A small tool to view real-world ActivityPub objects as JSON! Enter a URL
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Accept
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to the server to view the underlying object.
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"content": "<br />Sanity…<br />Posted on February 15, 2025\t<br /><br />I would like to think we are entering a saner time with the second Trump presidency, a better energy policy, perhaps a chance at reeling in the insane Federal deficit, some respect for the constitution and the rights elucidated in said document, and perhaps we can end some of the homelessness and poverty and the general death cult that has enveloped not only our nation but the world.<br /><br />The biggest challenge I see in our future though isn’t global warming or poverty, or freedom, it is polarization. People are so polarized now that we can’t even communicate the areas we agree upon and perhaps act favorably upon those.<br /><br />My concern for the future of humanity is less that we’re going to fry ourselves in an overheated planet, more than we’re going to run out of commercially viable fossil fuels and not have a replacement. Then we won’t be able to grow distribute food let alone do all of the other activities necessary to our survival.<br /><br />Let me discuss a few myths, and explain how I’ve come to the conclusions that I have. First, you often here quoted that 97% of Scientists agree that human caused global warming by our emission of greenhouse gases is an existential threat is a falsehood. It is a lie spread by those with heavy investments in these fuels to create artificial scarcity thus driving up prices and enriching themselves. It is probably true that 97% of scientists would agree that global warming is in part exacerbated by human activity, and that we play at least a minor role, but probably less than 3% agree that it is an existential threat or that it is anywhere near that which mainstream media portrays. I am inclined to agree with this view though I also would say it is a source of unnecessary disruption that could be largely avoided.<br /><br />Let me explain some of the reasons for my beliefs. First, there is a lack of good data. Oh you can say yes we have direct temperature readings going back more than 100 years, and these records show significant warming. What most people don’t know is that almost all land weather stations are in heat islands, near busy airports or in busy metropolitan settings that are on average 3-10 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than average temperatures. And satellite temperature readings tend to suggest a decrease, and it is argued this is because they are measuring the upper atmosphere above where the heat is trapped. Both of these things are true, and the result is we do not have good reliable temperature data. Thus we have nothing to test models against that is reliable and thus we can not determine how reliable models are.<br /><br />And then there are psychological factors. Every year somewhere we beat all time temperature highs. But by the same token every winter somewhere we break all time temperature lows. Psychologically this feels threatening, but the truth is that weather is a fractal pattern sitting on top of cyclic variations, and thus the longer the sample time the greater the excursions. There is also much media hype suggesting an increase in the frequency and strength of tropical storms and of forest fires, neither is true. If you look at data that only goes back to 1980 you can see a rise, but if you look back to 1900, you’ll see 1925-1935 is the absolute worst period by a wide margin for both.<br /><br />So let’s talk about physics for a minute. First, methane though it might be a much stronger greenhouse gas in terms of the spectrum it can trap, it only lasts on average 12 years in the atmosphere, this means it is NOT a long term threat. It is claimed carbon-dioxide lasts hundreds to thousands of years, again not born out in the data, there is considerable variation between summer and winter in the Northern hemisphere because three fourths of the worlds lands masses are in the Northern hemisphere and thus there is significant differences in photosynthesis over the course of a year, and since these variations make a significant difference in only a fraction of a year, one can surmise that the lifetime of carbon dioxide is much shorter than advertised, especially since increased CO2 has resulted in radically increased photosynthesis removal of CO2, but photosynthesis is only a minor removal of CO2, the majority removal mechanism is marine life. Marine life uses CO2 to build it’s calcium-carbonate shells, these creatures then die and their shells fall to the seafloor. The seafloor eventually subducts under a another crustal plate and with the exception of a small amount of CO2 returned to the atmosphere when a small portion of that crust melts and returns to the surface via volcanism. This process is in fact what is mainly responsible for the decline of carbon dioxide levels from 3000-5000 parts per million near the beginning of the time of dinosaurs to the 280 parts per million around the beginning of the 20th century. And this process ultimately will be what terminates life on Earth.<br /><br />Another reason I believe that the cause for CO2 caused warming is exaggerated is the physics involved. Gases do not absorb radiation over a broad spectrum, they absorb along narrow spectral lines. When those lines fall near the maximum wavelength of black body radiation for the Earth’s temperature, they have maximal effect. When the temperature rises or falls such that the peak of the black body radiation no longer corresponds with the absorptive spectral lines, then they have less effect. And carbon dioxide is already at a level where these lines are saturated by approximately 12 feet off the ground. Adding more carbon dioxide will slightly broaden these lines but it will not increase their depths. It is for this reason that adding additional CO2 is NOT a linear but rather a diminishing effect.<br /><br />There is much talk of a “tipping point”, a point beyond which there will be a runaway green house effect, and Venus is actually often referred to as an example, but there are gross misrepresentations here. First, Venus receives 50% again as much solar radiation per square meter of atmosphere than Earth does. Second, Venus has an atmosphere approximately 100x as thick as the Earth’s, no matter what it’s makeup that’s a much thicker insulating blanket. Lastly, Venus has no plate tectonics, no photosynthesis, and no marine life to remove CO2, and no water cycle to remove it via mineral weathering. So this is an Apples to Watermelon comparison, two entirely different systems. Venus didn’t runaway, it NEVER had any method of removal. All fo the CO2 EVER put into Venuses atmosphere is still there. Earth on the other had started out with mostly nitrogen, then CO2, and then a small amount of argon in it’s atmosphere and over time has become 78% nitrogen, 1% argon, 21% oxygen, and just a smiggin of CO2.