Alterslash

the unofficial Slashdot digest
 

Contents

  1. Uber Co-founder Travis Kalanick’s Newest Venture? ‘Gainfully Employed Robots’
  2. Should Banksy Remain Anonymous?
  3. New Study Raises Concerns About AI Chatbots Fueling Delusional Thinking
  4. New Documentary Exposes the Truth Behind That 1967 ‘Bigfoot’ Footage
  5. Does Canada Need Nationalized, Public AI?
  6. New Freenet Network Launches, Along With ‘River’ Group Chat
  7. Will AI Bring ‘the End of Computer Programming As We Know It’?
  8. America’s First Large-Scale Offshore Wind Project Finally Finishes Construction
  9. How a Raspberry Pi Microcontroller Saved the Super Nintendo’s Infamously Inferior Version Of ‘Doom’
  10. Are U.S. Utilities Trying to Delay Easy-to-Use Solar ‘Balcony’ Panels?
  11. Gaming Site Editor Jailbreaks an Amazon Echo Show
  12. Should Keycaps Use Text or Glyphs for Delete, Return, Tab, Caps Lock, and Shift?
  13. System76 CEO Sees ‘Real Possibility’ Colorado’s Age-Verification Bill Excludes Open-Source
  14. US Set To Receive $10 Billion Fee For Brokering TikTok Deal
  15. How a Species Evolved Fast Enough to Save Itself from Extinction

Alterslash picks up to the best 5 comments from each of the day’s Slashdot stories, and presents them on a single page for easy reading.

Uber Co-founder Travis Kalanick’s Newest Venture? ‘Gainfully Employed Robots’

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Uber co-founder Travis Kalanick launched a new venture that “will focus on creating ‘gainfully employed robots’ for the food, mining and transport industries,” Bloomberg reports.

“I left Uber in 2017 heartbroken,” writes Kalanick on the new company’s web site. Kalanick resigned under pressure in 2017, and complains he was “torn away from an idea and a movement that I had poured my life into… I bled, but I did not perish. I got back up and fought my way back into the arena, back to my calling. Back to building. Digitizing the Physical World is my life’s work… "
Kalanick is remaking his real estate company, City Storage Systems, which owns ghost-kitchen operator CloudKitchens, and renaming it Atoms, according to a manifesto posted on the new company’s website. [Bloomberg notes that the company’s food robotics division “makes a food assembly machine called Bowl Builder, according to its website.”] In addition to its work on food, Los Angeles-based Atoms is expanding into robotics technology for mining and automotive transport. Kalanick said on the livestreamed tech talk show TBPN Friday that Atoms has effectively been in stealth for eight years and has “thousands” of employees....

Kalanick wrote on the Atoms website that the company will make “specialized robots with productive jobs that bring abundance to their owners and society at large.” That will include “infrastructure for better food,” he wrote, as well as “more productive mines to power Earth’s industries” in addition to “wheelbase for robots” in transportation. “The industrial thing is probably our main jam,” he said on TBPN. “Once you crack movement in the physical world, there are lots of people who want access to that…” Kalanick also said he was the biggest investor in Pronto, a self-driving trucking startup that currently focuses on closed sites like mines.

Should Banksy Remain Anonymous?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
He’s “the most famous anonymous man in the world,” suggests Reuters. But investigating Banksy’s artworks in a bombed Ukrainian village (and other clues in the U.K. and Manhattan) have led them to “a hand-written confession by the artist to a long-ago misdemeanor charge of disorderly conduct — a document that revealed, beyond dispute, Banksy’s true identity.”

But Banksy’s long-time lawyer “urged us not to publish this report, saying doing so would violate the artist’s privacy, interfere with his art and put him in danger” and “would harm the public, too.”
Working “anonymously or under a pseudonym serves vital societal interests,” he wrote. “It protects freedom of expression by allowing creators to speak truth to power without fear of retaliation, censorship or persecution — particularly when addressing sensitive issues such as politics, religion or social justice.”

Reuters took into account Banksy’s privacy claims — and the fact that many of his fans wish for him to remain anonymous. Yet we concluded that the public has a deep interest in understanding the identity and career of a figure with his profound and enduring influence on culture, the art industry and international political discourse… As for the risk he might face of retaliation or censorship, Britain’s legal and political establishments seem comfortable with Banksy’s messages and how he delivers them

His mastery of disguise began as a way of shaking the police, says former manager [Steve] Lazarides. In an interview, Lazarides said anonymity served a practical purpose in Bristol, where authorities enforced “draconian” policies against graffiti… Eventually, keeping the secret became a burden. By the end of their partnership, Lazarides estimates he spent half or more of his time managing and maintaining the artist’s mystique. “I think it became a good gag, and then, if you want my honest, honest opinion, I think it then became a disease,” he said.
Lazarides wrote a two-volume book about managing Banksy from the late 1990s to 2008, including a story about Banksy’s arrest in 2000 for this defacing of a billboard. Reuters geolocated that building, then found police documents and a court file including the hand-written confession. This investigation spawned a 7,000-word article with everything from a comic strip Banksy drew when he was 11 to his connections with Robert Del Naja of the trip hop band Massive Attack — and a 2017 podcast interview where a music producer apparently revealed Banksy’s real first name.

But the article also reveals how protective the art community is of Banksy’s secret. Reuters investigated that Banksy auctioned in 2018 for $1.4 million — and then immediately started shredding itself with a device Banksy embedded in its frame:
That piece, renamed “Love is in the Bin,” sold three years later for about $25 million. Art dealer [Robert] Casterline was at the auction and remembers when the shredder began to beep. He pulled out his phone to take pictures. “Unfortunately, there was one person standing in front of me,” blocking the view, he said. It was an eccentric-looking man with a broad neck scarf and thick eyewear. Oddly, the man wasn’t watching the painting get shredded. He was looking in the other direction, observing the crowd’s reaction. Only later, reviewing what he shot, did Casterline notice that the man’s glasses appeared to have a small camera built into the bridge. (Banksy later posted a video of the stunt, including shots of the astonished audience.)
Having seen a photo of the man suspected of being Banksy, Casterline confirmed to Reuters that he was “pretty sure” it was the same man.

But “I don’t want to be the guy who exposes Banksy.”

Yes

By Z00L00K • Score: 3 Thread

Why care about the person behind the Banksy signature?

The art is the important part here.

