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#speed

2 posts2 participants1 post today

"In a time of uncertainty, the future doesn’t slow down to give you time to make up your mind!" - Futurist Jim Carroll

Uncertainty is not an excuse to stall. It’s a signal to move—strategically, swiftly, and with intent.

And yet, in moments like this, indecision becomes the silent killer. Leaders delay. Organizations drift. People pause, waiting for “clarity” that never comes. And in a moment in history that features relentlessly unpredictable - and some would say insane - levels of uncertainty, indecision becomes aggressive.

But the future doesn’t reward those who hesitate. It penalizes them, punishes them, and hurts them, by setting them further back. It rewards those who know how to pivot, adapt, and accelerate—even when the ground is shifting beneath them. I've said this before: “The biggest risk isn’t moving too fast—it’s moving too slow while the world speeds up.” That reality becomes more pronounced during an era of uncertainty.

In every previous downturn, we’ve seen the same pattern. The companies that acted with agility—who streamlined decision-making, shortened timelines, and empowered their teams—came out ahead. They didn’t rush blindly. But they didn’t wait for permission, either. They were bold, fast, and focused.

What did they do?

- they built cross-functional teams with the authority to decide in real-time.

- they prototyped quickly, then scaled what worked.

-they adopted an iteration mindset: test, learn, refine—then repeat.

- they aligned on mission clarity, so even in chaos, the direction was clear.

And that mindset isn’t just aspirational. It’s proven through research. I summed it up after the last crisis: “Bureaucracy is out. Speed is everything. The future belongs to those who can decide—and move.”

Here's the key thing to think about: agility isn’t recklessness. It’s responsiveness. It’s not about rushing blindly—it’s about having the confidence to move when others are still overanalyzing the map.
The greatest risk right now? It isn’t moving too fast. It’s moving too slowly while the world speeds up. And the greatest mistake? Doing nothing.

So as this new era of global uncertainty accelerates, are you still fine-tuning your plans while others are executing theirs?

Because the future isn’t waiting.

And neither should you.

**#Uncertainty** **#Action** **#Agility** **#Speed** **#Decision** **#Future** **#Leadership** **#Strategy** **#Adaptation** **#Momentum**

Original post: jimcarroll.com/2025/04/decodin

My ISP gave me an interesting scare a couple of minutes ago. As you know if you do not want to pay them for a permanent IPv4 address, which I consider obsolete networking, they remotely reboot your gateway device and assign it a random IP out of one of their IPv4 pools.

This time it didn't take the usual long 30 to 90 Seconds to reboot the device and transfer credentials to obtain the new IP.
The Gateway got in an infinite loop somewhere and I had to Power it off, then had to wait 90 seconds to power cycle it before it took 180 seconds for the device to finally get the new IP.

Someone screwed up the login sequences for the xDSL devices of which the hashtag is in the toot and now we as the paying customer again have to pay for it in wasted time.

Luckily this power cycling off xDSL devices occurs only once in 6 weeks and usually I do not use the internet at that point in time.

In case you are wondering my Gateway uses obsolete technology, is forcibly assigned by the ISP and it's also cursed with a extremely low transfer speed.

I just included a speedtest after first draft of this toot

As you can see the speeds here are so low the connection is virtually unusable for anything where you have to move a big bites of data. They still manage to extort more than USD 30 a month for this connection

#xDSL#ISP#Services
Happy (belated) 91st birthday to the legend Jim Dunn. It is such an honor to photograph these Legends. This portrait was captured in my small tent studio at the 2023 Nitro Revival.
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#JimDunn #NitroRevival #legends #LegendsPassingProject #longtermproject #portrait #motorsport #motorsports #speed #speedculture #racing #PortraitsByTimScott #racingculture #carculture #dragracing #driver #history #Analog #Film #Hasselblad #MediumFormat #Ilford #DragRacing #timeless #scottphotoco www.ScottPhoto.co (not .com) ©2025 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Linux 6.15’s exFAT file deletion performance boosted

A recent development in the upcoming Linux 6.15 kernel has been spotted, because there was a big improvement to the exFAT file system implementation in relation to how it deletes the files when the “discard” mount option is used. This improvement significantly saves time as a test file after the merge has been deleted in 1.6 seconds, compared to more than 4 minutes of the total time taken.

This pull request makes sure that, upon file deletion, it discards a group of contiguous clusters (that is, clusters that are next to each other) in batch instead of discarding them one by one. This was because in prior kernels, such as 6.14, “if the discard mount option is enabled, the file’s clusters are discarded when they are freed. Discarding clusters one by one will significantly reduce performance. Poor performance may cause soft lockup when lots of clusters are freed.”

The change has been introduced in commit a36e0ab. Since then, the pull request has been merged to the kernel and it will be integrated to the first release candidate of Linux 6.15. A simple performance benchmark has been verified with the following commands:

# truncate -s 80G /mnt/file# time rm /mnt/file

In detail, the performance of this filesystem without this commit is poor, totalling about 4 minutes and 46 seconds in real time, with 12 seconds of system time. In contrast to the patched kernel, it totals about 1 second in real time, with 17 milliseconds of system time.

It’s a huge improvement!