<br /><br />All that said, the Earth is very good at homeostasis and there are mechanisms that somewhat counter the effects of the increased CO2, for example, there is 15% MORE area that has green plants since 1900, this is because plants have little pores called stomata to take in CO2 which is their food, and when CO2 is sparse they have more of them and they are opened longer. This results in greater water loss resulting in no survival in arid regions, but as CO2 increases, they produce fewer stomata and they do not keep them as open as long. This results in better water retention and better survival in arid regions. As a result we see greening of what used to be deserts. We also see more CO2 dissolved in oceans which up to a point results in marine life removing it faster, and we also see faster weathering of rock, also removing it faster, all of these mechanisms means the CO2 we put into the air will be removed at a higher rate than it has in the past.<br /><br />Now there are some aspects of the Earth’s systems that are negatively affected, and these are greater concern I think than warming per se’. For example, you hear of Arctic ice, especially Greenlandic and Icelandic glaciers being removed at a faster rate, well it is true they are calving at a higher rate but also there is more snow being precipitated resulting in a net glacier growth. This might seem to be a good thing but where Greenland is concerned it is not, because the difference in salinity is what drive the so called Atlantic circulation belt, and all the fresh water being added is slowing that belt, this means, less warm water is being brought up from tropical regions into the subtropical, temperate, and arctic zones. So what we get is not global warming but global heat redistribution. Particularly we get a cooling not warming of Western Europe. But because of the increased precipitation of snow we do not get the huge global warming people predict in the near future.<br /><br />This is undesirable, this is a point I think we can all agree upon, but then there is the question of solutions. The most extreme solutions is what the World Economic Forum is pushing for, lock us all into 15-minute prisons, forbid travel, forbid the use of the majority of the Earth’s land masses, have us all eat even less non-nutritious artificial food so we’ll die sooner, and if that doesn’t kill us, generate some deadly diseases and introduce them into the population, and if that doesn’t spread naturally enough to kill enough of us, inject us with it. Not a solution I would favor. The next favored solution is to produce all of our energy with wind and solar and electrify all of our transportation, this is better but not economically viable, and not viable from a standpoint of the mineral resources required both for production and storage of energy this way, primarily lithium and rare Earth’s, neither can be obtained in sufficient quantity economically.<br /><br />So what is left? Well, start by cutting out waste. If we didn’t waste so much energy on military that would be a big plus right there. Next thing, we need new base load energy sources. We are on the cusp of three potentially viable new sources, one source and one I would want to see developed for reasons beyond energy, is molten salt breeder reactors. These can burn thorium indirectly by breeding it into Uranium 233, but they can also burn all the actinide waste from existing spent fuel, and this is the long term nuclear waste. You burn it up and it leaves only short term fission products that only need to be kept isolated for about 300 years rather than 100,000 to a million. Three hundred years is realistically doable, 100,000 isn’t. Thorium is 3x as more abundant in the Earth’s crust than Uranium and 100% of it is usable not just the .6% of Uranium that is U-235, also with this technology the other 99.4% of uranium that is U-238 would become usable. Yet another advantage of molten salt reactors is that molten salts also being used as the heat exchange mechanism, these can be stored in tanks when power isn’t required and then used to provide peak power beyond the reactors capability when load demands it. This makes them a perfect adjunct to intermittent sources like Wind and Solar.<br /><br />Another technology that has been in the works for a long time is nuclear fusion, and for many years we were unable to reach scientific break even let alone commercial break-even. But Wendlestein-7x stellarator recently achieved a gain of 320, that is it produced 320 times as much energy from fusion as that which was required to initiate the reaction. Now there is still engineering work to be done, but the science is there.<br /><br />And yet another technology involves a new form of drilling that involves a megawatt maser microwave source. This new technology makes drilling holes deep enough to reach geothermal resources virtually anywhere viable. But even without this technology, here in the United States, we have a huge national resource of geothermal energy near enough the surface to easily tap known as Yellowstone but federal law prohibits tapping it. This is beyond ludicrous.<br /><br />At any rate; if we cripple our economy in order to “save the planet”, we cripple our ability to put in place these new technologies and ultimately make the problem larger in the long run, or we guarantee our extinction and fix it that way. Neither seems desirable to me. But one thing I am sure of, we can’t get to a better place by constantly fighting each other. We need to be willing to discuss, determine what things we can agree upon and at least pursue those.<br />",
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"content": "\nSanity…\nPosted on February 15, 2025\t\n\nI would like to think we are entering a saner time with the second Trump presidency, a better energy policy, perhaps a chance at reeling in the insane Federal deficit, some respect for the constitution and the rights elucidated in said document, and perhaps we can end some of the homelessness and poverty and the general death cult that has enveloped not only our nation but the world.\n\nThe biggest challenge I see in our future though isn’t global warming or poverty, or freedom, it is polarization. People are so polarized now that we can’t even communicate the areas we agree upon and perhaps act favorably upon those.\n\nMy concern for the future of humanity is less that we’re going to fry ourselves in an overheated planet, more than we’re going to run out of commercially viable fossil fuels and not have a replacement. Then we won’t be able to grow distribute food let alone do all of the other activities necessary to our survival.