#External

2025-07-07

Weekly LoL • W28 • 2025

Weekly Link out Louds – are links that I found fascinating and took notes on. Sharing so that you might enjoy / find them valuable too

  • 10 technologies that won’t exist in 5 years: Why won’t we have more of these tools in 5 years? I’ve worked in science funding for the last 5 years. I now have a sense of where the money goes, and how long things take on a default development path even when they do get funded. We are not on track.
  • Why Your Brain Gets High on Uncertainty: Some researchers think our love of uncertainty might be why we enjoy music. We anticipate patterns in the melody, and when the song does something slightly unexpected – boom, dopamine city.
  • Why You Should Stop Complaining: Complaints are a poor way to express an idea
  • How to like everything more: enjoyment is a skill. you can learn to enjoy more – not only by practicing mindfulness but by cultivating a sense of acceptance and curiosity
  • Flounder Mode: Hollywood style of working. Different ways to be successful. But the critical thing is for you to define what success is yourself. And never let an external system be the adjudicator.
  • Old Computer Challenge: Home of the divine machines.
  • People don’t keep secrets: Incentives need to be designed for secrets. But it also limits upsides and options. In the end, everything is a trade off. Control versus optionality and opportunity.
  • Reasonably unreasonable: Only 20% of startups survive 5 years. Here’s what it takes to be reasonably unreasonable and beat the entrepreneurial odds. So one has to be reasonably unreasonable and relentless to make it happen
  • WWDC 2025: What does that change for me? Nothing, really. Apple continues to produce best in class products, which I will continue to rely on. But I do feel an increasing appetite for competition. If someone were to come along with a certain degree of audacity and the right philosophy around design/privacy/etc., I’d be a vulnerable customer for Apple. I expect the same holds true for a lot of my friends. The likelihood of that is, obviously, fairly low. And that, in turn, is why Apple has been enabled to skip out of community events and produce these glossy, over-rehearsed events. Which is a shame.
  • ‘The America I Loved is Gone’: Stephen Marche on the decline of America.
  • What I learned about decisions from a pancake: The truth about decisions is to just make them. They might be right. Then great. They might be wrong. If so, live them, learn from them, grow. But, the answer almost always is – make them. Like flipping a pancake. What a delightful rad.

#external #links #weeklyLol

2025-07-03

Deployment of “Oreshnik” hypersonic missile in Belarus: is a new era beginning?

One of the latest achievements of Russia’s military industry — the “Oreshnik” hypersonic ballistic missile system — will…
#Belarus #BY #Europe #Europa #EU #according #against #Ballistic #belarus #coming #défense #Deployed #during #external #fully #Hypersonic #lukashenko #military #missile #Missiles #oreshnik #president #security #strengthen #system #weeks
europesays.com/2213446/

Hacker Newsh4ckernews
2025-07-01
2025-06-30

Weekly LoL • W27 • 2025

Weekly LoLs are articles that were great and I jotted notes about them. I am sharing them as a summary here so you can also follow them and read them.

