Daniel Martin
@fizbin.bsky.social
1.2K followers 170 following 3.8K posts
One of many, many people with this particular "real name". You might know me from... IDK. College? Did we work together once? Prodigy's old math forum? debian-devel? A certain social MUSH? xoogler slack? "Making Light" comments? (he/him)
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fizbin.bsky.social
I made a web thing a bit ago that I find useful maybe once a month or so on average, and it's been a while since I promoted it.

It's for when you have a long enough zoom meeting that everyone needs a break; it puts up a sign to remind everyone when you're resuming.

breakmessage.com

#dev
Break Message
breakmessage.com
fizbin.bsky.social
If I present someone with a document that looks like a legal thing and say "this document allows me to do XYZ", when in fact the document allows no such thing and I will give up if someone objects, I've still attempted fraud, right?
fizbin.bsky.social
Yeah, I really don't understand that—they have a nice site buried in there if they could just focus on the location-centric parts (local businesses/organizations, and FB marketplace) and shove all that algorithmic discussion crap over onto Threads.

Zuck gets a new idea? Shove it off on a new site.
fizbin.bsky.social
I walked around locally on Saturday for #OctoberBigDay and didn't see any unusual bird species or get any really great shots, but I did get two new additions to my collection of #awkward #bird photos:
A mockingbird taking off from a tree with lots of green leaves. The camera catches the bird's wings completely back, giving the impression almost that the wings are held back there.

ƒ/7.1  1/640 s  300 mm  ISO 400 A rock pigeon taking off from a bridge's girders, with the photo catching the moment the bird's wings are flapped forward, covering the entire head.

ƒ/7.1  1/640 s  300 mm  ISO 1600
fizbin.bsky.social
A little unusually for a #BirdOfTheDay post, it's a bunch of photos from my phone camera instead of photos from the camera camera, but for today's theme of #wings I kept thinking of these Magnificent Frigatebirds that just seem to have an inordinate amount of wing for their body.
A black bird almost in silhouette against a blue sky, with some ocean water visible in the corner. The bird is in almost classic "tiny m" shape.

The visual of the bird is tiny, because the photo is from a distance and not zoomed in, but the bird itself is huge. (wingspan over 2m)

Taken at Palm Beach, Aruba. Another view of the black Magnificent Frigatebird, this time heading slightly away from the camera and to the right. This shot shows the sharp, angular nature of its wings. The background is a blue sky with a large but non-threatening cloud in the background. Some ocean and fishing boats are visible at the bottom of the image.

Taken at Palm Beach, Aruba. (Hadicurari Fishermen’s Pier) Another distance shot of the frigatebird, showing the classic outline that looks almost bat-like. The background is a blue sky with just the hint of a small cloud visible.

Taken at Palm Beach, Aruba. The Magnificent Frigatebird against a clear blue sky. This photo, if zoomed in, shows the forked tail being held together in a point.

Taken at Palm Beach, Aruba.
fizbin.bsky.social
Late for today's #BirdOfTheDay since I wasn't sure I had anything today's theme ('Family Paridae' aka 'Tits, Chickadees & Titmice')

I've seen tufted titmice around here, but haven't ever managed any decent pictures.

But this Carolina Chickadee showed up outside my office window in August, so:
A bird with a black and white head, white chest, and gray back and wings perches on the soft evergreen leaves of an Arbor Vitae. Its black break is slightly open. 

f/4.0 1/250 s. 100mm. ISO 3200
fizbin.bsky.social
...aunts, and uncles to say to them "No, Aunt Jane, this is fake, and here's how you know"?

Why are people in media suggesting that there's an obligation to engage with the noise machine instead of with the machine where we have hard evidence that it actually changes people?
fizbin.bsky.social
But do we have anything like the same sort of evidence that X is changing people's minds the way we have for viral idiocy on Facebook? Or is X just changing the background noise?

Why aren't mainstream media outlets exhorting left-leaning people to engage with their FB-poisoned grandparents...
fizbin.bsky.social
Facebook use is known to drive people further right, and to have lots of money being poured into it to drive people further right.

Now compare this to X.

X has driven what it shows people further right, and the face X shows the world is manipulated toward the right by its owner.
fizbin.bsky.social
The thing is, why *aren't* people making that moral argument?

We know that right wingers like the hard core gun nuts use Facebook groups to organize.

We know that FB targeting data was used to swing 2016.

