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Telemakhos commented on Curating a Show on My Ineffable Mother, Ursula K. Le Guin   hyperallergic.com/curatin... · Posted by u/bryanrasmussen
Telemakhos · 20 hours ago
“Ineffable” means “too great to be spoken in words,” so I’m wondering what you found sexualized about that.
Telemakhos commented on Italy Railways Sabotaged   bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c... · Posted by u/vedantnair
colejhudson · a day ago
No, Russia is the prime (if not only) candidate.

Why? They've been developing a system of "single-use agents" to overwhelm European governments and keep them on their back foot.

This is likely a test run.

A lovely article on this was recently published in The New Yorker that you may enjoy: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2026/02/09/to-build-a-fir....

Telemakhos · a day ago
I'd suggest that radical left-wing elements indigenous to Italy, such as those behind the Turin protests that left 100 police officers wounded a few days ago, are a perfectly plausible candidate; not every attack comes from without. There was another protest against the Olympics in Milan itself last night by left-wing elements who believe the games are economically and socially unsustainable [0]

[0] https://www.cnn.com/2026/02/07/europe/italy-protests-rail-da...

Telemakhos commented on OpenClaw is what Apple intelligence should have been   jakequist.com/thoughts/op... · Posted by u/jakequist
crazygringo · 4 days ago
> This is exactly what Apple Intelligence should have been... They could have shipped an agentic AI that actually automated your computer instead of summarizing your notifications. Imagine if Siri could genuinely file your taxes, respond to emails, or manage your calendar by actually using your apps, not through some brittle API layer that breaks every update.

And this is probably coming, a few years from now. Because remember, Apple doesn't usually invent new products. It takes proven ones and then makes its own much nicer version.

Let other companies figure out the model. Let the industry figure out how to make it secure. Then Apple can integrate it with hardware and software in a way no other company can.

Right now we are still in very, very, very early days.

Telemakhos · 4 days ago
Apple's niche product, consisting of like 1-4% of computer sales compared to its dominant MacBook line, is now flying off the shelf as a highly desired product, because of a piece of software that Apple didn't spend a dime developing. This sounds like a major win for Apple.

The OS maker does not have to make all the killer software. In fact, Apple's pretty much the only game in town that's making hardware and software both.

Telemakhos commented on What's up with all those equals signs anyway?   lars.ingebrigtsen.no/2026... · Posted by u/todsacerdoti
liveoneggs · 6 days ago
This is how email work(ed) over smtp. When each command was sent it would get a '200'-class message (success) or 400/500-class message (failure). Sound familiar?

telnet smtp.mailserver.com 25

HELO

MAIL FROM: me@foo.com

RCPT TO: you@bar.com

DATA

blah blah blah

how's it going?

talk to you later!

.

QUIT

Telemakhos · 6 days ago
This brings back some fun memories from the 1990s when this was exactly how we would send prank emails.
Telemakhos commented on Jack Kerouac's 37 metre-long, first draft scroll of On the Road to be auctioned   theguardian.com/books/202... · Posted by u/mitchbob
fsckboy · 8 days ago
FTA: This scroll is one of the most important literary documents still in private hands.

and: However, the return of the scroll to the auction block echoes an earlier controversy. In 2001, when the manuscript was last offered for sale, Carolyn Cassady – the former wife of Neal Cassady, the real-life inspiration for the novel’s Dean Moriarty – denounced the auction as “blasphemy”, arguing that the scroll belonged in a public library rather than a private collection. “Jack loved public libraries,” she said at the time, adding: “If they auction it, anybody rich could buy it and keep it out of sight.”

Telemakhos · 8 days ago
If it's in a library, it's going to be in special collections, and nobody's going to see it. It will be preserved and kept safe for the rare scholar who has a legitimate need to see the original, but for most purposes the archetype is never needed. We don't have the archetype of Vergil's Aeneid, but it's well studied nonetheless.

If it's in a private collection, a scholar who really, really needs to see it might make an arrangement with the owner. For everyone else, though, there are copies at the local bookstore. Bonus, though: if it's in a private collection, there's a chance that it physically is in a library. Some private collections are housed inside public (usually university) library special collections. From the investor's standpoint, it's worth it to have professionals who know preservation keeping the book in climate-controlled, reasonably secure facilities.

