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dagny-hashtaggart:

Finally starting to see a real run on the grocery stores in Portland, at least if my local branches are an indication.

The bread aisle was almost completely cleaned out, but apparently people don’t much like whole wheat English muffins or burger buns, which is convenient because I do like whole wheat English muffins and burger buns.

 

rustingbridges:

Burger buns make sense as a leftover but I don’t understand English muffins. Compared to most bread items they keep well.

I mean, really, a run on premade bread is inherently farcical – it’s a terrible food item to stockpile, it doesn’t keep and by volume you’re mostly storing air.

But if I was going to, I’d hit the bagels first.

 

brin-bellway:

Bread keeps very well if you put it in the freezer. Just scrape off any significant collections of ice crystals before thawing, else it’ll get soggy.

The volume thing is a fair point, though: we do stockpile bread under normal circumstances, but one should probably cut it from the list if storage space is even *thinking* about becoming an issue.

 

rustingbridges:

this is true, but freezer space is typically the most premium space if you’re trying to build up a reserve, since most people have only a small freezer in their fridge (sidenote: if you want preservation over convenience, turning your fridge all the way to cold may convert part of it into a shitty freezer and will improve longevity in most of the rest of it).

anyway I was at the store and thinking about the toilet paper hypothesis – that it’s bulky and low margin, so stores stock as little as possible to not run out under normal conditions – and this totally applies to bread too. it’s cheap, it’s mostly air, and it expires faster than most stuff. so the tp hypothesis would explain why bread goes quickly too.

I was just thinking earlier today about how grateful I am for the eight people who are not here.

Once upon a time, long before I lived here, this house had a dozen inhabitants. They had *much* lower standards for the amount of indoor living space one person should have–by my own culture’s standards this house is not *ridiculously* roomy, though it could comfortably fit perhaps one or two more people–but nevertheless we have quite a bit of storage space, especially in a pinch.

For people with enough storage space and perhaps stability of housing (both of which, I am aware, are in all-too-short supply for many demographics), I continue to recommend supplementary freezers [link]. Very handy for stockpiling of all kinds. Do try to put them in areas where you can keep an eye on them, though: you don’t want it to go unnoticed if they break or get left open [link]. (I admit that our own freezer placement is not great, and we have occasionally lost food to this. Painful, but I expect it’s still worth it overall. Might also take it upon myself to do routine checks.)

(We also have a secondary mini-fridge, but we currently don’t keep it plugged in. Might come in handy for an intra-household quarantine, though!)


Tags:

#my parents may have run out of money but they still have a generation’s worth of accumulated physical capital #which I am very glad to have access to #reply via reblog #adventures in human capitalism #food #covid19 #101 Uses for Infrastructureless Computers

rustingbridges:

dagny-hashtaggart:

Finally starting to see a real run on the grocery stores in Portland, at least if my local branches are an indication.

The bread aisle was almost completely cleaned out, but apparently people don’t much like whole wheat English muffins or burger buns, which is convenient because I do like whole wheat English muffins and burger buns.

Burger buns make sense as a leftover but I don’t understand English muffins. Compared to most bread items they keep well.

I mean, really, a run on premade bread is inherently farcical – it’s a terrible food item to stockpile, it doesn’t keep and by volume you’re mostly storing air.

But if I was going to, I’d hit the bagels first.

Bread keeps very well if you put it in the freezer. Just scrape off any significant collections of ice crystals before thawing, else it’ll get soggy.

The volume thing is a fair point, though: we do stockpile bread under normal circumstances, but one should probably cut it from the list if storage space is even *thinking* about becoming an issue.


Tags:

#reply via reblog #food #covid19 #adventures in human capitalism #101 Uses for Infrastructureless Computers


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The IndieWeb Movement: Owning Your Data and Being the Change You Want to See in the Web · Jamie Tanna | Software (Quality) Engineer

{{Title link: https://www.jvt.me/posts/2019/10/20/indieweb-talk/ }}

{{OP by oligopsalter}}

moral-autism:

I think on this site, there are a lot of people who aren’t ready to buy a domain name, so I’ll mention Neocities. (And yes, it lets you export an archive of your site as many times as you like.)

Also, the line “completely alien technology like RSS” makes me sad.


Tags:

#interesting #101 Uses for Infrastructureless Computers

What is the March Meta Matters Challenge?

marchmetamatters:

Posted by: useryourlibrarian

As sites hosting art, text, music, and more continue to either close up shop or change their Terms of Service, there have been various efforts to save content on what is often very short notice. It would be even better if fans gave our works this attention before a crisis hits.

While creators have often used multiple sites to host their works, one type of work has generally been left out of fans’ efforts at archiving and preserving fanworks – meta. In many cases, meta posts have not been copied anywhere else other than the location where they were first posted, leaving them particularly vulnerable to loss.

So what if we can make a small dent in getting it saved? The March Meta Matters Challenge is focused on not just new meta, but making sure older meta gets a chance to be read and remain a part of fandom history. While new meta is also encouraged, the priority for Meta Matters is to make sure meta doesn’t vanish with sites or personal accounts when those get closed or moved.

That’s also why the challenge will be using the Archive of Our Own as a destination site.

A primary purpose for AO3 is to serve as a perpetual site for fanwork preservation – and this includes meta! It’s intended as a host of last resort, and it accepts all content and fandoms. Many people already have accounts there, and for those who don’t, they are free to get (and offer various perks). And for people who want to find meta, the site is designed for searchability (unlike, say, most social media sites).

This will be a month-long event and will function as follows: Read more… )

commentcount comments

source https://marchmetamatterschallenge.dreamwidth.org/581.html

 

definitelynotscott:

@watchmebitch @monstrous-hourglass I think I said before that some of your longer posts on the new lore/Noxus would be good on AO3 and I stand by that.

@olderthannetfic Hey, more about meta!

 

olderthannetfic:

I’ve just been looking at this!

It’s a great idea. I will indeed comb through my tumblr and see what should be transferred to AO3 for long term access. I am still dubious about the fandom purges one, but I have a number of actual essays that aren’t on there.

Who’s going to take the meta archiving challenge with me?

 

isaacsapphire:

I should dig out some of the meta I did a zillion years ago.


Tags:

#101 Uses for Infrastructureless Computers #signal boost #fandom #amnesia cw?

rationalists-out-of-context:

gwern sighs as he looks for a ref. oh for heaven’s sake. he deleted all of his tweets, and threadreader deleted their mirror, and IA didn’t catch it, and Evernotes doesn’t seem to support html/pdf export from the web, so I have to… export a PDF from Nixnote -_- good thing I clip these fucking things.
tl;dr: you need at least 4 layers of backup in order to prevent something from disappearing from the Internet


Tags:

#Gwern is a hell of a person #I hope to be that intensely myself one day #(also a while back I tried his linkchecker/archive-requester to see if I could automate that aspect of my WordPress project) #(whereupon it was made rapidly clear to me that Gwern has a hundred and ten GB of RAM and I…do not) #101 Uses for Infrastructureless Computers #amnesia cw

little-brisk:

has anyone found a good way to back up their tumblr that isn’t a complete fucking mess? all i want is an archive of my original posts, a function which every blogging platform since the invention of blogs has made extremely easy but we all know the hellsite wouldn’t be our home if it was a functional blogging platform, so

{{maryellencarter replied to little-brisk: I think @brin-bellway knows things about tumblr backups… }}

@maryellencarter​ summoned me here, since I have experience in this topic and am pretty much always up for talking about archiving methods.

So, I know of a few different options, depending on how exactly you define “good” and whether you specifically want *only* OPs or would be good with a full-blog archive too.

1. tumblr-utils. On Linux, you just download their zip, put the file labelled “tumblr_backup.py” in your home directory (I keep the rest of the folder elsewhere in case I ever need it for anything), and then open a command-line terminal and run “python tumblr_backup.py little-brisk”. I’ve never done it on other operating systems, but I expect it’s fairly similar; since this is a relatively popular method, we might be able to find someone with firsthand experience doing it on your operating system to give you more details.

By default, this will give you a local folder (a sub-folder of the folder your tumblr_backup.py file is in) containing both reblogs and OPs, with images included but not video or audio, and posts indexed by month but not by tag. There are various options you can add to the command [link]: for example, “python tumblr_backup.py –save-video –save-audio little-brisk” will include the audio and video as well as the images. Warning: if you use the “–tag-index” option and you have any tags (whether organisational or commentary) with a slash in them, the archiver will crash. I have not tested the “–no-reblog” option, but it does exist.

Depending on how many posts you keep and how many images were in them, the folder may be several GB in size and contain tens of thousands of files (most of them tucked away under the image and individual-post sub-folders). IME one *needs* to zip a large blog’s folder in order to move it around: attempting to copy 30k individual files to a USB drive or suchlike tends to result in stuff like “Estimated time remaining: 4 months”. Zipping a large blog only takes an hour or three, though, and then you can copy it to places in just a few more minutes.

2. WordPress. This is mostly for if you really want your backup to be public-facing: the formatting *is* a bit of a mess (especially on long reblog chains and tag rambles), and I personally have been chipping away at fixing my WordPress’s formatting for an entire year and am still in 2017 (admittedly, I’ve been doing some mental crop rotation lately).

I’m not sure if they offer an OP-only option.

If you’re feeling particularly paranoid and are willing to fiddle around with a few software guts, you can self-host this, or keep a kitted-out WordPress server stashed away on your computer in case you want to import into a self-hosted platform later [here is a post I wrote on how I did this].

