Show newer

found a teeny tiny dead baby crow in front of my house and it makes me so sad

yep! i now officially follow those accounts! it seems to be working well!

Show thread

it seems to default to "follow request" - i don't know how that's going to get managed. maybe it's a "wait" state so that the system running the commands doesn't get overwhelmed? not sure. still testing.

Show thread

okay i followed my first accounts via the bsky bridge - we'll see how this goes~

you're supposed to be able to invite users (10 a day i think) to bridge their accounts by DMing @bsky.brid.gy but so far when i've tried those users haven't received a DM...

Show thread
doe boosted
doe boosted

one day we'll get legit integration but until then.....

Show thread

okay, so, i found out that there's a bridge for mastodon and bsky. it's something i talked about for a while, i'm glad someone made it real.

the link is: fed.brid.gy/docs

it can send things from fedi -> bsky AND bsky -> fedi

all you have to do to make it work is follow the account. when you do so it will auto-generate an account on *its* AT protocol host "ap.brid.gy" and will send all of your PUBLIC (and only PUBLIC) posts to this account. but, in addition, it will also translate likes/boosts/etc between protocols.

if you want to *see* content from bsky, you have to ask that they also enable the bridge's function by following the account, but to do this all you have to do is DM the bridgy account. in doing so it will send them a DM on bsky, saying that someone requested they bridge their account by following over there and in doing so, just like before, it'll make an account here of all of their posts on bsky, which you can interact with, and your bsky "bot" account that got auto-generated earlier will post your replies there.

it's actually fairly straightforward, all things considered. follow the account, it'll create a mirror account - if you want to see someone else's content, DM bridgy and they'll DM that person and ask to bridge.

holy shit!!! the guitar!!!! you can save chords and play it for real!!!!

Show thread

ohhhh okay there's deer antler accessories, that'll have to do for now

Show thread

who do i talk to about getting more critter types in webfishing

okay, it's not *exactly* what i've been thinking of. this essentially makes a "mirror" account on either bsky or on fediverse, depending on which account you want to "bridge" into which other network, while still allowing you to see posts from either network, regardless of where you started.

definitely close to what i was imagining, but not quite fully there yet.

Show thread

holy shit, it seems like someone has already worked on my dream of connecting fedi (activitypub protocol) to bsky (AT protocol) - someone linked me this earlier on bsky

fed.brid.gy/docs

then we hit a double play of Berwick and Chomsky to establish the prior belief that its "only us" who speak, so that we can show how other researchers (Cheney and Seyfarth) observed a group of Vervet Monkeys and their behaviors with regard to certain sounds... "one recorded vervet vocalization made vervets look up, presumably for eagles; another made them look down, presumably for pythons; and a third sent them running up into the trees, a good defense against approaching leopards. Young vervets sometimes use these calls faultily, perhaps sounding a leopard alarm for a warthog. But they get better as they grow up. They learn."

and a quick spattering of different vocalization/responses
"A newer generation of scientists has been trying to understand bird vocalizations. The alarm calls of Siberian jays can be said to have been partially translated. One of their screeches indicates a sitting hawk (which prompts other jays to come together in a group), another a flying hawk (jays hide, which makes them difficult to spot), and a third a hawk actively attacking (jays fly to the treetops to search for the attacker, and possibly flee). When cheery birds known as tufted titmice make a piercing sound, other titmice may respond by collectively harrying an invading predator. Some birds even lie. Fork-tailed drongos—common, innocuous-looking little dark birds that live in Africa—sometimes mimic the alarm calls of starlings or meerkats. Duped listeners flee the nonexistent threat, leaving behind a buffet for the drongo."

Show thread

i run into this discourse enough, perhaps i should write an ultimate screed against "worker-co-op-world"

it won't convince anyone but it'd be nice to centralize my thoughts.

also heres some fun plants i found on the dunes! i dont know what all of them are but im trying to learn~

Show thread
Show older
masto.anarch.cc

A small congregation of exiles.