Telemakhos commented on Finland looks to introduce Australia-style ban on social media   yle.fi/a/74-20207494... · Posted by u/Teever
mjevans · 9 days ago
I'm fine with this, as long as they DO NOT require any form of ID or 'age' verification.

Instead this should be attacked from the profit side, by banning any form of advertising which might target children. If there's no profit to be made in servicing said demographic and a law requesting at least end user 'agreement' that they are an adult, this should be sufficient.

Telemakhos · 9 days ago
> If there's no profit to be made in servicing said demographic and a law requesting at least end user 'agreement' that they are an adult, this should be sufficient.

Is it still advertising if an "influencer" takes money on the down low to sip a Pepsi not too obviously in the middle of a video?

Is it still advertising if an attractive and young person provides news that happens to be colored in a way that supports the narratives of a particular political faction?

Is it still advertising if you can't prove that a foreign power encouraged a popular yoga enthusiast or makeup artist to post some whispered ideas that weaken citizens' faith in your institutions? Does that foreign power ever care about profit?

Advertising and propaganda love to explore the grey spaces around definitions, so your bans will end up being a whack-a-mole game. Cutting off kids with an ID check is much easier. Implementing age verification the Apple way would even protect privacy by simply registering whether Apple can attest that the user is over or under the age limit, without handing the ID over to third parties.

Telemakhos commented on ICE and Palantir: US agents using health data to hunt illegal immigrants   bmj.com/content/392/bmj.s... · Posted by u/dberhane
mothballed · 12 days ago
The article says the data was 'surveilled' by Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and HHS in the performance of Medicare/Medicaid claims, with that surveillance fed to Palentir.

Palentir has certainly assisted, but the origin of the data collection here was public and then unleashed by the state to private entity.

Telemakhos · 12 days ago
> The article says the data was 'surveilled' by Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and HHS in the performance of Medicare/Medicaid claims

Does this imply that undocumented aliens subject to deportation have been making claims on Medicare/Medicaid monies?

Telemakhos commented on New York Times games are hard: A computational perspective   arxiv.org/abs/2509.10846... · Posted by u/PaulHoule
mexicocitinluez · 13 days ago
I still think the ultimate puzzle is the Sunday crossword (followed closely by Thur-Sat), though Connections is great. And definitely difficult (but never feels unfair).

I cancelled my subscription a few years back due to the way NYT was covering the current administration. At the time, I believed they'd never offer a "puzzles only" subscription because then they'd lose a large part of their subs. But, I was wrong. And now they offer a puzzle-only subscription.

There's a great documentary about the Crossword with Will Shortz that came out about a decade ago that's interesting.

Spelling bee is also pretty consistent.

Telemakhos · 13 days ago
In 2023, 55% of visits to NYT's website were to games, not news. The puzzle-only subscription points to the NYT's fate as a game company that also offers news, much as airlines are credit card/loyalty point companies that also offer flights.
Telemakhos commented on People who know the formula for WD-40   wsj.com/business/the-secr... · Posted by u/fortran77
umvi · 13 days ago
I thought WD-40 was more a solvent than lubricant
Telemakhos · 13 days ago
The WD in WD-40 stands for "water displacer." It makes water go somewhere else. Secondarily, it is a solvent, and it's great for dissolving glues, like the glue used to affix government-issued tax licenses to automobiles. It's not really a lubricant, but in a pinch it can temporarily function as one.

I like Swiss army knives, but they collect lint and gunk from my pockets. I use WD-40 to dissolve gunk, and to drive out water after an ultrasonic bath, but I lubricate with the light machine oil used for barber's clippers.

Telemakhos commented on Doom has been ported to an earbud   doombuds.com... · Posted by u/arin-s
TrainedMonkey · 15 days ago
> CPU: Dual-core 300MHz ARM Cortex-M4F

It's absolute bonkers amount of hardware scaling that happened since Doom was released. Yes, this is a tremendous overkill here, but the crazy part here is that this fits into an earpiece.

Telemakhos · 15 days ago
I remember playing Doom on a single-core 25MHz 486 laptop. It was, at the time, an amazing machine, hundreds of times more powerful than the flight computer that ran the Apollo space capsule, and now it is outclassed by an earbud.

u/Telemakhos

KarmaCake day1874March 17, 2021View Original