Image by diana.grytsku on Freepik

Still a few days left to register to our virtual #speed-networking event between PIs and young researchers (MSc/PhD/Postdocs)!
When? Wednesday April 9th 11.00AM-01.00PM CET. Registration deadline: April 2nd. Grab your slot!

For more information and registration, check out the following google form:
docs.google.com/forms/d/1qc7QM

Google DocsSpeed networking between PIs and young researchers - April 2025 editionInterest and registration form for PI speed networking for April 9th, 11:00 AM - 01.00 PM CET The following PIs are open to meeting with interested junior researchers (prospective masters, PhDs, postdocs, etc.) to discuss anything under the sun (but mainly background, research interests, info about the lab environment/supervision styles, potential projects etc.) -- This is meant to be an informal chat, like those you can have during a conference rather than an interview or anything like that. Here is a list of the PIs participating and some brief information about them: - Assoc. Prof. Martin Sikora (University of Copenhagen, Globe Institute, https://globe.ku.dk/research/geogenetics/sikora-group/) - Dr. Lucy van Dorp (University College London, Genetics Institute, https://www.ucl.ac.uk/~ucbpvan/). - Dr. Alexander Herbig (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, https://www.eva.mpg.de/archaeogenetics/research-groups/computational-pathogenomics/) - Assoc. Prof. Verena Schuenemann (University of Zurich, https://www.iem.uzh.ch/en/research/paleogenetics_group_schünemann.html). - Prof. Ludovic Orlando (Université de Toulouse III, Faculté de Médecine Purpan, https://cagt.cnrs.fr/ages/) - Prof. Nicola Segata (Università Di Trento, http://segatalab.cibio.unitn.it/contacts.html) - Assoc. Prof. Michael D. Martin (NTNU University Museum, https://www.ntnu.edu/employees/mike.martin) You can sign up to talk to more than one PI. However, to allow most participants to meet with the PIs they are interested in, we ask you to select two first choices. When assigning people to the PIs time slots we will prioritize the people that have expressed to meet a PI as a first choice over people that have not. Slots related to the two first choices will be allocated on a first-come-first-served basis. Each chat with a PI will last roughly 12/13 minutes. We will send details of how to attend in a follow up email prior to the event confirming who you will talk to and roughly when. Registration closes on Wednesday April 2nd. Data protection: Please note that submission to Google Forms results in data being stored on Google Servers including those located in the United States. If at any point you wish your responses to be removed from use of the SPAAM community, please contact a member of the steering committee for removal of your personal data.
This is not the kind of photograph that gets a lot of likes or attention but I find myself drawn more and more to moments like this. It’s the kind of photograph that you need to spend a little time looking at to see what I saw and what inspired me to press the shutter right at this moment. I shoot a lot of film so every time I press the shutter it costs me money – I don’t take that lightly. I’m always looking for moments with a lot of details so that the photograph is not a one-trick-pony. There are times for that for sure but as I look at historical photographs the ones I find most interesting are ones that give me a more in-depth look at the moment captured. The older the photograph the more important the details seem to be because so many of the elements of that moment are gone forever – the people, the location, the fashion, the experience that everyone was having at that exact split second is never to happen again in the same way, ever. That is one of the things I love about photography – every single photograph is history.
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#RPM #BaronaDrags #Racing #RacingCulture #Speed #SpeedCulture #HotRods #Timeless #Analog #Film #Nikon #35mm #Kodak #KodakProfessional #BlackAndWhite #Monochrome #CarsOfInstagram #ScottPhotoCo www.ScottPhoto.co (not .com) ©2025 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

I cannot recommend it enough, but you fediverse-folks need to try out BallisticNG 🤩 If you like old-scool anti-gravity racing, this is DA THIIIING for you 🤤 It's pretty cheap as well! :bitcoin: 😎

store.steampowered.com/app/473

I'll also add, try out the current development build, it's awesome 😉

store.steampowered.comBallisticNG on SteamBallisticNG is a high speed, all thrills anti-gravity combat racer and open modding environment developed as a tribute to old school classics such as Wipeout, Rollcage and Jet Moto.
There is something special to me about the RPM Barona Drags. The combination of the location, the track, the people and the entire experience makes me feel like I’m taking a step back in time. The track is old, rough around the edges and a bit unkempt – but that’s not a critique, it’s part of what makes it special. It feels like I’ve taken a step back in time to the 60’s or 70’s and you can feel the ghosts of races past and the decades of memories made here – in all of the right ways. It kind of makes me feel like a kid again with my face mashed against the chain link fence close enough to make my ears ring and smell the hot cylinders exploding in front of me. I really haven’t found an experience quite like this anywhere else. The RPM team always puts on a fantastic event and the mix of hot rods, dragsters and madmen (and women!) pummeling their cars down the track was absolutely perfect. I hope that with this short series you might get just a little taste of the magic found here and tempt you to come experience this for yourself.
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#RPM #BaronaDrags #Racing #RacingCulture #Speed #SpeedCulture #HotRods #Timeless #Analog #Film #Nikon #35mm #Kodak #KodakProfessional #BlackAndWhite #Monochrome #CarsOfInstagram #ScottPhotoCo www.ScottPhoto.co (not .com) ©2025 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED