

James Cook. Time-space trader and software hipster.
I'm in an article in Quanta Magazine! It's about the bizarre world of algorithms that re-use memory that's already full. https://www.quantamagazine.org/catalytic-computing-taps-the-full-power-of-a-full-hard-drive-20250218/ I'm the one with all the snow in the background.
Some satisfying icicle-breaking in our backyard: photos.falsifian.org/video/sM7G3vfS6yuc/VID_20250217_203250.mp4
I couldn't resist taking home a prize:
It's been snowy here in #Toronto.
(I tried formatting the images in markdown for the benefit of yarn and any other clients that understand it.)
I have a paper deadline coming up, so will everyone please stop writing twts for the next 48 hours, thanks.
It turns out my ISP supports ipv6. After 4-5 months with only ipv4, I thought to ask customer support, and they told me how to turn it on. (I'm pretty happy with ebox so far. Low-priced fibre with no issues so far. Though all my traffic goes through Montreal, 500km away from me in Toronto, which adds a few ms to network latency.)
@andros Sorry I missed your messages to #twtxt on IRC. There are people there, but it can take several hours to get a response. E.g. I check it every day or two. I recommend using an IRC bouncer. To answer your question about registries, I used a couple of registries when I first started out, to try to find feeds to follow, but haven't since then. I don't remember which ones, but they were easy to find with web searches.
I installed GrapheneOS for the first time on Wednesday last week on a used Pixel 7a, and I'm impressed. Installation was almost seamless, and I was able to do it from another Android phone. I've run into very few wrinkles, even using Google's proprietary apps with GrapheneOS's "sandboxed" version of Google Play Services. The main problems I've noticed: I can't cast, and Google Timeline doesn't seem to work (though I imagine the intersection between people keen to use GrapheneOS and keen to have Google log their location history is pretty small).
Inversion by Aric McBay was another random library pick. Like The Fall of Io, it's the most recent in a series, though I think this series is pretty loosely connected. In contrast, the villain in this book is simple and cartoonishly evil. The book presents a design for utopia which was interesting but a little cloying. I'm not sure if I'm supposed to want to live there, but I don't think I do. I enjoyed the book as easy reading, and might try the others in the series some time. (4/4)
I read Starter Villain by John Scalzi. Enjoyable, like his other books that I've read. Somewhat sillier. (3/4)
I'm enjoying Wesley Chu's Tao and Io series. Spies, action, ancient aliens. Some funny parts, some interesting world-building parts, some action-filled parts. I picked up The Fall of Io at random from a library a few weeks ago, and it turned out to be the last in a series of six (technically two series), so after finishing that I read the first and am partway through the second. Usually I try to read series in order, but this way is interesting. One thing I liked about The Fall of Io was that it it followed many points of view with somewhat conflicting interests, some more evil than others, and I felt sympathy for most of them. (I was kind of hoping it would be about Jupiter's moon Io, but it wasn't, but I'm satisfied with what I ended up with.) (2/4)