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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セーフティチェック行ってきたよ :saba:

7fe3e80758 (upstream/main) Rely on locale for options order in DOB input (#36895)
1ae3b4672b Fix “Delete and Redraft” on a non-quote being treated as a quote post in some cases (#37140)
007ae588d8 Fix incorrect date for Wrapstodon start (#37138)
ce22c835ac Increase maximum height of media items on desktop (#37136)
9b851616fe Remove more unused data from 2025 annual reports (#37134)
591776d7ad Fix inversion of emoji colours based on dark/light mode (#37120)
7f1f3236c6 Update opentelemetry-ruby (non-major) (#37101)
852727a226 Update dependency aws-sdk-s3 to v1.206.0 (#37100)
429d6bcab4 New Crowdin Translations (automated) (#37131)
e47a5dd1c2 Update dependency faker to v3.5.3 (#37099)
4ec761debd Update dependency sidekiq to v8.0.10 (#37090)
d895ea3433 Update dependency vite to v7.2.6 (#37076)
49105a28a3 Update eslint (non-major) (#36801)
1cb650d107 Update dependency jsdom to v27.2.0 (#36845)

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Ústavní právníci se shodují na tom, že plán šéfa hnutí ANO Andreje Babiše je – s ohledem na znění zákona o střetu zájmů – přijatelný. Klíčové ale podle nich budou konkrétní podmínky: jak přesně bude fond vypadat, kde bude registrován nebo kdo se stane správcem. Takzvaný slepý fond v českém právu neexistuje, proto část právníků předpokládá, že ho budoucí premiér založí v zahraničí.

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"...meaning that in response to nearly every single name we fed into the chatbot, Grok readily disclosed a location where it thought we might find them, in addition to other possibly identifying information."
futurism.com/artificial-intell

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So long, Frank Gehry, and thanks for all the fish!

(We have our own blinding architectural landmark on the east bank of the river at the University of Minnesota.)

'With the advent of new computer technologies, Mr. Gehry’s work became increasingly sculptural. For the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, he designed a monumental fish sculpture using software developed for the French aerospace industry. It was one of a number of massive sculptures he created, including the 1986 “Standing Glass Fish” at the Weisman Art Museum in Minneapolis (where he would go on to design a 1993 building clad in faceted steel plates that resembled tinfoil) and the 1987 “Fish Dance” in Kobe, Japan.'

Frank O. Gehry, Titan of Architecture, Is Dead at 96
nytimes.com/2025/12/05/arts/de

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Some traffic statistics:

| Month | RX | TX | Total | Avg rate |
|----------|-------------|-------------|-------------|----------|
| 2025-01 | 94.83 GiB | 399.68 GiB | 494.51 GiB | 1.59 Mbit/s |
| 2025-02 | 192.88 GiB | 773.54 GiB | 966.42 GiB | 3.43 Mbit/s |
| 2025-03 | 316.48 GiB | 1.25 TiB | 1.55 TiB | 5.10 Mbit/s |
| 2025-04 | 315.47 GiB | 1.21 TiB | 1.52 TiB | 5.16 Mbit/s |
| 2025-05 | 886.55 GiB | 1.37 TiB | 2.23 TiB | 7.33 Mbit/s |
| 2025-06 | 1.07 TiB | 1.32 TiB | 2.39 TiB | 8.12 Mbit/s |
| 2025-07 | 1.12 TiB | 1.40 TiB | 2.51 TiB | 8.26 Mbit/s |
| 2025-08 | 1.11 TiB | 1.43 TiB | 2.54 TiB | 8.33 Mbit/s |
| 2025-09 | 1.08 TiB | 1.43 TiB | 2.51 TiB | 8.51 Mbit/s |
| 2025-10 | 1.11 TiB | 1.46 TiB | 2.57 TiB | 8.45 Mbit/s |
| 2025-11 | 1.04 TiB | 1.38 TiB | 2.43 TiB | 8.23 Mbit/s |
| 2025-12 | 169.98 GiB | 278.75 GiB | 448.73 GiB | 9.13 Mbit/s |
| Estimated | 1.05 TiB | 1.73 TiB | 2.78 TiB | |