\n\nLet me discuss a few myths, and explain how I’ve come to the conclusions that I have. First, you often here quoted that 97% of Scientists agree that human caused global warming by our emission of greenhouse gases is an existential threat is a falsehood. It is a lie spread by those with heavy investments in these fuels to create artificial scarcity thus driving up prices and enriching themselves. It is probably true that 97% of scientists would agree that global warming is in part exacerbated by human activity, and that we play at least a minor role, but probably less than 3% agree that it is an existential threat or that it is anywhere near that which mainstream media portrays. I am inclined to agree with this view though I also would say it is a source of unnecessary disruption that could be largely avoided.\n\nLet me explain some of the reasons for my beliefs. First, there is a lack of good data. Oh you can say yes we have direct temperature readings going back more than 100 years, and these records show significant warming. What most people don’t know is that almost all land weather stations are in heat islands, near busy airports or in busy metropolitan settings that are on average 3-10 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than average temperatures. And satellite temperature readings tend to suggest a decrease, and it is argued this is because they are measuring the upper atmosphere above where the heat is trapped. Both of these things are true, and the result is we do not have good reliable temperature data. Thus we have nothing to test models against that is reliable and thus we can not determine how reliable models are.\n\nAnd then there are psychological factors. Every year somewhere we beat all time temperature highs. But by the same token every winter somewhere we break all time temperature lows. Psychologically this feels threatening, but the truth is that weather is a fractal pattern sitting on top of cyclic variations, and thus the longer the sample time the greater the excursions. There is also much media hype suggesting an increase in the frequency and strength of tropical storms and of forest fires, neither is true. If you look at data that only goes back to 1980 you can see a rise, but if you look back to 1900, you’ll see 1925-1935 is the absolute worst period by a wide margin for both.\n\nSo let’s talk about physics for a minute. First, methane though it might be a much stronger greenhouse gas in terms of the spectrum it can trap, it only lasts on average 12 years in the atmosphere, this means it is NOT a long term threat. It is claimed carbon-dioxide lasts hundreds to thousands of years, again not born out in the data, there is considerable variation between summer and winter in the Northern hemisphere because three fourths of the worlds lands masses are in the Northern hemisphere and thus there is significant differences in photosynthesis over the course of a year, and since these variations make a significant difference in only a fraction of a year, one can surmise that the lifetime of carbon dioxide is much shorter than advertised, especially since increased CO2 has resulted in radically increased photosynthesis removal of CO2, but photosynthesis is only a minor removal of CO2, the majority removal mechanism is marine life. Marine life uses CO2 to build it’s calcium-carbonate shells, these creatures then die and their shells fall to the seafloor. The seafloor eventually subducts under a another crustal plate and with the exception of a small amount of CO2 returned to the atmosphere when a small portion of that crust melts and returns to the surface via volcanism. This process is in fact what is mainly responsible for the decline of carbon dioxide levels from 3000-5000 parts per million near the beginning of the time of dinosaurs to the 280 parts per million around the beginning of the 20th century. And this process ultimately will be what terminates life on Earth.\n\nAnother reason I believe that the cause for CO2 caused warming is exaggerated is the physics involved. Gases do not absorb radiation over a broad spectrum, they absorb along narrow spectral lines. When those lines fall near the maximum wavelength of black body radiation for the Earth’s temperature, they have maximal effect. When the temperature rises or falls such that the peak of the black body radiation no longer corresponds with the absorptive spectral lines, then they have less effect. And carbon dioxide is already at a level where these lines are saturated by approximately 12 feet off the ground. Adding more carbon dioxide will slightly broaden these lines but it will not increase their depths. It is for this reason that adding additional CO2 is NOT a linear but rather a diminishing effect.\n\nThere is much talk of a “tipping point”, a point beyond which there will be a runaway green house effect, and Venus is actually often referred to as an example, but there are gross misrepresentations here. First, Venus receives 50% again as much solar radiation per square meter of atmosphere than Earth does. Second, Venus has an atmosphere approximately 100x as thick as the Earth’s, no matter what it’s makeup that’s a much thicker insulating blanket. Lastly, Venus has no plate tectonics, no photosynthesis, and no marine life to remove CO2, and no water cycle to remove it via mineral weathering. So this is an Apples to Watermelon comparison, two entirely different systems. Venus didn’t runaway, it NEVER had any method of removal. All fo the CO2 EVER put into Venuses atmosphere is still there. Earth on the other had started out with mostly nitrogen, then CO2, and then a small amount of argon in it’s atmosphere and over time has become 78% nitrogen, 1% argon, 21% oxygen, and just a smiggin of CO2.\n\nAll that said, the Earth is very good at homeostasis and there are mechanisms that somewhat counter the effects of the increased CO2, for example, there is 15% MORE area that has green plants since 1900, this is because plants have little pores called stomata to take in CO2 which is their food, and when CO2 is sparse they have more of them and they are opened longer. This results in greater water loss resulting in no survival in arid regions, but as CO2 increases, they produce fewer stomata and they do not keep them as open as long. This results in better water retention and better survival in arid regions. As a result we see greening of what used to be deserts. We also see more CO2 dissolved in oceans which up to a point results in marine life removing it faster, and we also see faster weathering of rock, also removing it faster, all of these mechanisms means the CO2 we put into the air will be removed at a higher rate than it has in the past.