Friday, November 15, 2024

Friday Links 24-30

The open mouth of a hippo sticking out of the water

Two podcast recommendations today: the one about culture fit and the one about Escobar's hippos.

Leadership

The wrong way to think about culture fit [Podcast] - It is very hard to get this wrong. Similar as values. It is just to easy to abuse.

How Infrequent Retrospectives Reduce Learning Cycle Time and Make Everything Worse - retrospectives are still my favourite part of everything agile.

Using systems modeling to refine strategy.

Engineering 

Martin Fowler Reflects on Refactoring: Improving the Design of Existing Code [Podcast] - another good episode. I would argue that the book could have been a handful of blog posts. If you exclude the reference. 

Build Your Own Radar: Using the Technology Radar as a governance tool [Podcast] - I think thise makes sense for every reasonably sized engineering team. 

Your Security Plan - simplified way to think about your security. 

Migrating in-place from PostgreSQL to MySQL - pretty cool. 

Demystifying The Regular Expression That Checks If A Number Is Prime - what?

Environment

It took 68 years for the world to reach 1 terawatt of solar PV capacity. It took just two years to double it - change is possible if we don't get stuck on the old way of doing things.

2024 'virtually certain' to be warmest year on record, scientists say - I think this has been confirmed by now? 

‘Used like taxis’: Soaring private jet flights drive up climate-heating emissions - thank you rich people!

EU emissions fall by 8% in steep reduction reminiscent of Covid shutdown - some good news.

Urbanism & Cycling

The cyclists tracking down their own stolen bikes - this is probably a bad idea in most cases.

Bicycles save lives: How bikes have been critical after Spain's Valencia floods

100,000 Chinese students join 50km night-time bike ride in search of good soup dumplings  - now I want those dumplings.

Pedestrian-friendly cities have lower rates of diabetes and obesity - not surprising.

Launching a new guide for taking bicycles on trains - very basic at the moment

Central Paris To Limit Through Motor Traffic From Next Week - How long will it take until Paris makes it to the top of the Copenhagenize list?

Random Hippos

The cocaine kingpin’s wildest legacy: what can be done with Pablo Escobar’s marauding hippos? [Podcast] - possibly my favourite invasive species?

Bland, soggy slop or scratch-cooked chilli and pancakes? The best and worst hospital food around the world – in pictures - they all looks good? I would go for the Taiwanese one.

Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kinds of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time, you might notice common themes, though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.

Friday, November 01, 2024

Friday Links 24-29

A park somewhere
This week's recommendations: the podcast about lawns and why cars are so scary at Halloween.

Leadership

Why Your Meetings Suck (And How to Fix Them): Insights from Dr. Steven Rogelberg 6 | 37 [Podcast] - focusing on 1:1 meetings

Measuring Developer Productivity with Diff Authoring Time [Podcast] - the use case is improving developer experience tools and not measuring developers.

TBM 318: Why Orgs Become Too Tall - again a good overview from John about the causes, some of them are difficult to work around.

Eng org seniority-mix model. - if you want to reduce spending on senior engineers, you have to reduce hiring them, but also reduce promoting into that level.

Urbanism and Transit

Jaywalking is now legal in New York City - the rest of the world: "what?" 

Forget tainted candy: The scariest thing on Halloween is parked in your driveway - "But the biggest reason may be that American streets and cities are designed for cars, and not people."

Crossing the USA by train - did I post this already? It's great anyway, and makes me want to travel large distances by train. 

How Many Hydrogen Transit Trial Failures Are Enough? - people are still clinging to this fuel.

Stuttgart 21: Europe’s Most Controversial Rail Project | DW News [YouTube] - that does look a bit overdesigned, but it will be great once it arrives.

Random Lawns

Lawns: Is yours giving sun king or pink flamingo? [Podcast] - blame the French!

When Does Instagram Decide a Nipple Becomes Female? - great project, and now I am curious when it will happen. 

Clothes Line Animals Series - pretty art.

The Unlikely Inventor of the Automatic Rice Cooker 

"Another clever sales technique was to get electricity companies to serve as Toshiba distributors. At the time, Japan was facing a national power surplus stemming from the widespread replacement of carbon-filament lightbulbs with more efficient tungsten ones." - maybe we see more things switch to electric when energy prices will go down in the future

The Unfettered Selfishness of Digital Nomads - "I think the least we can ask of these people is that they spare us all the self-serving posture of enlightenment."

Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kinds of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time, you might notice common themes, though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.

Friday, October 25, 2024

Friday Links 24-28

Four dogs looking into the camera

Mostly urbanism links today. 

This week I recommend the talk by Cabel Sasser, it's weird and fun.

Engineering

gptel - Emacs client for all kinds of LLMs 

SMURF: Beyond the Test Pyramid  - everything is a tradeoff.

Environment

Tax on Europe’s frequent flyers could raise €64bn a year – study - unlikely to happen. 

Fuel duty expected to rise by up to 7p a litre after the budget - it has been reduced before and had been frozen for a long time.

