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I wonder how much electricity globally things like uBlock and NoScript save?

I think most people rightly believe that we are living in a digital dark age where future generations won't really know what happened. That being said, we do have a say about it. With our current tool-set, good archiving practices, and a strong desire, we can share our lives with future generations in a way like never before. Sure, people could have always just written everything down, but now it is far more practical.

Some interesting debate on cryptocurrencies at the 2022 Web Summit.
youtu.be/D5p2gt7htDM?t=999

I heard that Kevin Conroy died a couple of days ago. He voiced Batman in the animated series back in 1992. It is a pretty solid series that still stands up, and obviously had a lot of talent behind it.

Daniel boosted
Daniel boosted

I don't care about celebrities showing up and posting on the fedi, what's really concerning me now is that people who knew me in high school are here.

Daniel boosted

Some of you non-techies expressed interest in learning a little bit more about computers, so I'm putting a guide together. I really am no one and not particularly knowledgeable, but I might be able to point you in the right direction. Here is tonight's homework. Maybe get some friends together to read and discuss. I'll write a little more every few days.
fortwalden.com

I am finally, and very inconsistently, refraining from double spacing before a new sentence.

There are basic things that I wish non-techie folks would look into and learn.
1.) Learn your natural rights and who they come from. These rights extend into computing. For computers that you own, YOU should be in control of what they do. Most smart phones and Windows computers are not this.
2.) The Cloud is just someone else's computer(s). Learn how to store and backup your data.
3.) You can do so much for yourself. You don't need to rely on bad actors for services.

What else would you advise?

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Daniel boosted

I’ve been thinking about you folks in Northern Europe with the winter coming and high heating costs. I was just considering my chest freezer and how it might be converted to a heater. I think it can hold around 400 liters of water. As long as you could heat the water(the hotter the better) to at least 10-15 degrees Celsius, you could turn it on and it would be a pretty decent heat pump until the water got too cold. A rocket stove, if you have wood, or solar thermal could do it.

Daniel boosted

CONSISTENCY IS THE MOST IMPORTANT THING IN YOUR LIFE

Things that @mike didn't tell us about his ADHD treatment journey...

I figured it out. Had to write something small. The printout of the binary data looks clear and should scan in well. Now, just need to do something for data redundancy like Par2. Not sure how I'm going to get the data out of the scan yet though. The PaperBak program is pretty cool, but doesn't live up to its stated data density by a long shot.

This is such a noob question. I’m trying to make a black and white image representation of a binary file. The PGM format grabs the data in bytes, rather than bits, and makes a nice grayscale image instead. Can I just pad each bit to make a byte so I only have 2 colors? Surely there is a simple command line tool for this, instead of me having to write something?

We started at the beginning of the machine and let Heidi watch the process until she realized what it was making. Hot doughnut surprise this morning!

I appreciate folks who have the gift of making things easy to understand and using it. If you’ve ever wondered about heat pumps, this might help.
dothemath.ucsd.edu/2012/06/hea

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Camp Duffel

We Do Camps!