Skip to main content



New in PHP 8.5: Marking Return Values as Important


Today, we'll explore one of the exciting features coming with PHP 8.5—the new #[NoDiscard] attribute to indicate important return values.
This entry was edited (2 months ago)


This week of bikes

The good news is, Madison Bike Week started yesterday. But there’s more good news: There is almost an entire week of Madison Bike Week left to celebrate.

Mayor Satya Rhodes Conway handing the Madison Bike Week declaration to our President ChristoBeth Skogen Photography – bethskogen.com

Weekday morning (and afternoon) rider pit-stops begin in earnest Tuesday, with […]

madisonbikes.org/2025/06/bike-…

This entry was edited (2 months ago)
in reply to Chris Barncard

Yeah, Bike Week! Celebrating here in Milwaukee as well. Hoping I can ride every day this week.


in reply to Avid Amoeba

Something something accusing their opposition of doing the thing that they either are currently doing, or 100% would be doing if they had the opportunity.


ap-components


I want to share some information about a repository we just published. ap-components is a set of Web Components for building interfaces for the ActivityPub API. I built it as I was making a sample application for handling the acct: URI scheme. I found mys

I want to share some information about a repository we just published. ap-components is a set of Web Components for building interfaces for the ActivityPub API. I built it as I was making a sample application for handling the acct: URI scheme. I found myself making more and more components for the UI, and realised that they would probably be useful for other applications, too.

The library is available on npm at @socialwebfoundation/ap-components. It currently covers some of the simplest ActivityPub data, but I hope to expand it to give visibility to other types of objects and activities. Please feel free to try it out and let us know if it’s helpful for your work.



SAP plans to convert entire vehicle fleet to electric by 2030, over 95% of current EV drivers also want an EV as their next car










Europeans have until May 27 to restrict Meta from using their data: Meta is about to use Europeans’ social posts to train its AI. Here’s how you can prevent it


Archived URL (Wayback Machine) - Original URL (in case of Wayback Machine downtime)

A small portion of the article:

At the end of May, Meta will start using Europeans’ data to train its AI. Here is how you can exercise your rights and prevent it.

Instagram and Facebook users in Europe will soon have their data and posts used by parent company Meta to train its artificial intelligence (AI) models.

Europeans have until May 27 to restrict Meta from using their data, the date when the company will start using Europe’s data.



Sioux Chef Sean Sherman Expands His Vision for Decolonizing the US Food System




Rent control goes a long way to solving the housing crisis







HP OmniBook 5 is a slim laptop with Snapdragon X, OLED display and $799 starting price


The HP OmniBook 5 14 is a laptop with a 14 inch, 1920 x 1200 pixel OLED display, support for up to 32GB of LPDDR5X-8448 onboard memory, and an M.2 slot for user-replaceable PCIe Gen 4 storage. And the OmniBook 5 16 is a 16 inch model with similar specs, but a larger display.

Powered by an energy-efficient Qualcomm Snapdragon X series processor, the laptop should offer up to 34 hours of […]

#hp #hpOmnibook5 #hpOmnibook514 #hpOmnibook516 #omnibook5 #snapdragonX #snapdragonXPlus

Read more: liliputing.com/hp-omnibook-5-i…



Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending 18th May 2025


in reply to Rachel Greenham

Think about it. What have they been pushing AI abilities in? Planning, strategizing, research, analyzing information, etc. What do they keep screwing up? Execution. Details. Accurately imitating a real human being. Now what kind of job are those skills and weaknesses suited for?

I think the implications are clear.

in reply to YourNetworkIsHaunted

probably the reason they think anyone's jobs can be replace by LLMs is that in their hearts they know theirs can, and that's after a lifetime of thinking they're the smartest people in the room.

reshared this



Who Broke the Internet?


Today I'm listening to [em]Who Broke the Internet?[/em], a four-part series by [url=https://mamot.fr/@pluralistic]@pluralistic@mamot.fr[/url] on CBC's [em]Understood[/em] podcast. [quote]Google Search was the gold standard — a product born in a dorm room

Today I'm listening to Who Broke the Internet?, a four-part series by pluralistic@mamot.fr on CBC's Understood podcast.

> Google Search was the gold standard — a product born in a dorm room during the internet’s early, idealistic era. But when internal emails surfaced they revealed a deeper conflict inside the company: was Google making Search worse, on purpose, to boost ad revenue? Google says its changes are all about benefiting users. Critics say it’s all part of a bigger pattern — one that host Cory Doctorow calls enshittification: the slow, deliberate decay of platforms in the name of profit.

Have you noticed internet search has become next to useless? It's like the arms-race between search and spam is ramping up, and not in a good way. Cory lays out the foundation that it isn't that simple, and that the degradation of search was brought on internally.

Check it out here or wherever you get your podcasts!



Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending 11th May 2025


in reply to BlueMonday1984




US doctors rewrite DNA of infant with severe genetic disorder in medical first


Doctors in the US have become the first to treat a baby with a customised gene-editing therapy after diagnosing the child with a severe genetic disorder that kills about half of those affected in early infancy.

KJ was born with severe CPS1 deficiency, a condition that affects only one in 1.3 million people. Those affected lack a liver enzyme that converts ammonia, from the natural breakdown of proteins in the body, into urea so it can be excreted in urine. This causes a build-up of ammonia that can damage the liver and other organs, such as the brain.

Writing in the New England Journal of Medicine, the doctors described the painstaking process of identifying the specific mutations behind KJ’s disorder, designing a gene-editing therapy to correct them, and testing the treatment and fatty nanoparticles needed to carry it into the liver. The therapy uses a powerful procedure called base editing which can rewrite the DNA code one letter at a time.




in reply to Ioughttamow

Yay freedom!

Keep an eye on RFK Jr. though. He seems like the death-panel eugenicist type.

This entry was edited (2 months ago)
in reply to floofloof

He’s already appointed his first eugenicist. David Geier is who RFK is having conduct the ‘study’ on Autism. He and his father previously experimented on autistic children in his basement by giving them Lupron injections, which cause chemical castration. He was prosecuted in Maryland for practicing medicine without a license, and his father had his medical license revoked in the process.

RFK said he was going to identify and eliminate the cause of autism. The cause of autism is DNA.

This entry was edited (2 months ago)


Man checks out 100 books from Beachwood Library, then burns them in social media post


Summary

A man checked out 100 books from Beachwood Library in Beachwood, Ohio, covering Jewish history, African-American history, and LGBTQ topics, and later posted social media videos showing the books with captions referencing “cleansing” libraries before burning them.

Princeton University’s Bridging Divides Initiative alerted the library about the posts.

The books were worth about $1,700. Since they are not overdue, the library will bill the man later.

Police say the matter is civil unless he fails to pay. He is now banned from returning to the library.

#news
This entry was edited (2 months ago)

reshared this






This entry was edited (2 months ago)




in reply to Emil Jacobs - Collectifission

we are a team of activists and researchers exposing the limits and potentials around the entire EU Voice/Video story and pilot project. We plan to publish a report real soon. Stay tuned


New Mexico to allow cyclists to roll through stop signs


Starting on July 1, people riding bicycles in New Mexico will be able to ride through stop signs without coming to a full stop, and stop at red traffic lights and continue even if the light hasn’t turned green — as long as it’s safe to do so.

That’s according to a new state law Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham signed on Friday.

Senate Bill 73 changes New Mexico’s traffic law to allow cyclists to treat stop signs as yield signs, and to treat red traffic lights as stop signs and proceed if there are no other cars, cyclists or pedestrians.



in reply to rozlav

What a badass, posing for the camera as she's taken out. Props to the photographer also for this excellent pic