Urbanism

Welsh roads safer this spring compared to last – new data - low speed works. "Collisions and casualties on 20mph and 30mph roads have fallen by almost a quarter compared to the same period in 2023"

Testing back alley laneways to unlock a hidden bike network (plus a visit to a top laneway city) [YouTube] - these don't really exist around here. I imagine the main problem will be the crossings with other streets.

Barcelona tramway between Glòries and Verdaguer to come into service on November 9 - this has been taken forever, and there is still a long way to go for the full connection.

TfL seizes 1,400 vehicles from drivers who ignore London Ulez fines - nice. 

Should Cities Ban Drive Thrus? [YouTube] - I would start fining people who queue on public roads. This also doesn't seem to be an issue in Europe.

Creating the First Bicycle Traffic Model of Barcelona - I am already looking forward to the results. 

Towards the Renaturalization of Urban Spaces: How 08014 arquitectura's Projects are Reclaiming Barcelona's Streets - the agency behind the design of the Superblocks.

Cycling with Balloons in Amsterdam - pretty.

Milliarden-Projekt wird zur Geisterstadt [German, Video] - it looks pretty bad. I do like all the greenery.

Barcelona is turning subway trains into power stations - I think I had this before, this is a new article. 

I went inside a "war on cars" neighbourhood in the UK [YouTube] - LTNs again.

Random Dogs

Dogs Are Entering a New Wave of Domestication - service dogs. 

TBM 317: Yes, Or... - it depends, or does it?

Mosaic Netscape 0.9 was released 30 years ago today - I'm old.

Montserrat monastery to host stage finish of 2025 Volta a Catalunya cycling race - the race comes to my hood again.

Pluralistic: You should be using an RSS reader (16 Oct 2024) - yes!

‘We were cheeky outlaws getting away with it’: the total euphoria of Liverpool’s 90s club scene " "“It’s a luxury to have something that’s underground and intimate where you know everyone in the room [...] But it can’t last. If it’s brilliant, it’s gonna go mainstream"

Casio made a furry robot designed to cuddle and calm you down - I approve. 

XOXO Cabel Sasser Panic [Video] - great talk. "Appreciate everything endlessly"

Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kinds of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time, you might notice common themes, though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.

Friday, October 04, 2024

Friday Links 24-27

Screenshot from the game Elite
Many links today, as I skipped some Fridays due to business and problems with my local workflow for links, which should finally be fixed.

This week I especially enjoyed the video about donated bikes for Ukraine and the podcast Shell Game about scary AI stuff.

Leadership

TBM 313: Chat, Breathe, and Reflect - how to deal with uncertainty, don't pretend you don't have to change your approach. 

Testing strategy: avoid the waterfall strategy trap with iterative refinement. - as always, start with a proof of concept, then iterate, and gather data.

Measuring developer experience [Podcast] - someone plugging his product, but still with some good information.

Are happy workers the way to better results? - the data seems to show this. 

Your company needs Junior devs - I would rather say: your company needs a good mix of seniority.

Engineering

NIST Recommends Some Common-Sense Password Rules - sensible indeed, frameworks should just adapt these in code. 

How we improved availability through iterative simplification - some examples from GitHub in tracking down and improving performance issues.

Committing to Rust in the kernel - summary of the discussion from the 2024 Maintainers Summit

Should we decompose our monolith? - an example of a fictional organisation. 

Uptime nines aren’t equally distributed - it doesn't help if your site is unavailable, when it is supposed to be busy. 

Software service granularity: Getting it right [Podcast] - everything is a tradeoff.

Work

Employers used return-to-office to make workers quit. Then this happened. - spoiler: it's probably the people you want to keep who are leaving.

Inside the chaos of Amazon's RTO mandate - see above. 

Should we focus on making workers happy? [Podcast] - yes.

Environment 

End of an era as Britain’s last coal-fired power plant shuts down - mostly switching to gas, which isn't great either, but there is progress on the renewable front too. 

In Barcelona, the subway trains are helping power the stations - I didn't know this, and this totally makes sense if you don't have batteries on the trains. 

Rich countries silencing climate protest while preaching about rights elsewhere, says study - this makes me sad and angry.

Urbanism

The European Tram Driver Championships: 26 Cities, 52 Drivers, 100% Sporting Drama [YouTube] - last time I post about this … promise. This is a good summary.  You can also check out the full stream.

Barcelona Completes First Phase of a Multiyear Renovation of La Rambla - the renderings are looking good. I haven't been able to check out the progress yet.

London saw a surprising benefit to fining high-polluting cars: More active kids - surprising? 

How are donated bikes rebuilding urban mobility in Ukraine? | With Bikes4Ukraine [YouTube] - some more good news from Ukraine.  

15min-City platform - browse cities on a map and see how accessible they are. When drilling down to individual cities, you can see a detailed map. 

A Map That Visualizes Walkable Neighborhoods Across the US - similar map, but more detailed for US cities.

‘It’s positive’: shoppers react to Oxford Street pedestrianisation proposal - I was always amazed that the road was open for cars. 

Are Taipei's Roads Still a "Living Hell"? [YouTube] - yes and no.

Random Elite

Elite 40th Anniversary Out  - more source code.

