I totally forgot about “Skannerz”!
Thanks for rushing back a bunch of my childhood memories
I totally forgot about “Skannerz”!
Thanks for rushing back a bunch of my childhood memories


Because of who decides how such verification gets built. Just look at what is happening with Android apps to know how big tech companies will handle it. https://f-droid.org/2025/09/29/google-developer-registration-decree.html


Whatever Apple, Microsoft, and Google decide it does.


This would require “verified” operating systems: No alternative Android-based OSes. No Linux phone. Hell, no Linux desktop, or at least we would be stuck with a big-tech-built proprietary web browser.
This is a terrible idea.


barebones, but you can use RTP with pipewire


As a John in both name and in relation to my main project at work, I am working my ass off to write comprehensive documentation and to train the rest of the team to take over. I don’t wanna be working on this same shit in 5 years.
I also have a OnePlus 6 with Mobile NixOS. I haven’t been able to get audio or camera to function, so it’s just a toy on m desk at the moment. Other than that and a few UI quirks, it’s serviceable.


Thanks!


threads and spaces?
It’s important to make a distinction between the definition of “open source AI” canonized by the OSI that doesn’t require open training data, and models where all of the training data used is also made available.
Separately, the tools most people think about when they hear “AI”, generalized generative AI models, only exist as capitalist surplus, and we shouldn’t be defending them. Hyper focused AI tools such as the Te Hiku Media project to create speech recognition tools for the te reo Māori language are unequivocally good, and we should be making a lot more projects like this.
mineral aerosols.
here is a recent paper trying to figure out the composition from ice core samples for a given age range and location
You’re correct! It is Cherenkov Radiation; specifically from the muon (or electron or tau) that is a result of the neutrino interacting with the nucleus of an atom because Cherenkov Radiation happens with charged particles.
There is a dust layer in the ice at the South Pole about 2km under the surface that interferes with about 5000 photomultiplier tubes spread out over a cubic kilometer in the ice that are watching for light created from high energy muons moving faster than the speed of light in the ice that were in turn the result of the very rare chance of a high energy neutrino interacting with the nucleus of a single atom in the ice.
Yeah, this is such an anti-labor thing for them to do. I hate seeing stuff like this in general, but from open-source projects it hurts way more.