  • What I learned about decisions from a pancake: The truth about decisions is to just make them. They might be right. Then great. They might be wrong. If so, live them, learn from them, grow. But, the answer almost always is – make them. Like flipping a pancake. What a delightful read.
  • In Praise of “Normal” Engineers: I think it’s actually the other way around. A truly great engineering organization is one where perfectly normal, workaday software engineers, with decent software engineering skills and an ordinary amount of expertise, can consistently move fast, ship code, respond to users, understand the systems they’ve built, and move the business forward a little bit more, day by day, week by week.
  • Dia: Thoughts on the latest from The Browser Company. Dia is the successor to Arc which was a skin on chrome tried something new. Plugging AI into browsers feels like what we should expect. I like their mechanic of @ but it is not a moat. I wish them the best, but for now it’s not becoming my default browser like arc did.
  • On Winging It Work, Planning And Growing Your own Luck: I don’t give up. But I don’t give up myself, either. So I won’t be number one. But I’ll still be me. You have to be okay with that trade. And you have to be okay with looking in the mirror and still seeing a recognisable version of yourself. And if you smile, then the smile has to be real, whether it’s rueful or not — not brave, desperate or terrified.
  • The Prodigal Techbro: Prodigal tech bro stories skip straight from the past, when they were part of something that—surprise!—turned out to be bad, to the present, where they are now…
  • Why learning how to learn is the skill behind all skills: Learning how to learn comes down to three essential practices that compound over time. Rather than chasing learning hacks, focus on these three fundamental practices that work regardless of what you’re learning or how your brain is wired.
  • Expert Generalists: Being an Expert Generalist should be treated as a first-class skill, one that can be assessed and taught. This is one of my super powers. I have a lot of knowledge about a lot of things and I truly believe that the next few years are mine to shine.
  • Emotionally Intelligent People Use This Brilliant 5-Word Phrase to Say No With Confidence (and Stop Talking): Appreciation, the no, followed by well wishes is the secret to not over explain while being clear about your priorities
  • Throw Away the Scales: This is insightful. The concept of Ikigai also thrives in this. Burnout happens when work becomes meaningless to you and you are still slogging.
  • Beyond Hierarchies The Real Org Chart – Blog: True organizational power lies not in titles or org charts, but in relationships. Learn how self-managed companies use trust and shared purpose to thrive. This is key to understanding how to operate in a culture and how to operate best in an environment as well. It’s also critical to know when things change
  • Do you follow your own advice?: It’s easier to speak wisdom than to live it. But that doesn’t mean the wisdom isn’t wisdom. In some ways practice what you preach is overrated?
  • Face it you’re a crazy person: Unpacking a job helps understand what is actually entailed in a job versus just what our brain fills in at the highest level. This is one of those learnings that I will try ti impart to my son (not that he will listen immediately).
  • Web Numbers: Domains? Where we’re going, we don’t need domains! Until the end of this year, the only way to have a secure web site is to have it accessible via a domain name. That, however, is changing. And the design of the Small Web will be changing along with it. IP addresses are about to make a comeback on the web in a big (ok, small) way, thanks to upcoming support for security certificates for IP addresses by Let’s Encrypt.
  • 32 notes on AI & writing: Writing isn’t just the creative writing that most of us read online. It’s so vast and so varied that unless you’ve really thought about it, classifying it as one thing is not a great idea. And there’s certainly a market where LLMs will take over generation of the content.

#articles #external #links #weekly #weeklyLol

2025-06-16

Weekly LoL • W23 • 2025

Weekly Link out Louds are articles that I found great enough that I jotted them down in my notes. Sharing them so they might be useful to you too

  • Stay Hungry, Stay Foolish: To celebrate the 20th anniversary of Steve’s commencement address at Stanford, we are sharing a newly enhanced version of the video below and on YouTube. It is one of the most influential commencement addresses in history, watched over 120 million times, and reproduced in media and school curricula around the world. The talk even helped inspire an unlikely NBA title comeback for the Cleveland Cavaliers when LeBron James played a clip from it in the locker room before a critical game three against the Golden State Warriors in 2016.
  • How Steve Jobs Wrote the Greatest Commencement Speech Ever WIRED: The notes that he sent contained the bones of what would become one of the most famous commencement addresses of all time. It has been viewed over 120 million times and is quoted to this day. Probably every person who agrees to give a commencement speech winds up rewatching it, getting inspired, and then sinking into despondency.
  • Trump’s “beautiful” bill wrecks our energy future: This legislation is terrible!
  • Social proof signalling loops: Have we reached that phase of life where growth at all costs are now an inherently important thing to consider?
  • Everyone says they want opinionated design until they get it: The new design system is polarizing and often that’s a good place to start. Especially for design.
  • WWDC25 macOS Tahoe Breaks Decades of Finder History: Something jumped out at me in the macOS Tahoe segment of the WWDC keynote today: the Finder icon is reversed. You can see that in the image below. On the left is macOS Sequoia, and on the right is macOS Tahoe:
  • The luxury of saying no.: The real threat to creativity isn’t a language model. It’s a workplace that rewards speed over depth, scale over care, automation over meaning. If we’re going to talk about what robs people of agency, let’s start there. Let’s talk about the economic structures that pressure people into using tools badly, or in ways that betray their values. Let’s talk about the lack of time, support, mentorship, and trust. Not the fact that someone ran a prompt through a chatbot to get unstuck. Where is the empathy? Where is your support for people who are being tossed into the pit of AI and instructed to find a way to make it work? How is the view from your ivory tower?
  • This is the secret to actually making the things you want to.: The reality is that we have an incredible capacity to rob ourselves of joy. Especially when we’re working on things that matter (something that I’ve spent eight other manifesto pieces arguing that you should be doing), we can trick ourselves into thinking that cold dispassion is the same thing as taking something seriously (or, conversely, that treating something with levity means it doesn’t matter to you). This is a really big problem, because if you’re going to do something that requires thought, focus or care, then you need to want to do it. It needs to, on some basic level, be at least a little bit fun.
  • Computers are Big-Ass Levers: A helpful heuristic for your career in the AI era: Pretend you’ve been handed next year’s technologies today. You have early, exclusive access. What can you now do that you couldn’t before? That’s your edge. Sprint with it.
  • I am disappointed in the AI discourse: Be cognitively flexible is great advice to anyone. If you find yourself morally or instinctively rejecting something, choose the opportunity to determine why? Often you might realize that you were conditioned. Use curiosity to learn even if to confirm to yourself that your opinion is still valid. In my personal experience, I’ve found opinions to matter less and less over time.
  • Make life possible: Uncertainty is the condition of not knowing what comes next, the fear of change that is beyond our control and likely at odds with our thriving. It is a state of worry, of insecurity, of a lack of faith in the systems that keep us alive and living. It is, so often, intolerable. And yet, as Le Guin reminds us, uncertainty is also the only thing that makes life possible.
  • Why agents are bad pair programmers: Continue to practice pair-programming with your editor, but throttle down from the semi-autonomous “Agent” mode to the turn-based “Edit” or “Ask” modes. You’ll go slower, and that’s the point. Also, just like pairing with humans, try to establish a rigorously consistent workflow as opposed to only reaching for AI to troubleshoot. I’ve found that ping-pong pairing with an AI in Edit mode (where the LLM can propose individual edits but you must manually accept them) strikes the best balance between accelerated productivity and continuous quality control
  • What I’ve learned about writing AI apps so far Seldo.com: Depending how much of the hype around AI you’ve taken on board, the idea that they “take text and turn it into less text” might seem gigantic back-pedal away from previous claims of what AI can do. But taking text and turning it into less text is still an enormous field of endeavour, and a huge market. It’s still very exciting, all the more exciting because it’s got clear boundaries and isn’t hype-driven over-reaching, or dependent on LLMs overnight becoming way better than they currently are. Take a look at the possibilities, find something that fits within these boundaries, and then have fun with it.
  • Meet Fidji Simo The Instacart CEO Tasked With Getting OpenAI to Turn…: Interesting profile of Fidji Simo, Open AI’s CPO of Apps.
  • The hidden time bomb in the tax code that’s fueling mass tech layoffs: This is a good article for tech workers to read. If you weren’t aware of it, it’s a fundamental shift in how corporations are allowed to account for your expense. This is something that was discussed in the tech circles a few years ago. To me this is correlated but it alone is not causational. There was a confluence of events – tax rate increases, over hiring and a refocus on the business fundamentals. That said, please remember, you are bigger than your job – no matter how awesome you thought it was.
  • Every generation discovers the same monster.: We’re doing it again.Rolling Stone recently shared stories of people who believe AI has chosen them as messiahs. Families are watching loved ones disappear into “spiritual mania” and “supernatural delusion.” Every generation discovers the same monster – the technology isn’t the problem, the obsession is.
  • The Who Cares Era dansinker.com: It’s so emblematic of the moment we’re in, the Who Cares Era, where completely disposable things are shoddily produced for people to mostly ignore.
  • How F1’s slowest car was upgraded to a Ferrari-beater: Sauber has generally been the slowest package in the 2025 F1 field. But on the weekend its big upgrade arrived, it beat a Ferrari to fifth on merit. A dive into how they managed and might it be sustainable?
  • Michael Tsai – Blog – WWDC 2025 Preview: A collection of previews of WWDC 2025 from MJ Tsai
  • How Daft Punk Changed Music: How Daft Punk Changed Music – a discographical documentary of the musical legends of Daft Punk and how they’ve changed music forever.
  • Some thoughts on human-AI relationships: In the light of the behavior of the Diabolus Ex Machina essay, this one is a good read on how OpenAI is thinking about model behavior.
  • Diabolus Ex Machina: This Is Not An Essay. When chatgpt screws up, it screws up bigly without remorse and keeps making mistakes all the while apologizing if and only if you push back. And when you push back, it goes into a weird mode of non apology-apologies because there’s no remorse or changing of tactics. Just fascinating.

#ai #browser #coding #dev #development #external #links #llm #lol #notes #qutoes #weekly #weeklyLol

databrickdatabrick
2025-06-02

real working handmade with bricks

External real working Lego SSD Hard Drive handmade
WordofTheHourwordofthehour
2025-04-29

: relating to the outside, as of a body

- French: externe

- Italian: esterno

- Portuguese: externo

- Spanish: externo

------------

Word of The Hour's Annual Survey @ wordofthehour.org/r/form

Kontak RecruitmentKontakRecruitment
2025-04-09

Business Development Executive – Solutions (JB5272)
Durban, KwaZulu Natal
R13 000 basic plus fuel/ cell allowance, plus com
Permanent

Min Re:
Valid driver's license/ own vehicle
3 + years experience in sales

Apply: Apply Now: bit.ly/4juTmOB
@KontakRecruitment

Business Development Executive – #Branding Solutions (JB5272) at Kontak Recruitment in Durban, KwaZulu Natal
OSM user diaries EN 🇬🇧osmuserdiariesen@soc.citizen4.eu
2025-03-21
Teach GIS after school at High Point Library Work other PH content into mix with ongoing GIS training

benefits #external #internal

risks #internal #external
first time inside OSM
Dirk Woutersdiwou
2025-03-20

Tutorial für ein externes 8x Kernal-Modul für den C64

Es gibt immer wieder Situationen, in denen man einen anderen Kernel für seinen Commodore C64 benötigt. Entweder um etwas zu testen oder weil man den Computer nicht öffnen möchte. Und so kam ich auf die Idee, eine solche kleine Steckkarte selbst zu bauen. Und für ein einfaches Mo…

dirkwouters.de/tutorial-fuer-e

2025-03-12

Thumbnail

vermadenvermaden
2025-03-09

Just finished my 𝗘𝘅𝘁𝗲𝗿𝗻𝗮𝗹 [External] page - history of many things I have done in the past outside/before my humble blog.

vermaden.wordpress.com/externa

2025-03-09

Just finished my 𝗘𝘅𝘁𝗲𝗿𝗻𝗮𝗹 [External] page - history of many things I have done in the past outside/before my humble blog.

vermaden.wordpress.com/externa

#verblog #external #history #memories #nostalgia #FreeBSD #bsd #unix

Kontak RecruitmentKontakRecruitment
2025-01-27

External Sales Representative (JB5032)
Joburg, Gauteng
R10 000 - R15 000 CTC plus comm
Permanent

Min Req:
Valid driver’s license + vehicle
Previous experience in sales.
Basic skills, /order dispatch.

@KontakRecruitment Apply: bit.ly/SalesJB5032

External Sales Representative (JB5032) at Kontak Recruitment in Gauteng

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