Flutterby™! : Data Hell 2024-10-12 02:11:01.651035+02
The hidden danger that kills search products
The lack of objective definition of good search creates huge hazards when creating search, RAG, AI solutions
Refurb weekend: the Symbolics MacIvory Lisp machine I have hated
Every collector has that machine, the machine they sunk so much time and, often, money into that they would have defenestrated it years ago...
Mosaic Netscape 0.9 was released 30 years ago today
According to my notes, it went live shortly after midnight on Oct 13, 1994. We sat in the conference room in the dark and listened to different sound effects fired for each different platform that was downloaded. At some point late that night I wandered off and wrote the first version of the page that loaded when you pressed the "What's Cool" button in the toolbar. (A couple days later, Jim ...
Seeing like a simulation ⊗ The “Whisperverse” ⊗ Risks vs. Harms: Youth & social media
No.328 — The destructo test ⊗ Seeding futures for wellbeing ⊗ AlphaChip transformed computer chip design ⊗ Tiny prairies for sustainability boons
AI in organizations: Some tactics
Meet the Lab and the Crowd
How to convince engineers that formal methods is cool
Based on my experiences convincing people it's cool
Scripting News: Monday, October 7, 2024
Dave Winer, OG blogger, podcaster, developed first apps in many categories. Old enough to know better. It's even worse than it appears.
A Company Is Not a Family. It's a Sports Team
'We're not just a company, we're a family!' It's a nice sentiment, sure. But it's also a load of crap.
Things I learned while building a yt-dlp wrapper | Arkadiusz Chmura
An opportunity to learn new things is a great reason to pursue side project.
The Future of API Caching: Intelligent Data Retrieval
This article explores how autonomous agents could be applied to API caching to enable intelligent data retrieval.
Cozy Cloud - A Personal Cloud to gather all your data
Cozy is a human-centric, open source and french personal cloud that gather all your data for more services, control and security.
The cozy web, as opposed to the dark forest
We withdraw to private spaces to feel safe, as Maggie Appleton writes.
How to Fall in Love With a System: Coziness as a Catalyst for Participatory Agency
Coziness can drive the care and cooperation needed for a world’s inhabitants to design and build systems geared towards emergence and interestingness together. In this sense, Autonomous Worlds are uniquely compatible hosts for cozy games.
The Dark Forest and the Cozy Web
An illustrated diagram exposing the inner layers of the dark and cozy web
Luddites Win
Happy Friday! What's good?
I've picked up many, many new subscribers to Second Breakfast this week. Welcome. And thank you all for making me feel like my decision to re-enter the ed-tech fray and write another book is a good one. I started Second Breakfast because I very much didn't
The Gift of Code - The History of the Web
In the open source community, there is perhaps no greater gift than code. This is about that time 135,000 lines of gifted code created a new era of JavaScript
The Secret Power of a Blog | Jason Rodriguez
Jason Rodriguez is a slightly jaded—but ultimately hopeful—tech worker. Working at GitHub.
After software eats the world, what comes out the other end? ⊗ Building a public energy commons ⊗ Unplugging is not the solution you want
No.327 — What’s a Brain? ⊗ The world’s weirdest library ⊗ A strategic simulation ⊗ Nvidia just dropped a bombshell
How GoDaddy’s Founder, Bob Parsons, Brought Domains To The Masses
The tale of the founder of GoDaddy, a Vietnam vet who figured out the formula for getting regular people to buy domain names.
Firefox, From The Ashes?
What must Firefox do to keep the trust of those who want freedom and choice on the web?
Today in TLD shenanigans: dot io is being killed off
Wishing a very pleasant rebranding to all techbros who squatted their web site in an unrelated nation because it made a good pun. On October 3, the British government announced that it was giving up sovereignty over a small tropical atoll in the Indian Ocean known as the Chagos Islands. The islands would be handed over to the neighboring island country of Mauritius, about 1,100 miles off the ...
SORCER - Wikipedia
The service-oriented computing environment (SORCER)[A] is a distributed computing platform implemented in Java. It allows writing network-programs (called "exertions") that operate on wrapped applications (services) to spread across the network. SORCER is often utilized in scenarios similar to those where grids are used (grid computing) in order to run parallel tasks.
Microsoft Bob - Wikipedia
Microsoft Bob was a Microsoft software product intended to provide a more user-friendly interface for the Windows 3.1, Windows 95 and Windows NT operating systems, supplanting the Windows Program Manager. The program was released on March 11, 1995, and discontinued in early 1996. Microsoft Bob presented screens showing a house, with rooms that the user could visit containing familiar objects corresponding to computer applications, such as a desk with pen and paper and a checkbook. Clicking on the pen and paper would open the system's word processor.
Danger Hiptop - Wikipedia
The Danger Hiptop, also re-branded as the T-Mobile Sidekick, Mobiflip and Sharp Jump, is a GPRS/EDGE/UMTS smartphone that was produced by Danger, Inc. from 2002 to 2010.
Haiku (operating system) - Wikipedia
Haiku, originally OpenBeOS, is a free and open-source operating system for personal computers. It is a community-driven continuation of BeOS and aims to be binary-compatible with it, but is largely a reimplementation with the exception of certain components like the Deskbar. The Haiku project began in 2001, supported by the nonprofit Haiku Inc., and the operating system remains in beta.
BeOS - Wikipedia
BeOS is a discontinued operating system for personal computers that was developed by Be Inc. It was conceived for the company's BeBox personal computer which was released in 1995. BeOS was designed for multitasking, multithreading, and a graphical user interface. The OS was later sold to OEMs, retail, and directly to users; its last version was released as freeware.
Palm OS - Wikipedia
Palm OS is a discontinued mobile operating system initially developed by Palm, Inc., for personal digital assistants (PDAs) in 1996. Palm OS was designed for ease of use with a touchscreen-based graphical user interface. It was provided with a suite of basic applications for personal information management. Later versions of the OS were extended to support smartphones. The software appeared on the company's line of Palm devices while several other licensees have manufactured devices powered by Palm OS.
Amiga - Wikipedia
Amiga is a family of personal computers introduced by Commodore in 1985. The original model is one of a number of mid-1980s computers with 16- or 16/32-bit processors, 256 KB or more of RAM, mouse-based GUIs, and significantly improved graphics and audio compared to previous 8-bit systems. These systems include the Atari ST—released earlier the same year—as well as the Macintosh and Acorn Archimedes. Based on the Motorola 68000 microprocessor, the Amiga differs from its contemporaries through the inclusion of custom hardware to accelerate graphics and sound, including sprites and a blitter, and a pre-emptive multitasking operating system called AmigaOS.
webOS - Wikipedia
webOS, also known as LG webOS and previously known as Open webOS, HP webOS and Palm webOS, is a Linux kernel-based multitasking operating system for smart devices such as smart TVs that has also been used as a mobile operating system. Initially developed by Palm, Inc., HP made the platform open source, at which point it became Open webOS.