πŸ—» James Van Dyne

✈️Trips πŸ—ΊοΈMaps ✏️️Blog πŸ”—οΈοΈLinks πŸƒRuns πŸ‘‰Now
  • 🏑Home
  • ✈️Trips
  • πŸ—ΊοΈMaps
  • ✏️Blog
  • πŸ”—οΈLinks
  • πŸƒRuns
  • πŸ‘‰Now
  • ✏️Articles
  • πŸ“€οΈReplies
  • πŸ’¬Status
  • πŸ”–οΈοΈBookmarks
  • πŸ—ΊCheckins
  • πŸ“…The Week
  • πŸ–₯Tech
  • 🌲Sustainability
  • πŸƒRunning
  • 🧠Thoughts
  • πŸ‡―πŸ‡΅Japan
  • πŸ’‘TIL
  • β›°Tanzawa
  • 🏑Home
  • ✏️Articles
  • πŸ“€οΈReplies
  • πŸ’¬Status
  • πŸ”–οΈοΈBookmarks
  • πŸ—ΊCheckins
  • πŸ“…The Week
  • πŸ–₯Tech
  • 🌲Sustainability
  • πŸƒRunning
  • 🧠Thoughts
  • πŸ‡―πŸ‡΅Japan
  • πŸ’‘TIL
  • β›°Tanzawa
  • Nov 30, 2020
    by James

    Today's happy thought: native iOS apps running on a Mac means I can run fewer Electron apps.

    πŸ”—permalink
  • Nov 29, 2020
    by James

    Just past Shimoida station off the subway. Still blows my mind this is Yokohama. Nice 10k to round off the week and get my monthly goal kms in. πŸƒπŸ™ŒπŸ»






    πŸ”—permalink
  • Nov 29, 2020
    by James

    What if you made a service where each customer's data was kept in their own sqlite.db? GDRP compliance would be as simple as "rm hoge.sqlite", no mixing customer data, data exports easy peasy...

    πŸ”—permalink
  • Nov 28, 2020
    by James

    My mother-in-law made me this sweet holder for my pour over coffee filters. β˜•οΈ



    πŸ”—permalink
  • When it comes to tech or business, what are you most thankful for?

    Nov 27, 2020
    by James

    It is American Thanksgiving (well, in America, it's the next day here in Japan) and Justin asked a good question in the Mega Maker Slack today and I wanted to share my answer publicly.


    When it comes to tech or business, what are you most thankful for?

    My answer:

    Open source. Not just because there’s a bunch of high quality tools available for free (gratis), but that it shows that humans, no matter where they’re from or what they believe can work together for the greater good.

    When I was first getting into programming windows ruled and the idea of being able to work using open source all day every day was still a bit for dreamers. Grateful that’s no longer the case.

    πŸ”—permalink
  • Nov 26, 2020
    by James

    My first fun query using healthkit-to-sqlite and datasette: average duration of hand washing each day. Query is on my Healthkit queries page.



    πŸ”—permalink
  • Nov 26, 2020
    by James

    I know I'm probably late to the game, but ripgrep is fantastic. Great work, y'all.

    πŸ”—permalink
  • Nov 26, 2020
    by James

    Nakata sunrise set. 5km at 5am. πŸƒπŸ™ŒπŸ»



    πŸ”—permalink
  • πŸ”— dogsheep/healthkit-to-sqlite

    Nov 25, 2020
    by James
    Convert an Apple Healthkit export zip to a SQLite database - dogsheep/healthkit-to-sqlite
    healthkit-to-sqlite is super neat. I now have an SQL-queriable db of my heart rate, runs, handwashing, sleep analysis, you name it. Even better - this data is all on device. Now to think of some fun queries...
    1. Tagged with
    2. apple
    3. health
    πŸ”—permalink
  • The Week #20

    Nov 24, 2020
    by James


    • It's been 20 weeks since I started doing the week. Let's go for 20 more!

    • I started getting my feet wet with desktop linux again. I last ran linux on my desktop the around 2003 or 2004 running Gentoo. I liked that computer, it was a full tower with a sticker of Calvin (of Calvin & Hobbes) smashing a swastika in two that said Stop Racism, it was great. But X11 was fiddly and OS X gave me my unix without the fiddling.

    To my surprise Ubuntu just worked on my mid-2014 MacBook Pro. Wifi works, resume from sleep works, printer works, everything that used to be fiddly "just works". I'm able to connect to my Mac Mini and remote control it and access it's shares (my Drobo). monadical wrote a nice blog post that details settings for Mac users on linux to make them feel a bit more "at home". The little things like adjusting the mouse movement and so forth.

    In the event that I switch full-time to Linux, it seems like I could use icloud photos downloaderto automatically sync my photos from iCloud to my computer.

  • Speaking of iCloud Photos, I discovered that it's not useful for anything but looking at recent photos. I've been a user of iPhoto since version 1 or 2 - a long time. I never got deep into rating photos or building extensive albums, but I dutifully upgraded each time a new release came out.

    Some photos - like the one that showed my old full tower computer from high school was shot in 2003 has made all of the migrations between computers and versions. Or another of me and my brother smoking a celebratory cigar after his daughter was born in 2011. These photos show up in Photos on my desktop in the years 2003 and 2011 respectively.

    But on iCloud Photos the years only go back to 2015. What's more is that photo of me and my brother smoking a cigar shows up in 2015. The photo from 2003 is, I'm assuming in there somewhere because the number of photos matches on my desktop and in iCloud, but I can't find it or tell you where it is.

    It's almost like Apple is trying so hard to not read or use your data for privacy purposes off your machine that it can't read the exif data to get timestamp. But that it can't even order photos by the correct year online makes me question if all of my photos are actually safe.


  • πŸ”—permalink
Previous 167 of 360 Next
Reply by email
Powered by
πŸ”Tanzawa

← An IndieWeb Webring πŸ•ΈπŸ’β†’
Photo of James Van Dyne James Van Dyne Japan

Web developer living in Japan.