The WordPress mess [LWN] - good summary from LWN, in case you were curious, like me. 

Street Artist painting funny fake shadows to confuse people (20 photos) - I like this

Is Alcohol Really THAT Bad?! | Dan’s Journey Back to Health and Fitness (Pt. 6) [YouTube] - yes.

New Amplification - something to look into once my retro amps will give up.

The Alps [Vimeo] - tilt-shift and time-lapse for tiny models effect. Mostly spam for a hotel, but pretty.

601. Multitasking Doesn’t Work. So Why Do We Keep Trying? [Podcast] - sometimes we are forced into it, sometimes we believe we actually can do it. 

Bonus: Lives Less Ordinary [Podcast] - about the friends who remade Raiders of the Lost Ark. 

‘A diagnosis can sweep away guilt’: the delicate art of treating ADHD [Podcast] - view from the UK.

Shell Game [Podcast] - scary AI stuff.


Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kinds of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time, you might notice common themes, though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.

Friday, September 06, 2024

Friday Links 24-26

"Friday" spelled in satellite images
If you want to go into a niche topic, watch the one about fire departments in the US, and now they affect cities.  

I also enjoyed the blog from Google about Rust adoption.

Leadership

The Founder Mode Tradeoff - "Wielding power comes at a cost. Ignoring that cost serves no one in the long run. We all love a good hero story, but it’s not the whole story."

Engineering

Radio Survivor: Podcast #342 – The Famous Computer Cafe  [Podcast] - meta episode about the radio show, with one of the creators. 

Transcribing audio with AI using Speech Note [LWN] - nifty! 

Whither the Apple AGX graphics driver? [LWN] - the problem of two programming language styles colliding. 

Deploying Rust in Existing Firmware Codebases - Googles approach of using Rust more.

Urbanism

How American Fire Departments are Getting People Killed [YouTube] - all policy decisions have side effects and are probably about money.

Tokyo Has the BEST Streets in the World [YouTube] - they seem to be designed for purpose and not exclusively for cars.

The Secret to Japan's Great Cities [YouTube] - more on this from Not Just Bikes.

Can Paths Save America's Suburbs? [YouTube] - they certainly make cul-de-sacs more useful for people walking and cycling. Suddenly, you don't just have islands.

Environment

Up in Smoke  [Podcast] - bacteria in smoke from wildfires … something to look forward to!

Meta - 2024 Sustainability Report - doing well apparently? 

When heat turns deadly - heat is more dangerous than previously thought.

Random Satellites

Your Name In Landsat - fun tool, see image above.

THE WIRE’S Bubbles: How do you help an addict? – SHRINK THE BOX [Podcast] - The Wire is still the best TV show, and Bubbles is in the top three of best characters on it.

Is my blue your blue? - I am colour-blind and get "Your boundary is at hue 182, bluer than 89% of the population. For you, turquoise is green. "

End of the Road: An AnandTech Farewell - that's a shame. I am pretty sure I included quite a few of their articles in this blog.

Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kinds of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time, you might notice common themes, though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.

Friday, August 30, 2024

Friday Links 24-25

Graffiti labeled "infinito" showing infinite symbol made of snails

The experience of the creator of "One Million Checkboxes" is a fun read. You never know what you will find in your logs. 

I also liked the interview with Michael Feathers. 

Leadership

When to write strategy, and how much? - one is probably enough, and don't start before you understand the context.

Engineering

Michael Feathers Reflects on "Working Effectively with Legacy Code"  [Podcast] - his views on TDD are interesting. 

The secret inside One Million Checkboxes - when you let the internet loose on your site.

Recommending for Long-Term Member Satisfaction at Netflix - they seem to put so much effort in, and it is still so bad for me personally. 

Less Is More: Principles for Simple Comments - I am still subscribed to this and like the little nuggets like this one.

Environment 

Gemeinde kauft Dorf zurĂĽck, das abgerissen werden sollte  [German] - municipality buys back a village that was supposed to be demolished for coal mining. Everybody living there had already been relocated to different villages. 

Can climate stripes change the way we think about air pollution? - it looks like only changes in laws can change trends. 

Australia’s ski season could melt away early as snowfall drops to nearly half the average "The report also showed local towns, tourism industries and ecosystems relied on the snowfields and could struggle to survive if snowfalls continued to slide away."

Urbanism

Paris Olympics: Could this be the first fully cyclable Games? [Podcast] - is Paris the city moving quickest to be cycling friendly? 

Could driverless vehicles open a door to safe, car-lite lifestyles? - maybe, many predict that the number of cars overall will increase. 

The most (and least) walkable cities in Europe, ranked - I find Barcelona quite walkable, especially compared to Madrid. Lisbon is also not that bad. 

Why is Shibuya Crossing the Busiest in the World?  [YouTube] - it's a lot of people going there because it is.

Disappearing Bicycle: Understanding the Bodily Experience of Cycling - "People do not merely observe the city as they move through it; they actively constitute the city through their mobile practices. "

Labour is right about LTNs – the Tories need to learn the same lesson - "For all the initial noise against low-traffic neighbourhoods, most people like them and they can benefit the public purse"

Random Breaking

CrashFest x The Notorious IBE 2024 [YouTube] - I am pretty sure most of this is impossible.

Take a Nostalgic Dive Through a Visual Cassette Tape Archive - tapedeck.org is a pretty wonderful resource. I think all of my tapes are already on there.

shademap.app & app.shadowmap.org - two sites to calculate the shadows at a certain location and time. I think shademap is the better one.

'When I was cycling, the world was big again': What it takes to replace a flight with a long-distance bike ride - it's about the journey, and this looks like a beautiful one.

Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kinds of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time, you might notice common themes, though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.

Friday, August 23, 2024

Friday Links 24-24

Solent Flyer hovercraft parked on beach

I am still enjoying the Book Overflow podcast, this time with John Ousterhout. 

The podcast about the UK environmental agency is also great, and depressing.

Leadership

Wisdom for Work #25 - The Art of Generative Listening [Podcast] - the five levels are an interesting approach. As a leader, you have to master listening, that's how you know where to go. 

The Surprising Long Term Impact of Layoffs on Company Performance & Employee Experience.  [Podcast] - that is understandable, at times you can't really avoid it, though. 

A New Era of Medium Engineering - I quite like the messaging around this, and also the realisation that there is a shift in the company. 

TBM 305: Stop the (Goal) Cascade Madness - I really like the idea and structure of them, but they never work in the real world. 

Humans >> Data - "If you want to lead geeks effectively, at whatever scale, you need to be a person & interact with them as people. "

No "We" in IC - fascinating experiment. I prefer team ratings (and bonuses, perks, budgets, …) over individual ratings. As with everything with people, it can go horribly wrong.

Engineering

John Ousterhout Reflects on "A Philosophy of Software Design" [Podcast] - at least he knows that some of his ideas are controversial.

What the fuck is an SBAT and why does everyone suddenly care - in case you are wondering why your dual boot Linux doesn't work any more after your Windows update.

Klarna’s AI chatbot: how revolutionary is it, really?  - not a lot? 

0.0.0.0 Day: Exploiting Localhost APIs From the Browser (Oligo Security) - no place like 0.0.0.0

Urbanism

MĂĽllwagen werden kleiner [German] - Mercedes is designing narrower rubbish trucks, as there is less space between all the parked (including Mercedes) SUVs.

Environment

Can Science Fiction help us fight climate change? [Podcast] - No, but you get an interview with Kim Stanley Robinson.

How we made our hardware packaging 100% plastic-free - yes, it is true, there are still companies not doing this. 

Dirty waters: how the Environment Agency lost its way [Podcast] - that is a remarkable story of mismanagement and industry interference. 

Staat fördert CO₂-AusstoĂź mit 35,8 Milliarden Euro pro Jahr [German] - Germany subsidises polluting sectors with 35.8 billion Euro a year. 

Random Hovercraft

The Last Surviving Giant Passenger Hovercraft  [YouTube] - Christof's Regret #23: I never went on one of these when they were around, and I could even have been useful (Unlike a Concorde flight).

ytch.xyz - watch YouTube like telly.

Why Spain wants tourists to go home [Podcast] - mostly about house prices, but also about keeping your neighbourhood.

Professor Patricia Wiltshire, forensic scientist [Podcast] - she sounds like a brilliant nerd.

LA Sheriff Gets SCHOOLED by Pro Cyclist [YouTube] - spoiler alert: you can't school the police.

Scrolling through online videos increases feelings of boredom, study finds - shall I have a surprise of the week column?

597. Why Do Your Eyeglasses Cost $1,000? [Podcast] - it's a scam / monopoly. 

India's schoolgirls are leading a silent cycling revolution - until they grow out of it.

Wealth tax on super-rich could raise £1.5tn globally, campaigners say - eat the rich? Also: "some exemptions in the Spanish tax – including [...] some high-value assets such as boats and aircraft."

Zettlr: note-taking and publishing with Markdown - I am fully bought into org-roam, but this looks like a nice option.

Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kinds of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time, you might notice common themes, though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.

Friday, August 09, 2024

Friday Links 24-23

Teapot and cup on table

I was a bit distracted last Friday, so it is another double week today. 

I truly enjoy the Bookoverflow podcast. Some of the books I know already, and find the different perspectives interesting. Some of the other books I do plan to read now. 

For something entirely different: The Orkneyinga Saga and Fed podcasts.

Leadership

No More: It’s The People - at least not all the time.

Engineering

Bookoverflow  [Podcast] - many good episodes discussing engineering books or talking to authors. Some examples:

Story: Jeffrey Snover and the Making of PowerShell  [Podcast] - banging your head against Microsoft's wall. 

Maximal min() and max() [LWN] - that should be easy with a macro … tens of years later … oops.

Work 

Why Don't We Have a 15-hour Work Week?  [Podcast] - probably because of the rich. 

Return-to-office mandates hurt employee retention, productivity, survey says - surpise!

Environment 

Extreme heat poses ‘real risk’ to Spain’s mass tourism industry - and the locals.

Fed with Chris van Tulleken [Podcast] - about the chicken we eat.

‘Morally, nobody’s against it’: Brazil’s radical plan to tax global super-rich to tackle climate crisis - eat the rich! 

Germans Combat Climate Change From Their Balconies - this is not legal yet in Spain. 

‘It made me cry’: photos taken 15 years apart show melting Swiss glaciers - whatever you do, don't read the Twitter replies.

Barcelona records lowest nitrogen dioxide levels in 25 years - good, but: "However, pollution levels still exceed the limits set by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the European targets for 2030. "

All-night streetlights make leaves inedible to insects, study finds - that is a new side effect to me.

Wildfire boundary maps expand to new countries in Europe and Africa - nice. I have seen this working in Catalonia already.

Urbanism

A Swiss Town Banned Billboards. Zurich, Bern May Soon Follow - nice. I think they banned neon lights in Barcelona at some point. 

Do bigger highways actually help reduce traffic? - no

NYC REALLY Screwed Up Congestion Pricing (with Doug Gordon) [Podcast] - that is a pretty remarkable mess-up. 

‘Massive disinformation campaign’ is slowing global transition to green energy - it is better and cheaper, but many still believe this. 

"Every casualty reduced makes a difference": Significant drop in casualties on Welsh roads since 20mph speed limit - surprise!

Prague 1 reintroduces night ban on vehicles in defiance of Prague City Hall - because of noise pollution.
Very similar to Wiesbaden (in German): Wiesbaden reduziert Tempo in kompletter Innenstadt

Environmental Urbanism and Urban Geographies: MedellĂ­n 2024-2027 Urban Plan - mostly about green corridors. There was a plan like that in Barcelona in the past, it never happened.

Random Tea

Europe's under-the-radar region that's home to the 'undisputed tea world champions' - I can't find a decaf version of this.

Western DJs accused of ‘normalising war’ for playing at Russian techno events - I am sad to see Magda on the line-up.

CDs sales are growing. How I wish I hadn’t given my beloved collection away - or we could just buy music, instead of rent?

Battenburg markings - I find the British emergency vehicles strangely attractive. I didn't know that the pattern had a name and a design brief. 

The Orkneyinga Saga [Podcast] - super fun. 

Techno godfather Juan Atkins: ‘There were 5,000 white kids going crazy to my music’ - one of the great ones. 

Mosquitoes can fly but they can't hide from the Bzigo Iris - all it needs now is a stronger laser.

Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kinds of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time, you might notice common themes, though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.

Friday, July 26, 2024

Friday Links 24-22

Library with seating area in front

This week, I can recommend the long read about the Stream Deck, the one about books, and the discovery about a 55 year old bug in a game.

Last week, my automation for these failed, so you have to endure twice as many links today.

I also said that I wouldn't post depressing news any more. I am sorry, but the climate crisis and pollution made me do it, so it is your fault really.

Leadership

Gossip, Rumors, and Lies - About staff meetings.

3 reasons to stop hating one-on-one meetings - "After all, what’s a manager’s job? To get results and to grow people."

Developing domain expertise: get your hands dirty. - interesting approaches for different companies. Using the product, and shadowing customer support, seem to be good approaches. 

No More Mandatory - "By making something mandatory, you’re taking a rip at my autonomy."

The SECRET To Improve Developer Productivity Is... Being HAPPY?  [YouTube] - surprise! The mentioning of The Mythical Man-Month was unexpected. "Job satisfaction is the no.1 predictor of organizational performance"

Work

The Data Is In: Return-to-Office Mandates Aren’t Worth the Talent Risks - I see many advantages of offices, but this is the one you should care about.

Engineering

Open Source AI Is the Path Forward - is it really open source?

Switzerland now requires all government software to be open source - the real open source. "public money, public code"

How to use the new counted_by attribute in C (and Linux) - you look away for a decade and everything changes. This appears to be quite useful for safety. 

How I Found A 55 Year Old Bug In The First Lunar Lander Game - nice detective work.

Environment 

Urban air pollution and time losses: Evidence from cyclists in London [Paper] - increase in pollution reduces cycling speed. Or: clean cities to go (a bit) faster.

Kew Gardens prepares for climate change tree loss - this is a well-maintained park, now think about all the trees.

PFAS widely added to US pesticides despite EPA denial, study finds - thank you, America!

Sick leaves: tea growers’ climate misery leads to jump in UK prices - this should mobilise the Brits, right? 

Ireland’s datacentres overtake electricity use of all urban homes combined - thank you, Ireland!

Sunday was world’s hottest ever recorded day, data suggests - some of these links could be related. 

Five protesters and one police officer hurt in French reservoir demonstration - the water wars part #113.

Data centers draining resources in water-stressed communities - "Data centers are not a renewable resource."

The band that doesn't want you to drive to their concerts - artists who care about sustainability. 

Microsoft and Google's electricity consumption surpasses the power usage of over 100 countries - no comment.

Urbanism

The Problem with Cities & The Urban Doom Loop Could Still Happen

"To truly recover, cities must diversify their economic base, streamline the construction and conversion of new housing and mixed-use neighborhoods, enhance public services, and double down on what makes urban life attractive in its own right — not just as an employment destination."

