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#birdapp

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Bird app

Ah, excellent. My org has removed itself from X/Twitter.

We're a large organisation and had about a dozen accounts, including some for customer query ticketing and the like. We've availed ourselves of all of them.

Excellent.

This billionaire asshole that bought (and internationally subsidized) a social media platform thinks he's against the system when he's quite literally the system himself.

He's completely delusional and absolutely the problem.

There are times I do wish I hadn't deleted my 8k+ follower #BirdApp account and this is one of those times.

I was using #Bitdefender for my VPN, however the latest update, 27.0.3.35 is a POS! Not only does it randomly disconnect from the assigned IP, it also disconnects devices on my LAN! I reached out to support and they basically told me to change protocols, which fixed nothing!

Before the 31-May update the Premium VPN was solid, now avoid it at all cost!

#Technology
#Security
#DontUse

Heyhey, anyone else experiencing technical difficulties with the #birdapp ? It won't let me retweet or post anything. No, I'm not a doomscroller anymore, so I don't spend all day online posting. 😅​ So reaching the post limit can't be the reason.

My account isn't locked. It works otherwise like normal: I can scroll and like stuff, but can't retweet or make posts.

The #RedEyedVireo was one of our far-away visitors here in #Maine!

Backyard Bird of the Month for May: Red-eyed Vireo
by Andy Kapinos

Birds, Maine's Naturalist, News & Notes · April 30, 2024

"Here I am! Where are you? Way up here! In the tree! So goes the song of the Red-eyed Vireo, heard in nearly every forested area between Kittery and Fort Kent from May until early autumn. True neotropical migrants, Red-eyed Vireos spend the nonbreeding season in the #AmazonBasin, especially in Colombia, Brasil, Venezuela, Ecuador, and Peru. Most depart South America during April, and over the course of a few weeks or a month, make their way up through Central America and the southeastern US, #migrating on clear nights and refueling during the day by feasting on the abundance of newly-emerged insects. The first males can reach Maine by the first week of May, but the majority arrive in the second and third weeks, just in time for the emergence of leaves and insects in the canopy of our forests.

"These canopy-dwellers are heard far more often than they are seen, and possess a huge vocal repertoire, combining various “syllables” into “phrases” that don’t repeat. In fact, there is often no similarity between the songs of males whose territories are right next to each other. While the males generally sing from treetops, Red-eyed Vireos forage and nest in the mid- and understory, and require forest habitat with layers of native shrubs and small trees. Their nests are usually built at these lower levels, with layers of foliage above to hide the nest from predators. They raise their young on insects, especially caterpillars and other larvae, before eating increasing amounts of fruit later in the summer, which they subsist on throughout the nonbreeding season. The return of Red-eyed Vireos to their breeding territories in Maine is a yearly reminder that conserving healthy forest #ecosystems is important not only here at home, but also in the neotropical #forests where they spend the rest of their lives."

maineaudubon.org/news/backyard

Maine Audubon · Backyard Bird of the Month for May: Red-eyed Vireo - Maine AudubonHere I am! Where are you? Way up here! In the tree! So goes the song of the Red-eyed Vireo, heard in nearly every forested area between Kittery and Fort Kent from May until early autumn. True neotropical migrants, Red-eyed Vireos spend the nonbreeding season in the Amazon Basin, especially in Colombia, Brasil, Venezuela, Ecuador, […]

@rbreich Dr. Reich's surrogate: please take this post down. As others have said, referring to a post on the #BirdApp drives revenue into a apartheid supporting #RWNJ pocket. None of us here are interested in supporting the Muskrat!

For #Fediverse users, the story was posted on Mastodon yesterday.

masto.ai/@rbreich/112108835043

MastodonRobert Reich (@rbreich@masto.ai)Attached: 1 image Trump is out of his mind and desperate https://robertreich.substack.com/p/trump-is-out-of-his-mind-and-desperate?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=mastodon

I have a personal page, not super exciting, 3m.fyi/ On it I have a #twitter logo that goes to my old #birdapp account that I no longer use. I want to keep that logo but point it to an article specifically targeted at the people still on Twitter, maybe afraid to leave, loose followers, etc. an article about why, for many many reasons, they should move to #mastodon specifically.

Best clear concise non-paywall article on that?

Mark MullenMark Mullen