Flutterby™! (short)
Tuesday April 7th, 2026
Exciting USAA Advice Changes are
Dan Lyke /
comment 1
The "Exciting USAA Advice Changes are Coming!" email may be the thing that drives my growing sense of unease fully into "find a new insurance company".
Used to be that we actually liked USAA. Is there an "actually like" insurance company of any sort any more? Preferably that eschews AI?
Nepal's fake rescue racket
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
This is fascinating: Kathmandu Post: Inside Nepals fake rescue racket
Investigations reveal a vast network of trekking firms, helicopter operators,
hospitals and agents staging fake evacuations, fabricating medical records and inflating
bills to siphon millions from global insurers.
The tourists may be in on it, told by their guides that they can avoid a 2 week hike back
from Everest base camp by saying they were sick, or may be scared into it by guides
inducing psychosomatic symptoms of altitude sickness, or may be given Diamox
(Acetazolamide) tablets (for altitude sickness) with excessive water to induce symptoms of
altitude.
Monday April 6th, 2026
Tweaked CSS
Dan Lyke /
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Tweaked the CSS. Please tell me if you notice anything egregious. Should work better on
small screens now.
No not the EJ Gallo wine brand the
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
No, not the E&J Gallo wine brand, the email client.
Why is this so hard?
Hat tip to whoever's causing Reddit to
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
Hat tip to whoever's causing Reddit to send me password recovery emails. Guessing maybe it's my participation in /r/noai?
The developer owes you nothing
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
taco, bird/cat :verified420:
@chirpbirb@meow.social
Content warning: open source software drama, nvim-treesitter
open source software developers are getting fed up and are finally
recognizing that they can just fucking leave.
the owner of nvim-treesitter gets a really shitty comment from a user saying
that the update to a required version broke their workflow
the owner replies saying "hey just pin what you need instead of mainlining it if you need
this for an older version"
the shitty user replies back saying "go switch to something that doesn't require
interacting with people"
the owner says "OK." and ARCHIVES THE REPO
https://github.com/nvim-treesi...nvim-treesitter/discussions/8627
like, holy shit, what a power move.
The lunacy of Artemis
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
Maciej Ceglowski: The
lunacy of Artemis:
Advocates for Artemis insist that the program is more than Apollo 2.0. But as
well see, Artemis can't even measure up to Apollo 1.0. It costs more, does less,
flies
less frequently, and exposes crews to risks that the steely-eyed missile men of the Apollo
era found unacceptable. It's as if Ford in 2024 released a new model car that was slower,
more accident-prone, and ten times more expensive than the Model T.
Of course I mostly go back to: WTF are we doing with crewed exploration in the twenty
fucking twenties. Not only is sending out robots cheaper, we learn a hell of a lot more.
It's just propaganda dickwaving to put humans in harm's way.
Via.
speed of writing code is not the problem
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
Andrew Murphy: If you thought the speed of writing code
was your problem - you have bigger problems. He mentions Eli Goldratt's The
Goal, which, of course, I remember reading back in high school 'cause my Dad was in
management consulting at the time.
From this Elizabeth Ayer
@elizayer@mastodon.social thread, I quote tooted the second in that thread with:
I think we've got a whole lot of people building software who both have no
experience with the actual users of that software, and have no conceptual model for what
the software does internally.
Years of "Agile" and using writing software to prototype have destroyed our
collective ability to engage with the processes that we used to use.
security report tsunami
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
Maybe the LLM coding tools are getting better? daniel:// stenberg://
@bagder@mastodon.social
The challenge with AI in open source security has transitioned from an AI slop
tsunami into more of a ... plain security report tsunami. Less slop but lots of reports.
Many of them really good.
I'm spending hours per day on this now. It's intense.
Artemis IT disasters
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
You've probably seen the stuff from the Artemis II mission about Bluetooth pairing issues
and Microsoft Outlook ... well ... there's no way to put those words together without some
sort of "clusterfuck" semantics. Anyway, Becca Royal-
Gordon @beccadax@soincredibly.gay
Hot take: The Artemis livestream is a damning indictment of modern computing
devices. It seems like half the radio chatter is troubleshooting email delivery problems,
confusing user interfaces, or devices not booting or connecting. Literal astronauts with
years of training cant make our stuff work.
wendy cloudberry
@wendycloudberry.com
Pine would never
Numerous social media folks are also making "Thunderbird" comments... I think this is a
reminder that it's time for me to get back on Claws.
No one is coming
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
Paul Cantrell
@inthehands@hachyderm.io thread on the ICE invasion of Minneapolis and the clarity that
comes from realizing that no one is coming to save you.
Echo Chamber in your pocket
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
Campus Computing Center
of the United Nations University: The Echo Chamber in Your Pocket
Two landmark papers from MIT and Stanford now offer formal proof of what many
suspected: sycophantic AI is not merely annoying. It is systematically eroding both our
grip on reality and our capacity for moral repair.
Sycophantic Chatbots Cause Delusional
Spiraling, Even in Ideal Bayesians
Kartik Chandra, Max Kleiman-Weiner, Jonathan Ragan-Kelley, Joshua B. Tenenbaum
Science: Sycophantic
AI decreases prosocial intentions and promotes dependence
Myra Cheng, Cinoo Lee, Pranav Khadpe, Sunny Yu, Dyllan Han, and Dan Jurafsky (preprint mentioned
previously, a mention in the Stanford Report)
Via.
NPR catches up with AI in legal
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
NPR: Penalties stack up as AI spreads through the legal system.
Mostly stuff we've already seen, but it's good to see the mainstream catching up. Via.
Waymo safety vs buses & trains
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
Thread from Bryan
Culbertson 🥄
@bryanculbertson.com
about normalizing self-driving car trips vs different factors, and comparing those to
other modes, and pointing out that autonomous vehicles need are still 100x more dangerous
than public transit modes.
Futurism reports that Almost Half of
Dan Lyke /
comment 0
Futurism reports that "Almost Half of US Data Centers That Were Supposed to Open This Year Slated to Be Canceled or Delayed"
Demand is low enough that you might actually have to get Iran to bomb your data center for the insurance money rather than claim you're gonna achieve "AGI" next year this time for sure really...
https://futurism.com/science-e...data-centers-construction-supply
Flutterby&tm;! is a trademark claimed by Dan Lyke for the web publications at www.flutterby.com and www.flutterby.net.
Last modified: Thu Mar 15 12:48:17 PST 2001