Reminder of how much we like to criminalize being poor.
Skipping a $3.50 transit fare results in a $425 fine while skipping a $20 parking pass lands you a $70 fine that rich people complained to high heaven about. What justification, other than hating poor people, is there for this not scaling?
Make parking fines $2000 and then let's talk about the fictional "war on cars"
S, when I went to get him in the morning recently: “I have pictures in my eyes”
I find it interesting that on one hand, this is pretty much the best design possible for me given that it represents almost no new code, no new tools, and no new costs. It’s quite optimal. On the other hand, it’s possibly the worst possible tool chain imaginable for a blog engine for almost anybody else.
I don’t have a blog engine, but I feel like there’s a lot of what I use for personal things that make sense for me but I wouldn’t recommend in general.
RE: https://hachyderm.io/@mononcqc/113068111191906429
I recently saw an amazing Navajo rug at the National Gallery of Art. It looks abstract at first, but it is a detailed representation of the Intel Pentium processor. Called "Replica of a Chip", it was created in 1994 by Marilou Schultz, a Navajo/Diné weaver and math teacher. Intel commissioned the weaving as a gift to the American Indian Science & Engineering Society. 1/6
Realized that the death of the author and « The purpose of a system is what it does » are similar approaches
I'm going to create an SSG that runs just-in-time when a user of your website requests an html file from the web server. And for convenience, instead of mucking about with the filesystem I'm going to store the SSG inputs in an SQL database
I wrote about "Past Tense, parts 1 & 2", aka the Bell Riots episodes, from Star Trek Deep Space 9, and how their version of San Francisco in late August 2024 compares to the one we're living through today: https://cohost.org/vectorpoem/post/7112917-the-bell-riots-happe
On Sep 12 the Applied Social Media Lab (where I work) is hosting “Beyond Discourse Dumpster Fires: Strategies and Tools for Better Online Civil Space" to explore new ideas for healthier and more satisfying online communication.
I'm particularly excited to hear from @zephoria!
RSVP here, online via Zoom or (limited) in-person tickets in Cambridge MA: https://brk.mn/discourse
There will also be a recording available afterwards, so those who do not use Zoom can still watch!
Damn, AnandTech is stopping publication:
“Still, few things last forever, and the market for written tech journalism is not what it once was – nor will it ever be again. So, the time has come for AnandTech to wrap up its work, and let the next generation of tech journalists take their place within the zeitgeist.”
https://www.anandtech.com/show/21542/end-of-the-road-an-anandtech-farewell
Big news: I'm working with @criccomini on a second edition of Designing Data-Intensive Applications! An early release of the first 3 chapters is now available: https://learning.oreilly.com/library/view/designing-data-intensive-applications/9781098119058/ (O'Reilly Learning subscribers only at this point) and we're hoping to finish it next year.
The overall structure and philosophy remains unchanged, but we're bringing it up-to-date with new technical developments, and polishing the presentation with things we've learnt since I wrote the first edition a decade ago.
At the height of One Million Checkboxes's popularity I thought I'd been hacked. A few hours later I was tearing up, extraordinarily proud of some brilliant teens.
Here's my favorite story from running OMCB :)
https://eieio.games/essays/the-secret-in-one-million-checkboxes/
Have surprised a lot of my coworkers with my age this summer by talking about playing in the grandmasters division.
And you may ask yourself, who wrote this crap
And after enough time, you realize it was you all along.
RE: https://mastodon.social/@brouhaha/112928310801430771
Finally hit 1000 miles on the e-bike! Took a while, since the vast majority of my trips are <1 mile.
If there are going to be climate-justified subsidies for owning electric cars, there should be subsidies for not owning cars at all.
reading "The slow evaporation of the free/open source surplus" and I mostly agree with it, except for this tiny aside at the top which turns out to be important
Free/open source has been on my mind lately – more than usual. (FOSS or OSS for short, the distinction matters, a lot, but for the purposes of this post the two are similar enough to lump together.)
often it's fine to lump together free software and open source, but this article talks about the intersection of FOSS and industry, which means it's almost all about open source and hardly about free software at all because The Industry is ... almost entirely unconcerned with free software
the only point raised in the article that actually affects FS is how more coders becoming unemployed means less free time to hack; beyond that it seems that FS will roll on mostly unaffected, because FS (programs that put the end user first) has always been at the margins
https://www.baldurbjarnason.com/2024/the-slow-evaporation-of-the-foss-surplus/