Skip to content

Piero Bosio Social Web Site Personale Logo Fediverso

Social Forum federato con il resto del mondo. Non contano le istanze, contano le persone

Episode 47 - Elena Rossini - Director & Fedi Advocate - Livestream 2025-10-10

Uncategorized
9 6 45

Gli ultimi otto messaggi ricevuti dalla Federazione
Post suggeriti
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    7 Views
    Orbene, ieri finalmente ho visto il Frankestein di Del Toro!Bello? Bello, assolutamente, con un Oscar Isaac davvero fantastico e probabilmente quanto di più di fedele al romanzo si sia mai visto in un adattamento cinematografico.Personalmente resto un po' freddino per due motivi tutti miei: 1. C'è qualcosa nell'estetica e della messa in scena che non mi convince mai del tutto con i film di Del Toro. Forse è la CGI o boh, ma visivamente ho sempre la sensazione del "bel farlocco" (problema mio eh)2. Il romanzo di Mary Shelley è un tale capolavoro che rappresenta un bel macigno con cui confrontarsi (ma davvero, tanti applausi per lo sforzo: non pensavo avrei mai visto tutta la parte del fienile con la "crescita" della creatura)ma aldilà di tutto, una meravigliosa storia senza tempo raccontata molto bene nell'arco di un paio d'ore: e oh, di sti tempi mi pare oro colato#film
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    9 Views
    I think I have identified a fairly significant flaw in how the #Fediverse currently operates. Hear me out.The Fediverse currently consists of all sorts of different systems - #Mastodon, #Friendica , #Pixelfed , #PeerTube, #BookWyrm , and so forth. And while they are all connected via the #ActivityPub protocol, they all have different functionalities and different ways of presenting themselves. Which is as it should be, because Diversity Is Our Strength(TM).However, it is here that the ActivityPub-based interactivity hits its limits - for usually, you can either experience the relevant system as it was intended, or you can interact with it, but not both - _unless_ you have an account on the same system (though not necessarily on the same instance).Let's say that you are a Mastodon user who looks at another person's BookWyrm page. You scroll through their books, posts, and comments. Then you see some comment you want to comment on yourself, but can you do so?Not directly. You need to figure out the URL of their comment, and then copy and paste that comment into the search bar of your Mastodon instance. Then it will show up in the same format as a Mastodon post, and you can interact with it - boost it, like it, comment on it.Sure, it works, but it's a whole lot of tedious effort.Or you can search for the user account in Mastodon and scroll through all their posts and comments as if they were a Mastodon user - and thus, you will miss out on all the unique user interface features of BookWyrm.So what is missing?Well, Mastodon already has an "Open original page" feature when looking at someone's post. What we need is an "Open original page AND AUTHENTICATE" feature. This way, the target instance (whatever software they are using) could acknowledge the viewer as an external user who could nevertheless fully interact with the local user interface, including the ability to boost, like, and make comments.This is something that should be theoretically possible to implement, right? #FediHelp
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    13 Views
    Drew Struzan, RIP. His Floating Heads show a level of artistry and emotion rarely seen in the realm of motion picture poster illustration. I won't go into the (very) long list of his credits, but if you like movies, you've seen - and will instantly recognize - his work. #Art #DrewStruzan #Illustration #Movies #OldMovies #RIP
  • 0 Votes
    3 Posts
    22 Views
    @passiomatic AFAIU they used the same people from Mad Max: Fury Road, but they have _more_ CGI so some of it just came out bad, and relied on some new things (deep fakes!) which aren't as good.Also, I think you need to spend more to get better CGI, e.g. the bit in Dune where they used huge led screens with the background desert to get the proper lighting and not just green screens.