@[email protected]/interfluidity.com (bsky)

78.3K posts

@interfluidity@zirk.us/interfluidity.com (bsky)

@[email protected]/interfluidity.com (bsky)

@interfluidity

@[email protected] https://t.co/KOrJiAg0dp https://t.co/fNb7jrjzS9 https://t.co/H3CF3PW82c @interfluidity.com on BlueSky

Se unió Mayıs 2009
16.5K Siguiendo20.6K Seguidores
@[email protected]/interfluidity.com (bsky) retuiteado
Karthik Sankaran
Karthik Sankaran@RajaKorman·
Various people are taking a sledgehammer to a fantastically expensive watch with all kinds of complications made up of parts that come from all over the world and take years to make, except that the watch is also food and transportation for 10s of millions of people.
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Bob Golen
Bob Golen@BobGolen·
Somebody born in ‘33 was 45 in ‘78. That's gotta be some sort of record.
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@[email protected]/interfluidity.com (bsky) retuiteado
Jonathan Berk
Jonathan Berk@berkie1·
“Parisian car traffic fell by more than half between 2002 and 2023, while cycle lanes expanded sixfold. Bikes now make more than twice as many journeys as cars.” @FinancialTimes
Jonathan Berk tweet media
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
Apple spent a decade gluing batteries into $2,499 MacBook Pros. Then it shipped a $599 laptop you can take apart in six minutes. The MacBook Neo teardown numbers are wild. Eight screws to open. Eighteen screws hold the battery, zero glue, zero tape. The USB-C ports, speakers, and headphone jack are all modular, meaning each one swaps individually. The speakers come out with four screws. An Australian repair channel disassembled most of the machine in under six minutes using standard Torx bits you can buy at any hardware store. For context, the 2019 MacBook Pro scored 2 out of 10 on iFixit’s repairability scale. The 16-inch Pro got a 1 out of 10. Soldered RAM, soldered storage, glued battery, proprietary pentalobe screws, keyboard riveted to the top case. Apple’s own Self Service Repair program required you to rent a 79-pound repair kit shipped in two Pelican cases just to swap a battery. The timing explains everything. The EU Right to Repair Directive takes effect July 31, 2026. Member states are transposing it into national law right now. Manufacturers must offer repair beyond warranty, provide spare parts within 5 to 10 working days for seven years, and publish repair manuals. In the US, over a quarter of Americans already live in states with enforceable Right to Repair laws. Oregon banned parts pairing. California’s act is in effect. Apple read the regulatory calendar and realized the cheapest laptop in the lineup would face the most scrutiny. Millions of students and first-time buyers will own it. The volume will be enormous. And regulators love consumer-protection cases involving the most affordable products in a company’s portfolio. So they built the Neo as the compliance flagship. Standard screws, modular ports, no adhesive, a battery that lifts out. Meanwhile the $1,099 MacBook Air still has soldered storage and a riveted keyboard. The $2,499 Pro still scores poorly on independent repairability scales. The $599 laptop is the most repairable MacBook in over a decade. Apple always knew how to build a repairable laptop. They just needed a reason that showed up on a regulatory deadline.
MacRumors.com@MacRumors

MacBook Neo Teardown: Modular Ports, Glue-Less Battery, Zero Tape macrumors.com/2026/03/12/mac…

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Martin Pilgrim
Martin Pilgrim@MartinPilgrim1·
The fact that most captchas are based on robots not being able to identify bikes or traffic lights doesn't fill me with confidence for self-driving cars.
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Ryan Evans
Ryan Evans@EvansRyan202·
"There is nothing romantic, dramatic, or satisfying in modern conflict. It is all horrible, profoundly depressing; and now it carries with it a dreadful threat to civil populations." George C. Marshall, 1938
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Ami Dar
Ami Dar@AmiDar·
We need to start from the dignity of every human life. Every person is precious. Forgetting that, or never accepting it, has left us here.
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Ami Dar
Ami Dar@AmiDar·
Some people think that the idea of rules for war is ridiculous. But they are there for a reason: they serve everyone's interests. For example, it's in everyone's interest to agree that once soldiers surrender, they should not be killed. And now, in this war, nothing is more urgent than everyone committing not to harm water desalination plants, anywhere. Many other things should also be beyond the pale. But this one is crucial. The lives of millions of people hang on that alone.
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@[email protected]/interfluidity.com (bsky) retuiteado
Paul Crowley
Paul Crowley@ciphergoth·
This is an insane dodge. - Did your agency kill Mr Smith? - No, Sir. - We have a written order from you saying to stab him until he was dead. - Ah, yes, within the agency we only call it "kill" if you use a gun. Using a knife is just "terminating". So, no, we didn't "kill" him.
Paul Crowley tweet media
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@[email protected]/interfluidity.com (bsky) retuiteado
James Medlock
James Medlock@jdcmedlock·
A nice characteristic of LLMs is that switching frictions are really low because it's easy to generate basic text files to migrate. Big contrast to other software, and if they ever try to suppress this sort of prompt we should go Lina Khan on their asses.
Daniel San@dani_avila7

Just moved all my memory from "another chat" to Claude using the Import Memory feature This was literally the only reason I was still opening that other chat. If you want to do the same, follow the steps here: claude.com/import-memory The process is dead simple, one prompt extracts all your memory in the exact format Claude needs to import it. Took me like 2 minutes.

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