We know that fake/"spoof" news stories shared on Facebook moved certain demos rightward.
fizbin.bsky.social
I want a world where this isn't the case and every little mom and pop place has a simple website that they can keep up to date that doesn't require registering for the most invasive ad tracking ever, but that's not the world we live in.
fizbin.bsky.social
"No one is made to feel duty bound to engage with Facebook"... uh...

If you want to find current information about local businesses, organizations, churches, Facebook is it. _Maybe_ there's a website maintained within the past year, but it likely directs you to Facebook for more up-to-date stuff.
fizbin.bsky.social
While it is probably safe to consume pork roll (or "Taylor ham") without frying it first, I can't imagine why you'd want to.

It'd be like eating ham steak straight, without frying. Why would you do that?
fizbin.bsky.social
Gov. Murphy tried to claim when he was first running that:
1) Central Jersey exists, and is where he's from, and
2) There the name is "Taylor Pork" (just those two words)

I don't think anyone believed him, but that's what he said.
fizbin.bsky.social
The one redeeming feature appears to be that they cut the pork roll multiple times before frying it and didn't do the weird "just one slice to the center so that you end up with pacman" thing.
fizbin.bsky.social
Ah.

The ABC Islands are pretty much the only places outside actual Venezuela you can regularly see a Venezuelan Troupial, so I took a guess. (Knowing that Aruba also has loads of barn swallows that exhibit that sort of behavior)
Two barn swallows in flight. This was at a circular dirt road in the Bubali Bird Sanctuary where they'd just swoop around again and again.
fizbin.bsky.social
Co-signed; I first met her back in college.

What I like about the imagined CatNet is that it manages to feel in interactions a bit like a social mush I was on 25+ years ago, but is also something I could imagine today with a discord-esque UI, given the sci-fi machine you'd need on the back end.
fizbin.bsky.social
Wait, are you in Aruba too? My wife and I just returned from a week there.

Recommendation if you have a day you can do it: get to the Bubali Bird sanctuary early, birdwatch until 8am when Diana's Pancake Palace opens right across the road, go have breakfast there.
A yellow warbler (medium-small yellow bird with light brown stripes down its chest) sits on a branch and sings, mouth open. One eye faces the camera. 

This little guy was *right there*, so close I had to lean back a bit to get the camera's autofocus to work.
fizbin.bsky.social
I'm rereading a YA novel from a few years ago and I'm really jealous of the aggressive social media clustering algorithm imagined there. ("Catfishing on Catnet", @naomikritzer.bsky.social's follow-up to her Hugo-winning short story "Cat Pictures Please")
fizbin.bsky.social
Seriously, this bird was almost too close to focus on since the lens I had on the camera at the time has a minimum focus distance of 1.5 m.
fizbin.bsky.social
Time for another #BirdOfTheDay and today's theme from @alan678.bsky.social is #Beakful (so, something being carried/held in the beak)

Here we have an American Robin I used before for the "all weather" theme, but a different picture from that same morning
An American Robin steps on a gravestone with a curved, circular top. One foot is raised. In the robin's break is a worm.

The background is green made by out-of-focus grass. 

ƒ/5.6  1/640 s. 300 mm. ISO 800
fizbin.bsky.social
Today's #BirdOfTheDay theme is "Juveniles/Chicks", so here's some wild Muscovy Ducklings from yesterday.

For ducks in temperate zones it's much too late in the year to have ducklings this small still, but in the Caribbean seasons are more vague suggestions than organizing life principles.
An adult Muscovy Duck with characteristic black and white feathers and red facial growth leads six yellow and brown ducklings in the water. An adult Muscovy Duck with black and white feathers and red face mask leads at least five ducklings to the shore out of the water.

A White-cheecked Pintail rests on the shore slightly out of focus in the foreground. For ducklings from themselves on land right after getting out of the water. An adult Muscovy Duck stands and makes a display at the other birds, stepping in front of her ducklings (at least five)
fizbin.bsky.social
For today's #BirdOfTheDay theme of #spotted, here's this yellow warbler who came up right near where we were watching other #birds this morning and started singing at full volume until we turned around and spotted him. This is his "took you long enough, now take some photos of *me* please" look.
A bright yellow bird with dark yellow lines on its chest states directly at the camera while pitching on a small branch. The background is dark greenery with bits of gray-blue sky peaking through.
fizbin.bsky.social
In the Wizard of Oz books, wasn't one of the things considered when Dorothy disappeared "maybe she fell into the pig pen"?
fizbin.bsky.social
Later books deconstruct magical society and the lies it's built on.