At last week’s Crafting {:} a Life unconference on PEI I participated in three conversations on blogging: What happened to blogging? Initiated by Steven Garrity The future of blogging. Initiated by Peter Rukavina Doing Blogging. Initiated by me
Elmine already blogged some of her impressions from t…
Links
There are 374 posts filed in Links (this is page 28 of 38).
Read: How the Boeing 737 Max Disaster Looks to a Software Developer
Design shortcuts meant to make a new plane seem like an old, familiar one are to blame
Read: Hypercard at 30
From the archives: Before the World Wide Web did anything, HyperCard did everything.
Read: The Wolfram Function Repository
We’re on an exciting path these days with the Wolfram Language. Just three weeks ago we launched the Free Wolfram Engine for Developers to help people integrate the Wolfram Language into large-scale software projects. Now, today, we’re launching the Wolfram Function Repository to provide an organized platform for functions that are built to extend the Wolfram Language—and we’re opening up the Function Repository for anyone to contribute.
I remember when it was “just Mathematica….”
Read: The end of political cartoons at the New York Times
All my professional life, I have been driven by the conviction that the unique freedom of political cartooning entails a great sense of responsibility.
Cool story, I am not a Times subscriber, so I did not know there were no political cartoons until this artist got in the back window…
Read: Banks scramble to fix old systems as IT 'cowboys' ride into sunset
Bill Hinshaw is not a typical 75-year-old. He divides his time between his famil…
Read: Interview with Aaron Parecki on Indieweb
Listened to XRAY In The Morning- Tuesday, June 4th, 2019: Lillian interviews Aaron Parecki with IndieWeb from xray.fm
If possible, click to play, otherwise your browser may be unable to play this audio file.
TODAY ON XRAY:
(1)News with Friends with Lillian Karabaic and Michael Leverette
(2)Talk Medi…
Read: Evernote and IFTTT collection
This year, I’ve written about how digital marginalia?—?those notes, clippings, likes, and kindle book highlights?—?have re-shaped the way we read. In particular, I believe that we are entering a new era of reading, an era that has a social reading element similar to reading in the 18th and 19th centuries, a time when commonplace books and note-sharing were standard.
Read: Black and White and RSS
Black and white and RSS is an RSS feed of black and white photographs, updating throughout June 2019.
There is no associated website. You can only see the photos if you use an RSS feed reader and subscribe to the feed. Like this:
Read: How to save what made Linux and FOSS possible
If we take freedom and openness for granted, we’ll lose both. That’s already happening, and we need to fight back. The question is how.