Manton Reece
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  • Wooden rollercoaster at the Kemah Boardwalk. Walking around earlier before dinner.

    → 10:49 PM, Mar 15
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  • They did a great job with the in memoriam this year at the Oscars. Longer and more personal stories. So many incredible people to highlight.

    → 8:02 PM, Mar 15
    Also on Bluesky
  • Inkwell for Mac will ship tomorrow. It’s my first Mac app that is sandboxed. I have to admit it is nice to do things like delete files without being extremely paranoid about deleting the right thing. It can’t do much damage, and Inkwell is well suited anyway for minimal access to the system.

    → 6:00 PM, Mar 15
    Also on Bluesky
  • Looking forward to the Oscars tonight. Managed to see almost all the best picture nominations, and a handful more in other categories. I wonder if the Oscars being later than the Golden Globes, etc. means there are more surprises because it would be “boring” for the same films to win again.

    → 5:11 PM, Mar 15
    Also on Bluesky
  • Cracking up watching the emoji bit on SNL tonight. I lost it at orange square. 🚡

    → 11:38 PM, Mar 14
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  • Parker Ortolani blogs about the Neo:

    The MacBook Neo is the first Mac that is truly, in every sense of the word, a bicycle for the mind. It’s the first Mac that almost anyone can buy and it’s going to unleash a whole new era of creativity because of it.

    → 2:50 PM, Mar 14
    Also on Bluesky
  • Writing the app is easy. Configuring Sparkle to verify updated app signatures… Impossible! 🤪

    → 12:10 PM, Mar 14
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  • Patrick Rhone interviewed for the People and Blogs series:

    …that’s exactly what a blog should be — a reflection of one’s interest and attention over time. A reflection of who one is right now and where they’ve been. Blogs are living things that should grow at the same rate we do.

    → 10:33 AM, Mar 14
    Also on Bluesky
  • Tetragrammaton

    I picked up Rick Rubin’s book a couple years ago. It sat on my bedside table for months and one day I will actually finish it.

    I just recently discovered his podcast Tetragrammaton. There are two episodes with Greg Brockman that are excellent. (Yes, I’m aware Greg gave a bunch of money to Trump and I’m disappointed by it.)

    The full interview is 3 hours long. The first episode has the best insight into Sam Altman’s firing that I’ve heard yet, especially around letting internal drama brew instead of resolving conflicts early. Highly recommend both episodes whether you love or hate AI.

    → 9:04 AM, Mar 14
    Also on Bluesky
  • Kagi’s Small Web has added categories:

    Finding great Small Web content that scratches your browsing itch can feel overwhelming, especially when the feed is a single stream that tumbles through over 30,000 featured sites. That’s why we’ve introduced categories, curated groups of topics that let you dive into the corners of the Small Web that interest you most.

    The site list is available as a simple text file, but I haven’t seen if the categories are published anywhere yet.

    → 8:43 AM, Mar 14
    Also on Bluesky
  • At my mom’s house taking care of things. All the furniture is gone except the piano, so it’s now a sort of standing desk when I need to work.

    A closed, dark upright piano with a backpack on a bench in front and a laptop resting on top.
    → 4:32 PM, Mar 13
    Also on Bluesky
  • I have a draft pull request for Inkwell sync in NetNewsWire. Not totally sure yet what more will be needed or any kind of timeline for merging it. I’ll test over the next few days, but at least the code is out there.

    → 1:00 PM, Mar 13
    Also on Bluesky
  • Brent Simmons:

    Code is a liquid now.

    Movable, shapable, flowing. It’s the first time I haven’t felt trapped by the weight of old code.

    → 12:44 PM, Mar 13
    Also on Bluesky
  • The AI divide

    John Gruber blogs about the split in reaction to AI-assisted programming:

    The divide I’m seeing is that the developers who are craftspeople are elated because their productivity is skyrocketing while their craftsmanship remains unchanged. They’re achieving much more, much faster, than ever before.

    As things stand right now, I see people falling into roughly four buckets:

    • Normal people who use ChatGPT and love it.
    • Normal people who are worried and want us to slow down or stop building data centers.
    • Programmers who love building products but never loved the low-level details. AI is huge for them.
    • Programmers who think of coding as an art itself. AI is taking away their sense of purpose.

    That second group of folks who are worried is perhaps represented best by this video from Bernie Sanders. I watched the whole thing (about 9 minutes) because I don’t want to lose sympathy for people who feel lost with what is coming. I think this division in society is going to be a very big deal.

    There are going to be protests against data centers, humanoid robots, billionaires, lost jobs. I’m an optimist, though, and to me the possibilities for the future outweigh the challenges. The key will be for all of us — fans and skeptics — to push AI in a direction that is widely available and empowering. The worst outcome would be for it to further concentrate power and wealth in a small group.

    → 10:09 AM, Mar 13
    Also on Bluesky
  • David Smith developed a clever solution for letting the home screen wallpaper show through widgets:

    In Widgetsmith 8.2 we added the ability to give your widgets a ‘clear’ background. This isn’t actually clear (since iOS doesn’t allow that without private API use), but instead just crops part of your home screen wallpaper and uses that as the background.

    Very cool.

    → 9:30 AM, Mar 13
    Also on Bluesky
  • Lisa Charlotte Muth blogs on bringing everything back to her own website:

    Why am I doing all this? Because I got inspired by the concept of POSSE: “Publish on your own, syndicate elsewhere.” For me, ROOTS is the logical first step toward that: “Return Old Online Things to your own Site” (yes, I made this up).

    Most bloggers should at least have this approach for tweets or old blogs. That’s why Micro.blog has special support for handling tweets, and import from a bunch of other platforms.

    → 9:12 AM, Mar 13
    Also on Bluesky
  • I worked downtown earlier today at Lazarus (☕️) and you can already start to feel the SXSW vibes. I’m going to miss all the events this year, but I wonder how AI will change it? Just checked the ClawCon page and there are 750 RSVPs! 🦞

    → 3:49 PM, Mar 12
    Also on Bluesky
  • Atlassian lays off 10%, about 1600 people. They employ a lot of folks in Austin, hope friends here are not affected much.

    → 1:02 PM, Mar 12
    Also on Bluesky
  • Jon Hays:

    I just released a new version of Silverleaf, my new RSS reader that’s built around Inkwell syncing. It’s free, so check it out!

    Available in the App Store.

    → 10:45 AM, Mar 12
    Also on Bluesky
  • The first Rivian R2 off the assembly line will be the higher-priced $60k model. I’m not in the market for a car, still love my old Honda Element that I’ve put way too much money into. But maybe 5-10 years from now when the price is a bit lower, this will probably be my car.

    → 10:33 AM, Mar 12
    Also on Bluesky
Recommendations
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  • Nick Heer
  • Jason Fried

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