Photo cross-post

Apr. 21st, 2025 09:56 am
andrewducker: (Default)
[personal profile] andrewducker


In the future all zoo trips will look like this.
Original is here on Pixelfed.scot.

Photo cross-post

Apr. 20th, 2025 12:21 pm
andrewducker: (Default)
[personal profile] andrewducker


Pop stars in the making.

(Pretty sure the one on the right has been up for three nights in a row and the drugs are now wearing off.)
Original is here on Pixelfed.scot.

Interesting Links for 20-04-2025

Apr. 20th, 2025 12:00 pm
arlie: (Default)
[personal profile] arlie
I've spent the day installing Proton Mail on 2 computers and one cell phone, importing my mail, calendar, and contacts from gmail, setting my gmail account to forward everything to my new protonmail account, learning to use the email client, configuring what I can, and designing and beginning to implement a new email organization that I expect to work well with these tools.

Advantages:
- Essentially the same UI on the web, on MacOS, on Linux, and on Android.
- Available on Windows, iOS and iPadOS when/if I ever need them
- Open source. If something makes me crazy, I can fix it.
- I like the UI, at least by comparison with other current offerings. It has keyboard shortcuts, ability to use typing a partial name in place of selecting e.g. a folder from a huge scrollable list, and similar nerd (power user) advantages
- Best of all, a built-in, though less general Procmail equivalent. I can apply rules automatically to incoming records, filing them where I want them, including in the spam bucket.
- Built in support for masked email addresses
- Much better privacy than anything Google or even Apple can snoop on.
- Servers in Switzerland; Swiss laws apply.
- Run by a non-profit rather than a profit-maximizing corporation. I expect notably less bad behavior than from any FAANG company, or even most for-profit corporations.
- No more of the damn ads google inflicts on me when I use their interface.
- Should be able to use this to regain control of my previous email address, associated with a domain I now have hosted on DigitalOcean. (My server got blackholed, presumably because of the offenses of a prior user of the same IP address.)

Disadvantages:
- learning curve
- imported my gmail account with everything organized as labels rather than in folders. (Proton mail supports both. Mac Mail and Thunderbird had been presenting gmail's labels as folders, so that's what I'm used to seeing.)
- I lose MacMail's random signature feature, unless I use MacMail to connect to my proton mail account, which would mean using 2 UIs for email.
- Stupid about date formats. I'm stuck with "yesterday", and with "9 PM" - worse, it apparently ignores localization, and always uses US date formats. US date formats are not a problem for me, but it's a large ugly wart, particularly for something not based in the US.
- I'm paying an annual subscription for this. They have a free version, but I wanted some of the non-free features. Moreover, they deserve to be supported.

This is just the mail component of their package of tools. I expect others of their tools to solve other ongoing aggravations - notably I'll be cutting down from 3 password managers, none working on all my devices, to one which will work everywhere. This will make me very happy.
andrewducker: (KittenPenguin)
[personal profile] andrewducker
The Gender Recognition Act was brought in in 2004 because the UK lost a court case at the ECHR in 2002.*

The court said:
"In the twenty first century the right of transsexuals to personal development and to physical and moral security in the full sense enjoyed by others in society cannot be regarded as a matter of controversy requiring the lapse of time to cast clearer light on the issues involved. In short, the unsatisfactory situation in which post-operative transsexuals live in an intermediate zone as not quite one gender or the other is no longer sustainable."

This is under article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights - the right to a private life.

Placing "trans women" in a generally** different category than "women" is definitely putting them in an intermediate zone. And expecting them to make their assigned gender public is definitely taking the "private" out of "private life".

The UK is still a signatory to the convention. Cases can still be taken to its court. Leaving it would mean a *major* falling out with the EU. I suspect that if the UK tries to nudge things far at all that they will find the court takes a dim view.


*Fought, and lost, by Labour. Because they have never been onside in this area.
**It is possible to carve out exceptions in the current system. But they have to be justified on a case by case basis. A general finding that trans people are not of their legal gender is almost certainly not that.
ludy: Close up of pink tinted “dyslexo-specs” with sunset light shining through them (Default)
[personal profile] ludy
I have an Android phone which means my texts either send as SMS - which show up on my phone screen on a light blue bubble (other people's SMS's to me are on a dark grey bubble or more often (because they aren't limited by my monthly Bundle) as RCS via Google Messages - which show up on a darker-but-still-bright-blue bubble.

