Skip to content

Recently updated blogs

Or see recently added blogs

  1. Aaron Gustafson :: My Notebook, , more info

    🔗 Web Components Are Not the Future — They’re the Present
    I really appreciated Cory LaViska’s take on #WebComponents here. Especially this bit:You know what framework I want to use? I want a framework that aligns with the platform, not one that replaces it. I want a framework that values incremental innovation over user lock-in. I want a framework that says it’s OK to break things if it means making the Web a better place for everyone. Yes, that comes at …
    111 words
  2. Hotelblues.com, , more info

    All Good Things
    It finally seems to be happening. The old hotel I worked at is getting torn down. It seems weird to see it go. I wouldn’t have had this website without that hotel. Here is a link to the Beloit Daily News article about the place getting torn down.
    By Turk, 51 words
  3. Martin Truefitt-Baker | Blog, , more info

    Printing Rollers
    I’m trying to write a little bit about some of the materials, techniques and equipment that I use for my printing. These will be my personal opinions about what works for me and how well. Anything I say about cost, value and quality is from my personal experience and I’m well aware that the way we all work and our preferences and values are very individual. Out of all of …
    By Martin Truefitt-Baker, Art, 2,499 words
  4. Niche Museums: Find tiny museums near you, , more info

    The Vincent and Ethel Simonetti Historic Tuba Collection
    Vincent Simonetti collected his first historic tuba - a ~1910 Cerveny BB-flat Helicon - in Boston in 1965, while playing tuba on tour with the Moyseev Ballet Company. Today the collection has grown to more than 350 tubas, and is now the largest private collection in the world that is dedicated exclusively to members of the tuba family. The collection entirely fills five rooms of a bright yellow house in …
    By Simon Willison, 317 words
  5. The Indie Game Reading Club, , more info

    Ugly Beautiful Books
    Thought experiment: What’s the ugliest game book you’d still pick off a shelf if you came across it again for the first time? Indie snobs will of course claim it’s a whole long list, but the reality is that we really do judge a book by its cover. That’s why they have covers. Fair warning: it’s not a great movie! But I did appreciate the (ham-handed) message. Last week I …
    By Paul Beakley, 2,295 words
  6. Light from Space, , more info

    Andromeda: Our Galactic Neighbor
    Many things have been said about the Andromeda Galaxy, arguably the most majestic galaxy that amateur astronomers can image due to it's sheer size in the sky—many times larger than the Moon appears to us, but also many times dimmer.With the naked eye, even in dark skies it appears but a tiny little fuzzy patch. But once you start collecting those photons photographically with long exposures it comes to life.Total …
    By Thomas Fuchs, 154 words
  7. Silver Screenings, , more info

    Love & Finance in “The Rage of Paris” (1938)
    Here’s a line you don’t often hear in a classic movie. A man greets a friend with, “How’s everything in Winnipeg?” You heard that right: Winnipeg. And why not? There was a time when Winnipeg was touted as the “Chicago of the North” with its rail transportation systems and rapidly-growing population. Big money was to be made, until it wasn’t. … Continue reading →
    By Silver Screenings, 71 words
  8. Plenge Gen @rplenge, , more info

    Advice to my younger self
    Last week I visited the University of Pennsylvania for a fireside chat with Roger Greenberg, a Professor in the Department of Cancer Biology, as part of the Wharton Undergraduate Healthcare Club (WUHC). I shared my personal history and answered questions from an audience primarily consisting of Penn undergraduate students. This inspired me to write down advice that I wish I could have given to my younger self. This blog is …
    By Robert Plenge, 228 words
  9. Zythophile, , more info

    No, the ‘Hymn to Ninkasi’ is NOT a recipe for making Sumerian beer
    It’s a claim you will find repeated in dozens – possibly hundreds – of places: that the so-called “Hymn to Ninkasi”, a poem in the Sumerian language to the goddess of beer, at least 3,900 years old, known from three fragmentary clay tablets found in and around the ancient city of Nippur, which stood between the Euphrates and the Tigris, is “effectively a Sumerian recipe for brewing beer”, “the oldest …
    By Martyn Cornell, 7,444 words
  10. Zak Reviews, , more info

    Arbitrary List of Popular Lights - Fall Equinox 2024 Edition
    Happy (belated) Equinox! In honor of Fall Equinox, I've made an updated list of popular lights. Days are getting shorter in the northern hemisphere. It might be time for a new flashlight. The best flashlight There is no best flashlight, so this is an amalgamation of what enthusiasts have been buying and recommending to others lately along with the author's arbitrary preferences and biases. Please take note that prices and …
    By Zak, 1,280 words
  11. fasterthanli.me, , more info

    ktls now under the rustls org
    What's a ktls I started work on ktls and ktls-sys, a pair of crates exposing Kernel TLS offload to Rust, about two years ago. kTLS lets the kernel (and, in turn, any network interface that supports it) take care of encryption, framing, etc., for the entire duration of a TLS connection... as soon as you have a TLS connection. For the handshake itself (hellos, change cipher, encrypted extensions, certificate verification, …
    86 words
  12. The Shelter Stone, , more info

    Bläbær
    I bought two of these in Norway last spring. One I shared with two friends on top of a local hill at sunset. This one I found in the gel and sports nutrition drawer that’s mostly sugar. I’m saving it for something. I just don’t know what.
    By Will Ellwood, 48 words
  13. Spooky Rusty, , more info

    2024-09-26 16:56
    Fuck Time Fuck Space by Spooky Jaguar
    By ᶘ ᵒ㉨ᵒᶅ Rusty James, 8 words
  14. Erik Bernhardsson, , more info

    It's hard to write code for computers, but it's even harder to write code for humans
    Writing code for a computer is hard enough. You take something big and fuzzy, some large vague business outcome you want to achive. Then you break it down recursively and think about all the cases until you have clear logical statements a computer can follow.
    61 words
  15. Derek Sivers | blog articles, , more info

    Wealth = Have ÷ Need
    Not a new idea, but just another visualization and reminder. Wealth, feeling like you have plenty, is an equation. Wealth = Have ÷ Need If you have nothing, then focus on having some. Once you have some, the easiest way to increase your wealth is to decrease your needs. Have 10 but think you need 100? You are poor. Have 10 but only need 5? You are wealthy. Have 10 …
    146 words