Dan Lerch
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Dan Lerch
@dan-lerch.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
Dan, Systems Librarian, should be reading more, cyclist, bread maker. Occasional video gamer. Lives in British Columbia. Views are not my employers. He/Him.
Dan […]

🌉 bridged from ⁂ https://mastodon.social/@dan_lerch, follow @ap.brid.gy to interact
Reposted by Dan Lerch
TikTok alternative Skylight soars to 380K+ users after TikTok U.S. deal finalized
TikTok alternative Skylight soars to 380K+ users after TikTok U.S. deal finalized | TechCrunch
Skylight, a TikTok alternative built on open protocols, has had a busy weekend.
techcrunch.com
January 26, 2026 at 6:51 PM
Reposted by Dan Lerch
The BSDCan Call For Papers (CFP) is open until January 17th, see https://www.bsdcan.org/2026/papers.html

If you tried to sign up as a new indico user and did not get the confirmation mail in time, please try again. The problem has been fixed.

The holidays can be a great time to get that […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
December 27, 2025 at 7:44 PM
Silksong Act 3, 150 hours in. Coral towers. I quit.
November 18, 2025 at 7:27 PM
I saw One Battle After Another, the new PT Anderson film some are calling a masterpiece. The acting was phenomenal and the technicality of the film making was unparalleled, but as a cohesive piece of art, I absolutely hated this thing. Imagine Old Country For Old Men, or Pulp Fiction except all […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
October 24, 2025 at 8:04 AM
Reposted by Dan Lerch
August 20, 2025 at 7:58 PM
I have been using #nextcloud to store files in the cloud and sync my calendar. Lately, despite having descent specs it kept crashing. Yesterday the SSL stopped working, and no matter what I tried it wouldn't renew. Hosting is also costing approx $50 CDN a month. Are there any non-big tech […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
July 22, 2025 at 4:56 PM
Small town Pennsylvania man discovers eternal life by getting to experience the same day over and over again. Blows it over a girl and an aversion to cold weather.

#describeacharactergenerically
#hashtaggames
July 13, 2025 at 5:23 AM
Squid game seasons 2 and 3 but the dudes on the ship actually do something to move the plot forward. #squidgame
July 1, 2025 at 9:40 PM
Reposted by Dan Lerch
also I wrote a short post on self hosting and open source movement

if you’re interested it’s here🥹
pvco.medium.com/why-self-hos...
Why Self-Hosting and Open Source Matter More Than Ever
In today’s Internet everything you do online can be tracked, stored and monetized.
pvco.medium.com
June 12, 2025 at 7:04 PM
It only took like 6 months but I finally wrote my 2nd blog post. This one is about creating a Kiosk experience, such as browsing a store's inventory. https://danlerch.ca/making-a-kiosk #linux #python #gnomekiosk #opensource
Making a Kiosk - Dan Lerch
danlerch.ca
June 25, 2025 at 6:18 PM
Reposted by Dan Lerch
June 10, 2025 at 5:38 PM
[Moment of Internet Clarity]

