Ви знаєте, що в дійсності казки пишуть для дорослих. І взагалі казки, особливо не народні, а там пізнього періоду, які там писав, наприклад, Шарль Перро чи Андерсен, вони були орієнтовані на соціум, на солони, на якісь серйозні філософські чи соціотеми. І тобто казки — це не просто, і ти це зазвичай усвідомлюєш, коли в тебе з'являються діти, і ти починаєш ці казки читати разом з дітьми.
At @habitat.network, we're working hard to launch something at ATmosphereConf. We're building a platform for user data agency: giving users full and transparent control of where their data flows on the internet. Naturally, building a privacy-first platform, we're thinking about permissioned data.
And that's thanks to switching from bsky.social to eurosky.social. I, like most people I guess, have missed the impressive growth in different applications running on that same protocol. Leaflet is a longer format publishing tool. Like a mailing list or an RSS feed, or a blog. Or the best of all three. I like the minimalism. It's inviting. I may as well make myself comfortable.
TESSERA streaming in the browser, planetary programming at WG2.8, biodiversity action papers, FP Launchpad opens, and Docker CACM buzz
Record elicitation is a pattern where a client asks an AppView to construct a record from the user's intent, rather than building it locally. This lets the AppView handle business logic, validation, and schema complexity while the client retains full authority over what gets written to the user's repository.
This workshop will bring together ecologists, philosophers, cultural theorists, and technologists to discuss how contemporary insights from theoretical biology and ecology can provide a richer understanding of what makes for a thriving biosphere, and how this might provide inspiration for cultivating sociotechnical infrastructure that is more resilient against co-option by monopolising tendencies.
Just checking out PCKT blog (Curious to see how this works. Say hi if you read this)
ATProtocolを使っている pckt.blog から、新たにPDSのサービスが始まった。 Building Our Corner of the Open Social Web: pckt.cafe and More 最近はATProtocol周りが活発に動いていて、いろいろ試している。leaflet.pub もそうだし、 eurosky.social もそう。
I really am not good at this stuff and never have been. Anything that requires technical know-how is something that's been slipping from my grasp the older I get. I'm always down to learning how to do things as my knowledge is mostly learned from fucking around on my own or were taught to me decades ago in school. I feel like a caveman most of the time banging my stone club against my scary space-age computer.
No one wants to get their pictures clicked with an android camera. They get it, you have the Samsung s8000 or the latest Huawei or Oneplus but the average android photo is worse than an Iphone photo. Iphones are reliable, people think they have better photos.
Summary of the Nine Recommendations and Biodiversity Monitoring Standards Framework papers from the NAS/Royal Society US-UK Forum in summer 2025, and how they connect to my work on collective knowledge systems, TESSERA, and evidence synthesis.
In this post I’ll be talking about Jamila Lyiscott’s article “3 Way to Speak English”. This article explores the idea that people often change the way they speak depending on their social setting or what environment they’re in. This is not necessarily something bad but it’s something that should be recognized as just a form of communication tied to identity and context of a situation. I learned in this article that the 3 ways to speak English are at home with your family, casually with your friends, and at work or school in a professional setting. The main message form this article is that language diversity should be widely accepted. People naturally do this without even thinking purely based on the situations they find themselves in. It’s actually a good skill to be able to switch the way you speak because it allows you to show a casual and professional side to yourself. Switching between styles is a strength, not a weakness!
Nearly two years ago, Ottawa appointed Mathieu Grondin as the city's Nightlife Commissioner in an effort to inject some energy back into its atrophied nightlife. Largely the sentiments towards this position have changed very little in the years since, with seemingly the city in agreement that not enough has changed to warrant the six-figure salary the position grants, and an endless stream of jokes about Ottawa's absent 'Night Mayor'.