Links
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A short history of body copy sizes on the Web
I would like more histories of specific features of web design over the decades. (via Adactio)
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The twenty tens: my lucky decade – Matt Edgar writes here
If you’re looking for inspiration for how to think about your work/life over the next decade, this look back on Matt’s 2010s is lovely. (via @gilest)
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my favorite posts of the decade — Ask a Manager
Lots of good stuff, both oh-my-god-amazing and very useful.
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The Secret Life and Strange Death of Quadriga Founder Gerald Cotten | Vanity Fair
Very entertaining, from a distance. (via Money Stuff)
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Overload and isolation: the decade that warped popular culture | Culture | The Guardian
Simon Reynolds. “Slowly but surely, streaming is killing the idea of a mainstream. … Occasionally, your streaming selection will coincide with large numbers of other people – the waning flickers of the monoculture drawing you all to the same spot.”
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How I structure my vanilla JS projects | Go Make Things
Some tips in here.
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The Vanilla JS Toolkit
A nice collection of JavaScript methods, plugins, etc that don’t require any extra frameworks or libraries.
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Domestic Cozy: 9
High Peasant (Boomers), Premium Mediocre (Millennials), Domestic Cozy (Gen Z), Favela Chic (Gen X). From a low cost vs private pleasure 2x2.
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Free for developers
“This is a list of software (SaaS, PaaS, IaaS, etc.) and other offerings that have free tiers for developers.” (via Simon Willison)
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Instant Class – Popula
A nice piece on British coffee and class signifiers. (via Mark Hurrell)
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This Page is Designed to Last: A Manifesto for Preserving Content on the Web
On making simple websites to last a minimum of ten years. (via Adactio)
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The Online Photographer: Best Film Cameras for Newbies
Re “Mike’s Comment” below the cameras, I bet there’s a similar sweet spot in the development of most technologies – cars, computers, others that don’t start with “c” – and that it should have a name.
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‘Boomerspeak’ Is Now Available for Your Parodying Pleasure | WIRED
Fascinating. I use ellipses a lot myself but I don’t think I use them as randomly, or to end messages, as much as some older people seem to. Which comes across as passive aggressive apparently… (via Waxy)
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Batch Notes. No.3 — Paynter Jacket Co.
I enjoy these notes covering the thinking, planning, testing and making of their jackets.
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Said the Gramophone: Best Songs of 2019
A highlight of every year since 2005.
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Do One Thing Well List 2019 - Hiut Denim Co - Medium
Lots of very nice things, if you’re stuck for Christmas gifts for someone in this particular demographic.
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I Found A Drain And Drained A Flooded Street During A Storm | MetaFilter
“A person going by the name post 10 clears blocked storm drains and posts unexpectedly satisfying videos of doing so to YouTube.” Very satisfying.
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Build your own React
I’ve only read a bit of this but aside from what seems like an interesting article, it’s a lovely example of going step-by-step through writing some code. (via @RandomEtc)
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My Python Development Environment, 2020 Edition | Jacob Kaplan-Moss
As the previous edition, interesting. I’ll stick with pipenv instead of poetry for now, as I’m happy with it. I should use pipx but not sure how to go from my current mess to that. (via Simon Willison)
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Mwie Ltd (13 Nov., 2019, at Interconnected)
Matt’s thoughts on five years of being an independent consultant are interesting. I daren’t think too closely about my *mumble* years of freelancing.
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Notes: We’ve Got Blog (2002) (Kicks Condor)
“…my notes on the book We’ve Got Blog: How Weblogs Are Changing Our Culture … a pretty decent compilation of blog posts from … mostly 1999-2002.” Great. Fascinating excerpts and commentary.
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HOW - Pure CSS - cyanHarlow
Nicely done explanation of how Diana Smith uses CSS properties in her amazing CSS art, and what hat art looks like without each property. (via Waxy)
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All The Places | A growing set of web scrapers designed to output consistent geodata about as many places of business in the world as possible.
Handy, and a nice example of making scrapers to work with loads of different sites. (via Simon Willison)
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The Book of Dreams | Argos
I always wanted to put all the catalogues online, and they’ve done it. Gold. It’s a shame they don’t have usable indexes, as that’s how I navigated them in the 80s.
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Elderblog Sutra: 8
“I’ve neither succeeded spectacularly enough at what I do that I can afford to ‘make bad movies for the rest of my life’ … nor have I failed so miserably that it’s an easy call … to just toss it all as worthless sunk cost, and start afresh with whatever resources and talents I have left.”
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What happened to Early Retirement Extreme? An update from Jacob Lund Fisker
The father of “Financial Independence / Retire Early” on what he and his wife have been doing for the past decade or so of not having to work.
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Sweet Moderation, Heart of this Nation
On why Britain, its media, and Rory Stewart aren’t moderate and centrist. (via @markhurrell)
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My ethical investment strategy - Matthew Somerville
This is good. But there’s still no easy way to balance low-cost passive investing with investing ethically (whatever that means to you).
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dotfiles/setup.sh at master · lazerwalker/dotfiles
Impressed by this kind of thing but I don’t think I set up a new Mac often enough to do this. (via FaveJet)