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  1. Zeldman on Web and Interaction Design, , more info

    In search of a digital town square
    Ever since an infantile fascist billionaire (hereafter, the IFB) decided to turn Twitter over to the racially hostile anti-science set, folks who previously used that network daily to discuss and amplify topics they cared about have either given up on the very premise of a shared digital commons, continued to post to Twitter while holding their noses, or sought a new digital place to call their own. This post is …
    By L. Jeffrey Zeldman, 1,071 words
  2. Glorious Noise, , more info

    New Waxahatchee: Bored
    Video: Waxahatchee – “Bored” Directed by Corbett Jones and Nick Simonite. From Tigers Blood, out on March 22 on Anti-. I love the Joey Santiago-style guitar that opens this song. Katie Crutchfield says, “I feel like my comfort zone when writing songs lies somewhere on the emotional spectrum of sadness and heartache. Writing from a place of happiness scares me. Too earnest. Anger scares me even more. I wrote ‘Bored’ …
    By Jake Brown, 165 words
  3. one.point.zero - Blog, , more info

    Chrome is getting worse.
    Steer clear of Google Chrome if you value your privacy. They've just introduced a misleadingly labeled "privacy sandbox" feature, which, paradoxically, undermines user privacy rather than protecting it. [direct link to source]
    By Colin, 36 words
  4. David Bradley, , more info

    How many songs is too many songs?
    As with guitars, you can never have too many songs, surely? My modern period of writing and recording began around April 2012, although I’d done a lot of noodling guitar instrumentals with beats and synths for many years before that going way back into my teens. But, this modern period which started in my 40s when I co-established an Arts Night happening got me writing and recording on a more …
    By David Bradley, 428 words
  5. Criminal Element, , more info

    Book Review: Mission Manhattan by James Ponti
    The resourceful young agents of James Ponti’s terrific middle grade series City Spies are back for their fifth adventure, this time protecting a young environmentalist from forces who will stop at nothing to silence her powerful voice for change. Teenager Beatriz Santos is a rock star in the global protest movement, with dedicated followers who…
    By Doreen Sheridan, 62 words
  6. { feuilleton }, , more info

    Helix magazine, 1967–1968
    Another underground magazine, this one originating in Seattle during the first wave of the counter-cultural publications that flourished from the mid-60s on. Wikipedia says that Helix managed 125 bi-weekly issues from 1967 to 1970; the Internet Archive has the first 42 issues which run to October 1968 (the uploader’s dates are out by a year each way). When so few of these magazines are available online this makes a welcome …
    By John, 144 words
  7. Eduwonk, , more info

    How The IRS Treats Entities Is Pretty Irrelevant To How You Should Think About Them
    There is a sort of truism in the education world that non-profit means white hat* and for-profit means you should be skeptical or something stronger. And because Bellwether is a non-profit it would be in my interest to perpetuate that notion. Except it’s wrong and not at all useful. Not-for-profit and for-profit are just corporate structures. Those structures matter, for instance, legally, to some aspects of operations, to compensation, and …
    By arotherham, 744 words
  8. Artmaker Blog, , more info

    Poetry Will Not Optimize; or, What Is Literature to AI? by Michele Elam
    https://read.dukeupress.edu/american-literature/article/95/2/281/344231/Poetry-Will-Not-Optimize-or-What-Is-Literature-to Abstract Literature, poetry, and other forms of noncommercial creative expression challenge the techno-instrumentalist approaches to language, the predictive language generation, informing NLP (large natural language processing models) such as GPT-3 or -4 as well as, more generally, generative AI (text to image, video, audio). Claims that AI systems automate and expedite creativity reflect industry and research priorities of speed, scale, optimization, and frictionlessness driving much artificial intelligence design and …
    By Bruce Sterling, 358 words
  9. Dirty Feed, , more info

    Smashie’s Saturday Smiles
    INSPECTOR FOWLER: We have all seen the musical Oliver, and are familiar with the images of jolly, apple-cheeked urchins in big hats. Well, dispel this cozy impression. The Artful Dodger was a thief, and I don’t think he’d have considered himself quite so “at home” in a juvenile detention centre, which is where I’d have put him. Thieving is thieving. And no amount of “oom-pah-pah” or “boom-titty-titty” will change that. …
    By John J. Hoare, 2,112 words
  10. Brendan Dawes, , more info

    Tickets are now on sale to Barbican members for UK premiere of “Eno” including post screening conversation with @brianeno, @gary_hustwit and myself
    Tickets are now on sale to Barbican members for UK premiere of “Eno” including post screening conversation with @brianeno, @gary_hustwit and myself. Tickets for non-members go on sale Friday. The film is never the same twice and the screening in London will be unique to that time and place. Checkout Garys’s site for all the details @gary_hustwit
    79 words
  11. A Just Recompense, , more info

    Pushcart 2024 XLVIII: Laura Van Den Berg, “Fight Week” from Virginia Quarterly Review #99.4
    Art by Laura Nicole On fight week, Kayla feels every muscle in her body harden. Electrical currents race around in her bloodstream; each movement is animated by a force that feels uncontrollable, uncontainable. Her coach keeps telling her to rest, to sleep, but how is she supposed to sleep? Her life has tapered to one fine and brilliant point. In bed at night she imagines each punch landing like a …
    By Karen Carlson, 1,129 words
  12. Minutes to Midnight - Blog, , more info

    Living in a corporate bubble
    Sanctimonious post about something that, strangely enough, just occurred to me: normal people can easily turn into soulless sellers, casually dropping ridiculous corporate jargon while taking money out of the same group they call community. Yesterday I watched a few videos from well-known professionals in the music production field, which left me stunned. Not sure if it was the language, or the way they were taking the topics so seriously, …
    By Simone Silvestroni, 476 words
  13. Computational Complexity, , more info

    Sumchecks and Snarks
    Last summer as I lamented that my research didn't have real world implications, one of the comments mentioned the sumcheck protocol used for zero-knowledge SNARKs. I tried to figure out the connection back then but got lost in technical papers. With the formal verification of the sumcheck protocol announced last week I tried again this time using Google's new Gemini Ultra. Gemini gave a readable explanation. Let me try to …
    By Lance Fortnow, 431 words
  14. Lewis Dale - Blog, , more info

    My first ever promotion
    Yep, even though I’ve been working as a software engineer for around 11 years now, I’ve actually never had a promotion. Every change in title I’ve had throughout my career has been through changing jobs. But today, for the first time in my career, I had it confirmed that I’ve been promoted. It’s just a level-increase within the “Senior” bracket, but it’s a huge win for me. I got some …
    By Lewis Dale, 262 words
  15. Inframethodology, , more info

    The Key and the Content
    Nabokov arises early in the morning and works. He does his writing on filing cards, which are gradually copied, expanded, and rearranged until they become his novels. The Paris Review: The Art of Fiction No. 40 I’m working through each section of a paper in the Craft of Research series this spring using an image that has worked for me in the past, and which is by no means original, …
    By Thomas Basbøll, 665 words