Journal

29 entries for Brasilia

Thursday, December 14, 2023

How to organise yourself - the dangerous path to Explorer, Villager and Town Planners

Be prepared to be shocked, that’s the horror of looking.

This is like a guide on how to run a company or organization.

Deprecating Content

[Include enough context (such as what, when, why, and the plan) so that the reader can make more informed prioritization of how to handle it.]

Foam: Software as Curation

[With a modular enough system, people can simply curate components or plugins into a kind of software experience, requiring less effort or technical skill than programming.]

Wednesday, December 13, 2023

Why don’t the Democrats adopt the obvious winning strategies?

[Since the Clinton era, US Democrats want to lose because it enables them to continue campaign funding as a lucrative income, as the Republicans started to do decades earlier.]

Jess Martin on devtools.fm

Do you have ten years of experience? or ten of the same year?

Tech doesn’t make our lives easier. It makes them faster

[Instead of saving an hour from not having to walk an hour to work, speed and distance increases so that we spend a comparable amount of time occupied with new trajectories.]

Tuesday, December 12, 2023

The Linking of Opposites

[It’s fine to stop a video to talk about one frame, but we cannot separate it from the moving picture of life: we’re always in motion.]

Thursday, December 7, 2023

How Close Is That Photo to the Truth? What to Know in the Age of AI

[The camera’s photon sensor converts light into pixel data and makes guesses about how much red, green, and blue to represent in each one.]

[Breaking up the image into multiple frames helps better represent shadows and skies while reducing noise.]

[Cameras make choices about how to make photos more vivid or different skin colors better represented, and decide how to store them for maximum compression.]

More Money For Better Open-Source Software

I am going to emphasize, in the docs, the license file, and the communication surrounding the project, that free-loading is not socially acceptable. Along with this, I will provide convenient mechanisms to donate. The code of financial conduct would be something like this:

  • If you are a non-commercial user, don’t worry about it.
  • If I fix a bug you reported or add a feature you wanted and you have the financial means, a one-time tip is much appreciated. Even if this is unlikely to add up to serious money, it takes the one-sidedness out of the process of responding to user requests.
  • If you are extracting value from your use of my software, set up a proportional monthly donation.

The monthly part is the important thing here. Having to periodically beg a user base to please contribute to a donation drive again is a drag, and not very effective. Convincing users to donate as long as they get value from the software gives a maintainer a more or less predictable, low-maintenance source of compensations for their work.