Putting design first: six social housing projects from around the world - annoyingly, Denmark is doing it the best again. 

BikeBus Summit ‘24 - all a bit different, all good. 

Cycling your commute can lower risk of death by 47%, as long as you aren't hit by a driver - roll the dice.

Stuttgart's Urban Rack Railway [YouTube] - if you like trams & co.

The qualities of a great bike city aren't what I expected [YouTube] - cities with higher density help, so do politics and vibes. 

Carspiracy - You’ll Never See The World The Same Way Again [YouTube] - sadly, GCN is preaching to the choir.

Random Books

No one buys books - and most books don't earn anything.

Decoding Gen-Z slang and grammar pet peeves with linguist Anne Curzan [Podcast] - I am going to start using "a couple" as meaning "a few" again! Who is with me? 

The Famous Computer Cafe 1985-07-12 Joel Berez (Infocom) and Jack Anderson (Young Astronauts) [Podcast] - a bit about Infocom. 

VNC Resolver - peek into someone's VNC.

'Not harmful to health': Korea's Buldak spicy noodles return to shelves as Denmark reverses recall  - Koreans are still wondering what is going on. 

'Superlubricious' coating radically drops friction between metal parts - is it just me, or is everybody thinking bicycle gears? 

Scared [Comic] - trust the pros. 

[Essay] The Breaking of a Social Contract, or Why I am Switching to Copyleft Licensing - good thinking about the decision. 

Munich, home of the Oktoberfest, to open alcohol-free beer garden - "noting that while there were patrons who could drink 10 beers in a night, few would order 10 fruit juices." someone tell them about non-alcoholic beer. 

How the Stream Deck rose from the ashes of a legendary keyboard - cool story.

Hackers Steal Text and Call Records of ‘Nearly All’ AT&T Customers - snowflake leak.

Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kinds of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time, you might notice common themes, though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.

Friday, July 12, 2024

Friday Links 24-21

Octopus in aquarium
Good news for the environment. 

I enjoyed reading the PySkyWiFi hack! This happens when engineers are bored.

Engineering

Just Use Postgres for Everything - I have opinions …

PySkyWiFi: completely free, unbelievably stupid wi-fi on long-haul flights - how many programmers have thought about hacking the Wi-Fi in planes? All of them! 

Microservices [YouTube] - funny, also use better names for your stuff!

PagerDuty Incident Response - looking at this at the moment..

Work

A growing body of data is debunking myths about remote work

Environment 

Amazon meets 100% renewable energy goal 7 years early - maybe Google should take notice.

Energy boss backs lower bills for those near wind farms - that's a good way of spreading them. Germany does this badly.

Labour lifts Tories’ ‘absurd’ ban on onshore windfarms  - yay!

Urbanism 

Cities are failing women on bikes, but we can fix it  [YouTube] - you have to make it easy and safe for everyone.

Review of City-Wide 30 km/h Speed Limit Benefits in Europe  [Paper] - up to 38% reduction in road crashes, 18% less emissions

Random Octopuses

Is it Octopi or Octopuses? | Correct Plural of Octopus - both work, apparently.

The Famous Computer Cafe 1984-11-17 Bill Gates and Kazuhiko Nishi [Podcast] - early Gates and MSX.

Nike killing app for $350 self-tying sneakers - internet of sh*t.

Spanish town acting as 'rear guard' for charity boats rescuing migrants - nice

Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kinds of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time, you might notice common themes, though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.

Friday, July 05, 2024

Friday Links 24-20

Vintage Atari ad: One word for these prices: Rip-off

This week I have been enjoying the audio archive of The Famous Computer Cafe, a radio show from the eighties with many famous guests of the home computer area. There are definitely some parallels to the present. 

The X Windows history is also great. 

Today's post does contain plenty of throwbacks.

Leadership

TBM 297: Staying In Touch - keeping track of things helps, people forget, and we can't see trends 

On Burnout, Mental Health, And Not Being Okay  - take care of yourself.

Engineering

X Window System At 40 - about the history, and why it is still around. 

Serious vulnerability fixed with OpenSSH 9.8 - seems to be difficult to exploit, but possible.

Environment 

‘It needs to stay in the loop’: German reuse schemes turn shopping upside down - some of this is happening in Spain too. 

Our 2024 Environmental Report - from Google, pretending everything is fine 

Google’s emissions climb nearly 50% in five years due to AI energy demand - it's not fine.

Heatpumpmonitor - database with ratings. 

World’s largest plane to carry wind turbines and save Earth - I don't even understand if this makes sense.

Understanding the large role of long-distance travel in carbon emissions from passenger travel [Paper] - turns out long-distance travel is increasing and also especially bad for the environment. 

‘We can’t let the animals die’: drought leaves Sicilian farmers facing uncertain future - maybe everybody has to migrate north.

Urbanism

In this satirical city builder, your goal is to convert walkable cities into parking lots and use propaganda to convince everyone it's what they want - too real!