\n\nNow there are some aspects of the Earth’s systems that are negatively affected, and these are greater concern I think than warming per se’. For example, you hear of Arctic ice, especially Greenlandic and Icelandic glaciers being removed at a faster rate, well it is true they are calving at a higher rate but also there is more snow being precipitated resulting in a net glacier growth. This might seem to be a good thing but where Greenland is concerned it is not, because the difference in salinity is what drive the so called Atlantic circulation belt, and all the fresh water being added is slowing that belt, this means, less warm water is being brought up from tropical regions into the subtropical, temperate, and arctic zones. So what we get is not global warming but global heat redistribution. Particularly we get a cooling not warming of Western Europe. But because of the increased precipitation of snow we do not get the huge global warming people predict in the near future.\n\nThis is undesirable, this is a point I think we can all agree upon, but then there is the question of solutions. The most extreme solutions is what the World Economic Forum is pushing for, lock us all into 15-minute prisons, forbid travel, forbid the use of the majority of the Earth’s land masses, have us all eat even less non-nutritious artificial food so we’ll die sooner, and if that doesn’t kill us, generate some deadly diseases and introduce them into the population, and if that doesn’t spread naturally enough to kill enough of us, inject us with it. Not a solution I would favor. The next favored solution is to produce all of our energy with wind and solar and electrify all of our transportation, this is better but not economically viable, and not viable from a standpoint of the mineral resources required both for production and storage of energy this way, primarily lithium and rare Earth’s, neither can be obtained in sufficient quantity economically.\n\nSo what is left? Well, start by cutting out waste. If we didn’t waste so much energy on military that would be a big plus right there. Next thing, we need new base load energy sources. We are on the cusp of three potentially viable new sources, one source and one I would want to see developed for reasons beyond energy, is molten salt breeder reactors. These can burn thorium indirectly by breeding it into Uranium 233, but they can also burn all the actinide waste from existing spent fuel, and this is the long term nuclear waste. You burn it up and it leaves only short term fission products that only need to be kept isolated for about 300 years rather than 100,000 to a million. Three hundred years is realistically doable, 100,000 isn’t. Thorium is 3x as more abundant in the Earth’s crust than Uranium and 100% of it is usable not just the .6% of Uranium that is U-235, also with this technology the other 99.4% of uranium that is U-238 would become usable. Yet another advantage of molten salt reactors is that molten salts also being used as the heat exchange mechanism, these can be stored in tanks when power isn’t required and then used to provide peak power beyond the reactors capability when load demands it. This makes them a perfect adjunct to intermittent sources like Wind and Solar.\n\nAnother technology that has been in the works for a long time is nuclear fusion, and for many years we were unable to reach scientific break even let alone commercial break-even. But Wendlestein-7x stellarator recently achieved a gain of 320, that is it produced 320 times as much energy from fusion as that which was required to initiate the reaction. Now there is still engineering work to be done, but the science is there.\n\nAnd yet another technology involves a new form of drilling that involves a megawatt maser microwave source. This new technology makes drilling holes deep enough to reach geothermal resources virtually anywhere viable. But even without this technology, here in the United States, we have a huge national resource of geothermal energy near enough the surface to easily tap known as Yellowstone but federal law prohibits tapping it. This is beyond ludicrous.\n\nAt any rate; if we cripple our economy in order to “save the planet”, we cripple our ability to put in place these new technologies and ultimately make the problem larger in the long run, or we guarantee our extinction and fix it that way. Neither seems desirable to me. But one thing I am sure of, we can’t get to a better place by constantly fighting each other. We need to be willing to discuss, determine what things we can agree upon and at least pursue those.\n",
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"content": "<a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O3Ivv6jjixE\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O3Ivv6jjixE</a>",
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"content": "<br /><br />Federated Services<br /><br />Federated Services are services which many instances form a network to provide a greater whole than the sum of their parts, each participant in the Fediverse is an “instance”. A message or other item made available on one instance is visible and available on other instances.<br /><br />We make these services available to all people who do not abuse it in order to promote the values of Free Speech, and those of the United States Constitution First Amendment. A free republic is not possible without free speech and commercial mainstream media do not provide it. We also get some advertisement benefit from hosting these, it is our hope that people who see how fast and responsible our services are will decide to do hosting or use other paid services here.<br /><br />There are numerous federated services available, we offer Macrobloging platform Friendica, Hubzilla; Microbloging services Mastodon, Misskey, a federated search engine, Yacy, and a federated cloud service, Nextcloud.<br /><br />Macrobloging services are message systems that allow long form posts similar in format to Facebook. These allow for works of fiction, poetry, technical papers, news items, short stories, and more. These formats are most useful for discussion of social issues.<br /><br />Microbloging services allow only short form posts similar in format to Twitter. While you can link to larger articles elsewhere, you have a relatively short character limit and so can not post them directly.<br /><br />Censorship, is handled much different on the fediverse than on mainstream media like Twitter or Facebook. On the fediverse, each individual instance is responsible for content available on that instance, but does not censor the rest of the network. Thus if you find the rules of one instance too constraining you can move to another.<br /><br />Federated search engines are analogous to federated message systems in that each instance chooses what portion of the internet it wants to crawl. When you enter a search term, the local instance queries all of the federated instances, collates and sorts the results and presents them to you. As with messages, each instance can have it’s own censorship policies but no one instance can censor the entire network.