3. I know it must be possible to use wget because I’ve seen people do it [link], but I’m not sure exactly which options you need to add to the terminal command to make it work properly. I just now made a few promising-looking variants of my Dreamwidth-archiving command [link], and none of them could get past the front page of any of the blogs I tested them on.

TumblThree is Windows-only and Soup is OPs-only, so I haven’t used them, but I hear some people like them.


Tags:

#reply via reblog #101 Uses for Infrastructureless Computers #Tumblr: a User’s Guide #the more you know #WordPress

PSA: TinyPic image hosting to shut down September 16

ao3org:

The image hosting service TinyPic has announced they will permanently shut down on September 16, 2019. To make sure their users know, TinyPic has made it so any images hosted on their servers no longer appear on third-party sites like AO3. Instead, a notice about TinyPic’s closure displays in the images’ place.

We strongly urge anyone using TinyPic-hosted images for their fanworks to back up their images as soon as possible.


Tags:

#101 Uses for Infrastructureless Computers #signal boost #AO3 #amnesia cw?

another-normal-anomaly:

I just got my Alcor membership finalized! I have the amulet and everything!

\o/

Oddly enough, I was just researching cryonics myself these past two days.

My conclusion was “given my current financial situation, increasing my expenses by ~USD$1k/year is probably more likely to get me killed than not immediately signing up for vitrification is”. (yes I saw the Cryonics Institute, but frankly I would not trust any sort of long-term facility in *Detroit* further than I could throw it) Alcor membership is now #6 on my list of Things to Save Up For Once My Finances Permit Saving Up That Much, below the non-shitty car but above the fire-escape ladder.

(I get the impression that the demographics are pretty different, but cryonics nevertheless parses to me as a Neat Prepper Thing. I have a soft spot for things that one will likely never find useful but will be *extremely glad for* if one does.)


Tags:

#not a day goes by that I don’t add at least a few strands to one safety net or another #cryonics #death tw #transhumanism #reply via reblog #adventures in human capitalism #101 Uses for Infrastructureless Computers

staff:

Hello Tumblr 👋

Today, Tumblr’s owner, Verizon Media, announced that Automattic plans to acquire Tumblr. Automattic is the technology company behind products such as WordPress.com, WooCommerce, Jetpack, and Simplenote—products that help connect creators, businesses, and publishers to communities around the world. 

We couldn’t be more excited to be joining a team that has a similar mission. Many of you know WordPress.com, Automattic’s flagship product. WordPress.com and Tumblr were both early pioneers among blogging platforms.

Automattic shares our vision to build passionate communities around shared interests and to democratize publishing so that anyone with a story can tell it, especially when they come from under-heard voices and marginalized communities.

We look forward to continuing to create products that empower your self-expression and sense of community and that build a better, more inclusive internet. 

We’re excited for our future together!

<3 Tumblr

Some things staff won’t tell you [link]:

  • They’re dumping it for–in the grand scheme of things–almost nothing
  • No, Automattic *isn’t* ending the NSFW ban
  • As for what this means for WordPress, executives from both Tumblr and Automattic will “look for ways WordPress.com and Tumblr can share services and functionality.” We wouldn’t expect any immediate changes, though.

I think my main reaction to this is to trust WordPress a bit less. The main appeal of the place for me is that it *isn’t* Tumblr, a separate platform with separate interests.

I’m going to continue my project to create a more stable copy of my Tumblr on WordPress. I’ll probably even continue my plan to start giving them money this winter (what better way to give people an incentive not to screw you over?).

But I’ve been wavering, lately, on whether to *also* look into self-hosting. Not as a Plan A, you understand: I’d *rather* not go through the effort of running the whole infrastructure myself. But I have put (am putting, will put) a lot of effort into making a specifically *Wordpress-compatible* version of my Tumblr, and this WordPress-compatible version is probably distinct enough to deserve its own backup. (After all, if I *did* end up self-hosting one day, that’s probably the software I’d use.)

WordPress export files don’t include images, which would make it a massive pain to re-instantiate my blog using only an export file (not *impossible*–all of the images are also stored elsewhere–but painful, and if I wanted possible-but-painful I’d just re-instantiate from a tumblr-utils scrape), but perhaps a tiny, local server to receive site-to-site exports, not to be made outward-facing unless necessary.

I’m not sure yet what the most practical option is, and how exactly one goes about it. I’ll have to look into it. But I *am* going to look into it.


Tags:

#in which Brin is paranoid #(but what else is new) #101 Uses for Infrastructureless Computers #PSA #Wordpress #The Great Tumblr Apocalypse #reply via reblog #oh look an update

sigmaleph:

i always feel irrationally angry at Things (posters, ads, whatever) that specify something is happening on some date but not the year. i see them, some unspecified time in the future, and suffer burning curiosity

won’t someone please think of the future
[Original post]


Tags:

#yes this