Banning Phones in Schools Is Drastically Changing the Behaviour of Kids, Teachers Say “Gothamist spoke to students about their experience with the ban, and the number one takeaway didn’t have to do with anything to do with hot-button topics like social media addiction or cyberbullying. Instead, it was that kiboshing phones is forcing kids to actually talk to each other in meatspace again — and it’s making schools way noisier, for better or worse.” I'm going to say something that will be highly unpopular with employees, but I think banning phones in the workplace during working hours (not lunchtime) would also boost productivity and focus a lot! I can't but help noticing when I go to do my weekly groceries shopping at a certain supermarket, that in more than one aisle, a packer is busy on their phones with the boxes lying next to them. I doubt these are emergencies, and are more likely ongoing replies to someone on an instant messaging app. Apart from shelf packers though, even for management, they should not be conducting work communication over private messaging apps. E-mail can be read whenever one is at their desk, and the company has a record of the official correspondence then too. There seems to be this need to be in constant contact 24/7, but I have started to realise that I do not need to read every single notification coming in as it happens. I choose times when I'm taking a break, or before supper, etc when it does not break my concentration of what I'm doing. As I'm writing this post, I've heard my phone going ding about 5 times (one at least was from my spouse). If it's urgent though, they can phone me, but if I don't have boundaries in place, a phone threatens to just keep interrupting you. It's the same reason why my phone goes onto Do Not Disturb mode from 22:30 every night. See #technology #health #education #boundaries
This OpenWrt-Based Router Has Swappable Wi-Fi Modules for Future Upgrades “Their Turris router project started as an internal research effort focused on understanding network threats that has now evolved into offering commercial products with rock-solid security and convenient features. Now, they have launched the Turris Omnia NG, the next generation of their security-focused router line. Like its predecessors, the router is manufactured in the Czech Republic.” Yes, part of the news is the swappable Wi-Fi hardware modules, but also very interesting is that the router comes with an open source operating system based on OpenWrt. I really like that! That means that you can do a lot more with it than just being a basic, cripple proprietary router. It can work as a NAS, VPN gateway, run LXC containers or even full Linux distributions like Ubuntu or Debian on virtual machines, or a self-hosted cloud server running Nextcloud. Try doing that on a commercial Asus or T-Link router! See #technology #opensource #routers #openwrt
Scientists Say They’ve Figured Out How to Transcribe Your Thoughts From an MRI Scan “They’re calling the technique “mind captioning,” and it may represent an effective way for transcribing what someone’s thinking, with impressively comprehensive and accurate results.” It is certainly not reading of specific thoughts, but nonetheless statistically the results are way above just random guesses, with some sounding impressive. And yes, it seems AI does the number crunching to arrive at suggestions. As with any technology, there can be good and bad applications for it. The usual culprits will try to exploit the bad side, but think of the good for those with seriously impaired communication capabilities (stroke, aphasia, and other medical difficulties). Right now, of course this is not possible yet to use without an MRI machine, but it is quite promising so far, and possibly better ways to scan will be found. See #technology #health
Why self-hosting matters now more than ever in the age of cloud "A little over a week ago, a DNS update conflict brought down AWS, crippling hundreds of apps and services worldwide. Along with many of Amazon’s own platforms, Netflix, Spotify, Google Drive, Zoom, and many others were affected by the failure. At ground level, online shops went silent. One Reddit user lamented that they had missed out on thousands of dollars in profit because their trading platform couldn’t execute a trade, while another unlucky person’s bed stopped functioning." And just this morning there we suffered a Teraco outage for an hour and a half that affected Internet services too. All my self-hosted services in the house continued to work so I could watch movies, read my RSS news feeds, update my notes management, etc. The linked article goes on to show many other advantages too of self-hosting. That said though, you do at least want to have two hard drives so that there is a rsync backing up daily to the second drive. Just because self-hosting may save you money, does not mean you should skimp on the essentials. You have to take accountability for your data if you self-host. See #technology #selfhosting