<br /><br />Given the wild-west nature of the fediverse, it is probably not suitable for children under 14, and you’re guaranteed to find some material that will offend virtually everyone. With federated search engines, material that is inappropriate will usually be flagged sensitive or nsfw (not safe for work) so as long as you don’t expand material marked as such, you can avoid this soft of material. There are occasionally people who violate these rules, we do our best to remove such individuals none the less some will get through.<br /><br />We offer the following federated services:<br /><br />Friendica.Eskimo.Com<br /> Friendica is a decentralized long format macrobloging message network. It is similar in format to facebook however there is no centralized censorship. Also, it is able to federate with all other federated message systems which use ActivityPub protocol and also we have extensions that allow it to speak to several other networks via other protocols.<br /><br />Hubzilla.Eskimo.Com<br /> Hubzilla is similar in message format to Friendica in that it allows long posts. However, it specializes in it’s ability to provide connectivity to multiple protocols and so we include it in our mix of federated services primarily for the better connectivity it offers. Hubzilla provides a great deal of interoperability between many networks though ActivityPub is still it’s primary protocol. Hubzilla gives you a greater degree of control over privacy than some of the other networks. You can create private channels that are served between hubzilla instances and other compatible instances.<br /><br />Mastodon.Eskimo.Com<br /> Mastodon is first and foremost an alternative to Twitter. While Twitter has Tweets, Mastodon has Toots. The format is very similar. Mastodon toots have a limit of 500 characters. Similar to the short limit of Twitter. This is why this platform is referred to as a Microbloging format. Mastodon interacts with other ActivityPub instances however when a long form blog post from another instance arrives, you are only shown a short portion with a link to follow to see the full post on the originating site.<br /><br />Misskey.Eskimo.Com<br /> Misskey is, like Mastodon, a microbloging service. However, it’s Japanese design and gives it a much more gamey aesthetic. The software is also extremely efficient allowing for a very fast message rate. If you’ve got a fast mind and can read and comprehend fast, you will appreciate this service.<br /><br />Yacy.Eskimo.Com<br /> Yacy is a federated search engine. There are several thousand instances on the Internet. Each instances crawls whatever portion of the web the administrator requested. It is also possible for the administrator of a site with relatively few resources to request a larger site to do crawls on their behalf. Unfortunately, it does not provide a method for an end user to initiate a crawl, but if you send e-mail to support@eskimo.com and request a crawl, we will initiate a crawl on your behalf.<br /><br />NextCloud.Eskimo.Com<br /> If you are a customer of Eskimo North, your login credentials will work without a domain extension to access Nextcloud. If you are not a customer you can apply for a Nextcloud account using your choice of login and password, in this case the login should include your originating network. Some features require an Eskimo North shell account to take full advantage of.<br /><br />If you enjoy these services, please consider supporting us by taking advantage of our paid services: <a href=\"https://www.eskimo.com/\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.eskimo.com/</a><br />",
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"published": "2024-11-28T11:33:46+00:00",
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"content": "\n\nFederated Services\n\nFederated Services are services which many instances form a network to provide a greater whole than the sum of their parts, each participant in the Fediverse is an “instance”. A message or other item made available on one instance is visible and available on other instances.\n\nWe make these services available to all people who do not abuse it in order to promote the values of Free Speech, and those of the United States Constitution First Amendment. A free republic is not possible without free speech and commercial mainstream media do not provide it. We also get some advertisement benefit from hosting these, it is our hope that people who see how fast and responsible our services are will decide to do hosting or use other paid services here.\n\nThere are numerous federated services available, we offer Macrobloging platform Friendica, Hubzilla; Microbloging services Mastodon, Misskey, a federated search engine, Yacy, and a federated cloud service, Nextcloud.\n\nMacrobloging services are message systems that allow long form posts similar in format to Facebook. These allow for works of fiction, poetry, technical papers, news items, short stories, and more. These formats are most useful for discussion of social issues.\n\nMicrobloging services allow only short form posts similar in format to Twitter. While you can link to larger articles elsewhere, you have a relatively short character limit and so can not post them directly.\n\nCensorship, is handled much different on the fediverse than on mainstream media like Twitter or Facebook. On the fediverse, each individual instance is responsible for content available on that instance, but does not censor the rest of the network. Thus if you find the rules of one instance too constraining you can move to another.\n\nFederated search engines are analogous to federated message systems in that each instance chooses what portion of the internet it wants to crawl. When you enter a search term, the local instance queries all of the federated instances, collates and sorts the results and presents them to you. As with messages, each instance can have it’s own censorship policies but no one instance can censor the entire network.\n\nGiven the wild-west nature of the fediverse, it is probably not suitable for children under 14, and you’re guaranteed to find some material that will offend virtually everyone. With federated search engines, material that is inappropriate will usually be flagged sensitive or nsfw (not safe for work) so as long as you don’t expand material marked as such, you can avoid this soft of material. There are occasionally people who violate these rules, we do our best to remove such individuals none the less some will get through.\n\nWe offer the following federated services:\n\nFriendica.Eskimo.Com\n Friendica is a decentralized long format macrobloging message network. It is similar in format to facebook however there is no centralized censorship. Also, it is able to federate with all other federated message systems which use ActivityPub protocol and also we have extensions that allow it to speak to several other networks via other protocols.