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Interesting discussion of different end of life methods and their environmental impact:

"Living Planet: Deep Dive: How eco-friendly funerals are changing traditions"
dw.com/en/deep-dive-how-eco-fr

Turns out the human composting is still illegal everywhere in Canada (but not some states like Washington), but embalming and licensed funeral services are not required:

ontario.ca/page/arrange-funera

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If you're on BlueSky and want to bridge to Mastodon, follow @ap.brid.gy

That's it. Nothing to install, no terms of service to sign, no complicated garbage. If you want to stop, just block @ap.brid.gy

Details here: fed.brid.gy/docs

If you want to bridge your account to BlueSky, simply follow this account: @bsky.brid.gy

Why am I encouraging this? Because when BlueSky inevitably goes bad, people there will have friends in the Fediverse to help them move here.

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Boost this toot if you're planning on sticking around Mastodon whether or not it's more popular than Bluesky.

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Just found out about the IKEA Inspelning electrical plug that can integrate with and is relatively inexpensive but immediately available.

Will need to give one a try. I don't yet have any zigbee devices, so open to suggestions on the best way to integrate those into the system.

ikea.com/ca/en/p/inspelning-pl

@underlap if privacy is a concern, then avoiding centralized services based in the Unites States is probably a good idea. There are many alternatives with self-hosting if you're able, or using services based in the EU which have stronger privacy laws and enforcement (which also affects US-based services but generally only for people residing in the EU).

Some alternatives to the common ones are listed at: switching.software/

@timbray

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New* on the blog: “Privacy, Why?” tbray.org/ongoing/When/202x/20

It argues that a lockable front door is a key benefit of civilization. And I think it offers useful talking points for anyone who finds themselves having to defend their desire for privacy.

[*Well, not *that* new; it’s adapted from a piece I wrote in 2013 but published elsewhere.]

#Privacy

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anyway, "world standards day", to celebrate international standards, was on october the 14th

unless you're in america, in which case it's next week, the 14th of november

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@dangillmor My experience is that any article with Twitter embeds isn't an article at all, it's a "some people are saying" listicle. I might as well be watching a local weatherman doing man-on-the-street interviews about how wet the rain is.

"Nothing of value was lost", in other words.

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FYI, wrapping a tortilla around a handful of Halloween candy counts as breakfast burrito as long as you eat it before noon.

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@uint8_t In March 2024, the was a ruling by the European Court of Justice, which basically said that all standards that are mandatory for products must be free of charge.

I just looked up what's the current state of this:

There is now an official web site where you can request free access to european standards, and access those that were sucessfully requested by others: ec.europa.eu/transparency/docu

It explicitly says that everyone may use it, not just people in the EU.

@tasket @murena @e_mydata @gael the Murena 2 was sold in the US, and the kickstarter says still available, but it's not present in the Murena shop. It's not clear if that's a supply issue or something else going on.

kickstarter.com/projects/muren

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1. interview with the vampire
2. HR screening with the vampire
3. technical interview with the vampire
4. team interview with the vampire
5. Good evening vampire, unfortunately we're not able to extend you an offer at this time. We'd like to keep in contact and notify you of any available positions in the future

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Masks in healthcare, eugenics, ableism 

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Anyway, TL;DR, impressed and fascinated as I am by LLMs and GPTs as technology, the things we're using them for are just dumb and, in many cases, dangerous.

The more of these artificial liars get rolled out, the more we have to choose between believing everything the machine says -- which is lunacy -- or believing nothing that it says -- which is exhausting.

6/

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I don't understand why you would deploy something that looks like an information retrieval tool, but simply invents things when it doesn't know the answer.

No one would design a database system that returned random data if a query failed to match any records. (Except perhaps in a specialized application such as a game).

The argument “but it gets it right MOST of the time" cuts no ice. That actually makes it WORSE, because it's harder to tell when the robot is fabricating answers.

5/

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I think that fact that we're using AI to write emails because we find it hard and AI to summarise emails because we can't be bothered to read them suggests that we should take a look at how we communicate rather than boiling the oceans to have LLMs hallucinate at each other on our behalf.

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