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.

Febelyn Drilo | Maisulao village, Calumpit municipality

I am a housewife with three small children. It’s difficult because we have to continue living in our home even when it’s full of floodwater. If the children fall into the water, we just lift them up. We raise our beds to sleep. The water was up to chest-high last week. This area used to be all farmland with plants, but now its gone.

Photograph: Gideon Mendel




A woman in a pink dress stands i a knee-deep water in her flooded house, with their belongings piled up high.

" I hope we can get help with the problem of rising water, which has been here since Typhoon Emong. The water has been increasing; it’s not disappearing any more. That’s the change I’ve seen here."

Emily Irabagon | San Miguel village, Calumpit municipality

It’s hard. We’ve been submerged for almost seven months. If the water is high, we can’t get out to stock up on food. You can’t get out unless someone takes you. And the students here barely have school. I’ve grown old here; I’m 65 years old. When it flooded here in the past, it went straight down.

Photograph: Gideon Mendel




A 65-year-old woman stands in her flooded room, the picture of The Last Supper behind her.

"But when it floods now, it goes up and down until we’ve reached seven months of mud and water. They shouldn’t cut down the trees on the mountains and block water channels that let the water flow straight out."
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Febelyn Drilo | Maisulao village, Calumpit municipality

I am a housewife with three small children. It’s difficult because we have to continue living in our home even when it’s full of floodwater. If the children fall into the water, we just lift them up. We raise our beds to sleep. The water was up to chest-high last week. This area used to be all farmland with plants, but now its gone.

Photograph: Gideon Mendel




A woman in a pink dress stands i a knee-deep water in her flooded house, with their belongings piled up high.

" I hope we can get help with the problem of rising water, which has been here since Typhoon Emong. The water has been increasing; it’s not disappearing any more. That’s the change I’ve seen here."
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Marvin Torres Gianan, Calizon village, Calumpit municipality

I am a tricycle driver so I have a hard time with the rising water. The combination of the high tide and the flood is terrible. It’s difficult to work. Saving stuff is really hard. The water is rising faster now. In this region we have often had floods, but now with the typhoons so frequent, they are worse and take so much longer to subside.

Photograph: Gideon Mendel




A man stands in water inside his flooded house, with holy pictures and a Merry Christmas banner on the walls.

"We have had water here since Typhoon Emong in July. We know now what is going on because it’s in the news – many have become corrupt, and the funds for flood control construction have disappeared."

Benjamin Manlapig | Calizon village, Calumpit municipality

I work at the Calizon elementary school as the caretaker. I tried to get to all the classrooms to raise the furniture and teaching materials. At my home, the water was so deep I took my family up to the roof so we could wait for relief and have something to eat. We were left stranded there.

Photograph: Gideon Mendel




A man standing in a flooded classroom in front of three green whiteboards.

"Every year now there are at least two typhoons and they are getting more frequent. Our community is near a river and close to the sea so the floodwater from the whole country eventually reaches us, and the high tide makes it much worse."
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Maica Salonga | Bulusan village, Calumpit municipality

I work as a seamstress. It’s very difficult. I can’t work properly because of the flood. Our things are getting damaged. This water is from Typhoon Uwan. It feels like the seasons have changed. Before, we used to have a dry season for a month. Now, we experience half a year before it dries up. As the years go by, the flooding is getting worse.

Photograph: Gideon Mendel




A young woman stands in water inside her house with a picture of dolphins on the wall.

" I hope a solution can be found so that we will never experience this suffering again. I hope the government budget will be used properly so that something can be done about our situation."

Marvin Torres Gianan, Calizon village, Calumpit municipality

I am a tricycle driver so I have a hard time with the rising water. The combination of the high tide and the flood is terrible. It’s difficult to work. Saving stuff is really hard. The water is rising faster now. In this region we have often had floods, but now with the typhoons so frequent, they are worse and take so much longer to subside.

Photograph: Gideon Mendel




A man stands in water inside his flooded house, with holy pictures and a Merry Christmas banner on the walls.

"We have had water here since Typhoon Emong in July. We know now what is going on because it’s in the news – many have become corrupt, and the funds for flood control construction have disappeared."
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Carina Manabat Venenoso | Palapat village, Hagonoy municipality

I work as a garbage collector. It was difficult when the water came. I had to save my kids and move to higher ground to avoid the flooding. I have returned today to pick up my cat Sundo, who I rescued in September. When it rains, the floodwaters really rise. This is deep. In the past, we only had high tides.

Photograph: Gideon Mendel




A woman stands in water holding a bucket. There's a rack of clothes hanging high behind her.

"Then the storm came along, and the dams were released at the same time. That’s why the water got deeper. I hope the flood and high tide won’t occur again so children will be able to play in the street and can have more fun."

Maica Salonga | Bulusan village, Calumpit municipality

I work as a seamstress. It’s very difficult. I can’t work properly because of the flood. Our things are getting damaged. This water is from Typhoon Uwan. It feels like the seasons have changed. Before, we used to have a dry season for a month. Now, we experience half a year before it dries up. As the years go by, the flooding is getting worse.

Photograph: Gideon Mendel




A young woman stands in water inside her house with a picture of dolphins on the wall.

" I hope a solution can be found so that we will never experience this suffering again. I hope the government budget will be used properly so that something can be done about our situation."
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Feli Albania | Bulusan village, Calumpit municipality

I am a widow and a grandmother. I take care of my grandchildren. That is my only job. This frequent flooding is hard. It’s been like this for a few days now. It’s hard when all the stuff is floating. I really had a hard time. Sometimes it goes up and down, then rises again. It looks like it’s growing again. It’s getting harder.

Photograph: Gideon Mendel




A woman with a pink shawl stands outside her house in raised waters, with pot plants on the porch.

"The water is rising. Because of the frequent rain and storms, right? We’re behind that river, so all the water from the country passes here on the way to the sea. We’re really used to that water every year."

Carina Manabat Venenoso | Palapat village, Hagonoy municipality

I work as a garbage collector. It was difficult when the water came. I had to save my kids and move to higher ground to avoid the flooding. I have returned today to pick up my cat Sundo, who I rescued in September. When it rains, the floodwaters really rise. This is deep. In the past, we only had high tides.

Photograph: Gideon Mendel




A woman stands in water holding a bucket. There's a rack of clothes hanging high behind her.

"Then the storm came along, and the dams were released at the same time. That’s why the water got deeper. I hope the flood and high tide won’t occur again so children will be able to play in the street and can have more fun."
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Feli Albania | Bulusan village, Calumpit municipality

I am a widow and a grandmother. I take care of my grandchildren. That is my only job. This frequent flooding is hard. It’s been like this for a few days now. It’s hard when all the stuff is floating. I really had a hard time. Sometimes it goes up and down, then rises again. It looks like it’s growing again. It’s getting harder.

Photograph: Gideon Mendel




A woman with a pink shawl stands outside her house in raised waters, with pot plants on the porch.

"The water is rising. Because of the frequent rain and storms, right? We’re behind that river, so all the water from the country passes here on the way to the sea. We’re really used to that water every year."
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Metrilita Dela Cruz, 80 | San Miguel village, Hagonoy municipality

It’s so hard. I hope our world changes, we’re really struggling. For the past six months, we have been unable to use the bottom floor of our house because the floodwater has not disappeared. When the water comes, sometimes at midnight it’s really strong and we try lifting things up. We didn’t expect it because it wasn’t like that before.

Photograph: Gideon Mendel




A woman standing in water inside her house, with a big pink poster of 3 white dogs (Shitzu?) behind her.

"Now, it’s just like that, the water is always strong. I hope the leaders, like those corruption cases that were reported, don’t ignore the needs of the people."

Rocky Albania | Bulusan village, Calumpit municipality

I work in a district office as a special operations officer. We are giving some relief operations and goods to the evacuation centres. The cause of the flood is the typhoon, and there’s also the high tide issue we are facing. Our town is considered the catch basin of the province, so we expect this.

Photograph: Gideon Mendel




A man in waders stands inside his flooded room with pictures on the walls.

"Due to climate change, the flooding is getting worse. Ten years ago, the roads were dry … we didn’t have to elevate our houses. I am afraid for our children, for everybody … What will happen if we don’t find a solution to this?"
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Metrilita Dela Cruz, 80 | San Miguel village, Hagonoy municipality

It’s so hard. I hope our world changes, we’re really struggling. For the past six months, we have been unable to use the bottom floor of our house because the floodwater has not disappeared. When the water comes, sometimes at midnight it’s really strong and we try lifting things up. We didn’t expect it because it wasn’t like that before.

Photograph: Gideon Mendel




A woman standing in water inside her house, with a big pink poster of 3 white dogs (Shitzu?) behind her.

"Now, it’s just like that, the water is always strong. I hope the leaders, like those corruption cases that were reported, don’t ignore the needs of the people."
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Abel Binoya | San Miguel village, Hagonoy municipality

It’s been flooded for six months in our street, since Typhoon Emong hit Bulacan. It was not like that before, the water would only last about a week, even if it was a big flood. I work as a tricycle driver and you can’t pick up any passengers because it’s flooded everywhere. When it floods, it’s really difficult.

Photograph: Gideon Mendel




A man standing in water in his house.

 The weather has really lost its direction, and that is the effect of climate change. Here in the north we used to have rain in August for half a month, fifteen days of rain, fifteen days of sunshine. Now, that pattern is gone.
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‘I’m afraid for our children’: living with the climate crisis in the – in pictures

The Philippines is one of the countries most at risk of the climate emergency due to its low-lying island geography. With sea temperatures rising, the country deals with increasingly frequent and intense typhoons, rising sea-levels that threaten coastal communities, and changing rainfall patterns that disrupt agriculture.

