Short overview of John Locke's commonplace book method. Nothing I haven't seen before sadly.
And probably not a method I would personally use unless I was thinking about paper solutions.
Short overview of John Locke's commonplace book method. Nothing I haven't seen before sadly.
And probably not a method I would personally use unless I was thinking about paper solutions.
Mostly an advertisement for their other materials, but a reasonable overview particularly with
4 Benefits of Keeping a Commonplace Book
Supposedly helped to popularize commonplace books in the Renaissance.
This article has lots of examples of commonplace books and talks about a few of the older online methods for collecting and keeping them.
It doesn't touch on any of the newer applications with backlink UI like Roam Research, Obsidian, Foam, etc.
And as Kimberly Hirsh indicated, it doesn't include keeping one on your own website where you can truly keep it for yourself.
I'm curious to take a look after seeing this. Thanks for the recommendation.
I've tried Memrise and Duolingo before and like Duolingo a lot. I don't think they've got a French option, but I've also been using a platform called SSiW or Say Something in Welsh (they've got a few other languages too). I like their focus on verbal fluency over the methods traditionally taught in most classroom settings.
Having studied a handful of languages in the past, I'm quite impressed at how much and how well I can understand Welsh after only 20 minutes or so a day for about a month.
I'm going to have to circle back to this for a proper response.
Some icky growth hacking dark patterns that Clubhouse is using.
A fairly comprehensive list of problems and limitations that are often encountered with data as well as suggestions about who should be responsible for fixing them (from a journalistic perspective).
A fun whinging blogpost blaming the 20-30 somethings for our woes.
Modern XMPP clients and server set ups for chat
A view into communities, identity, and how smaller communities might be built in new ways and with new business models that aren't as centralized or ad driven as Facebook, Twitter, et al.
A long, but worthwhile read. This goes into some valuable ideas about public spaces that the typical article on the independent web doesn't explore.
<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>Fluffy</span> in Notes: All Our Selves In One Basket (<time class='dt-published'>2021-01-31 12:31:00 </time>)</cite></small>
Alienated by the Town Square There was this article I read, titled Why You Hate Contemporary Architecture, that does a really good job at describing this issue. There was no point in beauty, no point in decoration, as it was useless, distracting from the primary usage of the building, and a needless expense.
<small><cite class='h-cite via'>ᔥ <span class='p-author h-card'>InvisibleUp</span> in All Our Selves In One Basket (<time class='dt-published'>02/10/2021 10:46:46</time>)</cite></small>
Should transclusion work both ways, embedding content and letting the source know that I did so?
If one is worried about link rot for transclusion, why not just have a blockquote of the original in excerpt form along with a reference link to the original. Then you've got a permanent copy of the original and the link can send a webmention to it as a means of notification?
If the original quoted page changes, it could potentially send a webmention (technically a salmention in function) to all the pages that had previously mentioned it to create updates.
Automatic transclusion can also be more problematic in terms of original useful data being used as a vector of spam, graffiti, or other abuses.
As an example, I can "transclude" a portion of your page onto my own website as a reply context for my comment and syndicate a copy to Hypothes.is. If you've got Webmentions on your site, you'll get a notification.
For several years now I've been considering why digital gardens/zettelkasten/commonplace books don't implement webmention as a means of creating backlinks between wikis as a means of sites having conversations?
A broad overview of the original web and where we are today. Includes an outline of three business models that don't include advertising including:
I wonder how much this mini-article about Twitter subscription services may have been in response to Galloway's article last week?
Or will they, as he suggests they do so often, make a head fake to something they might do and then just do nothing (again)?
A synopsis of some of what Twitter has been doing wrong, opportunities squandered, and what it could be doing. Reasonable analysis of what some new competitors are doing to generate value in tangential spaces.
‘Programs are meant to be read by humans and only incidentally for computers to execute.’
via Michael Beckwith in IWC chat
I was thinking about logic a bit this evening and looked up an old professor. Saddened to hear he's passed away.
Mobirise looks like an interesting IndieWeb-ish sort of tool for relative beginners. It also looks like it dovetails with Github Pages.
I'm curious how a model like Homebrew Website Club or regular DoOO meetups might be similar to or borrow from a teaching model like this class?
This seems like the sort of thing Greg McVerry would appreciate.
Tyson was married to jazz legend Miles Davis for several years during the 1980s
Glad to have you back Ben!
Interesting to hear the results of the experiment. Knowing that it only made you $10 on their platform is an interesting data point.
I can't wait to see what you come up with on the community front. Healthier competitors to Facebook's pages/communities is a problem we need more work on.
I identify with this a lot and I feel like I'm failing while working on an even easier "difficulty setting" than Kimberly.
Take care of yourselves people!
Tim Ingold's short but beautiful introduction Anthropology: Why It Matters.
This could be an interesting read.
This is the Caliban's mirror effect again. I find intelligent dicourse on the web. Chernin finds pornography and worthless content. All human life is there. What you find is what you look for.
