What is Hackers' Pub?

Hackers' Pub is a place for software engineers to share their knowledge and experience with each other. It's also an ActivityPub-enabled social network, so you can follow your favorite hackers in the fediverse and get their latest posts in your feed.

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快進場前才知道片名是《雷霆特攻隊*》(Thunderbolts *),重點是那個*

很多人說這一輪漫威的電影有影集化的傾向,我覺得這一部也不例外。它的規模、它的故事其實更像一部影集。不過在劇情交待、演員表現方面,至少全部都是在線的。

這一部是一部關於療傷的電影,如何面對、治療精神創傷,一群邊緣人自我救贖的故事。中間眾主角要面對自己內心最黑暗的回憶,很難想像Winter Soldier為了救一個素未謀面的人,重新經歷一遍自己的故事。電影沒有詳細講述這個過程,只有冬兵輕描淡寫的說「I have a good past」,如果一路有看Marvel的觀眾,應該可以想像這樣一句背負著多少的重量。

後面的彩蛋也是滿棒的。至少Marvel也通過這部電影做了一次自我救贖。

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My half-baked deep thought of the day is that we are living through a time in which imagination has been de-legitimatized generally, and we are reaching the necessarily absurd crescendo of this process. It is taking physical form in technologies such as generative AI, literal Anti-Imagination generators.

Let me be clear what I (don't) mean by "imagination". I do not mean "creative", "fictional", "imaginary", or "artistic"--those words can be related, but they've also been co-opted into exactly the trend I'm calling out. I also don't mean interesting images that appear in your mind or dreams but are then dismissed as lacking significance. I do mean truly imaginative acts arising within and from the mind, and not subjected to editorial scrutiny by logic, empiricism, or other instrumentalized forms of reason. Dreams are one way to access imagination; active imagination--stream of consciousness directed but not edited by the conscious mind--can be a way to explore it. Religious, magical, mystical, or meditative practices can too if that's your jam. So can psychoanalysis and some other forms of therapy. There are countless other ways and I don't pretend to have any special knowledge of this, I'm just riffing on an idea.

More and more I believe that we have to rediscover and exercise this aspect of ourselves if we're to navigate the current crisis. (*) Our collective imagination lacks force at a time when generative Anti-Imagination is reaching industrial scale.



(*) "Crisis" has a medical definition: "that change in a disease which indicates whether the result is to be recovery or death" (Webster's dictionary). Its Greek root can also mean "decision", which I like to think about when considering "crises". They are decisions that need to be made.
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I assume it's possible, because most people who blog do it, but I struggle to get comfortable posting to a personal blog using a CMS (e.g. Ghost). I can't seem to get over knowing that it's all "out there". It's probably irrational, but still makes me twitchy. My blog is like a journal. I don't like the idea of my journal being at all fragile. Anything other than local-first static HTML feels fragile.

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Now. Canada and Aus. Learn from America; and Britain…
… just because you pulled through this time doesn’t mean you’re safe. Keep doing politics like you have, and you’ll fail next time. It’s a pattern. Learn.

Go hard on public spending, go hard on social security, go hard on taxing companies and the rich.

It’s your only option. Don’t? You saw what happened in America. You see what’s happening in the UK.

Change. Really, actually, deliver for people. It’s a matter of global security.

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剛剛收到一個通知,是FB強迫我在5/10前開啟專業模式,不然我會失去我個人的6000多位追蹤者,未來私人帳號只能交朋友,不能有追蹤者。

但是我還沒有讀完詳細的影響和風險,內容就跳掉了,然後後面完全找不到任何公告的地方。

跳掉前大概瞄到是如果開啟專業模式,代表同意他們拿你的內容販售廣告之類的。

不知道有人也有收到類似的通知嗎?

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Der FC St. Pauli engagiert sich seit Jahren gegen Rassismus & Diskriminierung.
 
Jetzt zeigte St. Paulis Präsident Oke Göttlich vor dem Heimspiel gegen den VFB Stuttgart in einem Sky-Interview einen Sticker mit klarer Botschaft gegen Sackwurst Bernd:

"Björn Höcke ist 1 Nazi!"

Aber psssst, nicht teilen!
Das mag der Bernd not. 🙃

Der Trainer hält einen runden, gelben Aufkleber in die Kamera, auf dem steht: Björn Höcke ist ein Nazi.
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剛剛收到一個通知,是FB強迫我在5/10前開啟專業模式,不然我會失去我個人的6000多位追蹤者,未來私人帳號只能交朋友,不能有追蹤者。

但是我還沒有讀完詳細的影響和風險,內容就跳掉了,然後後面完全找不到任何公告的地方。

跳掉前大概瞄到是如果開啟專業模式,代表同意他們拿你的內容販售廣告之類的。

不知道有人也有收到類似的通知嗎?

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Also I have literally had people try to threaten my career and say I should not be allowed to speak on computer science (even though I had a postdoc appointment in CS!) because I dared to criticize examples in the public published scientific record that propose laughably inaccurate, damaging and bigoted models of human ability, something I have scientific expertise in.

