3D Printer Surveillance

Feb. 12th, 2026 12:01 pm
[syndicated profile] bruce_schneier_feed

Posted by Bruce Schneier

New York is contemplating a bill that adds surveillance to 3D printers:

New York’s 2026­2027 executive budget bill (S.9005 / A.10005) includes language that should alarm every maker, educator, and small manufacturer in the state. Buried in Part C is a provision requiring all 3D printers sold or delivered in New York to include “blocking technology.” This is defined as software or firmware that scans every print file through a “firearms blueprint detection algorithm” and refuses to print anything it flags as a potential firearm or firearm component.

I get the policy goals here, but the solution just won’t work. It’s the same problem as DRM: trying to prevent general-purpose computers from doing specific things. Cory Doctorow wrote about it in 2018 and—more generally—spoke about it in 2011.

A Little on the Small Side

Feb. 12th, 2026 11:04 am
ffutures: (Default)
[personal profile] ffutures
Yesterday I was wondering if I should sell on my USB Zip drive and remaining disks (100 and 250 megabyte capacity) because they're too small and unreliable to be useful and I last needed to recover data from one about a decade ago. But I decided against it for the same reason I always do - if I ever need it it would cost a small fortune to get a replacement.

And as if by magic, today's [syndicated profile] daily_illuminator_feed has a link to someone's project to build a USB drive based on bubble memory with a staggering 128 bits of memory. For comparison, the first three words of this post, with spaces and the space after the third word, are 16 characters = 128 bits, the whole capacity of the drive... which looks larger than the main board of most computers!

The Illuminator post is here - https://www.sjgames.com/ill/archive/2026-02-12

The project is here - https://blog.adafruit.com/2026/02/02/a-128-byte-core-memory-module-as-a-flash-drive-raspberry_pi/

[syndicated profile] rest_of_world_rss_feed

Posted by Andrea Pollio

When I first embarked on the project to write about the encounters between Chinese digital capital and Nairobi’s booming innovation scene, I imagined myself rubbing shoulders with software developers, venture...

(no subject)

Feb. 12th, 2026 10:01 am
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
[personal profile] oursin
Happy birthday, [personal profile] lenores_raven and [personal profile] lindra!

Incorrect fandom osmosis

Feb. 12th, 2026 07:52 am
naraht: Moonrise over Earth (Default)
[personal profile] naraht
Still haven't seen Heated Rivalry but I glanced at one of the books in a bookstore last night, and realised that I had the characters backwards! Based on pictures, I'd assumed that the dark-haired one was Ilya Rozanov and the ginger one was Shane Hollander. I'd figured that Rozanov was part Kazakh (or could well have been part Korean, like Viktor Tsoi) – but the guy who actually turns out to be playing Rozanov doesn't look Slavic to me at all. I can only see him as having a severe case of American Canadian Actor Face. This has been an interesting collision of racial assumptions.
sovay: (Lord Peter Wimsey: passion)
[personal profile] sovay
My poem "The Principle of the Thing" has been accepted by Weird Fiction Quarterly. It is the ghost poem I wrote last spring for Werner Heisenberg: 2025 finally called it out. 2026 hasn't yet rendered it démodé.

Branching off The Perceptual Form of the City (1954–59), I am still tracking down the publications of György Kepes whose debt to Gestalt psychology my mother pegged instantly from his interdisciplinary interests in perception, but my local library system furnished me with Kevin Lynch's The Image of the City (1960) and What Time Is This Place? (1972) and even more than urban planning, they make me think of psychogeography. An entire chapter in the latter is entitled "Boston Time" and illustrates itself with layers of photographs of a walk down Washington Street in the present of the book's composition and its past, singling out not only buildings and former buildings but weathered milestones and ghost signs, commemorative plaques and graffiti, dates established, construction stamps, spray paint, initials in concrete. "The trees are seasonal clocks, very precise in spring and fall." "The street name refers to the edge of the ancient peninsula. (If you look closely at the ground, you can trace the outline of the former shore.)" "The railroad, which in its day was cut ruthlessly through the close-packed docks and sailing ships, is now buried in its turn." Five and a half decades behind me, the book itself is a slice of history, a snapshot in the middle of the urban renewal that Lynch evocatively and not inaccurately describes as "steamrolling." I recognize the image of the city formed by the eponymously accumulated interviews in the older book and it is a city of Theseus. Scollay Square disappeared between the two publications. Lynch's Charles River Dam isn't mine. Blankly industrial spaces on his map have gentrified in over my lifetime. Don't even ask about wayfinding by the landmarks of the skyline. I do think he would have liked the harborwalk, since it reinforces one of Boston's edges as sea. And whether I agree entirely or at all with his assertion:

If we examine the feelings that accompany daily life, we find that historic monuments occupy a small place. Our strongest emotions concern our own lives and the lives of our family or friends because we have known them personally. The crucial reminders of the past are therefore those connected with our own childhood, or with our parents' or perhaps our grandparents' lives. Remarkable things are directly associated with memorable events in those lives: births, deaths, marriages, partings, graduations. To live in the same surroundings that one recalls from earliest memories is a satisfaction denied to most Americans today. The continuity of kin lacks a corresponding continuity of place. We are interested in a street on which our father may have lived as a boy; it helps to explain him to us and strengthens our own sense of identity, But our grandfather or great-grandfather, whom we never knew, is already in the remote past; his house is "historical."

it is impossible for me not to read it and hear "Isn't the house you were born in the most interesting house in the world to you? Don't you want to know how your father lived, and his father? Well, there are more ways than one of getting close to your ancestors." None of mine came from this city I walk.

The rest of my day has been a landfill on fire.

Five Happy Things

Feb. 12th, 2026 12:47 am
gremdark: A cluster of orange, many-petaled marigolds (Default)
[personal profile] gremdark
Because I'm having trouble falling asleep (definitely work jitters, sigh) and sometimes internalizing the good in the world helps. So:

Boyfriend's redownloaded Bumble and has been talking to a couple people, most notably Emerald, who has met up with us to play Magic once and is coming over for dinner on Saturday. I'm making chicken tortilla soup, which is always a winner. She's a sweetheart, and I look forward to getting to know her better. Next order of business is softening her up enough to get my grubby paws on her tumblr url. I always say that the best way to tell whether a prospective friend is a keeper is to put them in a room with my stoic and silent fiance and see if they recognize how lovely and befriendable he is in spite of his retiring nature. So we shall see.

I mailed a care package to my dear friend Robin, whose birthday was Sunday. She's in grad school for accounting in Michigan after taking several years off to recover from a pair of strokes. I'm SO proud of her, and I was glad for the excuse to send her something nice. She loves foxes, so the package was fox-themed. Stickers, two necklaces (one handmade, one store bought) an art card, and a lemon candle that came in a nice box. She seemed very happy to receive it, so I think I'll try to repeat the trick after spring break even if all my finances can support at that time is a nice  handwritten note.

I've officially progressed to the first interview phase for the alternative teacher's certification program I'm applying to. The internet says that that puts me in the top 50% of applicants. My fate isn't yet assured, but I'm closer! Tomorrow night, I have a webinar where they'll talk through what the interview will look like. The interview itself is next week (eek!) and will be about two hours long. The interviewer sent me a nice email after I booked my time, which feels optimistic. He mentioned that he's interested to hear about my study abroad experience, so I'll see if I can dig up my notes from that time. I also need two recommendation forms filed by this upcoming Monday. I've got my former thesis advisor and an ex boss working on them. Tomorrow I'll shoot them polite emails thanking them and making sue they haven't forgotten.

One of my favorite people in the entire universe is my neighbor, who I've known for almost a decade now. The other day I wandered into a little antique shop while waiting for a hair appointment and found a shelf of vintage cinema books. I spotted one about All About Eve, his favorite movie, and nabbed it. This afternoon, my neighbor came over for movie and writing time and brought the book along to read. Apparently he's really enjoying it, so that's a win. He's starting a new job next week, but we made plans for me to cook him dinner next Saturday. I need to riffle through my cookbooks and pick out a good recipe for it.

This morning when I woke up, the cat had worked my bedroom door open and curled up at the foot of my bed. He stayed there until I got up and spent the day following me around and sitting in my lap whenever I sat. He's the first cat I've ever lived with, and it's nice to be friends with him.

I have now tried to embed an image of the cat three different times. I am confident I can figure this out in the long run, but right now I need to sleep. So here's a description.

He's a hair overweight for an adult male cat, but the vet assures us that he's mostly just muscular. When she first saw him, she exclaimed, "Oh! A cream-colored cat!" Like most people who live with cats, I'm pretty sure he's the best and most attractive one. His eyes are on the green side of olive, and his chest and the very tips of his paws are white. His stripes are very faint, most evident on the hindquarters and tail.

As I type this, he's loafing at the foot of my bed. In five minutes, once this is posted and I've gotten under the covers, he'll pace the hallway, scratch at each of our bedroom doors, and meow plaintively for ten to fifteen minutes before giving up and sleeping on the living room couch. Sometimes, for variety, he climbs into one of the dining room chairs, pulls the nearest tablecloth corner into it, and nests in an irritatingly decadent fashion. He'll meow at my door about twenty minutes before my first alarm goes off at six a.m. Then, when I stagger out of bed, he'll follow me into the kitchen and hover while I eat breakfast. 

