front of judgmental peers. But ultimately, I believe that’s a disservice to film analysis, and to the films themselves. We’ve weaponized the idea of being right or wrong about movies, and it’s a boring state to be in. There’s no harm done in taking an educated analytical swing in good-faith, because every piece of art is about something, many things, and that’s what keeps art alive.


I haven't seen the film yet, but I am very appreciative of this reviewer's push for personal engagement with texts.



Just ate a fresh peach the only way one should be eaten: over the sink, juice dripping over my fingers, making borderline obscene little noises involuntarily.


Every summer, our neighborhood association puts on a large "forest festival" in a local park. We went, for the third year in a row, with the Goblin today, and we never went more than a couple minutes without saying hi to someone we knew.

Booths and booths of local artists sharing their work. Places for kids to play different musical instruments. Live music and presentations on two different stages.

The future I want has more of this. When our needs are taken care of, when we can all feed and clothe and house our families with time to spare, I want to gather under the trees every few weeks and peruse the beautiful, quirky things my neighbors have made.

reshared this

in reply to Spencer

I want this, too. I dream of it, and relish the glimpses of it we can have on our way to that world.




Looking for options for a dedicated portable audio player so I can break my smartphone's hold on me, I remembered I had an old Pixel 2 in my nightstand, and I booted it up.

It's amazing how much nicer a smaller device feels—and my daily phone, a Pixel 5a, is still "small" by modern standards! I can see more of the outside world around the periphery of the Pixel 2. It fits in my hand like a tool; it serves me, rather than the other way around.



Managed to kill my phone's display in exactly the same way I did two and a half years ago: by dropping it. Even happened in the exact same spot in the house.

And this is giving me the opportunity to reexamine what, exactly, I want from a personal electronic device.



food
During my hiatus, the Goblin and I had a perfect adventure picking blueberries, then I got to pull off my very first canning adventure: blueberry spice jam!
in reply to Spencer

For my first canning attempt ever, I wasn't gonna fuck with recipes at all. But this did turn out much sweeter than I'd like, such that it almost overpowers the flavor of the fruit. That's what I wanted to preserve in the first place! C'mon! 😆




Sage Christie's song "Moss in Your Name" caps off their album ice olation, an album about and written during the early stages of the Covid-19 pandemic. It is a touching reflection on those we lost, and I frequently find myself tearing up when listening, no matter how many times I've heard it.

The whole album points out to me that I've seen very little art about the pandemic. I'm sure it's out there, but it hasn't crossed my bow.



The latest ginger bug #fermentation: Smith Teamaker hibiscus-mango iced tea.

The good news is that it's fermenting happily! After a week, the swing-top bottles are making a hearty pop each day when I burp them. I'll probably give them a few days longer to really dry out. They're not quite as tasty right now as I'd like—bubbly, but not terribly fruity, and mostly taste like sweet. Fingers crossed that as they get drier, the tart flavors of the fruit will pop a little more.

in reply to Spencer

My ginger bug is also doing remarkably well, which is confusing to me because I really don't quite know how to read it yet.

I'm feeding it ginger and sugar every day or two, stirring vigorously, and occasionally adding a bit more tap water, and it seems... happy? It's still quite lively after what must have been at least a couple months. I was sure I was going to kill this one too, but somehow it's still alive.

in reply to Spencer

My brain wants to know, with rigorous precision, how this thing is working and what I'm doing right, but I think I'm at a stage in my relationship with this culture where that type of clarity isn't available to me yet. Perhaps I need to sit in the mystery a little longer and let the intuition develop.
in reply to Spencer

The carbonation today was vigorous enough to blow the lids back when I burped the bottles, so I think these are done.

And yeah, with a little more time, they're quite nice. The flavor is still somewhat subtle, but it's gently tart and fruity, with excellent fizz and a beautiful color.



uspol
This is the form that the United States Department of the Interior is using to collect feedback about "any signs or other information that are negative about either past or living Americans" in national parks.


Man, know what I want to see in this era? Satirical lefty puppet shows.


potential comrades:

criminals
perverts
people who at different times engage in criminal or perverted behavior

not eligible:
criminal perverts



Dan Thurot is the best board games critic in the biz right now, and I dare you to prove otherwise. 😜


I'm starting to think that the ideology reification machine might have been a... bad idea?


OpenAI is featuring a "Looksmaxxing GPT" that provides "PSL ratings" for photos. It will rate people as "subhuman", and advise men to get invasive procedures like jaw surgery to "increase their sexual market value" among women, who it describes as "hypergamous by nature".

"PSL" is short for "PUAhate Sluthate Lookism", a group of three manosphere/incel communities. PUAHate came to public attention after Elliot Rodger's 2014 mass shooting in Isla Vista, California, when it came out that he frequented the platform to talk about his "incel" status.

After uploading a photo, this GPT gives ratings like "Subhuman", "Low Normie / High Subhuman Borderline (White)", or "high-tier normie, borderline Chadlite".

It proactively offers to provide "hardmaxxing" (medical interventions like plastic surgery) or "softmaxxing" advice (grooming, fitness training, etc).




Friends! Tell me about indie #TTRPG hidden gems. I've been watching a lot of Quinns Quest and Cozy RPG Reviews, as well as reading the design thoughts of Jay Dragon, and I just want to gobble up a bunch of excellent, innovative games.
in reply to Spencer

These are more like "required reading" than "hidden gems":

- Lady Blackbird
- Primetime Adventures
- My Life With Master
- Cortex Prime
- Fiasco
- Sorcerer
- Blades in the Dark
- Wushu: the Ancient Art of Action Roleplaying
- Index Card RPG
- Burning Wheel
- Mechanical Oryx
- 3:16 Carnage Among the Stars
- Belly of the Beast
- Anima Prime
- The Spire
- Trophy
- Legacy: Life Among the Ruins
- Monsters & Magic
- Ars Magica
- Amber Diceless Roleplaying

in reply to Lester Ward

Interesting! I recognize some of these, like Blades in the Dark, Fiasco, and The Spire, but not all. Mind sharing what you love about a couple of them?
in reply to Spencer

Many advance the “technology” of RPGs, solving common problems that show up at the table, in a new way.

Many contain mechanical procedures for GMs, instead of vague advice on the “art” of running a game.

Some are examples of “coherency”, where the game has an opinion of what it is trying to do, and is laser focused on making that happen at the table, removing everything that doesn't do that.

One is only 200 words, but uses mechanical incentives better than any game before 2000.

in reply to Spencer

Really great games are often built around encoding some key insight about how RPGs work into play. Some on this list do that.

Most games are lucky to have one such insight. One game not on my list, Apocalypse World, has at least three, which is why it took over indie gaming for a while.




We went camping over the weekend, and the night we got in, I was excited to notice this thing on the ceiling of the restroom—an infrared heater panel!

I've been curious to experience these since learning about them. They definitely make sense as energy-efficient heating for a state park restroom: heat people, not space.

in reply to genehack

Yeah, it was on while I was there. It was nice! Satisfyingly warm. I've heard someone describe it as warm like sun shining on you, and that's apt.



The Horrors are swarming, and they sure are numerous.

But here—let me cast us a quick spell of reprieve. Let's make a small, temporary oasis together before we venture back out into the howling winds.

You can help us weave our orb of fireglow, if you wish. Find your center, then join us in the comments with your answer to this question:

What moments have brought you joy lately?

Local Dad, Ben Hamill reshared this.

in reply to Spencer

Watching my 8th grader (and their peers) in the final choir and theater performances of the school year. These kids have all grown so much and are so talented. I'm really excited to get to watch some of them (including mine) learn and grow even more over the next four years in high school. It's truly a delight.
in reply to Local Dad, Ben Hamill

I've only had two years of experience, and god, watching kids grow up is incredible.
Unknown parent

friendica (DFRN) - Link to source
Spencer
Oh delightful! What arts and crafts have you been enjoying?



Yo Mastodon users, is there a way to go from a specific file on the "media" tab of a user's profile to the original post?
in reply to Spencer

@Spencer Yes, bring up the media, there’s an “external link” icon you can tap/click to the original post.


I'm in the middle of a six-week crash course to become part of my city's Community Emergency Response Team, or #CERT. CERT is a program backed by FEMA that trains civilian volunteers to be disaster responders, with basic #preparedness, search and rescue, and other relevant skills.

This has been a really fun experience, and I recommend it to anyone in the US whose local municipality offers it. Given how the federal government is currently being dismantled, if you're at all interested, I recommend taking the course sooner rather than later. Don't know if FEMA is going to exist much longer.

More on my experience in a thread...

in reply to Spencer

Anyway, to avoid a long digression on Cascadia: it's gonna be bad. Especially if the federal government's emergency response apparatus has been gutted and sold for parts.

So! CERT training is a way to stem the bleeding a little, and to feel more empowered to help in case of disaster, instead of only victimized.



Do any #Friendica and #Hugo users have a strategy for automatically or semi-automatically cross-posting content from their site to Friendica?

#indieweb #POSSE #gohugo

in reply to Spencer

Scratch that, I read the manual and enabled the setting in the admin panel that allowed this option to show up. Thanks!


MxFraud reshared this.

in reply to Spencer

uspol, body horror metaphor

This, weirdly, feels to me like a sibling to the recent news that crypto peddlers want the Trump White House to create a "strategic crypto reserve", which would, of course, serve a purpose completely contrary to what a national strategic reserve is supposed to do.

It is the aesthetic of populism, its flayed face worn like a mask by its killer.



Dear Washington State:

Did somebody just, like, poach all the reflectors from the highway signs along I-5 North? Hardly any sign is legible between Portland and Olympia because they're missing so many letters.



Okay, so, I'm curious.

Who else has noticed that Alton Brown has, 100%, without a doubt, no-two-ways-about-it dom energy?

in reply to Spencer

did you ever watch cutthroat kitchen? It’s all over that.


#3Dmodeling #PartDesign #FreeCAD community, I could use your help!

I have these two speakers, which came in their own plastic housing. I want to use them as part of a bigger device, in a 3D-printed enclosure. However, I cannot figure out how best to secure them in place.

As you can see, at each corner of the speaker, there is what looks like a mounting hole, so I was initially thinking of driving screws through two of them into either a threaded receptacle or a captive nut. However, there is very little horizontal space (my calipers say less than 0.5mm) surrounding the hole, where the flat of a screw head might gain purchase, so I don't think this is a viable option.

What other ideas do you have for securing these speakers in place inside a 3D-printed enclosure?

in reply to Spencer

i would print big 'washers' if you will. So that they fill the holes and create a distance for screws.
in reply to Spencer

locating spikes through those holes, over hanging clip to secure in place.

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