\n\nHubzilla.Eskimo.Com\n Hubzilla is similar in message format to Friendica in that it allows long posts. However, it specializes in it’s ability to provide connectivity to multiple protocols and so we include it in our mix of federated services primarily for the better connectivity it offers. Hubzilla provides a great deal of interoperability between many networks though ActivityPub is still it’s primary protocol. Hubzilla gives you a greater degree of control over privacy than some of the other networks. You can create private channels that are served between hubzilla instances and other compatible instances.\n\nMastodon.Eskimo.Com\n Mastodon is first and foremost an alternative to Twitter. While Twitter has Tweets, Mastodon has Toots. The format is very similar. Mastodon toots have a limit of 500 characters. Similar to the short limit of Twitter. This is why this platform is referred to as a Microbloging format. Mastodon interacts with other ActivityPub instances however when a long form blog post from another instance arrives, you are only shown a short portion with a link to follow to see the full post on the originating site.\n\nMisskey.Eskimo.Com\n Misskey is, like Mastodon, a microbloging service. However, it’s Japanese design and gives it a much more gamey aesthetic. The software is also extremely efficient allowing for a very fast message rate. If you’ve got a fast mind and can read and comprehend fast, you will appreciate this service.\n\nYacy.Eskimo.Com\n Yacy is a federated search engine. There are several thousand instances on the Internet. Each instances crawls whatever portion of the web the administrator requested. It is also possible for the administrator of a site with relatively few resources to request a larger site to do crawls on their behalf. Unfortunately, it does not provide a method for an end user to initiate a crawl, but if you send e-mail to support@eskimo.com and request a crawl, we will initiate a crawl on your behalf.\n\nNextCloud.Eskimo.Com\n If you are a customer of Eskimo North, your login credentials will work without a domain extension to access Nextcloud. If you are not a customer you can apply for a Nextcloud account using your choice of login and password, in this case the login should include your originating network. Some features require an Eskimo North shell account to take full advantage of.\n\nIf you enjoy these services, please consider supporting us by taking advantage of our paid services: https://www.eskimo.com/\n",
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"content": "<a href=\"https://www.minds.com/RobertDinse/blog/federated-services-1705477171385995280\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.minds.com/RobertDinse/blog/federated-services-1705477171385995280</a>",
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"content": "Is there any way to turn off this auto replacing of messages? It switches faster than I can comprehend.",
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"content": "Is there any way to turn off this auto replacing of messages? It switches faster than I can comprehend.",
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"content": "<br />Inuvik Restored to Service<br /><br />Innuvik is back in service. I fixed the cable connector by epoxying the 4-pin to the 20-pin effectively making it a 24 pin connector so the latch on the 20 pin section holds all in. I no longer get intermittent power when I move the cable around.<br /><br />I discovered that about a penny sized area of air gap between the CPU heat spreader and the cooler had developed and so regooped the whole thing but this time I did not have the higher quality compound. Still at 4.8 Ghz under the most extreme CPU torture test I have it maxed at 82C and averaged about 70C, with the better compound it will max at about 62C when there are no gaps, but this is adequate.<br /><br />coretemp-isa-0000<br />Adapter: ISA adapter<br />Package id 0: +33.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 0: +30.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 1: +29.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 2: +29.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 3: +31.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 4: +33.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 8: +30.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 9: +31.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 10: +28.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 11: +31.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 16: +31.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 17: +30.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 18: +31.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 19: +30.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 20: +32.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 24: +31.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 25: +30.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 26: +29.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br />Core 27: +30.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)<br /><br />This is what temps are looking like now, you notice there is only a 4C spread between the hottest and coolest cores, before that spread was 20C.<br /><br />So I would like to have the additional overhead but this should suffice for now. I have a new power supply on order as this one is a little doggy and sags under load more than I would like. The current supply is a 1000 watt Gigabyte supply, the replacement is a Phanteks 1200 watt which is a rebranded Seasonic, it’s has a 12-year warranty so at least financially if it dies it will be someone else’s problem.<br /><br />So I don’t know if this is going to fix the stability issues or not, but I did run it with the most extreme CPU torture test software I have at 4.8 Ghz all cores two threads per core for an hour before I took it back to the co-lo and no CPU errors.<br /><br />So back in service are roundcube.eskimo.com, friendica.eskimo.com, hubzilla.eskimo.com, and yacy.eskimo.com and with all these running full tilt CPU is still about 97% idle and I’m working on some additional new services.<br />",
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"content": "\nInuvik Restored to Service\n\nInnuvik is back in service. I fixed the cable connector by epoxying the 4-pin to the 20-pin effectively making it a 24 pin connector so the latch on the 20 pin section holds all in. I no longer get intermittent power when I move the cable around.\n\nI discovered that about a penny sized area of air gap between the CPU heat spreader and the cooler had developed and so regooped the whole thing but this time I did not have the higher quality compound. Still at 4.8 Ghz under the most extreme CPU torture test I have it maxed at 82C and averaged about 70C, with the better compound it will max at about 62C when there are no gaps, but this is adequate.\n\ncoretemp-isa-0000\nAdapter: ISA adapter\nPackage id 0: +33.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 0: +30.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 1: +29.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 2: +29.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 3: +31.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 4: +33.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 8: +30.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 9: +31.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 10: +28.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 11: +31.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 16: +31.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 17: +30.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 18: +31.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 19: +30.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 20: +32.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 24: +31.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 25: +30.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 26: +29.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\nCore 27: +30.0°C (high = +76.0°C, crit = +86.0°C)\n\nThis is what temps are looking like now, you notice there is only a 4C spread between the hottest and coolest cores, before that spread was 20C.\n\nSo I would like to have the additional overhead but this should suffice for now. I have a new power supply on order as this one is a little doggy and sags under load more than I would like. The current supply is a 1000 watt Gigabyte supply, the replacement is a Phanteks 1200 watt which is a rebranded Seasonic, it’s has a 12-year warranty so at least financially if it dies it will be someone else’s problem.\n\nSo I don’t know if this is going to fix the stability issues or not, but I did run it with the most extreme CPU torture test software I have at 4.8 Ghz all cores two threads per core for an hour before I took it back to the co-lo and no CPU errors.\n\nSo back in service are roundcube.eskimo.com, friendica.eskimo.com, hubzilla.eskimo.com, and yacy.eskimo.com and with all these running full tilt CPU is still about 97% idle and I’m working on some additional new services.\n",
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"content": "Megalopolis - I am 65 years old, this was absolutely THE most inspirational film I have seen in my life and hands down outshines anything else Francis Coppola has ever done.<br /><br />It very clearly draws parallels between historical Rome and the USA today but rather than being a story of doom, it is a story of hope, Trends Do Not Make Destiny, Individual People Will Find Paths to a New Future, One Courageous Man Can Overthrow Corruption, There is no need for fear because Love transcends everything. It was a story of hope, a story of redemption, and story showing us a way to the future and that our destiny need not parallel that of Rome. I hope others are as inspired as I by this film and that together we CAN build a better future for ourselves and our grandchildren.",
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"published": "2024-09-28T07:46:36+00:00",
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"content": "Megalopolis - I am 65 years old, this was absolutely THE most inspirational film I have seen in my life and hands down outshines anything else Francis Coppola has ever done.\n\nIt very clearly draws parallels between historical Rome and the USA today but rather than being a story of doom, it is a story of hope, Trends Do Not Make Destiny, Individual People Will Find Paths to a New Future, One Courageous Man Can Overthrow Corruption, There is no need for fear because Love transcends everything. It was a story of hope, a story of redemption, and story showing us a way to the future and that our destiny need not parallel that of Rome. I hope others are as inspired as I by this film and that together we CAN build a better future for ourselves and our grandchildren.",
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"content": "<br />Netflix Privacy Violation!<br /><br />I accidentally discovered that Netflix is snooping my browser history. I configured Firefox for private browsing and turned history off. Netflix would no longer allow me to view content. They have no legal interest in my browser history. Of course they'd like to know it so they can better target ads and probably the NSA pays them to help with their data collection, but what I've viewed outside of Netflix is NONE OF THEIR FUCKING BUSINESS.<br /><br />If you are a Netflix customer, I urge you to call them at (888) 638-3549 and tell them in no uncertain terms that this is NOT ACCEPTABLE.<br /><br />If there are any lawyers out there that would be willing to get a law suit<br />going pro-bono, please contact me at nanook@eskimo.com.<br /><br />Please spread this message around.<br />",
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"published": "2024-03-08T13:46:24+00:00",
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"content": "\nNetflix Privacy Violation!\n\nI accidentally discovered that Netflix is snooping my browser history. I configured Firefox for private browsing and turned history off. Netflix would no longer allow me to view content. They have no legal interest in my browser history. Of course they'd like to know it so they can better target ads and probably the NSA pays them to help with their data collection, but what I've viewed outside of Netflix is NONE OF THEIR FUCKING BUSINESS.\n\nIf you are a Netflix customer, I urge you to call them at (888) 638-3549 and tell them in no uncertain terms that this is NOT ACCEPTABLE.\n\nIf there are any lawyers out there that would be willing to get a law suit\ngoing pro-bono, please contact me at nanook@eskimo.com.\n\nPlease spread this message around.\n",