Blue is not my-eyes-friendly. The darker/brighter blue of the RCS messages is particularly not me-friendly and I've wanted to change it ever since my phone started offering me the option of RCS as well as SMS. But, on my phone at least there's no setting on the main phone settings or on the Message app's central settings to change it. However I recently pressed something on the corner of an individual message thread and found you can change a specific thread to a different colour-scheme (though only on RCS threads). So I've done that with my most frequent RCS correspondents. I chose a grungey green as the bubble background

Only it turns out that changing the setting on my phone also changed how those messages look on the recipients phone!?! I suppose the idea is that it's like choosing Fancy Notepaper for specific friends? But it's just horrible for accessibility. What if my comfy colours are the ones that give them visual stress?



I already have my font size super large and use very few phone apps because I just can't read more than a few sentences off of a screen that size. (I am forever complaining to organisations, mostly medics, who send me links to webpages by text rather than by email - I only use the browser on my phone for emergencies like checking train times or directions when I'm out of WiFi range).

Why is basic visual accessibility so hard?
andrewducker: (Default)
[personal profile] andrewducker
I've read throught the judgement and written up a summary of the judgement. I've linked each point to a quote from the judgement.

As you might be able to tell, I'm furious about this.

1) The Gender Recognition Act (GRA) means your gender changes unless (1.1) a law specifically say it doesn't.
2) They knew that when they wrote the Equality Act.
3) Nothing in the equality act specifically says that the GRA doesn't apply.
4) Aaah, but can we say that something *indicates* that?
5) Everyone knows what "sex" means.
6) We can't think of a good reason why the politicians who passed this would want rights to apply to trans people. Even if they didn't say they didn't.
7) Particularly if we assume that every example in the Equalities Act has to apply to a person for it to work.
8) Therefore they *must* have meant biological sex.
9) Therefore a GRC doesn't apply, even though the GRA says it does.
10) Oh, and by the way trans people shouldn't be allowed to use any services at all that are for their lived gender.
11) Also, particular thank you to the lawyer for the transphobes who explained all of this.

*1* "the effect of section 9 of the GRA 2004 on the meaning of the words “man” and “woman” in the EA 2010. Section 9 (set out at para 75 above) provides both for a rule that on receipt of a GRC “the person’s gender becomes for all purposes the acquired gender” (subsection (1))"
*1.1* "If section 9(3) does not apply, then the section 9(1) rule does apply and sex in the EA 2010 must have an extended meaning that includes “certificated sex”. "

*2* "There is no doubt that the EA 2010 was enacted in the knowledge of the existence of the GRA 2004"

*3* "There is no provision in the EA 2010 that expressly addresses the effect (if any) which section 9(1) of the GRA 2004 has on the definition of “sex” or the words “woman” or “man” (and cognate expressions) used in the EA 2010. The terms “biological sex” and “certificated sex” do not appear anywhere in the Act. However, the mere fact that the word “biological” is absent from the EA 2010 definition of “sex” is not by itself indicative of Parliament’s intention that a “certificated sex” meaning is intended. The same is true of the absence of the word “certificated” in the definition of “sex”."

*4* "The question that must therefore be answered is whether there are provisions in the EA 2010 that indicate that the biological meaning of sex is plainly intended and/or that a “certificated sex” meaning renders these provisions incoherent or as giving rise to absurdity"

*5* "The definition of sex in the EA 2010 makes clear that the concept of sex is binary, a person is either a woman or a man" - "Although the word “biological” does not appear in this definition, the ordinary meaning of those plain and unambiguous words corresponds with the biological characteristics that make an individual a man or a woman."

*6* "We can identify no good reason why the legislature should have intended that sex-based rights and protections under the EA 2010 should apply to these complex, heterogenous groupings, rather than to the distinct group of (biological) women and girls (or men and boys) with their shared biology leading to shared disadvantage and discrimination faced by them as a distinct group."

*7* "a strong indicator that the words “sex”, “man” and “woman” in the EA 2010 have their biological meaning (and not a certificated sex meaning) is provided by sections 13(6), 17 and 18 (which relate to sex, pregnancy and maternity discrimination) and the related provisions. The protection afforded by these provisions is predicated on the fact of pregnancy or the fact of having given birth to a child and the taking of leave in consequence. Since as a matter of biology, only biological women can become pregnant, the protection is necessarily restricted to biological women. "

*8* "The interpretation of the EA 2010 (ie the biological sex reading), which we conclude is the only correct one"

*9* "The meaning of the terms “sex”, “man” and “woman” in the EA 2010 is biological and not certificated sex."