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Some traffic statistics:

| Month | RX | TX | Total | Avg rate |
|----------|-------------|-------------|-------------|----------|
| 2025-01 | 94.83 GiB | 399.68 GiB | 494.51 GiB | 1.59 Mbit/s |
| 2025-02 | 192.88 GiB | 773.54 GiB | 966.42 GiB | 3.43 Mbit/s |
| 2025-03 | 316.48 GiB | 1.25 TiB | 1.55 TiB | 5.10 Mbit/s |
| 2025-04 | 315.47 GiB | 1.21 TiB | 1.52 TiB | 5.16 Mbit/s |
| 2025-05 | 886.55 GiB | 1.37 TiB | 2.23 TiB | 7.33 Mbit/s |
| 2025-06 | 1.07 TiB | 1.32 TiB | 2.39 TiB | 8.12 Mbit/s |
| 2025-07 | 1.12 TiB | 1.40 TiB | 2.51 TiB | 8.26 Mbit/s |
| 2025-08 | 1.11 TiB | 1.43 TiB | 2.54 TiB | 8.33 Mbit/s |
| 2025-09 | 1.08 TiB | 1.43 TiB | 2.51 TiB | 8.51 Mbit/s |
| 2025-10 | 1.11 TiB | 1.46 TiB | 2.57 TiB | 8.45 Mbit/s |
| 2025-11 | 1.04 TiB | 1.38 TiB | 2.43 TiB | 8.23 Mbit/s |
| 2025-12 | 169.98 GiB | 278.75 GiB | 448.73 GiB | 9.13 Mbit/s |
| Estimated | 1.05 TiB | 1.73 TiB | 2.78 TiB | |


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:subarashii_2:​ :​:sugoi2:​​:agooglehearts:
:yawn_javasparrow:​ ​:yawn_javasparrow:​ ​:ai_yay:​​:owo_hyper:


MISSKEY HUB ESTÁ EN ESPAÑOL
MISSKEY HUBがスペイン語に対応しました
MISSKEY HUB IS NOW IN SPANISH
🇪🇦 🇲🇽🇦🇷🇬🇹🇨🇱
https://misskey-hub.net/es/docs/about-misskey/

:no_misskey_no_life:
GRACIAS SYUILO, kakkokari_gtyih
SYUILOさんありがとうございます
kakkokari_gtyihさんありがとうございます

Misskey Hub en español
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Today's follow-up entry is vi/vim.

Which I use depends on the situation. Classic vi/nvi tends to be lighter weight and start faster, while vim offers extra features that I find particularly useful). I usually just type `vi` which gets me `vi` on OpenBSD, `nvi` on FreeBSD, and `vim` (or `vim-tiny`) on most flavors of Linux. If I specifically want vim features, I'll invoke it as such directly.

I could go on for ages about favorite features, but a select few:

• the ability to keep my hands on the home row and not use a mouse is helpful for preventing RSI symptoms

• it's a language¹ of editing, involving counts, verbs/commands, and objects/motions, so I can express my editing *intent* and then use the period command to re-issue that same editing *intent*

• the :global or :substitute commands can make massive-yet-precise edits across huge files

• the :*do commands extend that power across multiple files, allowing me to precisely edit millions of lines across thousands of files with targeted precision

• it's ubiquitous—even as some Linux distros have started removing ed(1) from the base installs , relegating it to packages, I can always type `vi` on any Unix-like/POSIX system and be editing with a powerful editor. And with builds for Windows and my phone, I can use it everywhere. No need to install anything

• they work just fine over a SSH connection without a GUI, and use minimal resources so they work even on that old hardware from the 90s.


¹ gist.github.com/nifl/1178878

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day 5: Wrapping up the new ilo implementations, today I did GNU Smalltalk. It's in the repository at fossils.retroforth.org:8000/il With this I now have implemented ilo in 25 programming languages.

This isn't yet good Smalltalk, it's very much like the C original in structure, though I did make some notes on things I need to improve. I might revisit this later this month.

My full logs are at charles.childe.rs/DA2025/

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has a rather small team backing it. As registrations on Codeberg have gone way up as of the past week, we could always use help from (both from non-technical and technical volunteers). To see what we have to offer, take a look here: codeberg.org/Codeberg/Contribu

There isn't necessarily a time commitment involved (if at all). Say, if 20 people spent 5-15 minutes to, say, send a pull request to something that annoyed them in our documentation, it would be in a much better state.

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has a rather small team backing it. As registrations on Codeberg have gone way up as of the past week, we could always use help from (both from non-technical and technical volunteers). To see what we have to offer, take a look here: codeberg.org/Codeberg/Contribu

There isn't necessarily a time commitment involved (if at all). Say, if 20 people spent 5-15 minutes to, say, send a pull request to something that annoyed them in our documentation, it would be in a much better state.

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