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byGot my first PR merged and deployed todayπππ» . Code in prod within 4 days of starting. π
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π Paged Out!
byPaged Out! is a free experimental (one article == one page) technical magazine about programming (especially programming tricks!), hacking, security hacking, retro computers, modern computers, electronics, demoscene, and other similar topics.
What a cool zine. Reminds me of high school when we'd make these kinds of things around C/assembly, hacking, and programming in general (but not as professional looking as this).- Tagged with
- computing
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The Week #65
by- I had my first day at first day at Octopus Energy.Β Initially I was in rushing about as I still needed to do some initial setup so I could use my muscle memory again: move the dock to the left, auto hide it, remap caps to control, swap spotlight and language input changing shortcuts ( ctrl-space <--> cmd-space), pairing my magic trackpad, and so forth.
We used gather, this J-RPG-esque video conferencing website for a chat with my new co-workers. Amazing the number of takes on video chat these days.Β
After that I mostly spent of the day reading docs and getting the project up and running locally. There was also a global meeting with the engineering team where I got to introduce myself to everyone.
Working in English left me less mentally taxed at the end of the day, something I must have stopped noticing. I'm a bit afraid that my Japanese will deteriorate. Without a doubt this is the largest project I've worked to date and I know I'm going to learn a lot. - Covid cases returned to double digits in Tokyo for the first time since last November. Kanagawa was down to 51. Cause for optimism. Let's hope this trend continues ππ».
- Leo's return to school was delayed as a super typhoon grazed Yokohama on it's way past Japan. No damage, just a lot of rain and a bit of wind. Though my bicycle cover did manage to blow away. ( Update: Found it down at the end of the street and halfway up a hill).
- Love seeing Weekly blog posts picking up momentum on the IndieWeb.
Saturday: Maquie publishes thingsThisWeek.
Monday: Michael publishes Weeknotes and James publishes Weeknotes
Tuesday: I publish The Week.
Soon we'll have a weekly roundup for each day of the week. - I started (re)-watching The Lone Gunmen (a 13 episode spinoff from the X-Files). I don't think I've seen it properly since it aired on TV 20(!) years ago. It's a bit corny, but pushes a good message about computing, freedom, and surveillance/privacy. In the opening scene Langly is at a launch party for the Optium 4, a new super fast CPU that (secretly) has a modem embedded in it to "upload your files to the internet, and your credit history, and your tax bracket, and your social security number".
While we don't quite have chips designed / hidden to invade our privacy (yet) we are uploading everything and other data that we previously considered extremely confidential is readily accessible to advertisers β and sometimes we even supply it. Amazing that this issue was raised on prime-time TV. How the times has changed.
- I had my first day at first day at Octopus Energy.Β Initially I was in rushing about as I still needed to do some initial setup so I could use my muscle memory again: move the dock to the left, auto hide it, remap caps to control, swap spotlight and language input changing shortcuts ( ctrl-space <--> cmd-space), pairing my magic trackpad, and so forth.
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Response to
byUrban transportation is central to the effort to slow climate change. It canβt be done by just switching to electric cars. Several cities are starting to electrify mass transit.
It's really great to see how varied the methods of transport they're installing are. The photos are also really great.
Yokohama trialed some fully electric buses recently, but they found trouble with the hills and battery life. I think it was as these were retrofitted buses using 3-old Nissan Leaf batteries. I hope they switch the fleet over to electric asap though, as the noise and fumes at the bus centers are horrible.βIt has become a reasonable position to advocate for less space for cars,β said Felix Creutzig, a transportation specialist at the Mercator Research Center in Berlin. βTen years ago, it was not even allowed to be said. But now you can say it.β
My favorite quote and I am happy this is becoming the case. Felix, welcome to The War on Cars. -
Response to
byBut even after that era, as search engines started to become a reliable and powerful way to navigate the wealth of content on the growing Web, links still dominated our exploration. Following a link from a resource that was linked to by somebody you know carried the weight of a βweb of trustβ, and youβd quickly come to learn whose links were consistently valuable and on what subjects. They also provided a sense of community and interconnectivity that paralleled the organic, chaotic networks of acquaintances people form out in the real world.
[...]
The net result is that Internet users use fewer different websites today than they did 20 years ago, and spend most of their βWebβ time in app versions of websites [..] Truly exploring the Web now requires extra effort, like exercising an underused muscle.This article by Dan articulates perfectly what I was feeling when browsing blogs on the Wayback Machine earlier.Β