
Diarmad McNally
4.7K posts

Diarmad McNally
@ixdStudio
Human-Computer Interaction. Creator of Cryptographic Cards®
London Se unió Şubat 2009
2K Siguiendo1.1K Seguidores

@tomdoorley Perhaps but an improvement on rum, sodomy and the lash 😀
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It's an unusual match. The French usually serve Sauternes with foie gras. And the glasses are an odd shape...
Tom Antonov@Tom_Antonov
Pomerol red wine and foie gras served in the officers mess on a French navy submarine. 🇫🇷🍽 via @LEXPRESS
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@buccocapital @WillManidis PDFs are the digital cockroaches of AI Armageddon 😀
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@WillManidis I like how implied in this future the PDF still survives. It is unkillable
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@BBCNews Gov unsure whether to make gesture of closing the gate or locking the gate after horse has bolted from entirely different stable.
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Government backtracks on AI and copyright after outcry from major artists bbc.in/4rXtO0p
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@trwsenti The worst part is many lose their souls and even become passionate about a crap job because of cognitive dissonance. They wanted to have a good life but took a job in insurance when it came around. They talk about amortisation like they used to talk about music.
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nobody told me this when I started working a 9-5:
- it's not even a 9-5. every job I've had has been 8 to 6.
- you get home, cook dinner, and don't feel like doing anything else for the rest of the day. then it's right back to work before you know it.
- you used to play guitar. you used to read books. you used to work out. they just slowly get phased out of you and you don't even notice it happening.
- you eat lunch at your desk because the job is understaffed and you have too much to do. that "1 hour break" they sold you doesn't exist.
- you leave the house at 7. you get home at 6. you are physically and mentally exhausted. this is a "good" day.
- you sit at your desk and can't get past 5 minutes without being the most bored you've ever been in your life
- you feel ready to have a mid-life crisis in 3 years let alone before you turn 40
- one day you realise you're giving up 5 days of your life every single week just to have a few hours at night and 2 days on the weekend. and you just accept it.
♩@readitandwe3p
No no no no this cannot be my life for 30+ years
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@MartinSLewis You should spilt the results by sex as testosterone influences speed that people can tap.
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@keithwrjones A very nice multifuncional example without mode switching is pressing a button where a long press has an additional feature. Short press = windscreen wipe, Long press = wipe plus water
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@ixdStudio It’s not remotely my field of expertise, but given many products we all use have multifunction controls, I would suggest it’s well within the wit of the vast majority of people to quickly learn what those functions are. Preferable to having separate controls for _each_ function.
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@1ssve You directly ask your ‘boss’, “Is there anything you need me to do now?” If he does, you stay. It’s always no.
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@keithwrjones Yes the separate controls for each function, such as the old TV remotes, are right at the beginning of the evolution of control design and usability. Mode switching and locking controls came next but went beyond the wit of many, before contextual design and not forgetting voice.
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@jayrayner1 The better correction would be the patisserie stand demands MANY more visits!
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@keithwrjones I don't know what it does in this car but one way it could be a problem if in Media mode it skips a track, but in Driver Assistance mode the same press adjusts cruise-control distance.
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@keithwrjones Mode specifically in both physical and digital, lots of writings on this from Norman and Raskin among others. The issue is when the same action produces different outcomes depending on a hidden state.
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@keithwrjones One of the most common, simple examples (perhaps both physical and digital) is the errors forced by the Caps Lock on a keyboard.
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@SketchesbyBoze I read it aged about 12 as it was bundled with the Commodore 64 Hobbit adventure game. Loved it and then read LotR. Theres probably a deeper point there how tech used to stimulate rather than hinder reading.
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Someone once told me that The Hobbit is too difficult a book for a child of twelve to read. The Hobbit, famously a children’s book. Fewer and fewer people are able to read in part because we continue to lower expectations. Kids in the 1940s were reading Defoe & Dickens.
𝘚𝘦𝘳 𝘌𝘭𝘭𝘪𝘦 ➳⋆⟡⋆♡@gildfae
It’s a flex that the hobbit was the first non-picture book I read in elementary school and I’ll take that flex with me to the grave
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Conversations about Morrissey, Musk, Rowling etc. are as toxic and uncivil as anything here. The targets are different, not the vitriol. Still very little engagement by comparison and no Community Notes equivalent.
Bluesky@bluesky
If you haven't checked us out in a while, we've been busy. Doing work to make conversations less toxic and more civil, and adding new ways to help you find your friends on Bluesky. See what you've been missing: bsky.app
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@adudetrading Yes, all involuntarily. Nobody hiring a FTE at that age and IR35 killed consulting.
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has anyone else noticed that everyone you meet between ages 55-65 are retiring right now?
doomer@uncledoomer
has anyone else noticed that everyone you meet between ages 25-35 is having kids right now
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@MerrynSW Most of a financial advisor’s role is to alleviate a client’s justified fear of committing their savings to complex products they don’t fully understand, easing the discomfort of inaction or making the wrong choice. In the future will people trust human or machine more?
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Diarmad McNally retuiteado

NEWS: Less than 33% of the 1 million Plug-in Hybrid Electric vehicles in Germany plugged in either occasionally or not at all.
Just 0.8% of Porsche drivers used electricity for the energy used for driving, for an average of 7kWh over two years. In other words, the average Porsche PHEV driver charged their battery less than 50% of its capacity — once. Toyota PHEV drivers were the highest at ~43%.
• Porsche: 0.8%
• VW: 24.7%
• Volvo: 26.5%
• Audi: 26.5%
• BMW: 27.0%
• Hyundai: 27.5%
• Mercedes: 27.7%
• Jeep: 27.7%
• Kia: 34.8%
• Ford: 36.7%
• Toyota: 42.8%
Studies have previously shown that PHEVs produce about 3.5 times more emissions than their official ratings would suggest. This new study explains why since it directly assesses how much electricity the vehicles gained from charging. (PHEVs, like all hybrids, can operate in a mixed mode, using both gas and electricity. The study used data straight off the vehicles to disentangle the two.)
According to real-world data drawn by the Fraunhofer Institute from the vehicles’ onboard computers. techcrunch.com/2026/02/24/its…
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