1924 house here. Definitely not in the US though.
Dick pics in 3, 2, 1...
On a fieldtrip today with nostr:npub1qvwdl9rp7a5ghrxv57wnml5ehg2whjh708vys6kaxpkgu0z3aclsuy2h4p to the famous tulip greenhouse.


Hacking away!
Very suggestive to what i should commit myself, but i fully agree!
Even though i'm a developer by trade i find it much easier to commit myself to physical activities. No need to overthink anything. You close the door and you GO!
Or sometimes i don't even need to close the door and i do a few navy seal burpees, pullups or back/shoulder flexiblity exercises right from my bedroom.
I agree and i think this thread is full of strawman arguments and weird edge cases where, yes, you might have to drive yourself. Does not mean 99.9% could and should be automated.
Additionally it's an illusion that you are not being tracked already. The roads (especially highways) are loaded with cameras. It would just be slightly harder to obtain the full chain of data.
To combat this start thinking about the open source car or flashing the firmware of an existing car like you now install linux on your computer that came preinstalled with windows.
Guess i'll be buying all the noise then. 😹
Not good enough. I want to be part of tne moment where the bananas are steaks.
GM!

I am looking for some form of sleep tracker. Preferably an open source hardware and software system so that i can ensure i own my data.
I am switching from a regular 20 year old boxspring bed to a thin futon on tatami mat solution pretty soon and apart from how i feel i am very interested in actually making some measurements.
Ideally i want some kind of wristband due to its not-so-invasive nature but if a headband is the only thing available that could work too. I have very little trust in a phone-on-mattress solution but if there's really nothing else than i guess it's better than nothing.
#asknostr #sleep #sleepstr
Nice catch!
Maybe you can cache profile pictures and then later request to see if there's a new one. Better to see something then to be 100% up-to-date.
Yes rs-232 is still common and useful, but i doubt you can find mice that connect to it. I think it was actually invented as a standard debugging port.
Meanwhile in The Netherlands as of 2025 they increased the amount of mandatory checkups a farmer needs to have if he wants to sell raw milk. Already heard about half of them stopped as it is no longer economically viable.
I'm sure they'll keep cranking it up until they're all gone and there is again more centralized control over the milk supply.
I hope you're not talking about the actual picture because that only shows rs-232 to which ancient people commonly used to connect their mouse, or sometimes their highspeed 2400 baud modems.

nostr:note1kaqvca7j8ja4h38w3ma4xp2t6cpstptwvf74t9msqpggftl7eguq37qc8p