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  1. Peter Merholz, , more info

    Whither UX Research?
    A few years ago, we interviewed Jen Cardello for Finding Our Way, and she shared that her team (UX Research) is peered with “market research, behavioral economics, brand, and advertising research, and customer loyalty” in an independent Insights team. The idea was for research to avoid a functional bias, so that it couldn’t be “weaponized” by marketing or design. And while UX Research is still typically found within a UX/Design …
    By Peter Merholz, 621 words
  2. Poemas del río Wang, , more info

    The last serf village in Europe
    As you drive from Málaga airport through the Málaga mountains into the interior of Andalusia, just before the Antequera junction where the roads branch off to Seville, Córdoba and Granada, a compact cluster of houses looks down from a hilltop along the way. Traditional Andalusian white houses, standing shoulder to shoulder, coming together as a single closed settlement, as if they were preserving an old story. I give in to …
    By Studiolum, 1,151 words
  3. web-goddess, , more info

    Chambray Shorts
    I had such fun making Rodd’s Trigg Shorts for New Year’s Eve that I decided to make another pair. I’ve had this chambray in my stash for a few years, thinking it might make a nice pair of shorts. And guess what? It does! I asked the Snook if I needed to make any size adjustments, and the only thing he asked for was a slightly bigger waistband when fully …
    By Kris, 191 words
  4. David's Book World, , more info

    Weasels in the Attic by Hiroko Oyamada (tr. David Boyd)
    Each of the three stories collected in Weasels in the Attic is linked by the narrator and his friend Saiki sharing a meal, meals that seem to become a focal point for broader currents at play. The stories may appear quiet on the surface, but there is an unsettling sense of more going on (or perhaps more being meant) beneath that façade. In the first story, ‘Death in the Family’, …
    By David Hebblethwaite, 363 words
  5. Runestone Academy, , more info

    Roadmap 2024
    Roadmap 2024 A lot of the podcasts I listen to, and quite a few of the blogs I read, encourage you to pick a touchstone word for the year. I’ve never done that before, but I’m going to try it this year. My word for 2024 is “Simplicity”. I’m going to try to use this word to guide my decisions and actions for the year, both in my personal life …
    647 words
  6. Allen Pike, pixel crafter, , more info

    From Chatbot to Everything Engine
    This morning, OpenAI launched the GPT Store: a simple way to browse and distribute customized versions of ChatGPT. GPTs – awkwardly named to solidify OpenAI’s claim to the trademark “GPT” – consist of a custom ChatGPT prompt, an icon, and optionally some reference data or hookups to external APIs. In the coming weeks, OpenAI will also start paying developers based on usage of their GPTs. While GPTs may prove useful …
    By Allen Pike, 992 words
  7. Matthew Somerville - Writing, , more info

    2023 in review
    A personal summary of the past year, after reading a couple of others from friends
    18 words
  8. Out of the Past, , more info

    New & Upcoming Classic Film Books (22)
    New year, new books! 2024 is your year to read more film books and there are plenty of new ones coming out for you to enjoy. There is lots here for those of you who enjoy Oscar history, fashion, Westerns, film noir, etc. There are 80+ new titles featured so plenty options to consider!Are you new to my list? Here are the details. The books include biographies, memoirs, scholarly texts, …
    By Raquel Stecher, 2,194 words
  9. Do You Know The Muffin Man?, , more info

    Holiday 2023 Cookies
    This year, our cookie inspiration came from the New York Times, especially Cookie Week 2023, and the book Fabulous Modern Cookies. Mexican Hot Chocolate Cookies Neapolitan Checkerboard Squares Peanut Butter-Miso Cookies Pistachio Pinwheels Mango Chutney Thumbprints Smoked Almond and Caramel Cookie Crunch We made one box as a New Years’ gift to a friend, brought some as a hostess gift for a New Year’s Eve party.
    By Eric Fung, 69 words
  10. Ben Viveur, , more info

    3.4 Children
    It's now been a fair few months since changes to UK Duty legislation made it advantageous for breweries to produce beers at a strength of 3.4% or weaker, and we should be starting to see the effects of this at the bar counter as breweries seek to offer beers meeting this criteria.Speculation at the time suggested that this could be the death knell for cask ales in the 3.5 to …
    By Benjamin Nunn, 1,219 words
  11. AVC, , more info

    Transit Tech Lab
    The Partnership for NYC, alongside its partners at the MTA, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, NJ TRANSIT, and NYC Department of Transportation, launched a call for applications for the 6th annual Transit Tech Lab this week. To kick off this year’s program, the Transit Tech Lab is seeking early and growth-stage tech companies with compelling solutions to one of three local transit system challenges: Customer Experience …
    By Fred Wilson, 256 words
  12. Sally Lait | Blogs, , more info

    2023 into 2024
    My annual, lengthy, round-up tradition continues into another year. 2023 brought a return to Japan, a return to work, a lot of fatigue and health challenges to navigate, but also a lot of lovely memories. This post is part of a yearly series dating back to 2011(!), of which the previous post can be found here. Overview Before I dive in, I haven’t been on social media nearly as much …
    By Sally Lait, 89 words
  13. Morphosis, , more info

    Publication News: 2024
    I have a new novel coming out in July (amazon page here): a utopian novel mashed-up with some space-opera Lovecraftian/Dennis Wheatley horror. My teenage son, when I explained the premise, suggested I call it Space Satan!!!, with that many exclamation marks, and this may have been a better title than the King Lear reference with which I have actually gone. But here we are. And isn't the cover-art, above, splendid? …
    By Adam Roberts, 139 words
  14. A Stick a Dog and a Box With Something In It, , more info

    You Can Call me AI
    Paul Simon got there first.. I’m giving up ‘intelligence’ for 2024. That is, I’m not going to use the term ‘intelligence’ except to critique it as an inherently flawed construction firmly grounded in race science and unable to sustain the weight of current usage as a measure of cognitive ability that can help us assess human, animal, or machine-based capabilities. It doesn’t do the work we want it to in …
    By billt, 387 words
  15. Sentence first, , more info

    The thingliness of Lorrie Moore’s words
    Lorrie Moore’s 2009 novel A Gate at the Stairs offers among its attractions several passages and exchanges of lexical and linguistic interest. This post looks at some of them. The book’s narrator, Tassie, is a Midwestern farm girl now in college. She’s also employed as a nanny by Sarah, a restaurateur. One of their early conversations has commentary on the semantic inflation of awesome: “You have a mother?” I said. …
    By Stan Carey, 1,315 words