2 weeks ago something in my internet brain snapped. I was scrolling through my feeds on BlueSky and YouTube and suddenly had this realization I had no desire to engage with the content. The rage baiting and bad news, or the never ending grand standing from wannabe […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
May 11, 2025 at 10:08 PM
Mastodon does not have the user base of Blue Sky but it definitely has a larger diversity of discussion that’s easier to engage with. At least that’s my experience. The algorithm mostly promotes rage bait, and no matter what feed you pick everyone is pretty much yelling about how bad the world […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
May 3, 2025 at 7:40 PM
Chantelle Hebert points out that Pierre Poilievre’s riding of Carleton has a large contingent of Civil Servants. His message to them: they were all going to be fired in a DOGE style purge. Clearly not a winning strategy.
April 29, 2025 at 5:18 PM
homestar runner returns! https://youtu.be/2z7kVH9xePM?si=PXulB0kuIwoUoSyC .com! .com! .com!
April 26, 2025 at 3:12 AM
Reposted by Dan Lerch
Map of British English dialects
### **_This map took me a long time to make, and is very detailed, but will always be incomplete and inaccurate due to the nature of language._** ### Why this map is so detailed The diversity of English dialects in the United Kingdom is enormous. It’s common for people from either side of a river, mountain, or even town to speak noticeably different ways, with particular features that immediately mark someone out as being from a specific area, to those who have an ear for it. This is pretty normal in any large region that has been speaking a language continually for 1600 years. You will find the same thing in Germany, Norway, France, and countless other countries. Languages evolve over time, and physical distance between regions means that new features often spread slowly, leading to dialectal differences. Sometimes these differences are small, and only easily recognised by people from the relevant region. Other times there are very clear distinctions, with neighbouring dialects sounding almost like different languages to those unaccustomed to them. Here I have tried to capture as much nuance as possible. I’ve spent the last few years pooling together every study, survey, map, and database I can find, and then subjecting my image to several rounds of peer feedback. The members of my Facebook group, “Ah yes, the British accent”, were also a huge help in trying to make these borders as accurate as possible. The end result is an image which is, to my knowledge, the most detailed map of British dialects ever made. But it is still very much unfinished, and it always will be. ### Why this map is wrong, and always will be Maps are great. They allow us to display complex geographic data in a way that is visually appealing and easily understood. But often reality is just not that simple. **There’s no precise definition of a “dialect”** The definition is easy enough: a dialect is a form of language that has distinct vocabulary, pronunciation (accent), and/or grammar. But how different does a way of speaking need to be to constitute a different dialect? If any noticeable difference between the way two areas speak is a dialect, then my image is actually using very broad categories and missing much detail. My own tiny hometown (on the border between “North Cumbrian” and “West Northumbrian”) has words and pronunciations that don’t fit it into either grouping, but I think showing my town as a distinct bubble here would be a dangerous precedent. During my research for this image I talked with many people who, like me, perceive their village, town, or even street as being distinct from the surrounding area, and they’re probably right. But that kind of precision would make my image far more complicated, far harder to create, and likely far less accurate in other ways. So I’ve drawn lines around larger areas where more obvious distinctions can be found, without any strong criteria for what constitutes a dialect. I’ve also tried to show the similarities between neighbouring dialects by using a colour scheme that changes gradually across the country. **Borders between dialects are rarely hard lines** More often than not, dialects do not suddenly change as you move from one region to another. They flow and merge over time in complex and messy ways, like coloured inks diffusing into water. Yes, there is definitely a difference between the dialect of Barrow in southern Cumbria and Carlisle in the north, but in reality the region between them is a spectrum, and the placement of any dialect border across Cumbria is pretty arbitrary. Dialects on either side of it will have more in common with each other than they do with the rest of their side of the county. In an attempt to show this, the first few drafts of this map had no white borders, instead just similar neighbouring colours against each other. However, this turned out to be a nightmare for colour-blind people. I then put in a combination of dotted lines for smaller distinctions, and solid, thick lines to show different dialect groups. But that didn’t feel right either, as while it’s easy to group together the East Midlands as separate from the West Midlands, the “Mid” Midlands doesn’t really have any solid distinction like that: it’s a gradient between the two sides. So I’ve left it all as dotted lines, almost as an apology for the map’s inability to show the true messy gradient that exists. I hope they serve to convey the vagueness and permeability of these “borders”. In reality these colours should blur and fade together with gradients and checkerboard markings and about 35 extra spatial dimensions, but that would very much defeat the point of trying to make