I like the phrasing of Caliban's mirror to describe this phenomenon
We were especially excited to see Dorsey cite Mike Masnick's excellent Protocols, Not Products paper.
I don't think I've come across this paper before...
Looking at the link, it's obvious I read it on December 11, 2019.
The idea of bellwether counties seems to be disappearing.
Are there indicators here that could be leveraged to help pull people to the middle rather than being so heavily polarized or to prevent future gerrymandering?
Group Rules from the Admins1NO POSTING LINKS INSIDE OF POST - FOR ANY REASONWe've seen way too many groups become a glorified classified ad & members don't like that. We don't want the quality of our group negatively impacted because of endless links everywhere. NO LINKS2NO POST FROM FAN PAGES / ARTICLES / VIDEO LINKSOur mission is to cultivate the highest quality content inside the group. If we allowed videos, fan page shares, & outside websites, our group would turn into spam fest. Original written content only3NO SELF PROMOTION, RECRUITING, OR DM SPAMMINGMembers love our group because it's SAFE. We are very strict on banning members who blatantly self promote their product or services in the group OR secretly private message members to recruit them.4NO POSTING OR UPLOADING VIDEOS OF ANY KINDTo protect the quality of our group & prevent members from being solicited products & services - we don't allow any videos because we can't monitor what's being said word for word. Written post only.
Wow, that's strict.
a book on Golang
In his classic text, Thought as a System (1992), the US physicist and philosopher David Bohm
I have his QM text, but didn't know(?) he did philosophy like this.
a story for production Positioning?
eth
Sarah Roberts’s new book Behind the Screen: Content Moderation in the Shadows of Social Media (2019)
via david
startup class
Four Channel Multivariate Coherence Training: Development and Evidence in Support of a New Form of Neurofeedback
tags:: [[neurofeedback]], [[coherence]], [[neuroscience]] [[EEG]] #[[to read]]
kubevela, ali, kalm
RFC 3463 [25], specifies further structuring of the reply strings, including the use of supplemental and more specific completion codes (see also RFC 5248 [26]).
To-do: look at the mentioned RFCs.
思路不错
Treating the web as a compile target has a lot of implications, many negative. For example “view source” is a beloved feature of the web that’s an important part of its history and especially useful for learning, but Svelte’s compiled output is much harder to follow than its source. Source maps, which Svelte uses to map its web language outputs back to its source language, have limitations.
doorDash CTO
Why Zapier has always been 100% remote
Ariela had written a book about the history of theeveryday law of slavery in the U.S. Deep South that emphasized localculture and law,
2019-12-30 12:12:53 AM
Martha S. Jones,Birthright Citizens: A History of Race and Rights in AntebellumAmerica
price oracle
intro of PoS
intro of ETH2
coding style
John Carmack on coding style
seems interesting
API Machinery SIG
nice talks, especially from Daniel Smith
make money?
maybe a good reading material on k8s
读了一遍收获不大,读懂的内容读之前已经懂的,不懂的看了还是不大懂,等日后再来吧
seems interesting
What was it like to be a software engineer at NeXT?
What was it like to be a software engineer at NeXT?
Life of a Kubernetes API Request by Daniel Smith, Google
Kubernetes Design Principles: Understand the Why
Bringing this back to filtering, not only am I saving time and preserving focus by batch processing both the collection and the consumption of new content, I’m time-shifting the curation process to a time better suited for reading, and (most critically) removed from the temptations, stresses, and biopsychosocial hooks that first lured me in.I am always amazed by what happens: no matter how stringent I was in the original collecting, no matter how certain I was that this thing was worthwhile, I regularly eliminate 1/3 of my list before reading. The post that looked SO INTERESTING when compared to that one task I’d been procrastinating on, in retrospect isn’t even something I care about.What I’m essentially doing is creating a buffer. Instead of pushing a new piece of info through from intake to processing to consumption without any scrutiny, I’m creating a pool of options drawn from a longer time period, which allows me to make decisions from a higher perspective, where those decisions are much better aligned with what truly matters to me.
Using read-it later apps helps you separate collection from filtering.
By time-shifting the filtering process to a time better suited for reading, and removed from temptations, you will want to drop 2/3 of the content you save.
This allows you to "make decisions from a higher perspective"
How many times have you heard the cliché, for example, read between the lines? It turns out, the key to reading between the lines is actually to write between the lines. Once you start, you'll discover a whole new reading experience, elevated from that of a one-sided lecture to a two-sided conversation.
reading as a conversation between myself and the text.
political scientists Keith Poole and Howard Rosenthal, who have long tracked historical trends in political polarization, said their studies of congressional votes found that Republicans are now more conservative than they have been in more than a century. Their data show a dramatic uptick in polarization, mostly caused by the sharp rightward move of the GOP.
they're in the svelte compiler: https://github.com/sveltejs/svelte/blob/master/src/compiler/compile/nodes/Element.ts#L668 (search for the warning text)
flash loan & hack
flash loan & makerdao
measure system call
flash loans
math is simple
gitlab Tech stack
The idea of the hermeneutic circle is to envision a whole in terms how the parts interact with each other, and how they interact with the whole. That may sound a little bit out there, so let’s have a look at a concrete example.
