I used my UV light from fly tying to cure windshield repair resin!
Microblog
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Your platform archiving features are definitely an inspiration. I’m curious, what kind of storage space does that use, and how much does it grow on a monthly basis? What have you budgeted for archiving per account?
A note on the routine fixing with our plugin: It also self-heals, stopping redirects if the links come back. We thought that an important part. We also handle the redirects via JS on the front end so that if someone decides to stop using the plugin, their original post content is unchanged. Trying to avoid lock-in as much as possible.
A project I used to love is Amber Link from the Berkman Klein Center, which takes a similar approach to Micro.blog and saves snapshots on the WP site itself: https://github.com/berkmancenter/amber_wordpress
The plugin doesn’t work anymore, perhaps I should fork it and make it compatible with modern WP.
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Charlie today, pointing at my macOS dock:
“What’s the square with the truck?”
“That’s called Transmit.”
“What does it do?”
“It helps me move files from this computer to others.”
“Cool!!”
Panic is cornering the macOS app market for 4 year olds, purely on how cool their icon is.
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I sometimes have a similar conundrums when woodworking: Do I spend the next couple hours flattening this piece with a No. 5 plane or run it through the machine planer a few times? Do I carve out this dough bowl by hand with a gouge or put a carving disk on the electric grinder?
I really like using hand tools, but certainly will use power tools to save time and energy. Where I personally draw the line with woodworking is that I have no interest in using a CNC, but I don’t mind when other people do.
In some aspect it is the artist’s creative vision that counts most, but there is definitely a sliding spectrum on which the method of execution matters, too. An AI prompt is a kind of creative vision, but there is a lot to be said for a human grappling with and creating art manually.
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Observation: I remember very little about the Blinkist summaries I “read” (perhaps consumed is a better word) a few years ago, whereas I remember a lot about the full-length books I read a few years ago.
Perhaps I wasn’t taking the Blinkist summaries seriously or there is a selection bias going on (I chose to read the full version of things I was interested in and was thus more engaged), but either way they were a waste of time.






