@cwebber do you need help to stop reading that (also incredible long) piece? should we send someone? *g* *hugs* (I, for one thing, thank you for saving me from reading it…)
@civodul they're also conflating two unrelated issues in that (super weird) "announcement": (1) the fact that supporter-elected boards are more prone to hostile takeovers than self-perpetuating boards (which is true as a general proposition), and (2) the FSF baroque voting/board members split, which does not protect against anything at all and is currently helping rms to stay in power. Total non sequitur.
It's the next generation (in Rust indeed) of the best open source implementation of graph compression out there, and we're financing its development at @swheritage.
silly device that someone should invent: a physical/mechanical bookmark for paper books, that stays in sync with a digital bookmark of the same book on your ebook reader (I said silly!)
@joey I'm unconvinced even for finding them. The traditional method of keyword search + visiting the citation graph still looks much better. And for the search part, in general a bibliographic search engine will be easier to keep up-to-date than a trained AI.
> Dear Dr. Stefano Zacchiroli, > > I hope this email finds you well. > This is a friendly reminder about our cutting-edge research training programs on writing AI-powered systematic literature reviews.
@cwebber@simon I'm biased because I've the exact same main reference for this than Simon (the Reply All podcast episode from back in the days), but I find the more plausible explanation to be way more shocking than the theory of active listening. Advertisers, in all likelihood, don't even *need* to listen to us. And that's horrifying. (But yes, they could if it were cost effective to do so. It probably isn't.)
“Yesterday, January 1, 2025, copyrights expired for books, films, comic strips, musical compositions and other creative works from 1929, as well as sound recordings from 1924.” 📽️
On a recent #Dell#laptop, I'm facing a hard to debug #Linux wakeup crash: if a USB device (e.g., a #Yubikey) is plugged before putting the laptop in standby and removed while sleeping, then Linux will "reliably" crash upon resuming, with no visible oops nor dmesg log. I can reproduce it with a Yubikey, but it also happens with a USB docking station (connected to keyboard, mouse, etc.). Any idea what to look for? It's also hard to properly search the web for…
Full professor of computer science at Polytechnic Institute of Paris. Co-founder & CSO Software Heritage. Free Software activist. Previously: Debian leader, Open Source Initiative board.