The REAL reason America can’t go Dutch [YouTube] - because they don't dare to do it. 

Read this at my funeral - all cyclists know how they die ... most likely die anyway.

Random Home Computers

The Famous Computer Cafe 1985-02-08 James Copland [Podcast] - I have been going through the backlog of these radio recordings. They are all fun, even the commercials. This one is about Atari.

The Famous Computer Cafe 1984-12-21 Douglas Adams and Steve Meretzky [Podcast] - Douglas Adams talking about the Infocom HHGG text adventure.

Fiio’s reboot of the Walkman no longer hides those glorious cassettes - I am pretty sure the quality will be bad. I might still get one. 

Sony Walkman Turns 45  - not much of an article ... but yeah!

German cannabis clubs face jungle of bureaucracy - who is surprised? 

The Circle Back Initiative - interesting initiative to make sure companies get back to you when you apply for a job.

Here is your demo version of Energize for Solaris - those are some pretty CDs!

Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kind of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time you might notice common themes though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.

Friday, June 28, 2024

Friday Links 24-19

Philips D8444 stereo radio recorder (boombox, ghettoblaster)
Clearing up my backlog again!

A lot of fun stuff in the random section. I did enjoy the podcast about getting or not getting into Berghain, and the one about the Stereophonic play.
The ongoing research into the XZ backdoor also continues to be interesting.

Leadership 

Seven Conversation Hacks - some of this is harder, when working remote.

The route to better culture? Better managers - mostly quoting research.

The State of Teams - Atlassian data.

TBM 295: Going Deep  - "There is a thoughtful way to connect with your team, mentor, and coach and give useful feedback. It takes time and energy. By all means, be good managers."

Sharing Our Latest Culture Memo - from Netflix - "People over Process: Our goal is to inspire and empower more than manage because employees have more impact when they’re free to make decisions about their own work." 

Engineering

XZ backdoor: Hook analysis - more analysis on how that attack was supposed to work. 

The Trough of Despair - it will get worse, before it gets better. 

Urbanism / Transport

Germany's autobahn bridges falling apart - here is an idea: if you can't maintain your infrastructure, try building less

Is it even a city? [YouTube] - "Everything is just so … available"

What is the future of Barcelona’s Superblocks? - model for other cities, fighting for survival in Barcelona. 

I Rode the Craziest Trains in Japan [YouTube] - I'll take the bicycle train, please.

Lebensadern fĂĽr Velofahrerinnen [German] - Utrecht's way to a better city. 

Environment 

Why is defending forests so deadly? [Podcast] - first I thought this was about South America, but this is in Europe!

How Spain's tourism industry is dealing with drought - not well! 

‘Whack-a-mole situation’: Algerian officials wrestle with water shortage anger - the water wars are coming! 

BHP rejects hydrogen and hybrids, will go straight to electric for giant haul trucks - meanwhile some politicians continue to sell us hydrogen as the future. 

Solar modules deployed in France in 1992 still provide 79.5% of original output power - as batteries, they last longer than expected. 

Too much of a good thing? Spain's green energy can exceed demand - we need more electric consumers (cars, factories, ...)

Random Boomboxes

Sharp's Back-to-Back Boombox mixtape madness [YouTube] - should I have a separate cassette section every week? Better not. 

Tape Player/Recorder Diy - Final Circuit and Demo [YouTube] - building a tape head from scratch.

The disturbing online misogyny of Gamergate has returned – if it ever went away - some gamers are weird.

How I Stopped Fearing Boredom [Podcast] - boredom is the best! Or just call it the slack between the busy times. 

Overnight Success: How the founders of Kona Bikes saved their company [Podcast] - sounds like a bunch of hippies … nice.

592. How to Make the Coolest Show on Broadway [Podcast] - I am not a fan of plays or musicals, but this sounds intriguing. I did like the Fleetwood Mac documentary.

Why didn’t Chris and Dan get into Berghain? (Part 1)  & Why didn’t Chris and Dan get into Berghain? (Part 2) [Podcast] - I don't get the hype about Berghain. This is well told and funny. 

Falling Sand - want to waste some time, here you go …

SANDTRIS - you have more time, here you go …

How TED talks became the Picotop of millennial intellectualism - I noticed that I haven't seen any TED talks in a long time.

‘Thought Leader’ gives talk that will inspire your thoughts | CBC Radio (Comedy/Satire Skit) [YouTube] - and now that I have seen this, I can never unsee it for future TED talks.

Style Different Fonts [Instagram Reel] - quite fun for font fans.

Other Links

Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kinds of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time, you might notice common themes, though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.

Friday, June 14, 2024

Friday Links 24-18

Polaroid photo and camera
I really love the photograph series in the random section, it is a great concept.

The videos about the busiest train station and buying a train are also great … if you like trains.

Leadership

Beyond 'Sorry': How to Apologize and Mean It 6 | 22  [Podcast] - most apologies are just deflections.

TBM 293: Where More Effective Product Teams Spend More (and Less) Time - "Navigating proxies" - good collection!

Engineering

Story: From Burnout to Breakthrough  [Podcast] - I didn't know about Hedy before, it sounds quite interesting. The origin story is well told.

Regexle - who doesn't like regexes? 

The Documentation Tradeoff - "Nobody _wants_ documentation. They want to know enough to change the code quickly"

New York Times source code stolen using exposed GitHub token - oops!

Environment

Whose Truth?: Climate change denial  [Podcast] - part of a BBC series about misinformation.

Swiss parliament defies ECHR on climate women's case - Swiss being Swiss.

Urbanism

Galway City produces local version graphic showing space used by transport modes

I Visited the World's Busiest Train Station [YouTube] - three million!

Rushing to McDonald’s, sneaking into Trump Tower: the desperate struggle to find a public toilet in New York - a problem in most cities. 

Decoding the 15-Minute City Debate: Conspiracies, Backlash, and Dissent in Planning for Proximity - conspiracies are always weird, but this one is the weirdest.

Random Photographs

A Black photographer added himself to places where history didn’t want him - so cool.

591. Signs of Progress, One Year at a Time  [Podcast] - fun stories, some I knew already.

Whose Truth?: Russia v Ukraine [Podcast] - another episode in this series

Death from the Skies, Musk Edition - filling the sky with satellites and the ground with rubbish.

Will a personality test cost you your dream job? - "workplace horoscopes"

I Got My Own Train [YouTube] - everyone's dream.

It’s another Guardian Blind date wedding! How a lockdown love story ended in ‘I do’ - yes, I am a sucker for Guardian's blind dates, and especially the successful ones.

Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kinds of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time, you might notice common themes, though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.

Friday, June 07, 2024

Friday Links 24-17

Book cover: Commodore Amiga a visual Commpendium

The leadership antipatterns are quite good, so is the video about a new development in Amsterdam.

Leadership

Product Coaching with Petra Wille  [Podcast] - coaching not agile coaches.

Briefly: Anonymous Questions - how to set up Q&As as a leader

Unexpected Anti-Patterns for Engineering Leaders — Lessons From Stripe, Uber & Carta - #3 being a shit-umbrella 

Engineering 

What to Know Before You Implement Public-Facing APIs - I still think versioning APIs is overrated.

Sharing details on a recent incident impacting one of our customers - "we left auto-delete on"

Work

A year on, Spain’s ‘historic’ menstrual leave law has hardly been used. Why? - unsurprising, I hope this will improve.

Offsites, huh - the bigger you are, the harder they will be

Urbanism

Mayor fined €100 for riding on street where cycling is banned by the council, while shooting ‘cycle to work’ video to encourage cycling in Barcelona - I never realised there were roads like this in Barcelona ... you never stop learning things you don't want to know.

The $1.8 Billion Plan for Amsterdam [YouTube] - bloody Amsterdam, making everything so nice!

Are the Suburbs Getting Worse?* [YouTube] - yes, in the US

Random Amigas

AmigaPCI - a new Amiga compatible board based on PCI

New Electronics Workshop Tour [YouTube] - I don't understand all the toys, but I want them.

interviewcopilot - I expect some fun future interviews!

On Fire Drills and Phishing Tests - I had an article about this last week, this is the original "You can’t “fix” people, but you can fix the tools."

Drum N Bass in CommonLisp  [YouTube] - groovy 

Spain fines budget airlines €150m over ‘abusive’ cabin bag and seat charges - I am boycotting Ryanair, but the others are pretty bad too.

Other Links

Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kinds of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time, you might notice common themes, though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.

Friday, May 31, 2024

Friday Links 24-16

Alice in Wonderland themed tea mug with writing "Drink me"
This week, the "City in A Bottle" JavaScript demo blew me away. 

The podcasts in the leadership section are also pretty good. 

Leadership

Albert Strasheim, CTO at Rippling, on Embracing Rapid Iteration and Setting Goals for Accountability [Podcast] - interesting ideas about project management and also insights into our competition.

A company is not a family with Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky [Podcast] - I didn't know the origin of the name! I also think that overcommunication is a good thing. I am working on that. 

How Can I Set the Right Boundaries in a New Job? [Podcast] - another great coaching session.

Engineering 

Why, after 6 years, I’m over GraphQL - I have always been sceptical.

Environment

What does China's green tech revolution mean for the world? [Podcast] - for some reason, they focus on the negative.

What are PFAs? Everything you need to know about the ‘forever chemicals’ surrounding us every day - we are all plastic!

Random Tea

For seven years, I have been caffeine-free. Here’s how it has changed me - I can't remember when I stopped, probably around that time.

Remembering ICQ: A Page Out of History - I don't have that rosy memories. I am from the IRC generation.

Heura Launches Plant-Based Butcher’s - I really like Heura's products. This is a gimmicky way of marketing products.

City In A Bottle – A 256 Byte Raycasting System - this is just remarkable.

The Space Quest II Master Disk Blunder - oops.

Google: Stop Trying to Trick Employees With Fake Phishing Emails - I am not a big fan of tricking employees either.

The greatest clock (and map) ever made [YouTube] - definitely not the greatest. Pretty good, though.

Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kinds of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time, you might notice common themes, though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.