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"content": "Vladimir Putin DOES have a personal beef with the Bolsheviks, and Brezhnev and other communists because he happens to be a leader with a keen understanding of history, something sorely missing in our contemporary world, and he understands communism not only does not work, but ultimately leads to universal poverty and death.<br /><br />This is why, by all rights, Putin and Russia should be allies with the United States and Western Europe, and no doubt he would be if these regions hadn't been subverted with the socialists in the UN and China working hand in hand with the psychopaths from the WEF.<br /><br />I swear all Klaus Schwab needs is a white Persian cat and a Mini-Me. (I liken Klaus more to the Parody of the Bond films by Mike Myers than the Bond films themselves because he is fairly open about his intentions, the Earth population is more than we need for our slave needs, we must kill 7/8ths of the worlds population and enslave the remainder, like Dr. Evil, than Ernst Stavro Blofeld, Spectre's chief villain, who held his cards much closer to his chest. I've got no doubt Klaus and Yuval are working on clones of themselves, with the intent of transferring their souls to them before they die so they can live on forever.<br /><br />In deed, I am quite sure it is the fear of physical death that drives his psychopathic behavior. Anyone who has had a near death or out of body experience though understands that this is not how the soul-body connection works. We only experience time as a linear progression forward while in body because of the mechanics of our central nervous systems, out of body, time is just another dimension we can freely travel in. So making clones or AI systems or other artificial bodies we can stick ourselves in is silly, it's just another jail.<br /><br />Personally, I'd be happy to let him live his delusion and suffer the consequences, if it were not for the effect on the rest of us. We have a potential for a much better world, and he is holding us back from realizing it.<br /><br />Unfortunately, as much as he is psychopathic, he is also intelligent, and when he says he has penetrated the cabinets of about thirty countries around the world, that is just the tip of the iceberg, he has also penetrated the intelligence services of many, including FBI, CIA, MI5, MI6, and Mossad, and he has used his power in those agencies to arrange many atrocities including the coup in the USA that put Biden in office, and the coup in the Ukraine that put Volodymyr Zelenskyy in office there, 911, the creation of Covid, the creation of the Clot Shot, the poisoning of the food supply, and the poisoning of the culture to subvert normal social and sexual function of reproductive aged adults.<br /><br />We need to recognize evil, root it out, and expose it at every level while there are enough of us left to do so.<br />",
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"published": "2024-02-10T07:15:53+00:00",
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"content": "Vladimir Putin DOES have a personal beef with the Bolsheviks, and Brezhnev and other communists because he happens to be a leader with a keen understanding of history, something sorely missing in our contemporary world, and he understands communism not only does not work, but ultimately leads to universal poverty and death.\n\nThis is why, by all rights, Putin and Russia should be allies with the United States and Western Europe, and no doubt he would be if these regions hadn't been subverted with the socialists in the UN and China working hand in hand with the psychopaths from the WEF.\n\nI swear all Klaus Schwab needs is a white Persian cat and a Mini-Me. (I liken Klaus more to the Parody of the Bond films by Mike Myers than the Bond films themselves because he is fairly open about his intentions, the Earth population is more than we need for our slave needs, we must kill 7/8ths of the worlds population and enslave the remainder, like Dr. Evil, than Ernst Stavro Blofeld, Spectre's chief villain, who held his cards much closer to his chest. I've got no doubt Klaus and Yuval are working on clones of themselves, with the intent of transferring their souls to them before they die so they can live on forever.\n\nIn deed, I am quite sure it is the fear of physical death that drives his psychopathic behavior. Anyone who has had a near death or out of body experience though understands that this is not how the soul-body connection works. We only experience time as a linear progression forward while in body because of the mechanics of our central nervous systems, out of body, time is just another dimension we can freely travel in. So making clones or AI systems or other artificial bodies we can stick ourselves in is silly, it's just another jail.\n\nPersonally, I'd be happy to let him live his delusion and suffer the consequences, if it were not for the effect on the rest of us. We have a potential for a much better world, and he is holding us back from realizing it.\n\nUnfortunately, as much as he is psychopathic, he is also intelligent, and when he says he has penetrated the cabinets of about thirty countries around the world, that is just the tip of the iceberg, he has also penetrated the intelligence services of many, including FBI, CIA, MI5, MI6, and Mossad, and he has used his power in those agencies to arrange many atrocities including the coup in the USA that put Biden in office, and the coup in the Ukraine that put Volodymyr Zelenskyy in office there, 911, the creation of Covid, the creation of the Clot Shot, the poisoning of the food supply, and the poisoning of the culture to subvert normal social and sexual function of reproductive aged adults.\n\nWe need to recognize evil, root it out, and expose it at every level while there are enough of us left to do so.\n",
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"content": "<a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dk59B34qjUs\" target=\"_blank\">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dk59B34qjUs</a>",
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"content": "Talk Web<br /><br />I don't know how many here are old enough that in the past they used to listen to talk radio. I am 65, and did so and I miss the old days of the Art Bell show and some others.<br /><br />However radio doesn't have enough audience these days to sustain such a show economically, much of the audience has gone to the web.<br /><br />I got to thinking how could we bring this sort of thing to the web, we have blogs, but they are one-way except live blogging allows for real time comments, but it is nothing like talk radio used to be where you could have a host in one location, a guest in another, and callers calling in from all over the world and people listing from all over.<br /><br />I can envision a web application that could so something better but I don't have the coding skills to pull it off, so thought I would describe my idea and see if anybody else there feels it might be worth pursuing.<br /><br />My idea is to have something like Zoom, except on the viewers in it has the ability to have infinite number of people watching, something that on the output side can work with a cdn so that it can be widely distributed.<br /><br />Then there would be one or two main windows (host or host+guest), and a number of small windows on the side (callers queued) and when they come on they'd get a slightly larger screen to distinguish them being live from those in queue, and the host would have the ability to make them full screen if they had something to show or visually share and the host would also be able to full-screen the guest in that event.<br /><br />",
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