an intelligible map. **Some dialects are not geographically specific at all** While most dialects can be described as regional, spoken mainly in one area, that isn’t always the case. London is the prime example of this: my map cops out with “London Dialects” (plural), because in reality London is incredibly diverse, and deserves its own map to show that complexity. Except no, nobody will ever map that map, because more than anywhere geography is not how London dialects are arranged. Cultural and socioeconomic background is a much bigger deciding factor, and dialects like Multicultural London English aren’t found in one area, but all across London. Other examples of dialects hat aren’t in this image because they aren’t specifically regional include Received Pronunciation, the “standard” prestige dialect spoken across the southern Britain; and Pitmatic, a dialect spoken by scattered coal-mining towns across the northeast of England. So yes, this map may be unsatisfying, arbitrary, and unfinished, and no amount of work on it will really change that. It exists mainly as a testament to the huge dialectal diversity of the English language within the UK, and as a way for me to express my fascination and love for that diversity. ### Other important notes **What I mean by “British”** This is a map specifically of British English dialects. That means dialects of the English language of the UK (England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland), and the Crown Dependencies (The Isle of Man, The Bailiwick of Jersey, and the Bailiwick of Guernsey), which are not part of the UK but are “British”. It does not include Ireland, because Ireland is not British. I considered making this another of my “British and Irish” maps, but honestly this project was already enormous and impossible enough that adding the Republic of Ireland into the mix felt like a step too far. If you’re unclear on the use of terms like “UK” and “British”, this post is for you: **The difference between Britain, Great Britain, and the United Kingdom.** **Why Northern Ireland is included** I _did_ include Northern Ireland, which could be a little controversial (as so many things involving NI are). Broadly speaking, there are two main groups of people in Northern Ireland: those who see themselves as Irish, and those who see themselves as British. Because there are people in Northern Ireland who see themselves as British, I think it’s fitting to include them on a map of British dialects. This does not mean everyone in Northern Ireland is British, and if I ever make a map of Irish dialects, I will also be including Northern Ireland in that, as it obviously has a major Irish population. There is also a strong link between Ulster dialects and the dialects of Scotland, as both have a strong Scots influence, which makes Northern Ireland an important part of the picture here. If you want to read more about how the languages of Britain and Ireland have evolved and influenced each other, see this post: **A Brief History of British and Irish Languages** **Why Scots/Doric are not included:** This map is specifically of the English language, and Scots (and its subset, Doric), are not English. Scots is a close sibling to English, but it is distinct enough to be considered its own language. That said, the English dialects of the Scottish Lowlands are heavily influenced by Scots (with many speakers being bilingual in the two languages), and so the dialects are largely the same as the dialects of Scots. The notable exception being that there is no English dialect called “Doric”. Similarly Welsh, Scottish Gaelic, Cornish, Manx, and Irish do not belong on this map, despite being spoken within its borders. For a full list of languages spoken in the UK and Ireland and how they relate, this is the post for you: **Every Native British and Irish Language** I’ve got a ton of other maps on my site now, but if you enjoyed this one I recommend **Eight British and Irish Accent maps** , which includes a bunch of maps (eight, actually) showing the differences in pronunciation of specific sounds and works in Britain and Ireland. If you appreciate content like this and would like to help fund and motivate my work, I’d massively appreciate a donation to my **Patreon account**. As a small creator with a deep hatred of ads, my Patrons are the only income I receive for my Starkey Comics stuff, and without them I’d find it harder to justify just how much of my time and effort I put into these images. Oh, and make sure to **give my facebook page a follow**. I share everything I make on my facebook page, often before I get round to sharing it here on my site. ### Share this: * Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window) * Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) *
starkeycomics.com
April 19, 2025 at 5:04 PM
This classic hip hop track from France has some serious vibes. Tonton du Bled (uncle from the village) from the group 113.

Ce morceau de hip-hop classique a les ondes très cool. Tonton du Bled du groupe 113.

https://youtu.be/bxi67akqWN0?si=sEaoIegju9vr3aQA

#hiphop #france #music #Musiqie
April 12, 2025 at 7:58 PM
Reposted by Dan Lerch
China, economically, is about to metaphorically speaking, drop a nuclear bomb, on the United States.

China has suggested they will, null and void, all American copyrights, patents, and trademarks.

Imagine everything ever created or currently being created in the United States in China's eyes […]
Original post on mk.absturztau.be
mk.absturztau.be
April 9, 2025 at 2:11 AM
#ruinamovie Robo-Rent-a-Cop
March 31, 2025 at 5:51 AM
#ruinamovie Lord of the Wedding Rings Trilogy
March 31, 2025 at 5:47 AM
#ruinamovie Pulp Non-Fiction
March 30, 2025 at 4:10 PM
New Bike Day!
March 29, 2025 at 11:00 PM
March 17, 2025 at 12:09 AM