AFFiNE is an excellent open-source knowledge management tool “AFFiNE is an open-source productivity app with a workspace that blends structured note-taking with visual thinking. It’s a bit like Notion, Obsidian, Miro, and NotebookLM combined, but in a minimalist package. There are paid tiers that give you access to more of its AI features and cloud storage (it is a local-first app, though). But you don’t need to subscribe for the everyday management features.” There is a good write-up about this product in the linked article below. I've always preferred flat markdown files as I can see them and access them with any Markdown editor, but I did install AFFiNE a while ago on my Linux desktop. I really liked what it can do in terms of creativity and ideas collaboration. I don't think, though, that it will replace my notes app as I like to have my notes on hand where ever I am. With AFFiNE you do need to use its app for the creation and viewing. That said it does install on macOS, iOS, Android, Windows, Linux, and can work through a web browser too. Looking again at that list, and the fact that you can self-host it, I may have to give this another try as it seems with all that, I probably can sync everything across all my devices. For example, in my desktop AFFiNE app there is an option to sync it with the AFFiNE cloud, which includes a link to your own self-hosted instance. It does also support Markdown formatting, as well as export to/import from markdown files. I tested the import of a Markdown document I'd done a while ago in Obsidian Notes, and it imported perfectly, complete with to-do lists, code blocks, tables, etc. The mobile app though does not appear to export/import Markdown documents itself. Plain documents can be created and edited in AFFiNE's Page mode, but you can also switch to the Edgeless Canvas mode where all the whiteboarding, graphics, etc magic happens. Currently, I'm using Joplin for all my markdown notes, and syncing to a self-hosted Joplin server app. Although Joplin is doing everything I want with markdown notes, it does not store the notes in plain markdown files (like Obsidian Notes does). So, in truth, as fat as file formats go AFFiNE won't be much different from Joplin Notes, and if the browser access can actually view and edit notes directly on the self-hosted AFFiNE instance, that would actually be a big plus over Joplin Notes for me. I'm going to rethink my Joplin vs AFFiNE decision, I think. See #technology #brainstorming #knowledgemanagement #opensource
AI Is Amplifying the Dunning-Kruger Effect, New Research Finds “People who are the worst at doing something also tend to severely overestimate how good they are at doing it, while those who are actually skilled tend to not realize their true talent. This galling cognitive bias is called the Dunning-Kruger effect, as you’re probably familiar — and would you believe it if we told you that AI appears to make it even worse?” Taking things at face value, is really the crux of this problem. We've read more than one story about lawyers being caught out by incorrect conclusions drawn by AI. I'd expect, too, that if a trainee lawyer does some research, that they'd have to back it up with the actual references used to do their summary. But it seems too often, a confident answer is given by AI, and many just copy and paste that without questioning it. I like AI that actually provides the links to the source articles, because sometimes I've even found no mention of the answer actually given by AI. AI often just pieces excerpts together, where a human may not have even connected those dots (for very good reason). For some questions, AI can be pretty accurate, but for some others it can be way off the mark, and yet very confidently it will give a wild guess. There is zero actual intelligence in AI. It can be a very useful tool, but only as long as you treat it with caution and check against the sources. Like all technology, it can be very good and it can be very bad. There is no “always good and perfect”. As much as Mr Altman will have us believe AI is a sharp instrument, it is not, it is a blunt one if yielded incorrectly. Given all the hype around AI, and the tremendous investments riding on it, it is no wonder that all networks and products are leaning over backwards to stuff AI into all their products and services, even when no-one asked for it to be there. All these consumer AIs, of course, also all call home to the mother ship in real-time, so imagine what all that data harvesting is also worth. See #technology #AI
Lock Company Sues Man Who Picked Its Lock, Gets Horribly Humiliated This is often the typical; reaction of an organisation when someone shows their product or service has some serious defect or flaw. The problem is, then we all get to hear about it, and are less than impressed with their attitude. Rather than acknowledging something and fixing it, let's attack the messenger. How does this help the many other consumers who use the product or service? I'd never heard of the lock company Proven industries, but now I do know all about them after they sued Trevor McNally. It is worth remembering that no software or hardware is foolproof, just ask Microsoft, Cisco, Oracle, and every other big IT company. As the judge said in this preliminary hearing, someone can say something as long as it is not false (my note: or a politician). See #technology #security #legal