I've lost pretty much a whole work day to this: when #Docker is running, it messes up DHCP or routing or something and all networking on my LAN stops working.
I'm using #Ubuntu 24.04 and installed Docker from the official Docker apt repository.
This has happened before and I fixed it, but I've forgotten how.
I've googled around and found answers that say to set some things in /etc/docker/daemon.json, and to do stuff with NetworkManager and iptables, but none of it seems to work.
Has anyone else encountered this recently, and fixed it?
I've seen discussion around several in-person only events lately, where the organisers justify it by saying they can't get the best quality of conversation online.
Well, you can't get any of my conversation at an event I can't get to.
An in-person event that you have to travel to excludes people with caring responsibilities, disabilities, and limited funds.
I think I'm largely preaching to the converted about this on the fediverse, but I have a reason:
Many of you, at some point, will be involved in the planning of an event. Please be the person who pushes the other organisers to *really* justify running the event in-person only. If there's any way remote attendance can be accommodated, please fight for it!
@horse as far as I know, the ones I used had the correct lenses for protanopia, and I can't find anything on the enchroma website to say they've got an extra strong version, just "protan lenses". Since they work by partially blocking the colours you *can* see, they'd have to block out almost everything to have an effect on me.
@wj I took part in a study to measure their effectiveness; they did less than nothing for me. Thanks for trying to be helpful, but almost every time I mention my colourblindness someone asks me if I've heard of them.
I'm severely colourblind - my eyes can hardly detect red light at all. So, working in web development, picking colour schemes is hard. There are tools around to help you pick accessible colour schemes, but they assume that you can tell by looking that a colour is the one you want, and the only information you need the computer to calculate is the contrast ratio. I realised I need a tool that will take the name of a colour and find a shade that gives a target contrast ratio.
It uses the new APCA perceptual contrast algorithm and the Oklab colour space to help me find colours that people with better colour vision will interpret correctly, while ensuring there's good contrast for as many people as possible.
Sometimes just making a thing with @glitchdotcom is quicker than reading the documentation: https://do-datalist-autocompletes-update-while-typing.glitch.me/ I wanted to know if the autocomplete list for an input element would update automatically after I change the contents of the <datalist> element it uses while typing. The answer is yes!
I've enjoyed playing @streetcomplete lately, but I've realised that since my edits are public, it completely doxxes me to anyone who can find my account. Is there any way around that?