

He prefers to groom Ivanka anyway.
He prefers to groom Ivanka anyway.
This article sucks horrendously. The Japanese PM was asked about Assassin’s Creed Shadows by a member of the House of Councillors, which from a quick search is roughly like the Senate in many western governments.
Prime Minister Ishiba responded to the questions by Kada, saying that if such actions were carried out at real-life landmarks in Japan, he would oppose them. He said that acts such as shrines being graffitied are completely out of the question, which was in reference to a real life act from November 2024.
Holy fuck, the PM doesn’t want people to vandalise shrines in real life. He’s so mad about Assassin’s Creed Shadows, everybody point. Also, the writer doesn’t know how to spell feudal (“fueduel”) and that’s probably the worst part.
In fact, he could have just argued that he did spend the money on “white horse”.
I keep seeing opinion pieces like this, but I remain unconvinced. Sure, if his sincerely held intention was to do anything at all positive for the US and its allies, his actions would read as insane. But if he actively, deliberately desires to harm and destabilize both, then he’s going about it the right way. Screw Hanlon’s razor: stupidity is inadequate to explain any of this.
I can see a system where you have to scan the QR code in a specific app for that purpose (e.g. a dedicated QR code payment app which approved businesses sign up to, which either includes or remotely queries a database of valid endpoints). At that point though, where you’re requiring a dedicated app anyway, you may as well invent your own 2D code system with blackjack, hookers and signing. But yeah, I don’t understand how this would work otherwise. QR codes just aren’t made for security. They shouldn’t be used anywhere security is required.
As long as we’re filling out our fantasy browser brackets, I’m hoping that the Servo engine and browser/s can become viable. Servo was started at Mozilla as a web rendering engine only, before they laid off the whole team and the Linux Foundation took over the project. Basically revived from the dead in 2023, the current project is working on an engine and a demonstration browser that uses it. It’s years away from being a usable replacement for current browsers and the engine is certainly the main project. A separate browser which employs Servo as its engine is a more likely future than an actual Servo browser.
Still, you can download a demo build of the official browser from the web site. Currently, it’s only usable for very simple web sites. Even Lemmy/Mbin display is a little broken, and I think of those as fairly basic. YouTube is out of the question. One of the sites that’s been used to demonstrate its capability to render web pages is the web site for Space Jam (1996) if that gives you any idea of its current state.
If you follow any open source projects on GitHub, it’s useful to know that you can get an Atom feed of most pages (e.g. the commit log or releases tab), by adding
.atom
to the end of the URL.Atom feeds are not the same thing as RSS feeds but any halfway modern RSS reader should be able to handle both. Feeder for Android, mentioned by ElectroVagrant (twinsies!) elsewhere in this thread is an example of an “RSS reader” which also supports Atom.
Here’s an example Atom link for Interstellar (a cross-platform Lemmy/Mbin/PieFed app) releases: https://github.com/jwr1/interstellar/releases.atom
This is a handy way to get notifications when things update, especially useful if they have no internal update mechanism. If you can navigate your way to the Releases tab, then you can turn it into an Atom feed and you’re done.