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My hell was trying too make sense or and organise audio/music ID3 tags. What a nightmare that is. EXIF seems much nicer to me.

Picard is far from perfect, but it does more or less impose a semblance of uniformity across a large library.

Yes, that's what I ended up using. I was wanting to program something myself but it was too difficult. MusicBrainz Picard [1] is excellent.

[1] https://picard.musicbrainz.org/


It's a shame that the title doesn't say what the s/w is : keyd.

I actually use keyd on my laptops because it seems to do everything I need and is easy to get going without any fuss. So thank you Raheman Vaiya.


I wrote this on another submission here about his death :

Inevitable of course. He was getting on in years and starting to show his age. He's an artist I started to really appreciate about 10/15 years ago when visiting the one of his big Royal Academy shows in London. The works were very large, very colourful and monumental. But as well as the huge colourful paintings, his smaller, fine and fragile line drawings of the landscape were also inspiring. I think he got better as he aged and the past 20 years have been his best and most productive. Lovely guy as well. I'll miss him.

In addition to the above, he wasn't a grumpy technophobe. This was most apparent with his iPad usage but he was also someone who explored the way artists used technology in the past e.g. the Camera Lucida, an optical process of reflecting an image from in front of you onto a piece of paper. You trace it out. He wrote about this in a book called "Secret Knowledge" in 2001 [1]. He was always interesting in conversation.

[1] https://www.thamesandhudson.com/products/secret-knowledge


Originally on iPhone — he used an app called Brushes, by Steve Sprang.

Thanks. I'm sure Sprang loved having Hockney as a user! I must say that I am less fond of the digital art he made and much prefer the traditional, physical, paint on canvas.

> he wasn't a grumpy technophobe.

> I must say that I am less fond of the digital art he made and much prefer the traditional, physical, paint on canvas.

So does that make you the "grumpy technophobe"?

Or is it perfectly reasonable for people to choose to what technology they want without being called a "grumpy technophobe"?

I know for many people on this site their paychecks require them to promote genai trash, but how funny would it be for a successful visual artist to just start prompting their legacy into existence producing the same results that a toddler would get by banging on a keyboard into the same genai prompt input textarea to avoid having people on tech's payroll calling them "grumpy technophobes".


Painting with light, 1987

https://youtu.be/ZI8RbdPe4ro


Inevitable of course. He was getting on in years and starting to show his age. He's an artist I started to really appreciate about 10/15 years ago when visiting the one of his big Royal Academy shows in London. The works were very large, very colourful and monumental. But as well as the huge colourful paintings, his smaller, fine and fragile line drawings of the landscape were also inspiring. I think he got better as he aged and the past 20 years have been his best and most productive. Lovely guy as well. I'll miss him.

Yes, magpies are very intelligent birds. Also very annoying! I don't like hearing their "cackling", especially if you're in bed trying to sleep. Magpies at mine also figured out how to feed from the wire-cylinder hanging feeder, meant for small birds. They flap their wings like crazy to hover for a few moments at the feeder and knock out the food or get to it. Clever birds. The pigeons just stand around below and scavenge ...

Mine's been mostly fine. Second hand Pixel 10 (previous 2nd hand 8a) and I am extremely happy with an excellent phone. No problems like you've had.

Thanks for writing this. Perhaps a part of your therapy at the end. Also, a way to understand and recover. I hope all goes well for you!

Respect for programming this. I did some date/time calculations a few years ago using Perl and it was full of corner cases and trouble. Did I enjoy it? I enjoyed seeing it work. Hopefully with the right answers! This tool looks great.


Perl's DateTime module was pretty solid, IIRC. One of the things I miss about using Perl.


Yes, I agree. It was magic to me really. I still love Perl.


That's great news. Fwupdmgr has made a huge positive difference to me over the past few years. A BIOS update used to be painful, perhaps even impossible, but not now. Thanks to all who worked hard on this, particularly Richard Hughes, who set it all going. My Debian Thinkpads also thank you.


Whatever the reason for "hiding" Mythos, it seems clear that these systems are getting very good at finding software security exploits. Mythos has made more people, even the US government, sit up and pay more attention. Regarding who should control the release of powerful systems like this, as Bruce Schneier and David Lie write in "Mythos and Cybersecurity" :

"Until that changes, each Mythos-class release will put the world at the edge of another precipice, without any visibility into whether there is a landing out of view just below, or whether this time the drop will be fatal. That is not a choice a for-profit corporation should be allowed to make in a democratic society. Nor should such a company be able to restrict the ability of society to make choices about its own security."

https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2026/04/mythos-and-cy...

It is reasonable to be concerned.


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