What is this bright thing at the center? Reflection of an interior light as it was taken through a window? Or what?

It's 22:24 UTC today
There was an update when they disabled a lot of cities for some reason. I remember I could use it in my city, but now it's not supported...
I haven't heard about Bimba before, @dafunkkk@lemmy.world recommended here, it seems it has better coverage.
It's called OpenStreetMap, the last character is P, it's singular.
For reviews there are multiple ongoing projects, none of them is mature enough for everyday use, they have a very few content:
There was a long and very interesting thread about this last year on the osm forum: https://community.openstreetmap.org/t/a-crowd-sourced-review-service-for-openstreetmap/136235/24
For timetables, it's an existing standard called GTFS, public transport companies should publish their timetables in this format. Transportr is a mature app which supports a lot of companies and cities: https://transportr.app/
CoMaps (a better fork of OrganicMaps) already have a lot of issues about integrating GTFS feeds, e.g. https://codeberg.org/comaps/comaps/issues/1651
And last, as both pilots died
Saved you a click:
After much debate, the new policy is in effect: Wikipedia authors are not allowed to use LLMs for generating or rewriting article content. There are two primary exceptions, though.
First, editors can use LLMs to suggest refinements to their own writing, as long as the edits are checked for accuracy. In other words, it’s being treated like any other grammar checker or writing assistance tool. The policy says, “ LLMs can go beyond what you ask of them and change the meaning of the text such that it is not supported by the sources cited.”
The second exemption for LLMs is with translation assistance. Editors can use AI tools for the first pass at translating text, but they still need to be fluent enough in both languages to catch errors. As with regular writing refinements, anyone using LLMs also has to check that incorrect information hasn’t been injected.
That whatever happens the problem is always systemd. Chain of events:
- voters vote for corrupt politician
- big tech compaies bribe said politician to have shitty law
- freedesktop requests systemd for backend to comply with said law
- systemd just adds the field to the userdb
Who is to blame for all of this? Poettering who else...
Basically that's the other option. But considering a lot of the maintainers live there, it's just easier to comply with the stupid law until it's reversed.



What is n8n?