"Computer science isn't political" my ass

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A member of the Network of Alternative Social Media Researchers, Karen Frost-Arnold, is helping to organize a conference called "Digital Decolonization and Digital Justice," to be held at the U of Johannesburg in August. The CFP is here:

uj.ac.za/wp-content/uploads/20

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I've been traveling so forgive me for not posting this yesterday, but: That Signal clone app for archiving messages that Mike Waltz has been using, TeleMessage? It's unlicensed. Signal was unaware of its existence until they saw it in that Reuters photo. There's no known security vetting.

Photo appears to show Mike Wal...

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雖然有時候覺得人生千篇一律,但有時候想未來說不定活不到那個時候。

但是最近想,假設我把做某件事當成「以後說不定沒機會了」,是不是能提升做該事的動機?
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wakest ⁂ shared the below article:

These Tardigrades Have Tiny Tattoos

404 Media @index@www.404media.co

Welcome back to the Abstract!

The news is so often dominated by big egos and noxious personalities, so I’m genuinely excited to lead the column with this chill lass who just seems like a good hang! What’s her secret? She’s not a human being. That goes a long way these days.

Next, researchers have once again used the power of the scientific method and institutional funding to…make dinner. And speaking of dinner, bust out the fava beans because I’m back on the cannibalism beat. This time, it’s larval cannibalism, a delightfully grotesque subcategory of fellow flesh consumption. Last, some body art for some very tiny bodies. 

DJ Ronan Drops the Beat 

Cook, Peter et al. “Sensorimotor synchronization to rhythm in an experienced sea lion rivals that of humans.” Scientific Reports.

Can’t stop the beat, the beat goes on, back up to that beat. Humans simply cannot resist rolling with the rhythm. But as it turns out, there’s another groover in our midst. Put your hands (or flippers) together for Ronan the sea lion, a teen marine queen that bobs her head to tempos with incredible accuracy, according to a new study. 

Ronan, a California sea lion (Zalophus californianus), was born in the wild in 2008. But she repeatedly stranded herself on land by the time she was one, as if she wasn’t cut out for the ocean. After she ended up on a highway in San Luis Obispo County, she was adopted by researchers who study pinnipeds (the family that contains sea lions, seals, and walruses) at the Long Marine Laboratory in Santa Cruz.

Peter Cook, a researcher at the University of California, Santa Cruz, has worked with Ronan since her arrival and recognized her keen sense of rhythm. Ronan’s penchant for “biomusicality” first made waves in 2013 when Cook’s team declared her the first non-human animal to demonstrate “rhythmic entrainment,” or the ability to move with a beat. Back then, she was apparently really into “Boogie Wonderland” by Earth Wind & Fire, an enduring testament to the transcendent power of disco-funk.

This week, Cook and his colleagues presented new insights into her intriguing talent for tempo, which surpasses humans in many cases. 

“Most laboratory evidence of beat keeping in non-human vertebrates comes from psittacines [parrots] which tend not to show the same degree of consistency and precision as do humans, and from other primates, which seem to have great difficulty with lagless beat keeping,” said Cook’s team. “The notable exception is Ronan the sea lion, who was operantly conditioned to entrain a continuous head bob movement with metronomic sounds, and then demonstrated transfer of this behavior to novel acoustic tempos and wholly novel stimuli, including music.” 

“Ronan’s unprecedented beat keeping behavior was both consistent and relatively precise; there are no empirical data from a non-human mammal or bird that come close in terms of precision and consistency,” the researchers continued, before raising the question: “Would Ronan’s capability for beat keeping rival that of typical humans?”

To find out, Cook and his colleagues enlisted ten human participants aged 18 to 23 years of age “who self-reported as non-musicians with minimal formal exposure and training in music and dance.” All participants (hominid and pinniped) listened to snare drums at a tempo of 112, 120, and 128 beats per minute; Ronan performed her bob-head groove, while the humans were instructed to move a hand to the rhythm.

The upshot: Ronan’s still got it, baby. “This sea lion’s sensorimotor synchronization was precise, consistent, and indistinguishable from or superior to that of typical adults,” the team concluded. “These findings challenge claims of unique neurobiological adaptations for beat keeping in humans.”

First off, I demand a remake of Whiplash starring Ronan instead of Miles Teller. But more importantly, I must highlight the team’s lovely coda on the experiment: “When the test session was complete, human participants were thanked and given further details on the nature of the study” while “Ronan received a toy filled with fish and ice.”

These are both great outcomes: The humans discovering that they were competing against a sea lion and Ronan receiving a cool treat. A lot of studies don’t have happy endings, so let’s cherish this vision of Beatmaster Ronan winding down from a well-compensated gig. 

The Nobel Prize in Noodles Goes to…

Bartolucci, Giacomo et al. “Phase behavior of Cacio e pepe sauce.” Physics of Fluids.

Scientists are people too, with bellies that rumble and taste-buds that yearn for excitement. That might explain the origins of a new study that invests prodigious brainpower and institutional resources into the best recipe for pasta alla Cacio e pepe, a traditional Italian dish made from simple ingredients: Pasta, pepper, and pecorino.

“On several occasions, pasta has been a source of inspiration for physicists,” said researchers led by Giacomo Bartolucci of the University of Barcelona. “The observation that spaghetti always breaks up into three or more fragments, but never in two halves, puzzled even Richard Feynman himself” and “analogies with pasta shapes have proved useful in different physics fields, from polymer rings to neutron stars.”

This is a fantastic professional justification to make some pasta, plus it adds more grist to the theory that the universe is made of noodles (aka pastafarianism). The study is also a fun read, filled with flourishes about a perilous “Mozzarella Phase” in the cooking process as well as sentences like: “A potential future direction could be to better understand the starch-dependent morphology of the cheese clumps.” 

Pasta science. Image: Bartolucci, Giacomo et al. 

That’s basically a ready-made PhD thesis for anyone who aspires to join the vibrant subfield of cheese clumps. And while the researchers present laboratorial techniques to “achieve the perfect Cacio e pepe” they wisely acknowledge that “a true Italian grandmother or a skilled home chef from Rome would never need a scientific recipe for Cacio e pepe, relying instead on instinct and years of experience.” As always, Nonna knows best.

A Banner Week for Larval Cannibalism

Wu, Zhiwei et al. “A symbiotic gene stimulates aggressive behavior favoring the survival of parasitized caterpillars.” Nano Letters.

Parasitic wasps are so creepy that they gave Charles Darwin a crisis of faith. “I cannot persuade myself that a beneficent and omnipotent God would have designedly created the Ichneumonidae,” a family of parasitoid wasps, “with the express intention of their feeding within the living bodies of caterpillars,” he wrote in a 1860 letter to Asa Gray.

Well, Charlie D, it’s even worse than you even imagined. Scientists have now discovered that the parasitic wasp Cotesia vestalis not only infests the larval caterpillar form of the diamondback moth (Plutella xylostella), it also encourages their hosts to fight to the death and feast on their kin when starved. 

“To test whether aggressive behavior differed between unparasitized hosts and hosts parasitized by C. vestalis , we used a one-on-one aggression assay under starvation conditions that resulted in one larva cannibalizing the other,” said researchers led by Zhiwei Wu of Zhejiang University. “Strikingly, parasitized larvae exhibited higher attack (biting) frequencies than unparasitized larvae.” 

“We also show that a CvBV gene that is transferred to parasitized hosts elevates host aggression by increasing octopamine (OA) levels,” the team said. “Our results show how a parasite promotes its own survival under starvation conditions by manipulating the behavior of its host.”

In other words, the wasps manipulate the caterpillars to be their mech suits and mess halls. When the caterpillars starve, the wasps give them a genetic cue to cut loose and eat their brethren, upping the odds of survival. From the POV of the very hungry caterpillars, this is a benefit in the short term, as they might snag some grub (even if it is a sibling). On the other hand, they are still hosting a wasp parasite. You win some, you lose some.

Amazingly, this isn’t the only story about larval cannibalism this week—the same issue of this journal also published a study about toad tadpoles that were observed over several days in laboratory containers. The experiment inspired this fantastic sentence: “Instances in which tadpoles disappeared from containers overnight were considered cannibalism events.” It makes me picture a tadpole shrugging at the absence of its room-mates in the morning, then letting out a little tadpole belch.

In short, Darwin was right. Baby toads and baby moths are cannibalizing each other, sometimes at the behest of baby wasps. There is no benevolent God. Tell the conclave that it’s time, at last, to embrace Pope Baby Cannibal.

Blast from the Recent Past: Tardigrade Tats

Yang, Zhirong et al. Patterning on Living Tardigrades. Nano Letters.

I normally only feature studies published within the past calendar week in this column. But the internet is currently haunted by a study from March 2025—a distant hazy era—which refuses to fade away. I’m talking about tattooed tardigrades. Water bears with watermarks. Microbes are getting inked. Has science gone too far? Yes, it has. Behold:

“Here, we present ice lithography for direct fabrication of micro/nanoscale patterns on the surfaces of tardigrades in their cryptobiotic state,” said researchers led by Zhirong Yang of Westlake University. “Remarkably, upon rehydration the tardigrades revive, retaining the patterns on their surfaces…These patterns remain stable even after stretching, solvent immersion, rinsing, and drying.”

The tattoos display patterns of dots and lines as narrow as 72 nanometers, which is smaller than most viruses. These particular tats don’t convey a specific meaning, but perhaps future iterations of the method will get more creative. After all, given their virtually indestructible nature, tardigrades are already a contender for most badass species on Earth. A classic skull-and-bones tat would suit them.

Thanks for reading! See you next week.

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