I went from 33.6kbps dial-up to speeds of 1Mb/s on Rogers Wave. Incredible!
– James Koole, Getting Back to an Independent Web
A glorious aspect of the open web is this: people telling stories.
I went from 33.6kbps dial-up to speeds of 1Mb/s on Rogers Wave. Incredible!
– James Koole, Getting Back to an Independent Web
A glorious aspect of the open web is this: people telling stories.
Google-backed startup Mobvoi just announced TicPods Free
– TicPods Free are like AirPods for Android
This is both a terrible name and ripe for numerous mocking from the Apple punditry. Still, I hope I’ll be able to pre-order them.
Who Do Tax Breaks Benefit? – John Green
(Hint: not poor people.)
I always underestimate how long something is going to take.
– Hank Green in How to Stop Being Late Forever (includes bonus homescreen!)
Same Hank… same.
Part 1.b of improving my health: my skin does not react well to the material the Flex is made of. Oh well, I’ll get to testing out other Fitbit options in the future.
One of my favourite things about Casey Neistat’s vlog is the music he uses in the videos. I made a playlist of mixtapes made by Discoverthevibes. 🎶
The official Micro.blog metal band shall be called Apolacyptic. Thanks, @JacksonOfTrades. 🤘
Two tracks on Bandcamp that I’ve been meaning to share:
🎶
Micro Monday? How about the Micro.blog slack. It’s more than a simple source of help; different members of the community are in there, passionate about Micro.blog, and often willing to enjoy a good chat.
Between @vishae, @matigo, and myself all talking about new homes I think we need a Micro.blog Moving Club where we can all vent about things, heh. Actually, maybe a hashmoji will do… 🏠🏡🏘️
There’s a pretty good conversation regarding multi-platform support for Micro.blog and related issues. I have thoughts about this but for now just wanted to share it.
I can’t use the app (hi 👋 third-party devs) but native support for microcasts is just the right opportunity for people like me, having stopped short of producing audio.
Bravo, Manton. 👏
app.net is on the way …
A particularly good post from Jason Kottke about why we do things. It pairs nicely with his recent appearance on The Talk Show.
I recently talked about my discontent with Twitter, having been on-and-off again with the whole thing for years. Not only has that feeling intensified since joining Micro.blog a few months ago but it has in fact thoroughly swung into the off part of the cycle, which has happened before now only I did not have the same stable set-up that is now available to me when it comes to my own site and other blogging.
I have more to say about exactly what it is that I am doing but now is not the time for it. Instead, this is why I’m leaving my Twitter account as an archive and withdrawing entirely from it:
As such I’ll be here, with updates and all sorts of other activity forthcoming.
Goodbye Twitter, and hello Micro.blog. 👋
Inspired by Marcelo’s latest edition of his homescreen experiment, here’s my latest homescreen.
Homescreen: April 2018
HP are about to release the Chromebook x2, a Chrome OS tablet. Considering how happy I am with my sub-£200 HP Chromebook, I’ll definitely take a look at this when it ships.
Coolest use of colors to actually help people.
– Jen Scharl stumbled upon brilliant design in public transport.
Imagine shitting on a child for having the gall to be excellent. Assholes.
Podcasters have sold Squarespace HARD for years and it turns out they have a limit on their podcast archive via RSS.
It’s amazing to see the things these podcasters leave out of the adverts and (assumed) research.
Twitch gamer teams up with his son
This is like the beginning of Up. 😭
… in city centers, buses and trains are often the best way to get around, which presents a challenge for people who use wheelchairs or with other mobility needs.
– Rio Akasaka, introducing “wheelchair accessible” routes for Google Maps.
👏
Sarah Andersen’s latest comic is brilliant.
Between Marcelo Marfil’s love letter and Allen Pike’s guide for your inbox it’s worth remembering that your email is what you make it. You can make it good.