Rethinking systems for structuring and using time Time is fundamental for human existence and experience. Societal frameworks for structuring and understanding time and temporal experience have, however, remained stagnant and are potentially no longer fit for their intended purpose or, more importantly, the purposes we might intend for them at present. Indeed, when considering the...
Weeknotes 341 - New value mechanics for the agentic web
What is the consequence of an agentic web for the mechanics of values? And a lot of other news after a week of announcements by Big AI Tech.
We mostly don’t want to read the docs, but we do want to converse with them. When we build search interfaces for our docs, we have always tried to anticipate search intentions. People aren’t just l…
Netscape Cancer: far worse than Brand Necrophilia.
Google workers at Netscape Sacrifice Zone exposed to toxic levels of trichloroethylene. For at least two months, Google employees were exposed to excessive levels of a hazardous chemical after workers disabled a critical part of the ventilation system at the company's new satellite campus on a Superfund toxic waste site. [...] "We take several proactive measures to ensure the healthiest ...
Casey Newton writing for his Platformer newsletter: The AI Browser Wars Are About to Begin
Here, I think we begin to understand the opportunity that companies see here — and why "web browser" probably isn't the best word for what they are building.
Setting all the drama of the current browser
Dive into the History of Java, from its inception by James Gosling at Sun Microsystems to its evolution as a pivotal programming language in technology.
Source code is a form of expression with its own idioms and styles. It's also a historical relic that reveals how programmers have developed solutions that underpin the software that has changed our world.
Get in, loser, we’re doing an old fashioned conversation by blog post. Dan Sinker wrote recently about the Who Cares Era: The writer didn’t care. The supplement’s editors didn’t care. The biz people on both sides of the sale of the supplement didn’t care. The production people didn’t care. And, the fact that it took two days for anyone to discover this epic fuckup in print means that, ultimately, the reader didn’t care either. It’s so emblematic of the moment we’re in, the Who Cares Era, where completely disposable things are shoddily produced for people to mostly ignore. Then Les Orchard wrote in response that Only the Metrics Care: The user isn’t the customer. And they’re not the product either. The real product is behavioral optimization—metrics on a dashboard. The paying customer is somewhere else entirely, and the “content” is just a means to nudge behavior and juice KPIs. … The point isn’t to communicate. It’s to simulate relevance in order to optimize growth. It’s all goal-tracking, A/B tests, fake doors, and dark patterns. Both of those posts are great and you should read them, but reading them is not a prerequisite to reading this one. I just wanted to place this post in context of the conversation I’m dropping into.
We don't need any more software engineers (allegedly)
You may have noticed a trend recently: ‘AI is going to replace all of the developers’. I'll admit that I have quite a lot of skin in this game, having been a software engineer for the best part of 30 years - so I’ve been thinking about this quite a lot recently To get started, I find that breaking c
New Supermaterial: As Strong As Steel And As Light As Styrofoam
Today in material science news we have a report from [German Science Guy] about a new supermaterial which is as strong as steel and as light as Styrofoam! A supermaterial is a type of material that…
Practical advice for engineers in these troubled times
Since 2023, the rise of interest rates has caused a sea change in how software companies relate to their engineers. It’s harder to be a software engineer now…