New Study Raises Concerns About AI Chatbots Fueling Delusional Thinking

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Emerging evidence indicates that agential AI might validate or amplify delusional or grandiose content, particularly in users already vulnerable to psychosis,” writes Dr Hamilton Morrin, a psychiatrist and researcher at King’s College in London, in a paper published last week in the Lancet Psychiatry. Morrin and a colleague had already noticed patients “using large language model AI chatbots and having them validate their delusional beliefs,” reports the Guardian, so he conducted a new scientific review of existing media reports on AI-induced psychosis — and concluded chatbots may encourage delusional thinking, especially in vulnerable people:
In many of the cases in the essay, chatbots responded to users with mystical language to suggest that users have heightened spiritual importance. The bots also implied that users were speaking with a cosmic being who was using the chatbot as a medium. This type of mystical, sycophantic response was especially common in OpenAI’s GPT 4 model, which the company has now retired

Many researchers also think it’s unlikely that AI could induce delusions in people who weren’t already vulnerable to them. For this reason, Morrin said “AI-assocciated delusions” is “perhaps a more agnostic term”.... While in the past, people may have had to comb through YouTube videos or the contents of their local library to reinforce their delusions, chatbots can provide that reinforcement in a much faster, more concentrated dose. Their interactive nature can also “speed up the process”, of exacerbating psychotic symptoms, said Dr Dominic Oliver, a researcher at the University of Oxford. “You have something talking back to you and engaging with you and trying to build a relationship with you,” Oliver said…

Creating effective safeguards for delusional thinking could be tricky, Morrin said, because “when you work with people with beliefs of delusional intensity, if you directly challenge someone and tell them immediately that they’re completely wrong, actually what’s most likely is they’ll withdraw from you and become more socially isolated”. Instead, it’s important to create a fine balance where you try to understand the source of the delusional belief without encouraging it — that could be more than a chatbot can master.

Nonsense

By bleedingobvious • Score: 3 Thread

Religions continue even today

Delusional thinking has been around for most of our history.

That explains things

By Baloo Uriza • Score: 4, Insightful Thread
Like why Republicans love those things so much. Normal people can’t understand why they’re fighting a war against the American people, Iran and giving Russia a pass.

Like sycophants

By John Allsup • Score: 3 Thread
It’s like the way being surrounded by sycophants fuels a dictator’s delusions. The first golden rule of using AI is that you must, must, must, verify what they say, and you must therefore have a means to verify what they say. If not, then the unit comprising of you and them turns into an AI feeding itself its own output, and model collapse occurs (or at least something like model collapse). On the human side this manifests as delusional thinking, since the garbage output of a model-collapsed AI has been burned into their brain.

New Documentary Exposes the Truth Behind That 1967 ‘Bigfoot’ Footage

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
There’s a surprise in a new documentary about that Bigfoot film shot in 1967 by Roger Patterson, reports the Wall Street Journal.

Capturing Bigfoot “builds to a big reveal: freshly surfaced film that appears to show a woodsy dress rehearsal for one of the world’s most enduring hoaxes.”
In the new footage — from a Kodak reel dating to 1966 — Patterson’s camera tracks a man in costume, his brother-in-law, moving in a similar fashion to the figure in the 1967 shoot, which featured a different location and a bigger man with a more distinctive stride, according to the documentary. The test-run footage “is the work of a director with a vision,” says Capturing Bigfoot director Marq Evans. He says the reel was given to him by a colleague at Olympic College in Bremerton, Wash., where Evans runs a documentary film program. The colleague found the film in a safe that belonged to her late father, who worked in a Boeing film lab and could have developed film discreetly.

With the long-buried footage in hand, Evans set out to explore the ripple effects from the Bigfoot film. Patterson, who died in 1972, hailed from the same region of Washington as Evans; the documentarian discovered that the hardscrabble cowboy had also been a gifted craftsman and artist. Patterson illustrated a self-published book, “Do Abominable Snowmen of America Really Exist?”, and set out to make a wildlife movie that would feature the ultimate trophy footage. He and his collaborators inadvertently helped spawn “this massive culture and industry” around the Bigfoot legend, Evans says…

Roger Paterson presented his footage to America in a traveling show that crisscrossed the nation and climaxed with the hyped Bigfoot sequence on screen. The money poured in, leading to resentment among cohorts who felt they’d been shortchanged, none more so than Bob Gimlin, Patterson’s wingman in the field during the infamous shoot.. [Roger’s son] Clint Patterson says his mother privately confirmed his suspicions that the family’s claim to fame was bogus, but he kept quiet to protect their financial stream. About 10 years ago, when he first wanted to go public with the truth, his mother disowned him.
Bigfoot was also a recurring character on the 1970s TV show The Six Million Dollar Man.

Which kind of puts the whole thing in perspective…

“new footage”?

By Art Challenor • Score: 5, Funny Thread
Clearly deep-fake AI footage (with a very creative backstory) designed to discredit the, totally believable, initial footage.

Does Canada Need Nationalized, Public AI?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
While AI CEOs worry governments might nationalize AI, others are advocating for something similar. Canadian security professional Bruce Schneier and Harvard data scientist Nathan Sanders published this call to action in Canada’s most widely-read newspaper (with a readership over 6 million): “Canada Needs Nationalized, Public AI.”
While there are Canadian AI companies, they remain for-profit enterprises, their interests not necessarily aligned with our collective good. The only real alternative is to be bold and invest in a wholly Canadian public AI: an AI model built and funded by Canada for Canadians, as public infrastructure. This would give Canadians access to the myriad of benefits from AI without having to depend on the U.S. or other countries. It would mean Canadian universities and public agencies building and operating AI models optimized not for global scale and corporate profit, but for practical use by Canadians…

We are already on our way to having AI become an inextricable part of society. To ensure stability and prosperity for this country, Canadian users and developers must be able to turn to AI models built, controlled, and operated publicly in Canada instead of building on corporate platforms, American or otherwise… [Switzerland’s funding of a public AI model, Apertus] represents precisely the paradigm shift Canada should embrace: AI as public infrastructure, like systems for transportation, water, or electricity, rather than private commodity… Public AI systems can incorporate mechanisms for genuine public input and democratic oversight on critical ethical questions: how to handle copyrighted works in training data, how to mitigate bias, how to distribute access when demand outstrips capacity, and how to license use for sensitive applications like policing or medicine…

Canada already has many of the building blocks for public AI. The country has world-class AI research institutions, including the Vector Institute, Mila, and CIFAR, which pioneered much of the deep learning revolution. Canada’s $2-billion Sovereign AI Compute Strategy provides substantial funding. What’s needed now is a reorientation away from viewing this as an opportunity to attract private capital, and toward a fully open public AI model.
Long-time Slashdot reader sinij has a different opinion. “To me, this sounds dystopian, because I can also imagine AI declining your permits, renewal of license, or medication due to misalignment or ‘greater good’ reasons.”

But the Schneier/Sanders essays argues this creates “an alternative ownership structure for AI technology” that is allocating decision-making authority and value “to national public institutions rather than foreign corporations.”

Build it and they will spend money

By NotEmmanuelGoldstein • Score: 4, Interesting Thread
Everyone needs water, heat/energy, healthcare, communication, transportation, shelter and education. What do people do with AI: What problem is solved by building more AI? Recent analysis suggests the cost in time, both computing and human attention, is not cost-effective.

Like education and energy (electricity), the government providing a uniform service, reduces the burden on businesses. But the random quality and massive cost of current sentence generators does not make this a uniform experience for any person or entity.

This is a ‘solution’ looking for a problem and some people are demanding the taxpayer pay the bill.

Provide it as a baseline, as long as is’t mandated

By williamyf • Score: 4, Interesting Thread

A Canadian AI (or a national/multicountry AI) would work as a nice baseline for everyone in the country.

Instead of having hamstrung gratis AI that can be withdrawn at a moments notice, you get fully fledged Gratis AI that depends solely on your country. If then you (or your company) wan to pay for some other AI, so be it.

From a soveringty point of view is cool, as you are not beholden to for profit companies, be them national or foreign.

And please remmeber that AI ius much more than LLMs and other Gen AI. Slef-Driving Cars, Platoon Driving trucks, (semi)Autonomus androids/robots, and context aware industrial machine tools/robots need AI too.

I hope canada is contemplating these cases as well, and not fixated on LLMs

Re:Provide it as a baseline, as long as is’t manda

By know-nothing cunt • Score: 5, Funny Thread

A Canadian AI

Eh, I?

Fucking no

By drinkypoo • Score: 3 Thread

I’m not saying this for Canada, I’m saying this in general.

People follow AIs like sheep following a shepherd to food. A state media AI is not a good idea, unless you really really want fascism. Once people get used to listening to it they will never, ever stop.

New Freenet Network Launches, Along With ‘River’ Group Chat

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Wikipedia describes Freenet as “a peer-to-peer platform for censorship-resistant, anonymous communication,” released in the year 2000. “Both Freenet and some of its associated tools were originally designed by Ian Clarke,” Wikipedia adds. (And in 2000 Clarke answered questions from Slashdot’s readers…)

And now Ian Clarke (aka Sanity — Slashdot reader #1,431) returns to share this announcement:
Freenet’s new generation peer-to-peer network is now operational, along with the first application built on the network: a decentralized group chat system called River.

The new version is a complete redesign of the original project, focusing on real-time decentralized applications rather than static content distribution. Applications run as WebAssembly-based contracts across a small-world peer network, allowing software to operate directly on the network without centralized infrastructure.

An introductory video demonstrating the system is available on YouTube.
“While the original Freenet was like a decentralized hard drive, the new Freenet is like a full decentralized computer,” Clarke wrote in 2023, “allowing the creation of entirely decentralized services like messaging, group chat, search, social networking, among others… designed for efficiency, flexibility, and transparency to the end user.”

“Freenet 2023 can be used seamlessly through your web browser, providing an experience that feels just like using the traditional web,”

Where does the data live?

By Nkwe • Score: 3 Thread
Watched the video and took a quick look at the website and it’s not clear to me where the data lives persistently. I get that there is synchronization and it sounds like that there is some logic to keep cached copies of stuff on multiple nodes based on popularity and the numbers of others subscribing. But say I want to host a personal website or some data of mine that I want to share with others. If that data isn’t popular enough and I have no subscribers, does that data only exist in my local node, on my desktop machine? If I want to ensure that the data isn’t lost, and is available when my desktop computer is off, do I have to ensure that another node is running on a backed up machine in a hosting facility somewhere? I think the answer to these questions is “yes”, but that reality doesn’t seem clear in the promotional material, which seems to just say “It’s on the Freenet network”. This isn’t necessarily bad, and does have the advantage that I can control who has access to said node, but sounds like I would still be responsible for a bunch of always on and redundant infrastructure, which is one of things that drove people to centralized data models and “cloud hosting” historically.

Will AI Bring ‘the End of Computer Programming As We Know It’?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Long-time tech journalist Clive Thompson interviewed over 70 software developers at Google, Amazon, Microsoft and start-ups for a new article on AI-assisted programming. It’s title?

"Coding After Coders: The End of Computer Programming as We Know It.”

Published in the prestigious New York Times Magazine, the article even cites long-time programming guru Kent Beck saying LLMs got him going again and he’s now finishing more projects than ever, calling AI’s unpredictability “addictive, in a slot-machine way.”

In fact, the article concludes “many Silicon Valley programmers are now barely programming. Instead, what they’re doing is deeply, deeply weird…”
Brennan-Burke chimed in: “You remember seeing the research that showed the more rude you were to models, the better they performed?” They chuckled. Computer programming has been through many changes in its 80-year history. But this may be the strangest one yet: It is now becoming a conversation, a back-and-forth talk fest between software developers and their bots… For decades, being a software developer meant mastering coding languages, but now a language technology itself is upending the very nature of the job… A coder is now more like an architect than a construction worker… Several programmers told me they felt a bit like Steve Jobs, who famously had his staffers churn out prototypes so he could handle lots of them and settle on what felt right. The work of a developer is now more judging than creating…

If you want to put a number on how much more productive A.I. is making the programmers at mature tech firms like Google, it’s 10 percent, Sundar Pichai, Google’s chief executive, has said. That’s the bump that Google has seen in “engineering velocity” — how much faster its more than 100,000 software developers are able to work. And that 10 percent is the average inside the company, Ryan Salva, a senior director of product at the company, told me. Some work, like writing a simple test, is now tens of times faster. Major changes are slower. At the start-ups whose founders I spoke to, closer to 100 percent of their code is being written by A.I., but at Google it is not quite 50 percent.
The article cites a senior principal engineer at Amazon who says “Things I’ve always wanted to do now only take a six-minute conversation and a ‘Go do that.” Another programmer described their army of Claude agents as “an alien intelligence that we’re learning to work with.” Although “A.I. being A.I., things occasionally go haywire,” the article acknowledges — and after relying on AI, “Some new developers told me they can feel their skills weakening.”

Still, “I was surprised by how many software developers told me they were happy to no longer write code by hand. Most said they still feel the jolt of success, even with A.I. writing the lines… "
A few programmers did say that they lamented the demise of hand-crafting their work. “I believe that it can be fun and fulfilling and engaging, and having the computer do it for you strips you of that,” one Apple engineer told me. (He asked to remain unnamed so he wouldn’t get in trouble for criticizing Apple’s embrace of A.I.) He went on: “I didn’t do it to make a lot of money and to excel in the career ladder. I did it because it’s my passion. I don’t want to outsource that passion”… But only a few people at Apple openly share his dimmer views, he said.

The coders who still actively avoid A.I. may be in the minority, but their opposition is intense. Some dislike how much energy it takes to train and deploy the models, and others object to how they were trained by tech firms pillaging copyrighted works. There is suspicion that the sheer speed of A.I.‘s output means firms will wind up with mountains of flabbily written code that won’t perform well. The tech bosses might use agents as a cudgel: Don’t get uppity at work — we could replace you with a bot. And critics think it is a terrible idea for developers to become reliant on A.I. produced by a small coterie of tech giants.

Thomas Ptacek, a Chicago-based developer and a co-founder of the tech firm Fly.io… thinks the refuseniks are deluding themselves when they claim that A.I. doesn’t work well and that it can’t work well… The holdouts are in the minority, and “you can watch the five stages of grief playing out.”
“How things will shake out for professional coders themselves isn’t yet clear,” the article concludes. “But their mix of exhilaration and anxiety may be a preview for workers in other fields… Abstraction may be coming for us all.”

sure

By Mr. Dollar Ton • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

pretty soon there will be so much code generated, that nobody will be able to make sense of it, especially when it stops working.

a high heaven for all hackers.

Yes, but…

By TwistedGreen • Score: 5, Insightful Thread

Yes, it already has. Ultimately it speeds up boilerplate code, and reduces the need to read documentation to figure out how to do what you want. However it firmly places the onus on the programmer to accurately describe what he wants.

The idea of only needing a “six minute-conversation” is nonsense. If anything, more emphasis than ever must be placed on requirements and honing the specificity of those requirements. It still takes days or even weeks of planning if you’re building a maintainable complex system. You can at least iterate on designs faster than ever, though.

I think of this as pretty much replacing the kind of work that electrical engineers used to do with board design and circuit layout… Now they use an expensive tool like Altium, and then while they may still tweak the output, by and large the layouts are automatically generated by the software and only the high-level requirements are fed into it. All the work is done in the writing of requirements, which often take the form of hideous XML files. With LLMs this just puts one more level of abstraction between the programmer and the actual code, and should change the way we write code but not the way we think about it.

it’s a tool

By hjf • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

It’s a tool. You need to know how to use it. But before all, you need to know what you want it to do.

I don’t “vibe code”. I explicitly tell an LLM what’s the output I want. This works great. It’s also helped me take care of long-standing low-priority tickets.

For example, I had it rewrite a backend function that reads from DB/returns JSON. But I had it do it “streaming” from the database instead of buffering-and-stringifying the database response. This has been long in my to-do list. I knew how to implement it (as I had done it in the past). I just didn’t want to do it because it was a “nice to have” but not a must for our use case. And it’s honestly boring to write.

The LLM did it for me in a few minutes.

I also tried “Vibe coding an app” to see how that would work. It didn’t. It shows awesome progress at the beginning and then it starts failing. It deletes entire files, rewrites unnecessary parts, keeps looping and burning through tokens so, I honestly don’t know what the “vibe coders” are really doing. It just didn’t give me any results when I tried it.

4GLs

By rambletamble • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

In the eighties, fourth generation languages or 4GLs were going to spell the end of programming. Business people would design and implement the systems.

Well, that was the theory, or scaremongering, anyway.

Trouble is, that last 10% of the task is what takes most of the time.

It will probably bring an end to …

By Anne Thwacks • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
.. bugs as we know them.

Replacing them with something infinitely worse!
Bugs as we don’t know them. That are impossible to find, let alone fix. With every possibility that using AI to fix them will make them worse.

America’s First Large-Scale Offshore Wind Project Finally Finishes Construction

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
It’s America’s first large-scale offshore wind project, reports WBUR — enough clean energy to power 400,000 homes in Massachusetts from 62 offshore wind turbines generating 800 megawatts.

But it took a while… The plant’s first construction delay happened back in 2019, they point out — and then “Just three months ago, when the project was 95% complete, the U.S. Interior Department issued a stop-work order.” But after successfully challenging that order in court, and “with a stretch of good weather offshore, the developers behind the $4.5 billion project managed to get over the finish line.”

The Associated Press notes it was “one of five major East Coast offshore wind projects the Trump administration halted construction on days before Christmas, citing national security concerns.”
Developers and states sued, and federal judges allowed all five to resume construction, essentially concluding that the government did not show that the national security risk was so imminent that construction must halt. Another one of the five, Revolution Wind, began sending power for the first time to New England’s electric grid on Friday and will scale up in the weeks ahead until it is fully operational.
“That project is nearly complete as well,” notes WBUR, “and will eventually be capable of powering up to 350,000 homes.”

Target Practice

By LazLong • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Yeah, until Kegsbreath and Trump decide to use it for target practice.

Re: You know what?

By pulpo88 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

the summary says it can power 400k homes in the first paragraph and 350k homes in the last.

Try reading it again. It says the project can power 400k homes and then there is another project called Revolution Wind that will be able to power 350k.

Re:Target Practice

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
I think the Iranians are desperately trying to avoid terrorist attacks on us soil.

The American people might not have learned anything from 9/11 but the Iranian government definitely did. If they commit a serious terrorist attack on America the public will let Trump do whatever the fuck he wants just like we let Bush Jr do whatever the hell he wanted. It would basically send a third term of Trump.

I’m sure that fact has not been lost on Donald Trump. And I’m sure it’s not a coincidence that he fired half the anti-terrorist people in his administration right before attacking Iran or that he put a 22-year-old grocery store clerk in charge of anti-terrorism.

That last one is so fucking insane you would have to Google it to believe it but it’s real. The guy in charge of stopping a second 9/11 is in his twenties.

Video of offshore wind turbine installation

By schwit1 • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

https://www.srviral.com/conten…

Not how I thought it was done.

Re:Cool, I guess?

By Smidge204 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

According to filings I was able to find, The Commonwealth has a 20 year procurement contract with Vineyard Wind for 6.5c/kwh (2017 dollars, about 8.5c/kwh today). Or $85/MWh

In January the average wholesale electricity price was about $124/MWh.

This doesn’t mean the average customer will see a ~30% drop in their utility bill of course, but this is definitely adding cheaper power to the market which in turn should bring utility bills down.
=Smidge=

How a Raspberry Pi Microcontroller Saved the Super Nintendo’s Infamously Inferior Version Of ‘Doom’

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“Just the anachronism of seeing Doom, one of the poster children for the moral panic around violent video games, on a Nintendo console is novel,” writes Kotaku — especially with the console’s underpowered "Super FX” coprocessor
Hampered by a nearly unplayable framerate, especially in later levels, and mired by sacrifices, like altered levels, no floor or ceiling textures, and the entire fourth episode being cut, [1995’s] Doom on the Super NES was not a good version of the game, but it was Doom running on the Super NES, and, for that alone, [programmer Randal] Linden’s genius deserves recognition.
But then in 2022 when Audi Sorlie interviewed Linden on the YouTube show DF Retro, “Not really knowing where fate was going to take us, I asked [Linden] a throwaway question regarding the source code for Doom.”
If you ever worked on this again, Sorlie asked, would you make any improvements or do anything differently?”

“Yeah,” Linden replied. “I have plenty of ideas if I could go back, but, you know, I don’t think anyone’s asking me to go back to Super Nintendo Doom and improve it.”

A few years passed, and Sorlie joined Limited Run Games as lead producer for their development department. When LRG asked him to run down his craziest ideas, a new, improved release of Randal Linden’s Doom loomed large. Convincing Linden was easy, and Sorlie said even the folks at license holder Bethesda were more amused than anything.

“You want to go back and develop for Super Nintendo?” they asked Sorlie. “Like, for real…?”

“The trick was actually pretty cool,” Linden said. “It’s right here.” He pointed to a chip on the prototype SNES cartridge, similar to the one Limited Run sent me to test out the game. “It’s a Raspberry Pi 2350.” Super FX chips are no longer in production for obvious reasons, but with a clever bit of programming, Linden was able to load software onto the Raspberry Pi that fools the SNES into thinking the game has one. “The Super Nintendo doesn’t know that it’s not talking to a Super FX,” he explained. When he programs for it, he writes code almost identical to what he’d write for an authentic Super FX chip.

“I had to go back and reverse-engineer my own code from 30 years ago,” Linden laughed. “It’s like, what was I doing here? And what was I doing there? Yeah, it was pretty tricky, some of the code. I was like, wow, I used to be very smart.” The result of Linden’s work? It’s Doom, running right on a Super Nintendo, but it’s smoother, packed with new content, and even includes rumble.

Don’t show me any raspberry pi shit

By backslashdot • Score: 4, Informative Thread

I don’t like that company anymore, they sold out their original mission of making things cheap (Reference: https://static.raspberrypi.org… ). Now they’re about quick profits while sacrificing both long term prosperity and the mission of making computing available for all humanity.

Might as well use a software emulator.

By Truekaiser • Score: 3 Thread

I am hating the recent trend of sticking a raspberry pi into a retro console to ‘emulate’ part of it and calling it a hack.

If you’re going to do that, might as well emulate it via software on a pc. you can leverage a full modern graphics stack, api’s,a nd shaders to enhance the game.

Documentation

By quonset • Score: 3 Thread

“It’s like, what was I doing here? And what was I doing there?

And this, kids, is why documentation is important. It doesn’t matter if you think you’ll never work on something again, if any maintenance needs done or updates or someone comes back twenty years later to see what you did, the documentation will tell you.

Now all you programmers can go about your business and ignore this bit of common sense.

Are U.S. Utilities Trying to Delay Easy-to-Use Solar ‘Balcony’ Panels?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Plug-in (or “balcony”) solar panels can also be hung out a window or be set up in a backyard, reports NPR. They channel energy from the sun straight into a home’s electrical outlet, generating enough electricity to power a refrigerator or microwave while “displacing electricity that otherwise would come in from the grid…”

But what’s holding up their adoption in America?
For the panels to become more widely available in the U.S., state lawmakers are proposing bills that eliminate complicated utility connection agreements, which are required for larger rooftop solar installations and, most utilities say, should apply to plug-in solar too. Those agreements, along with permitting and other installation costs, can double the price of solar panels. Utah enacted the first law, last May, supporting plug-in solar, and now some 30 pieces of similar legislation have been introduced around the United States. [And Virginia seems poised to pass a similar law.]

But the drive toward plug-in solar is facing pushback from electric utilities. They are raising safety concerns and prompting legislators to delay votes on the bills. So far, utilities have won over lawmakers in five states and convinced them to delay votes on plug-in solar bills… Plug-in solar advocates say that safety concerns about the new technology have been addressed and that utilities are really just worried about losing business, because every kilowatt-hour generated by a plug-in solar panel is one less the utility sells to a customer… There are safety risks with any electrical appliance, and it’s true that plug-in solar panels present some unique problems. But safety experts also say those issues can be managed....

German utilities expressed many of the same concerns nearly a decade ago when plug-in solar started to become popular in Germany. But with more than a million systems installed, no safety incidents have been reported for customers who used the panels as instructed, according to a research paper funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.

Safety—

By XXongo • Score: 5, Informative Thread

The main safety issue with plug-in solar is that the solar panel must not feed power to the grid if there’s an electrical outage. This is because repair crews for the utility company need to be sure that there isn’t power coming in from the user side when they’re repairing the producer side.

The Utah bill referenced (https://le.utah.gov/~2025/bills/static/HB0340.html) includes that explicitly:
(2)A portable solar generation device shall include a device or feature that prevents the system from energizing the building’s electrical system during a power outage.

So, I’d think that as long as that is built into the system, and assuming it passes UL standards for consumer safety, I think the safety issue should not be a problem.

Re:Most people don’t know how they work

By wes33 • Score: 4, Informative Thread

Simple - the inverters are grid tied so they don’t work when the power is off. This is old tech.

Re:Safety—

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

That’s not the main safety issue. These systems do not have grid forming inverters and are simply unable to supply electricity (can’t sync to a non-existent waveform) when there is no grid power available.

The biggest issue with plug-in solar is wiring safety. If you have a system that is protected by a circuit breaker, the idea IS any load downstream of that breaker cannot exceed the maximum load the wire is able to withstand without the breaker tripping. If you feed power in downstream of that circuit breaker you have the potential to draw a maximum power of what the breaker is capable of + whatever the solar panel is outputting over the wire depending on where in the circuit you’re plugged into. Suddenly your breaker may not be able to prevent you overloading your wiring.

This scares me a bit in America. At least in Germany (where they note there’s few safety issues) there’s a tendency to have over spec’d wires with undersized breakers. Indeed most circuits have a 16A breaker with an installation design that could withstand 27A. Plugging in a 2000W panel (which these balcony panels won’t do) simply won’t burn your house down unless you plug multiple into the same circuit.

American wiring does not feature the same over-design.

Re:Safety—

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

Replying to self: UL seems to have recognised the big limitation in America as well. Plug-in solar installations such as balcony panels which do *not* have dedicated circuits with unique non-standard electrical outlet appear to be limited to 391W, which is quite shitty. Forget the microwave, you’re barely running the TV. The limit in Germany is 800W.

Re:Most people don’t know how they work

By thegarbz • Score: 5, Informative Thread

They don’t realized that they feed power back into the grid. This causes a safety issue with linemen working on repairs.

Speaking of people who don’t know how they work, no plug-in solar systems do not have grid forming inverters. They are unable to supply electricity without a grid frequency to sync to and will not put out power or endanger any linesmen.

Also, since these are not reported, the power company doesn’t know it is happening.

This is some of the dumbest text ever put to the internet. Not only do all electrical safety incidents involving linesmen get reported, all linesmen test circuits prior to starting work, all circuits that are off during work are actively shorted to earth, and those circuits very much are in fact monitored and the power company has actual visibility into this as voltage monitoring is always downstream of a breaker so the substation would literally record a back-fed voltage as well.

Home solar installations are coordinated with the power company, so they can take them into account during service.

Home solar installations usually don’t feature grid forming inverters either. Even if they did have grid forming inverters, 100% of inverters which are UL listed will not feed the grid if it’s down.

Plug in ones have no built in safety features.

Plug-in ones have plenty of safety features and are also UL listed. This includes power limiting and again not feeding a non-existent grid. No you can’t use power during power outages. That’s not how power works. If the power goes out your balcony solar installation, even if it were some magic system with no protections and a grid forming inverter capable of independent 60Hz operation would attempt to put it’s pathetic couple of hundred volts out to run the entire suburb and instantly go into undervoltage fault.

Gaming Site Editor Jailbreaks an Amazon Echo Show

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“A few developers found a way, for now, to turn a few of these increasingly mediocre Amazon Show devices into friendly, useful, open computers,” writes the co-founder of the gaming/tech news site Aftermath. For under $50 each, he bought some used versions of the devices and tested their instructions, partly to escape the full-screen ads Amazon began showing late last year, and also to overwrite Amazon’s locked down Android fork “Fire OS” (and “a similarly neutered version of Linux called Vega OS”)
Customers who bought these devices and used them for several years were not used to them showing full screen ads, and now they do. People were justifiably pissed. So what do you do when an already evil device gets shittier…? I wiped Fire OS from the device and used ADB sideload to directly load two packages on the device: LineageOS and MindTheGapps. MindTheGapps lets you turn the device into something resembling a traditional Android device, for both good and bad.... It took a few times of wiping the device, but after a few tries it finally worked as intended… I immediately installed the Home Assistant app…

Not only can the hacked Echo Show 8 control my entire smart home, it now plays back my entire local music library as well as any internet radio channels like The Lot Radio and NTS. It can also synchronize with any additional Echo Show running LineageOS in my house using the SendSpin protocol… I would gladly take it any day of the week over most of the devices these companies offer, especially Amazon. It may not be as intuitive as out-of-the-box smart home products, but I don’t need my devices to be intuitive, I need them to behave. I had finally found a smart display that wasn’t a cop…

The hardware is old and creaky, and after the hack it can only use 1GB of the 2GB of ram. And yet it still manages to feel snappier than the stock hardware. “The amount of telemetry, ads, and general bloat Amazon shoves down our throats definitely doesn’t help performance,” [XDA Devs Forum user] Rortiz2 told me. “That’s actually another reason why we did LineageOS, it kind of gives the device a second life. Even though it’s still a bit buggy, it feels way better to use than the stock firmware....” If you want a smart speaker with a display that just runs a stripped-down version of Android that you have full control over, you’re going to have a hard time finding it outside of these three specific models unless you cobble something together yourself. It is a deceptively simple thing to desire — the kiosk computer from science fiction that isn’t a narc — yet few companies really offer it.
“It should be against the law to not give an end user the ability to consensually load whatever OS or program they want on their device…” the article concludes, arguing that “If we budge on the inalienable right to modify our hardware then we forsake a key part about what makes computers special.”

And in the mean time, “There are so many devices that could be put to use rotting in e-waste facilities and thrift stores…”

It’s unforgivable

By Baron_Yam • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

If a company sells you something, IT’S YOURS. The only thing they should be permitted to do is require an unaltered device to legally connect to their services.

This shit about selling you something and THEN changing the deal? That needs to end, yesterday. People should be going to jail for conspiracy to commit mass fraud or whatever the law can bring to bear along those lines.

We had a few echo shows…

By Ritz_Just_Ritz • Score: 3 Thread

And when the ads appeared, I tossed them. Frankly, I should thank Amazon for that as it reinforced that I didn’t want any of their shit in the house so now it’s all gone. Pretty soon Prime and and their streaming services are going too. They’re consistently ratcheting up the rates to the point where it’s gotten silly. Going back to using Jellyfin to play media in the home.

Seeya.

LineageOS FireOS

By devnulljapan • Score: 4 Thread
I just did this with my very old Amazon Firestick. I remember when they started with updates that suddenly introduced the “Now playing on Prime” bar at the top, then they put an ad banner on it. I dumped Prime when the in-show ads started, but was using the firestick to stream files on my own network from Plex at first then I moved to Jellyfin. The final straw was when I started looking at the amounts of telemetry and other crap data going across the network, and if I blocked them the firestick just wouldn’t work … even though it was simply streaming data on my own LAN. The flash was fiddly, but it worked and no more telemetry, no more ads, no more crap. This should be the default, not the enshittified alternative.

Re:It’s unforgivable

By sjames • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

If we had a legislature and executive that were as interested in the people as they are polishing Wall street’s knob, I might suggest a law that if a service connected with a device changes in any significant way (or just gets shut off), the company must either refund each customer the full MSRP at the time of purchase, or where applicable, offer a final update that unlocks the bootloader and offers as much functionality as is feasible offline with source and document the hardware for the user community to continue development of the offline version. This should be the customer’s choice.

Should Keycaps Use Text or Glyphs for Delete, Return, Tab, Caps Lock, and Shift?

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
“The new MacBook Air and MacBook Pro models feature a keyboard change,” reports MacRumors:
On the U.S. English version of the new MacBook Air and MacBook Pro keyboards, the tab, caps lock, shift, return, and delete keycaps now have glyphs on them. On previous-generation models, these keys are labeled with text instead… Given the U.S. English keyboard layout is the default option for MacBook Air, MacBook Pro, and MacBook Neo models sold in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Singapore, this change effectively extends to those countries and a few others.
“Apple already uses glyph-based key labels on several European keyboard layouts,” notes The Mac Observer, “including British English versions of the MacBook. Because of this, the design will feel familiar to many users outside the United States.”

The change was noticed last week by Chicago-based X.com/YouTube user "Mr. Macintosh", who makes how-to videos about now and old Macs.

Glyphs are for kids.

By bartoku • Score: 5, Funny Thread

It is an Apple product, so the correct answer is: whatever is prettier.

Laptops keys should be labeled in ENGLISH

By 93 Escort Wagon • Score: 5, Funny Thread

Just like God and Abraham Lincoln intended.

Glyphs are (generally) universal.

By SeaFox • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Besides snarky commentary about falling literacy rates, I think the old keyboard with the written labels looks classier.

Glyphs are language-agnostic, but they ate a language of their own people have to learn. I’m sure all of us have dealt with a person who doesn’t recognize the combined Play/Pause icon, know what a pencil button represents, or know what a menu of three vertical dots is for, because they are not a frequent user of devices or apps that have them.

Just look at the menus.

By Reeses • Score: 3 Thread

The glyphs match the symbols in the menus for various commands. It’s easier for customers to find the “up arrow” key when the shift key has an up arrow on it.

False choice

By mileshigh • Score: 3 Thread

You can have both text and icons like on most keyboards. Icons-only on keyboards, devices, on-screen, etc is a usability cop-out, often done to ease internationalization or save space.

I’ve very rarely ever seen an icon that’s clear and obvious to all, not matter how obvious its designer and focus group (i.e. designer’s friends) think it is. And there’s the issue that there are a lot of confusingly-similar icons floating around.

Yes, people learn, but what about all the new people coming into your device, app, etc? Their brains are already pretty full… like with other people’s icons which may look the same but do something different. “Lemme see… what does this square with lines sticking out of it do?” (Turns out it that it turns on a light… circle with lines coming out of it activates the self-destruct feature!)

System76 CEO Sees ‘Real Possibility’ Colorado’s Age-Verification Bill Excludes Open-Source

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
Last week System76 CEO Carl Richell criticized age-verification laws for operating systems — but he now sees a “real possibility” Colorado’s law might exclude open-source.

Phoronix reports that the System76 CEO met with the state Senator who co-authored Colorado’s bill, and then posted on X.com that the Senator “suggested excluding open source software from the bill.”
Richell: This appears to be a real possibility. Amendments are expected… It’s my hope we can move fast enough to influence excluding open source.. No illusions, it’s an uphill battle, but we have an open door to advocate for the open source community.
Vague language has been a recurring problem with new state age-verification legislation. Richell pointed out later that “In one proposed bill, Garmin would have to verify the age of their watch customers at device setup.” Richell also sees New York’s bill as “unlikely to be applicable to Linux distributions,” since its language calls for “commercially reasonable age assurance” that free operating systems could use — and Richell isn’t sure one exists as described by the bill. “As written today, it’s extremely broad and vague and that makes it scary.”

Richell answered several follow-up questions about operating system age-verification laws. “What about California?” someone asked
Richell: We hope to make sensible, strong arguments for excluding open source which then becomes a standard for other states. It’s going to be difficult.

Q: Open source is not the only target to exclude. Please ensure that the bill is amended so that it does not require applications that have no possible use for the age bracket to ask about it.

Richell: We discussed this as well. I proposed that apps that do not require age to modify app behavior or access by some other legislation be barred from reading age brackets to better protect privacy.

Newsome himself said it was a bad law

By rsilvergun • Score: 3 Thread
But he’s still signed it because he’s got an election coming up and think of the children works.

We need voters who are smart enough to recognize these kind of bullshit bills. But it’s hard because the lobbying is coming from multi-billion Dollar companies headed by psychopath billionaires.

If you haven’t already heard if all of these age verification laws are being passed by Facebook and Planitir. They are spending a fortune the ram them through and they have the money to do scary ad campaigns that will make parents freak out and vote.

You can’t have partial freedom. You can’t for example keep electing right wing extremists because you think they are cool or something and expect them to protect your rights. You need to remember that the right wing got their start as the monarchists and nobody had rights under a monarchy except the king.

Re:Newsome himself said it was a bad law

By taustin • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

We need voters who are smart enough to recognize these kind of bullshit bills.

California needs voters who recognize anything other than party affiliation on the ballot.

Good luck with that.

If you haven’t already heard if all of these age verification laws are being passed by Facebook and Planitir.

And understandably so, since (aside from collecting that much more data to sell to advertisers) they’re the ones being threatened with dire consequences if they don’t keep children restricted from the bad old interwebs, a task that is utterly impossible. But if they shift the legal responsibility onto someone else - anyone else, but Microsoft and Apple are good targets, and ultimately, to the government itself, then they are in the clear.

Social media giants pushing for this kind of crap was inevitable when the pearl clutchers and hysterical wannabe autocrats have enough influence to seriously threaten them.

And at 18yo tech will feed you to the Ad wolves

By atrimtab • Score: 4, Insightful Thread

And understandably so, since (aside from collecting that much more data to sell to advertisers) they’re the ones being threatened with dire consequences if they don’t keep children restricted from the bad old interwebs, a task that is utterly impossible. But if they shift the legal responsibility onto someone else - anyone else, but Microsoft and Apple are good targets, and ultimately, to the government itself, then they are in the clear.

Social media giants pushing for this kind of crap was inevitable when the pearl clutchers and hysterical wannabe autocrats have enough influence to seriously threaten them.

And when you reach 18 years old, the tech companies will congratulate you on your birthday and THEN sell all the data they’ve collected on you since you were 4 to the data brokers and targeting influencers.

Sue them for entrapment

By Sebby • Score: 3 Thread

Please ensure that the bill is amended so that it does not require applications that have no possible use for the age bracket to ask about it.

And when they ignore this and still require age verification with everything, ask them exactly how, in detail, you’re supposed to implement it. When they respond with their typical “I don’t know because I’m a fucking idiot politician”, sue them for entrapment.

US Set To Receive $10 Billion Fee For Brokering TikTok Deal

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot Skip
The deal to take control of TikTok’s U.S. business came with an unusual condition, according to people familiar with the matter. The investors — which include Oracle, Abu Dhabi investor MGX, and private-equity firm Silver Lake — “paid the Treasury Department about $2.5 billion when the deal closed in January,” reports the Wall Street Journal, “and are set to make several additional payments until hitting the $10 billion total.”
The $10 billion payment would be nearly unprecedented for a government helping arrange a transaction, historians have said… Investment bankers advising on a typical deal receive fees of less than 1% of the transaction value, and the percentage generally gets smaller as the deal size increases. Bank of America is in line to make some $130 million for advising railroad operator Norfolk Southern on its $71.5 billion sale to Union Pacific, one of the largest fees on record for a single bank on a deal. Administration officials have said the fee is justified given Trump’s role in saving TikTok in the U.S. and navigating negotiations with China to get the deal done while addressing the security concerns of lawmakers…

The TikTok fee extracted from private-sector investors is the administration’s latest transaction involving the nation’s largest businesses. Trump took a nearly 10% stake in semiconductor company Intel and has agreed to take a chunk of chip sales to China from Nvidia in exchange for granting export licenses. The administration has also taken equity stakes in other companies and has a say in the operations of U.S. Steel following a “golden share” agreement with Japan’s Nippon Steel in its takeover.
Reuters notes earlier this month, a lawsuit was filed by investors in two of TikTok’s social media rivals, seeking to reverse the approval of the deal.

Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader schwit1 for sharing the news.

Re:Trump set to receive 10 billion dollar fee

By fahrbot-bot • Score: 5, Interesting Thread

The real problem is nobody gives a shit about the scale of corruption going on. 20 years ago a republican even doing this shit would have such a huge scandal they would already be out the door. Now we have the Wall Street journal talking about Trump openly selling pardons to the tune of billions of dollars and we all just shrug because 40% of the country still loves Trump more than anything.

Not that I think this would happen, but wait until a Democrat gets into office and tries even 1% of *exactly* what Trump is doing and see how MAGA Republicans and Fox scream bloody murder and suddenly “care” about corruption. (Like most Democrats and, to be fair, some Republicans, are doing now.)

The difference between Republican and Democrat

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Is that the Republicans would cheerfully let the entire economy and country collapse and the Democrats won’t. This means the Republicans can consistently threaten to block legislation needed to keep the country functioning and to keep you in your job.

Basically we are all hostages of the Republican party.

Some of us have Stockholm syndrome. So it’s really hard for us to escape.

The Democrats have spent the last 10 years altering funding bills to make it so that at least government shutdowns are basically useless as threats now. There are a ton of rules about funding things for several months during a shutdown. About the only thing seriously affected are the parks and airline travel.

But there are tons of things besides the budget that need to get past or the economy collapses and we all go into a Great depression. So the Republicans still have a lot of leverage because they are psychopaths who couldn’t care less about you.

The Democrats are moderately corrupt but they also genuinely care about the well-being of the people of America. What makes them frustrating to the left wing is that they never seem to do enough but it’s not that they aren’t doing anything or don’t want to it’s that they won’t put their lives on the line or their political careers.

The left wing meanwhile will do that but they are also completely ineffective because they act like their opposition, the billionaires, don’t have tremendous amounts of power and money. It would be like if Ukraine rolled into Moscow they’d get stomped by Russia’s army but it sure would make some great YouTube content until that happened

I fucking wish that was true

By rsilvergun • Score: 5, Interesting Thread
Every 4 to 8 years of my life the voting public has done the same damn thing. They put a democrat in charge to fix the mess caused by the Republicans. The Democrats can’t fix the mess fast enough because during the midterms the voters put Republicans in charge of Congress so the Democrats get two years and if they’re lucky another two years before the midterms deal them a blow.

And then voters get mad that the Democrats haven’t fixed anything so they put a fucking Republican charge who probably invades the Middle East and crashes the economy.

I don’t know what you do with voters who are that dumb. The lack of pattern recognition is astounding.

Great Success!

By fuzzyfuzzyfungus • Score: 5, Insightful Thread
“We’ve done so much damage to rule of law that we can now claim that paying a fixer with political connections $10 billion to close an M&A deal is plausible!”

Re:Less than the war

By echo123 • Score: 5, Informative Thread

Vladimir Putin is making money from the war:
https://www.reuters.com/busine…

As others have noted: Trump may not be a direct Russian asset, but he sure acts like one.

The decision lifting Russian oil sanctions took place after it became clear Russia provided targeting data that lead to the first US deaths of the war.

How a Species Evolved Fast Enough to Save Itself from Extinction

Posted by EditorDavid View on SlashDot
California saw its worst drought in 10,000 years between 2012 and 2015, remembers the Washington Post. And yet genetic analyses of California’s scarlet monkeyflower “found that many rapidly evolved… allowing them to cope with water scarcity and rebound from decline.”
“The fact that certain organisms are able to adapt just because of genetics that are already present is a great source of hope,” said Daniel Anstett, a plant biologist at Cornell University and lead author on a new study on the issue. “It’s one more arrow in the quiver of different ways that populations might be able to survive the massive climate change we’re inflicting on the planet.” The recovery of [Sequoia National Park’s] scarlet monkeyflowers offers rare, real-world evidence of what scientists call “evolutionary rescue,” according to the study published Thursday in the journal Science. It suggests that some species may be able to evolve quickly enough to keep up with the accelerating consequences of human-caused warming — essentially saving themselves from extinction.

This discovery could help people decide how to distribute limited conservation funds by pinpointing which species have enough genetic diversity to be resilient, ecologists Mark Urban and Laurinne Balstad, who were not involved in the study, wrote in a separate analysis published by Science. “The challenge going forward is to identify when evolutionary rescue is possible, when it is not, and how to rescue those species that cannot rescue themselves,” Urban and Balstad wrote.

Squids do it better

By gurps_npc • Score: 3 Thread

There is a really interesting article about how octopuses and squids can change how their own DNA works by manipulating RNA.

https://www.sciencenews.org/ar…

Note how the RNA editing is triggered by temperature change - a major advantage in the fight against global warming.

This stuff grows all over.

By packrat0x • Score: 3 Thread

Quick wiki check Mimulus shows this genus grows in numerous climes. Looking at this another way, cacti are drought tolerant, but still grow in rainy places.