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@fsf Is it in March or May? The page says "sometime in March" but the registration pages say May 4-5.

@mattblaze @wendynather "one drop at a time" is also the answer to that age old question, "How do you titrate an elephant?"

@pmb00cs @garius perhaps I'm ignorant, but I fail to see how "it was not a door that opened, it was *supposed* to be a wall" is precisely a *defense* of Boeing.

@colindean You're weird? Then you fit right in with us!

@jredlund @sfwrtr @stevendbrewer @taur10 @alan This is a thing Apple is most qualified to solve.

I won't hold my breath, though.

@trechnex@social.trechnex.com @ebassi

You're mixing up whom they have to convince: they have to convince _you_ to talk to Cortana. They have to convince _manufacturers_ to add a (nother) dedicated Microsoft key. One of these is much easier than the other.

@jameshowell@emacs.ch Greetings from the left side of the state!

I'm pretty sure we could arrange an in person thing over in Pittsburgh, at the Code & Supply office. @colindean

@kev Uncle John's Bathroom Reader would like a word.

trelane boosted
trelane boosted

36 years ago today was the Max Headroom TV STL hijacking. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Head

I regard this incident as the best and purest hacking prank in modern history. The combination of sophisticated, meticulous technical planning and execution, utterly juvenile content, essential harmlessness, lack of financial motive, and never getting caught or identified (or later taking credit) remains, in my opinion, unmatched to this day.

Pure art.

@mattblaze @jbschirtzinger @Blob_Calder I'm pretty sure microwave is how Sprint got their start.

Oh. I'm thinking of MCI: telephoneworld.org/long-distan

Though Sprint also had microwave: utahrails.net/sp/sprint.php npr.org/2012/10/15/162963607/s

From these, it sounds like microwave was important for getting around AT&T for delivering long-distance telephone and delivering other telecom things.

@mark @mattblaze fun fact: amateur radio can also still use microwaves. arrl.org/microwave

The circuits are kinda funky because the wavelengths are so short.

trelane boosted

Remember when over the air digital TV came in and unless you had a new TV you needed a converter box to watch the digital channels as analog channels went dark? Did you know it's happening again? But worse.

While the FCC just recently extended the required time for the existing (ATSC 1.0) system to stay operational, the new ATSC 3.0 system is loaded with encrypted DRM even on basic channels in many cases.

And get this, it appears that the external converter boxes currently available for this that can actually deal with that DRM reportedly require an Internet connection to work!

You read that right. To receive an over the air ATSC encrypted channel -- even a basic broadcast channel -- reportedly appears to currently require an Internet connection.

Now you might be asking, what the bloody hell is the point of over the air TV if you need a damned Internet connection to watch it?

And the answer is: I don't have a clue.

Stay tuned. No pun intended.

@DreadShips There is a special tour you can sign up for that lets you walk in amongst the stones. english-heritage.org.uk/visit/ We did that when we saw Stonehenge, and it was incredible. It's after (or before) hours, so there's no stonehenge bus service; you'll need to own or hire a car or conveyance of some sort.

@evan @chrismessina Hashtags were links first in identi.ca, possibly also the "@" mention as well. I still remember Twitter getting that feature, and thinking, "finally."

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