This is a general concept, the rest of the article extrapolates the idea to the act of reading. This may be a stretch, since it implies that whatever can be broken into parts will belong to the hermeneutic circle, while this only applies to interpreting (text)
multi-tenancy
via david
可能是不错的中文文档
worth reading
seems a good article/paper explaining zk-Snark
might be useful for Kalm Resource Quota
via david, OAM
via david, mentioned by OAM guys in Ali
code is read much more often than it is written.
docker interactive course, seems interesting
With or Without ‘export’
shell, With or Without ‘export’
Tables are not yet supported. If you love impossible to read regular expressions, submit a PR!
A reasonably clean alternative would be to map a function over the array and use destructuring in the each loop: {#each [1, 2, 3, 4].map(n => ({ n, sqr_n: n * n })) as { n, sqr_n }} {sqr_n} {sqr_n / 2}<br> {/each}
more about helm, and how to create a helm chart
via ruanyifeng http://www.ruanyifeng.com/blog/2020/09/weekly-issue-127.html
漫画家斯科特·亚当斯(Scott Adams)曾经提过一种建立个人护城河的方法,就是找到自己最擅长的2个~3个事物的交集。比如,他既不是最好的漫画家,也不是最好的作家,也不是最好的企业家,但他可以是最好的商业类漫画短文作者,这就是他的护城河。
Safiya Noble, Algorithms of Oppression (New York: New York University Press, 2018). See also Mozilla’s 2019 Internet Health Report at https://internethealthreport.org/2019/lets-ask-more-of-ai/.
This is exactly the sort of thing that makes me happy about the IndieWeb!
One person tinkers around with an idea and posts about how they did it. Someone else sees it and thinks it's cool and wants it for themselves. They then modify it for their system, maybe with some changes or even improvements, and post the details on their site.
They've both syndicated copies to IndieWeb news or to the IndieWeb wiki, so that in the future, others looking for that sort of UI research or examples can find them and potentially modify them for their own personal use.
And the cycle begins anew...
When I think about it, likes and bookmarks are somewhat difficult to distinguish for my purpose. A bookmark inherently implies that I liked a post because I usually only bookmark posts on Pocket that I like and want to save for later. I use Firefox bookmarks to track the articles that I have not yet read and want to come back to later. There is a distinction. A like is clearer. It’s my way of saying that I did like your content. Not everybody will know my policy on bookmarks, so having a like feature is useful.
My general heirarchy is that bookmarks are things I want to come back to (and usually read) later, reads are things that I've read, like are things I've read and want to send appreciation for, and replies are things that usually are both read, liked, and needed even a bit more.
Here's more on how I've thought about it before: https://boffosocko.com/2018/03/10/thoughts-on-linkblogs-bookmarks-reads-likes-favorites-follows-and-related-links/
2011-06-23 at OSBridge2011 having lunch with Ward, Tantek exclaimed: The Read Write Web is no longer sufficient. I want the Read Fork Write Merge Web. #osb11 lunch table. #diso #indieweb
This is what I want too!
“INFORMATION RULES”—published in 1999 but still one of the best books on digital economics—Carl Shapiro and Hal Varian, two economists, popularised the term “network effects”,
I want to get a copy of this book.
In the Ars memorandi noua secretissima, published in 1500 or 1501,20 Jodocus Weczdorff de Triptis (Weimar) inserted an alphabetical list of words, similar to that of Celtis, but he simply suggested that it could be used as a memory house without any scope for our private associations. Moreover, the alphabetic table of Celtis was included in the famous Margarita philosophica nova of Gregor Reisch, which was probably the most popular handbook of the artes scholars in the fi rst two decades of the 16th century.
Books on memory that used Celtes' trick
“The Art of Memory in Late Medieval East Central Europe (Bohemia, Hungary, Poland): An Anthology,” co-written by Lucie Doležalová, Rafał Wójcik and myself.
In 1945 Jacques S. Hadamard surveyed mathematicians to determine their mental processes at work by posing a series of questions to them and later published his results in An Essay on the Psychology of Invention in the Mathematical Field.
I suspect this might be an interesting read.
Horwitz argued a fairly radical point, which I think never received wide enough recognition due to the subject matter and his extremely difficult (dense and dry) style. He said, “I seek to show that one of the crucial choices made during the antebellum period was to promote economic growth primarily through the legal, not the tax, system, a choice which had major consequences for the distribution of wealth and power in American society”
I'll have to add this book to my to read stack.
Universal Design for Learning: Theory and Practice by Meyer, Rose, and Gordon (a book recognized as the core statement about UDL, which you can read for free) walks us through how educators actively change their practice to become more inclusive and helps us weigh choices in terms of how we create unnecessary barriers: