surely, we will be able to make up 5 runs in (checks notes) a single inning
I came home right as Muñoz began pitching and the score was 6-2 Mariners. It looked like they were an easy 3 outs from victory.
THIS DAMN TEAM. 😫
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I'll be sharing this to the Little Pixel Library once I get it up on my website, but I finished this today and am excited to share.
There was a website that held a library of common elements of modern UI/web app design, assessed for their attentional harm or addictive qualities. I don't remember if it had these exact items, but you would find things like "infinite scroll" and "notification badges" on there, along with research and recommended best practices.
Does anyone know what it is I'm thinking of?
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I learned last night that you can make I Can't Believe It's Not Umeboshi from apricots, and this is going on my projects list for this year next to starting a nukadoko bed.
#pickling #fermentation #fermenting #japanesefood
Homemade “Umeboshi” Apricots!? This Easy Hack Tastes Just Like the Real Thing
No Japanese ume? No problem. Here's how to recreate that classic umeboshi flavor with apricots you can find anywhere.Hav...…Japanmcconnell
#3GoodThings from today:
1. Walking around Queen Anne and listening to the birds singing. I stopped a couple times just to watch a nearby songbird, including one tiny friend who had made a nest out of moss in a tree. I would have walked right past.
2. Listening, on the radio, to the #Mariners taking Houston to town as we drove back down the I-5 corridor.
3. Friends who graciously took our request for help and made us dinner so that when we arrived back home, we didn't have to strain to fit cooking in the evening's schedule.
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Bonuses:
4. Spotting two barred owls in our friends' backyard trees
5. Meeting all sorts of interesting tropical birds at the Woodland Park Zoo
Very birb.
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I just learned of Disroot (@disroot@nixnet.social).
What a cool project. I hope I can one day set up a local cloud co-op doing something similar.
Does anyone have a system or method for managing digital calendars, some shared, in a way that doesn't, like, make you want to scream?
My wife and I each have our own Google Calendars. I'm trying to use my Nextcloud calendar more as the default. We also have a shared joint calendar for family activities... where I also sometimes schedule my own stuff just for visibility. We have a calendar for my daughter's school, and I have one for my work, which affects my busy/not busy status.
It all feels so crazy-making and disorganized. I want simplicity and organization. And, like, I know there's sense to be made out there, but I've been living with this hodgepodge system forever and I could use some light from the outside to help me reorient and find a better method.
I kinda want to try switching from Nginx Proxy Manager to Caddy, but the last time I tried to use Caddy as my reverse proxy, I could not get Nextcloud-AIO to properly set up.
Of course I can't just let "good enough" lie...
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Went out and pruned the blueberries in the sun while the Goblin napped. I'm about a month late here; March (and especially the last week) have been so sunny, the bushes have not only budded, but even started putting on leaves and a couple flowers. These bushes both need a more aggressive pruning than I gave them today—their tallest branches are as tall as me—but since they already have leaves, I didn't want to cut them back so far that they struggled.
It's been two years since we got a good harvest; last year, we both transplanted them and pruned them, so they were too shocked to put on any fruit in their new home. Next year, I'll have to catch them earlier so I can prune them back further.
Having blueberries in our yard is such a blessing.
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It's so weird how when I try to navigate to the page in my ISP's customer portal where I can review the contracts we've agreed to, that page consistently gives me a "We're having trouble connecting to My Account" error.
How coincidentally weird, Xfinity! How strange!
And calling the ISP just directs me into a "conversation" with an LLM with artificially generated speech
I hate every moment of this
#3GoodThings from today:
1. Today's service at my UU congregation, both the sermon itself (a meditation on the poetry of Mary Oliver) and the richness of being in a community with so many people.
2. The Goblin's coy smile when she was blinking the nap from her eyes and spotted me watching her.
3. Actually remembering to mount my drive after dismounting and fscking it. I always forget this step, then I reboot and things are unsurprisingly broken.
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It was just this weekend that I read Cal Newport's advice in Digital Minimalism to schedule yourself "office hours" when you're open to drop-in conversations with friends. A day later, I saw not one but two folks who had their own office (or "un-office") hours listed on their personal webpages.
Well, I guess the universe was tryna send me a message, so I put a couple office hour blocks on my calendar this week and just got off the phone with a good friend. Turns out, talking to someone for an hour is a much nicer diversion than YouTube shit when washing the dishes and putting the house to bed.
I really hope @Bonfire succeeds in their vision for federated groups. This is so important for the fediverse and I can envision many use cases in my own life.
Sadly, I'm not in a financial position to support them right now, but I hope I will be sometime soon.
Why Community Matters: Groups as the Next Step for the Fediverse
Federated groups in Bonfire will be spaces where communities gather to organise, care, and coordinate across the fediverse.bonfirenetworks.org
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As a hard leftist and gadget lover, the idea that my political ideology is synonymous with hating technology is confusing. Every leftist I know has a hard-on for high speed rail or mRNA vaccines. But the “left is missing out” blog positions generative AI as the only technology that matters.
The Left Doesn't Hate Technology, We Hate Being Exploited
Techno-cynics are all just wounded techno-optimists.Gita Jackson (Aftermath)
the watchers: how openai, the US government, and persona built an identity surveillance machine that files reports on you to the feds
53MB of source code leaked from a government endpoint. 269 verification checks. biometric face databases. SAR filings to FinCEN. and the same company that verifies your ChatGPT account.vmfunc.re
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Hey, #cooking friends.
My wife has a habit that has never made sense to me: when she starts cooking on the stove, she often adds the first-step ingredients (like garlic, onion, etc.) to the cold pan with the oil, then heats them up together. This is in contrast to my approach, which is to heat the pan and oil and then add ingredients.
This goes against all my "this is how Cooking is done" senses, but I've realized I don't have a solid, fact-based argument as to why one should heat the oil first. I could probably sputter something about absorbing oil and cooking at a consistent temperature, but it's not exactly a very honed argument.
Is there such a reason?
I remember learning to heat the pan, then put the oil in, then put the stuff in from the show Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat.
I don't remember the rationale though.
I think you should each cook the same dish with your different methods and have a third person arrange a blind taste test for you two and see which you prefer. 😁
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Preheating the pan stops food from sticking but garlic and onion never sticks for me so I don't think in this case it makes any difference.
Taking this further my mother would always follow recipe steps correctly while her sister just turned on the heat, chucked everything into the pot at once, and put the lid on. My mother hated that it was usually just as good.
Spencer likes this.
I want to find #gamedesign resources for designing the artificial, algorithmic systems that govern a computer opponent's decision-making.
For as long as I've kniwn these have been known collectively as "AI", as in "pathfinding AI" or "enemy AI", and, well, you can see what my problem is in 2026.
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Hypolite Petovan likes this.
The build is successful!
I finally finished* my TagTuner music jukebox and hooked it up to some speakers. It uses the ESPHome-based Home Assistant Voice PE as its brains and audio player, and when it scans NFC tags, it fetches corresponding media from my Music Assistant server.
I still have a couple bugs to work out, but this is definitely close enough to feel "ready".
I'm so happy to have a tool that will let us both (a) leverage my large home media server and (b) enjoy some of the benefits of physical media.
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This is not of my own devising; I followed the instructions for the TagTuner project, which is what you're looking for.
I linked those in my initial post too. 🙂
Thank you!
No, the point is not to fully physicalize every album or playlist in my library. That's far too much effort, and would likely result in a ton of unused tags.
Instead, I plan to make tags for favorite albums or playlists, roughly defined, the way some folks night have a small curated collection of vinyls to leaf through.
sorry, this one's stuck in my head so y'all are getting it too
Ants In My Room (Lyric Video)
Stream "Ants In My Room": https://cartervail.lnk.to/ants My New EP “Coydog” is out now!Stream It Here: https://cartervail.lnk.to/coydogCheck out my merch he...YouTube
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I learned in the last year or so that I have a real fondness for folk, rebel, punk, and protest songs, especially in this moment. Music brings solidarity, not just with the people singing today, but with those who marched and fought before me, and I need that right now.
Maybe you do too. So I'm gonna start a thread here of songs and artists I find that resonate with me.
Starting with this one, which I just discovered this morning and has been wedged in my brain:
"GTFO" by Christopher Murphy (as Gus the Bardic Troubador)
Here's an adaptation of an Irish fight song from the Troubles.
"Come Out, Ye Cowards ICE", performed by Ben Grosscup, with previous work by Dominic Behan, Carsie Blanton, and Sophie Schleicher
Today was going to be the day. The last shipment of parts arrived yesterday, so I was finally ready to assemble the TagTuner this morning. I'd spent a year or more procrastinating, several weeks beating my head against failed 3D prints, and another week sanding and staining the lid. I was honestly a little giddy when I tucked into bed last night.
And I got it almost all assembled, all the components into the 3D-printed case. All I had to do was put the lid, so carefully post-processed, on and fasten it.
It broke.
Three of the lid's four legs snapped off in the housings they were supposed to sit in. Superglue couldn't save them.
So it's back to the printer. And then the garage. And maybe by the end of the week I'll have a lid that will actually fit without breaking.
Spencer
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