[Read the ALT text]



A family with three children standing inside their flooded house.

he country is one of the smallest contributors to climate change but one of the places most affected by its impacts. Gideon Mendel’s visceral portraits from his project Drowning World show people in Bulacan province dealing with the climate emergency in their daily lives.

Abel Binoya | San Miguel village, Hagonoy municipality

It’s been flooded for six months in our street, since Typhoon Emong hit Bulacan. It was not like that before, the water would only last about a week, even if it was a big flood. I work as a tricycle driver and you can’t pick up any passengers because it’s flooded everywhere. When it floods, it’s really difficult.

Photograph: Gideon Mendel




A man standing in water in his house.

 The weather has really lost its direction, and that is the effect of climate change. Here in the north we used to have rain in August for half a month, fifteen days of rain, fifteen days of sunshine. Now, that pattern is gone.
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‘I’m afraid for our children’: living with the climate crisis in the – in pictures

The Philippines is one of the countries most at risk of the climate emergency due to its low-lying island geography. With sea temperatures rising, the country deals with increasingly frequent and intense typhoons, rising sea-levels that threaten coastal communities, and changing rainfall patterns that disrupt agriculture.

[Read the ALT text]



A family with three children standing inside their flooded house.

he country is one of the smallest contributors to climate change but one of the places most affected by its impacts. Gideon Mendel’s visceral portraits from his project Drowning World show people in Bulacan province dealing with the climate emergency in their daily lives.
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Would you support Fosstodon automatically deleting user accounts that have been inactive (no logins, posts, or interactions; excluding migrated accounts) for a set period, like 5 years, after sending multiple warning emails?

This could help protect user privacy, reduce digital footprints and free up server resources.

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RE: mastodon.social/@glyph/1156125

Tired: prompt injection
Wired: phrompting

Like, it's such a perfect analogy. "Injection" refers to when your data and control get confused, but "phreaking" refers to when you tack on your control to your data, in the process allowing attackers to send their own control.

Given that, malicious prompts look much more like phreaking than injection.

@glyph is really on to something here, I think.

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11/26 緒方理奈 (White Album) (본인 시나리오 기준) 이야기 내에서 가장 주체적으로 가장 큰 비용을 지불하며 결말을 성취하는 캐릭터였다. 사실 이 시나리오를 처음 읽을 당시엔 감정선의 무게를 읽을 능력이 없었다 - ‘온갖 걸 이뤘어도 정작 원하는 것은 선에 넣을 수 없던’ 에서 ’진심으로 원하는 단 하나를 위해 모든 걸 내려놓는‘ 으로 이어나간 실질적인 프로타고니스트.

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I kinda forgot how weird mailinglists are implemented. Because clients keep the person you reply to in the recipient list, the listserv opts to not send out a message to anyone directly addressed. That means that directly addressed people do not get the modified message of the ML.

That means for instance you don't get the listserv's footer, the list headers etc. on messages directly sent to you.

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It's not enough for software to "just work." Code has to be understandable and maintainable. That's true whether the code is generated by an LLM or artisanally crafted by a human. If the person committing code to your repository doesn't understand it, nobody else will either.

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To everyone in the Fediverse,
I'm syuilo, the creator of Misskey.
Please consider supporting Misskey — a completely free and open-source software!

Misskey is not a business venture; it's developed by a small group of dedicated volunteers, and our funding is very limited.

I believe that for the health and diversity of the Fediverse, it's important to have not only a few dominant platforms but also smaller projects like Misskey.
(Imagine a world where the only web browser is Chrome — what would that be like?)

In order to continue the development of Misskey and to further improve its compatibility with the broader Fediverse, your support would be greatly appreciated.

You can support us via:

-
Patreon
-
GitHub Sponsors
-
PayPal

👉 Misskey Repository

Thank you all for your support!

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You and me together is a watercolor painting in shades of indigo, teal and white in square format by artist Karen Kaspar. A black cat and a white cat seen from above are cuddling together. They form a circle like the yin and yang symbol on an abstract watercolor background in teal and indigo.
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What Is The Fediverse?

If you’re not familiar with the name “” – that’s okay. It is is an open society of web services that is already serving millions of people all around the world. They do this through a common language called that lets news and events flow from one site to the next. So, instead of checking in to 5 or 6 different corporate sites, you can find, follow, like, and share across many, many sources – all from your own, singluar Fediverse profile.

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電源が入ってないSSDは徐々にデータを失う危険性があり長期保存用として難あり - GIGAZINE share.google/bmvrGDpOBsu1AxrTz

知ってた
てか、SSDが利用され始めた頃から言ってたよね
長期利用しない場合は冷蔵庫入れとくしかないな(笑)
そう考えると最近のM.2.タイプはPC開けないとならんから、アクセス悪くてダメだね

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