He's surely not dissimilar from most cats, but I have a sample size of one and I dote on the lad.

flareonfury: (Bex/Jennifer)
[personal profile] flareonfury posting in [community profile] halfamoon
Made for [community profile] halfamoon Day 11 - The Explorer. As soon as I saw the prompt I had to do my favorite female explorers - Sydney Fox (Relic Hunter), Lara Croft (Tomb Raider), and Nell Jackson (Renegade Nell). Sydney and Lara could also represent Day 9 - The Scholar and Nell could represent Day 5 - The Outlaw.

Preview



Relic Hunter, Tomb Raider, Renegade Nell.....
lightbird: http://coelasquid.deviantart.com/ (Default)
[personal profile] lightbird
Title/Link: A Place Of Her Own
Fandom: Hey Arnold!
Character(s): Helga Pataki
Rating: G
[community profile] halfamoon prompt: her sanctuary
[community profile] genprompt_bingo prompt: closets, caves, and other tight spaces
Summary: The walk-in closet was too small to qualify as a separate room, but it was large enough for her to sit comfortably and hide.

Misadventures in Substitute Teaching

Feb. 11th, 2026 10:33 pm
gremdark: A single blue violet flower against a leafy background (violet)
[personal profile] gremdark
It's been a while since I've felt the urge to post on the internet diary-style, but I'm processing something this week. 
Over the last couple of weeks, I've been substitute teaching in our local public school district. It's the first thing resembling a full-time job that I've held since before I got so sick in 2019, and I'm hoping it'll give me a sense of whether the alternative certification program I'm pursuing is the right fit for me.
The adjustment period has been significant, but not unmanageable. I've taught before, but that was one-on-one pandemic teaching. Managing a 25 kid classroom is a different beast altogether. Still, I thought I was doing okay before Friday.
On Friday, a student called me a faggot. Shouted it out to the whole class, in fact. I think I would have shrugged that one off by itself, but other students used similarly homophobic and transphobic language towards me throughout the rest of that day. I taught five classes at that school. This happened in three of them. One student called me a "birl," which is not a word I'd realized had made it to this side of 1995. But there you go.
I'm visibly queer in the southern United States in 2026. I've been called slurs before. Not since I was eleven years old myself have children that small used hate speech towards me. It bothers me to know that eleven year olds in my neighborhood have that language on standby, that its use feels normal to them.
I'd like to think I covered it well in the moment, keeping my head high and taking down names and details for their regular teacher to punish. But that night, and in the days that followed, it felt like I was carrying a lead weight on my shoulders. It's taken days for the exhaustion to diminish.
Logically, I know that it's normal for that sort of language to wound. That's the point of its use. I know I'm not weak for feeling its impact. At the same time, it's hard not to reproach myself for not having a "thicker skin."
Tomorrow and Friday, I'm subbing for a G/T teacher who runs small group pullout classes at a K-5 elementary school. I'm hoping it'll be a good mental reset. But we shall see.
[syndicated profile] shinyhappygoth_feed

kazieka:

kazieka:

was outside earlier and a bird Came Up, squatted down, fluttered it’s wings at me and opened its mouth like a hatchling begging for food (it was a grown female) so I went and checked the seed cube in the feeder and the thing was completely covered in mold. this is one of the weirdest things that’s ever happened to me. how did she know im the one in charge of the birdseed. How Did She Know To Pantomime Hunger At Me. Hello.

i have spent my afternoon confusedly getting dressed, driving to the store, purchasing a new seed block, driving home, washing the cage, and getting the feeder set back up. i don’t take this much care for my Own nutrition. ive been bullied into a grocery store run by a tufted titmouse. i feel so loved

[syndicated profile] shinyhappygoth_feed












onenicebugperday:

Sunburst candy bolas spider, species undescribed, Cyrtarachninae, Araneidae

Photographed in Thailand by Nicky Bay // Facebook // Website

Shared with permission; do not remove credit or re-post!

The worst arrow in the world.

Feb. 11th, 2026 07:59 pm
[syndicated profile] shinyhappygoth_feed

blumineck:

The worst arrow in the world.

DMs I am giving you this knowledge in exchange for all the things I showed your players. Use it wisely.

More nonsense on Patreon

Day 10 Fic Hazbin Hotel, Molly

Feb. 12th, 2026 12:20 am
cornerofmadness: Angel hugging his pig amidst rubble (Fat Nuggets and Angel)
[personal profile] cornerofmadness posting in [community profile] halfamoon
Title: Letters from Heaven

fandom: Hazbin Hotel

Summary: Realizing Emily could carry letters back and forth from heaven to hell, Molly is determined to write to her twin, no matter how foolish some people think this is

Rating: teen

characters/pairing: Molly

content warning Discussions of death and organized crime

Story is here on AO3

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