*10* "There are other provisions whose proper functioning requires a biological interpretation of “sex”. These include separate spaces and single-sex services (including changing rooms, hostels and medical services), communal accommodation and others"

*11* We are particularly grateful to Ben Cooper KC for his written and oral submissions on behalf of Sex Matters, which gave focus and structure to the argument that “sex”, “man” and “woman” should be given a biological meaning, and who was able effectively to address the questions posed by members of the court in the hour he had to make his submissions.

(I should note at this point that no trans representative group or transgender person was allowed to talk to the judges. They took evidence only from the various transphobic groups, the Scottish Government and Amnesty, not from anyone who would actually be affected on the other side by this ruling.)

A thing I wish Google Maps could do

Apr. 17th, 2025 08:17 am
andrewducker: (whoever invented boredom...)
[personal profile] andrewducker
Plot me a route to my destination, taking into account that I am *already* on a bus.

Review: Planet of Lana

Apr. 16th, 2025 04:38 pm
andrewducker: (Kitten Stalking)
[personal profile] andrewducker
I grabbed Planet of Lana out of my backlog because I fancied something with a bit of a challenge, a bit of a plot, that looked gorgeous. And I got exactly that!

The art is painted, and looks it. It's set on a luscious moon where everything looks beautiful, and everything is just fine:


Well, maybe not *fine*:


Shortly after The Bad Thing happens you set off with your trusty friendly cat to Save Everything.

And then it's a lot of side-scrolling adventure as you head relentlessly rightward, climbing over things,distracting robots, avoiding being eaten by wild animals, until you find the source of The Bad Thing and Save The Day. If you've played Limbo or Inside then you know exactly the kind of thing you're in for. Only more Ghibli.

There's almost no dialogue, and what there is is in an alien language. But it's enough to pull you in. The plot is told through the things you encounter along the way. And it's explained as much as it needs to be, which isn't much.

The different environments work very nicely, whether you're trying to keep your cat dry:


or you're exploring underground caverns:


Or trying to prevent hordes of robot spiders from giving you an unfortunate hug:


The game lasts about 5 hours, but as it's on sale for over 50% off right now (£7.65 in the UK) I can happily say it's well worth picking up.

The challenge is fairly light - there were two puzzles I had to check walkthroughs for, but generally I could work my way through them, and it required very little in the way of reflexes.

Oh, and the music/sound design is gorgeous. You can listen to it over here.

Overall, highly recommended.

Followup on health data reporting

Apr. 14th, 2025 09:12 am
arlie: (Default)
[personal profile] arlie
As a followup on my More Media Inaccuracy post from one week ago, which was about measles death reporting excluding adults:

1. Your Local Epidemiologist has got the memo. In its latest issue it reports only pediatric flu deaths.

[Edit: Actually, I'm being unfair. A guesstimate of total deaths was sandwiched between 2 statements of total pediatric deaths:
The toll is still being counted: 188 children have died from flu so far this season, with final counts expected to rise as more death certificates are processed. Modeling has estimated that, in total, flu caused 45 million illnesses, 580,000 hospitalizations (including my little girl), and 25,000 deaths this season.
But the big prominent graph was entirely pediatric. End of edit]

2. This measles outbreak is terrible, 4 deaths so far, 2 of them pediatric, and only 3 of them in the United States. Let's all panic. The flu on the other hand has caused 188 pediatric deaths this year - presumably counting only deaths in the United States, but the YLE issue didn't say. We should merely worry about whether the flu vaccine will still be covered by insurance next year.

There are 3 types of reader.
1. Innumerate; notices only the emotional tone. Believes measles is worse, and notices nothing odd.
2. Numerate and observant but not understanding epidemiological math. Sees a gross inconsistency between the emotional tone and the numbers given. Suspects the reporters of anything from incompetence to conspiracy.
3. Has some clue about epidemiological math. Notices the inconsistency; presumes the reason for the greater concern about measles rests on greater potential to get a lot worse very swiftly.

I'm in class 3, except for a certain lack of trust in pundits in general, and suspicion of political motives. I'm aware that hysteria about measles feeds an anti- anti-vax agenda, and thus can be expected to be favored by blue tribers regardless of its accuracy, whereas an anti-flu hysteria does not.

Net result: I'd love to understand epidemiological math well enough to figure out whether the relative emphasis in this latest YLE post is in fact warranted. But I don't, so I have to score a "be wary" point against YLE - maybe they're in the process of (partially) substituting partisanship for reliability.
Page generated Apr. 23rd, 2025 01:02 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios