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အချင်းချင်သတ်ရအောင် အမေသားသမီးတွေက လူတွေပါ – ကျော်မျိုးမင်း

Posted on February 8, 2024 by Michael G
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Carnaval 2024: Mari Gonzalez comenta sobre participação no BBB 25: “Garanto os memes”; veja o vídeo

Posted on February 8, 2024 by Michael G
Carnaval 2024: Mari Gonzalez comenta sobre participação no BBB 25: “Garanto os memes”; veja o vídeo

I cut Ammonite fossils open on my lapidary saw!

Posted on February 8, 2024 by Michael G
Agates are sometimes opaque, but they are frequently translucent, and occasionally completely transparent. Agate is a variety of chalcedony, a crypto crystalline form of quartz. Translucency, patterns of color, or moss-like inclusions may distinguish this stone from other forms of chalcedony.
#agate
#agatestone
#agates
#mossagate
#agatedad
#agate#stonemeaning
#agatestonebenefits
#agatehunting
#agateidentification
#howtofindagates
#typesofagate
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#whatisagate
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#agatestones

Moodle Products Roadmap Update – our first for 2024!

Posted on February 8, 2024 by Michael G
by Marie Achour.  

Hi Moodlers,

The Moodle Products team recently completed our 3-monthly increment planning process during which we re-assessed our priorities and formalised our delivery plans for the quarter ahead, as well as reviewed our longer-term roadmap.

Our goals for the quarter are aligned with Moodle’s Product Vision which is focused on empowering our users to unlock their creativity, facilitate collaboration and optimise their learning & business outcomes.

For Moodle LMS, this means that we will be aiming to:

  1. Complete the designs for our new AI Subsystem which will power Moodle’s AI capabilities in the future, with immediate focus on enabling AI-generated content creation and launching embedded tools to support learners.

  2. Build our new SMS Subsystem which will enable the enriching of the notifications functionality in Moodle, helping educators and their learners collaborate more effectively and stay informed of key events that impact their learning outcomes.

  3. Finalise the changes to our activity icons, with a new colour palette and some new designs that will make it easier for students to easily identify what they are working on.

  4. Deliver our new course subsection functionality, providing more flexibility on how courses can be structured in Moodle to make them easier to navigate and provide more options for how content can be presented.

  5. Complete the integration of the ‘Ordering Question Type’ plugin into Moodle core, as it is one of our most popular plugins it’s no surprise that this project was chosen by the Moodle User Association.

  6. And last but certainly not least, support the release of Moodle LMS 4.4 scheduled for the 22nd of April. 

For Moodle Workplace, this means we will be focused on:

  1. Delivering our new Course Catalogue feature, bringing self-directed learning capability to our solution for the first time!

  2. Passing our WACG AA accessibility accreditation, certifying Moodle Workplace as best in class against accessibility standards (also for the first time).

Our community developers should also expect to see further developments in support of our ongoing commitment to modernise our software:

  1. Updates to the Task API: we will be completing technical enhancements that will make it easier for administrators to manage their sites in the case of task failures and create the foundation for further technical modernisation in the future.

  2. Enhancements to the LTI framework: creating more opportunities to leverage the power of this common standard in Moodle.

  3. Changes to our Web services & Bootstrap: please watch the videos below for excellent summaries of the work we will be progressing in this space.

  4. Focus on Plugin reviews: each of our teams will dedicate time this quarter to review plugins submitted by our community, keep an eye out for feedback and a sharp drop in the queue!

Webservices

Bootstrap

To find out more about these upcoming improvements and to see what we have planned long term, please check out our Public Roadmap. From there, you can follow the links to the Tracker issues for even more details.

Until next increment!

The Moodle Products Team

Motivation and Complaints of Japanese Wikipedia Editors – second half

Posted on February 8, 2024 by Michael G
Results of the Landscape Survey of Japanese Wikipedia Editors in 2023 Please see the first half. ▶Use of the “Forum(s)” Q14. Tell us everything you…

PreviousNext: Handling Emails Asynchronously: Integrating Symfony Mailer and Messenger

Posted on February 8, 2024 by Michael G

Take advantage of Symfony Mailer’s first-class integration with Symfony Messenger brought to Drupal via the SM project, allowing your site to send emails asynchronously.

by
daniel.phin
/ 8 February 2024

This post is part 6 in a series about Symfony Messenger.

  1. Introducing Symfony Messenger integrations with Drupal
  2. Symfony Messenger’ message and message handlers, and comparison with @QueueWorker
  3. Real-time: Symfony Messenger’ Consume command and prioritised messages
  4. Automatic message scheduling and replacing hook_cron
  5. Adding real-time processing to QueueWorker plugins
  6. Making Symfony Mailer asynchronous: integration with Symfony Messenger
  7. Displaying notifications when Symfony Messenger messages are processed
  8. Future of Symfony Messenger in Drupal

Since Swift Mailer and its Drupal contrib integration were recently deprecated, many projects have naturally switched to its replacement: Symfony Mailer, either via Drupal Symfony Mailer or Drupal Symfony Mailer Lite.

This post outlines how you can take advantage of Symfony Mailer’s first class integration with Symfony Messenger brought to Drupal via the SM project. This integration allows for dispatching emails off-thread, potentially improving performance of the dispatching (usually web-) thread by offloading email-related tasks to dedicated Symfony Messenger workers. This setup can be considered an alternative to using Queue Mail.

Setup

As of writing, of the two Symfony Mailer implementations in contrib, Drupal Symfony Mailer Lite has built in support for Symfony Messenger. Drupal Symfony Mailer does not yet support it, an issue and merge request exist to add it. Apply a patch until the changes are merged.

Symfony Messenger itself does not require any special configuration, other than installing SM.

To run asynchronously, the SymfonyComponentMailerMessengerSendEmailMessage message must have routing configuration to a transport. Or at least the fallback transport must be configured. Without transport configuration, Emails will still be dispatched through Messenger, however they will be executed synchronously in the same thread they were dispatched.

Opting out

If you happen to have both Symfony Mailer and Symfony Messenger installed but do not want emails to be sent asynchronously, you can configure routing for the SymfonyComponentMailerMessengerSendEmailMessage message to instead use the synchronous transport.

If you’re using the SM Config submodule:

PreviousNext: Handling Emails Asynchronously: Integrating Symfony Mailer and Messenger

Sending emails and dispatching emails

Emails may be dispatched using the usual Drupal mechanism, or you can dispatch using Symfony Mailer directly by constructing an email object:

$email = (new SymfonyComponentMimeEmail())
  ->to('jane@example.com')
  ->from('john@example.com')
  ->subject('Hello world!')
  ->text('Some sample text.')
  ->html('<p>some <strong>sample</strong> text.</p>');
/** @var SymfonyComponentMailerMailerInterface $mailer */
$mailer = Drupal::service(SymfonyComponentMailerMailerInterface::class);
$mailer->send($email);

After the send method is executed, Mailer checks Messenger is available, creates a new SendEmailMessage message to wrap the SymfonyComponentMimeEmail object. Then dispatches SendEmailMessage to the messenger bus.

As is typical with Symfony Messenger, email messages must be serialisable. Avoid including any Drupal entities or service references in an email object, and render email contents before sending it.

Processing emails

To process email messages, run the worker with sm messenger:consume. This command will either listen or poll for messages and execute them in a dedicated thread, ensuring quick processing after they are dispatched. For more information on the worker, please refer to post 3 of this series.


In the next post, we’ll explore how to add a user interface to notify users when relevant tasks have been processed.

Tagged

Symfony, Symfony Messenger, Symfony Mailer, Email

MissionControl::Servers (Resource monitor)

Posted on February 8, 2024 by Michael G
Taking the idea from MissionControl::Job, I’ve made MissionControl::Servers which is a simple monitoring of server resources. The general idea is that we may not want a separate system or service to monitor the CPU, Memory, and Disk Space of our Rails applications. This is especially true for hobby projects. So, if you have a VM, this will give you an easy way to set up monitoring of your system resources. The source can be found at Github Project along with a demo running on an AWS EC2 instance.

Python 3.12.2 and 3.11.8 are now available.

Posted on February 8, 2024 by Michael G

Python 3.12.2 and 3.11.8 are now available. In addition to all the usual bugfixes, these releases contain a small security fix: hidden .pth files are no longer automatically read and executed as part of Python startup. (New releases of 3.8, 3.9 and 3.10 containing the same fix are expected next week.)
 

Python 3.12.2

https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-3122/

Python 3.12’s second bugfix release. In addition to the mentioned
security fix and the usual slew of bug fixes, build changes and
documentation updates (more than 350 commits), this is also the first
release to include a Software Bill-of-Materials for the source packages (Python-3.12.2.tgz and Python-3.12.2.tar.xz). Full changelog.
 

Python 3.11.8

https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-3118/

More than 300 commits of bug fixes, build changes and documentation updates. Full changelog.

 

We hope you enjoy the new releases!

 
Thanks to all of the many volunteers who help make Python Development
and these releases possible! Please consider supporting our efforts by
volunteering yourself, or through contributions to the Python Software Foundation or CPython itself.
 
Thomas Wouters
on behalf of your release team,
 
Ned Deily
Steve Dower
Pablo Galindo Salgado
Łukasz Langa

At FOSDEM

Posted on February 8, 2024 by Michael G

FOSDEM (Free and Open source Software Developers’ European Meeting) is a
non-commercial, volunteer-organized meeting where almost ten thousand people
come together around free and open-source software development. It is aimed
at developers and anyone interested in the free and open-source software
movement. It really is totally open, anyone can just walk up and attend
anything. There is no registration even. And yet, it is full of people who
are central to so many key free software projects that power the world we
live in.

For me personally, FOSDEM was good and intense as usual. I went to FOSDEM
for the first time about five years ago. At that time, when I told people I
worked on F-Droid, they asked, “What’s that?”. I went last year, and when I
said F-Droid, people mostly responded, “oh yeah, nice project!” This year,
it felt like most people’s response was to show me F-Droid installed on
their phone then to thank me. It was really a wonderful confirmation to
receive, especially in person, and was a great reminder that we are
positively affecting people’s lives, although our day-to-day experience is
mostly dealing with the problems that people report.

I’ve been doing free software so long (30 years this year!) that it was hard
for me to walk 50m without running into someone that I should discuss
something with. I talked with people from Debian,
Codeberg, CalyxOS, Clean
Insights
, Weblate, The
European Commission, Tella,
Replicant, LineageOS,
OpenJDK, /e/ foundation,
FSFE, EDRi,
Guix, Reproducible
Builds
,
Huridocs, WolfSSL,
Internews
SUSTAIN
,
OpenWISP, OnionShare,
Mailvelope, Butter,
Thunderbird, Eclipse Foundation and more.
One thing that is particularly impressive is the project
stands. Basically every one of them was
staffed by core contributors. Many founders and project leaders were even at
the stands answering questions from whoever walked up (Mastodon, Calyx,
NLnet, ISRG/Let’s Encrypt, Open Source Design, Codeberg, Thunderbird,
Matrix and more).

EU Legislation and Free Software

For me, the biggest part was the Open Source In The European Legislative
Landscape
devroom.
There were a number of people from the European Commission actively engaging
with the hackers like me to understand free software in the context of the
Digital Markets Act, the Cyber Resiliency Act, and the Product Liability
Directive. It was great to see that they are generally supportive of our
point of view. The Digital Markets Act is shaping up to be a powerful tool
for opening up things for free software. The key question now is whether
the European Commission will step up to strongly enforce it in the face of
well-funded attacks from Big Tech.

From that experience, I now feel that the current state of the EU’s Cyber
Resiliency Act (CRA) and the Product Liability Directive (PLD) should not
negatively affect F-Droid or its contributors. I am not a lawyer, so this is
based on my understanding after lots of discussions with people who know a
lot of about it. This is my current understanding of why F-Droid and anyone
who contributes to it should not have to change what they are doing:

  • The F-Droid legal entity makes the “product” so it would be liable.
  • F-Droid is currently entirely non-commercial, handles no money, and only
    commercial activity is regulated by CRA and PLD.
  • Volunteer contributors are very clearly exempt since all their activity is
    non-commercial.
  • Donation-funded contributions like our
    Liberapay
    should also not be affected
    since donations are not paying for a product.
  • Contracted contributors are helping build the regulated product, so the
    legal entities of the contractors would not be liable for F-Droid’s
    “product”.

All in all, I enjoyed FOSDEM very much and found it an amazing place to
exchange with other free software projects. The only downside were the
crowds when trying to get food and drink, and the Wi-Fi and cellular
networks being overwhelmed. I can recommend bringing a spare sandwich and a
water bottle. I hope that the F-Droid community can be better represented
there in the future, and I’ll work on that myself to help make it happen.
Hope to see you at FOSDEM!

Open Source AI Definition: Where it stands and what’s ahead

Posted on February 8, 2024 by Michael G
Open Source AI Definition: Where it stands and what’s ahead

A review of the actions taken toward establishing an Open Source AI Definition and a roadmap of the work to be done in 2024 to get to v. 1.0. Read this recap to stay in the know.

The post <span class=’p-name’>Open Source AI Definition: Where it stands and what’s ahead</span> appeared first on Voices of Open Source.

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