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From grumbling to growth

 A friend called me up. He wanted to talk about his work. So we did… or rather, he did.

He likes to do that. What he doesn’t like, though, is his job. He likes talking about what he doesn’t like.

Here’s the list of improvements he’s presented to management:

No, there’s nothing wrong with your browser. The list doesn’t exist. There’s never been a list, only complaints to people who don’t even work there.

It’s fine to complain, even to those who can’t change the circumstances. A little coffee break gossip and grumbling. Some studies even claim it’s good for us.

But there are limits. At some point the complaints have to be put in a constructive way to those who can actually make a difference.

“These things aren’t working. Here are my suggestions. Let’s try to make things better.”

It’s not that difficult. A little courage, a little effort, and suddenly the words that once weighed us down might make life lighter.

Robert Birming

17 Sep 2025 at 15:10

Fruit crisp

 

Over the past few months, I have indulged myself by eating various fruit crisps that L has made.

She has made a lot of crisp, using in-season fruits like peaches and blueberries and strawberries and apricots and rhubarb and a variety of other local produce we have been able to get from the farms around us. Her topping is perfect: just the right mix of oats and butter and sugar, and when well suited for the crisp, even almonds or cinnamon. The mix of the topping with the baked fruit creates a harmony of sensations on your tastebuds; it is, in many ways, the perfect dessert.

I didn’t grow up eating dessert often. When I was a child, it wasn’t something my family prepared except on special, celebratory occasions. Even as a young adult, I focused my eating on the savory parts of a meal, and did not leave room for any sweet treats at the end.

I eat, and thoroughly enjoy, dessert now. It is an indulgence that reminds me that every day is worth celebrating in some small way. A bite of crisp — most recently, peach and blueberry — with some vanilla ice cream is a perfect way to end a day, when Zoya is asleep and I’m taking stock of all I’ve done and all that’s left to do.

Now, unlike before, I relish in this small celebration of the day. Lucky for me, L makes the best crisp, the best desserts, so I can celebrate each day with delight and deliciousness—and love.


A poem

Unpacking a Globe
Arthur Sze

I gaze at the Pacific and don’t expect
to ever see the heads on Easter Island,

though I guess at sunlight rippling
the yellow grasses sloping to shore;

yesterday a doe ate grass in the orchard:
it lifted its ears and stopped eating

when it sensed us watching from
a glass hallway–in his sleep, a veteran

sweats, defusing a land mine.
On the globe, I mark the Battle of

the Coral Sea–no one frets at that now.
A poem can never be too dark,

I nod and, staring at the Kenai, hear
ice breaking up along an inlet;

yesterday a coyote trotted across
my headlights and turned his head

but didn’t break stride; that’s how
I want to live on this planet:

alive to a rabbit at a glass door–
and flower where there is no flower

Arthur Sze has recently been named the US Poet Laureate by the Library of Congress.


Gina Trapani is blogging again. Gina is one of those people that has always influenced me and the stuff I do on the web, so I’m ecstatic to see her blogging again.

Anil Dash turned fifty years old and shared some thoughts on the milestone day. This one, in particular, resonated with me:

This one is a thing people say all the time, but I can’t emphasize enough how much it’s true: Do not wait until someone is gone to praise them, or thank them, or acknowledge them, or to tell them what you’re grateful for or how they’ve impacted your life.

I’ve been lucky to interact with Anil a bit over the past twenty-five years, and I’ve told him many times that he’s a big influence on me. Who can you reach out to today to tell them you appreciate them?

Ethan Marcotte has an excellent post on the new National Design Studio in the US — worth a read even if you don’t work in design. As someone who co-founded and worked in one of the make government services better for everyone” shops (the Ontario Digital Service), I know how hard real civil servant technologists and designers work to make services accessible and usable by every person. This new America By Design” initiative feels like a direct rebuke to the amazing work people have put in over the years.

Ruby Tandoh, a former contestant on The Great British Bake-Off, gives an inside look into the show—from auditioning to taping to the aftermath—and ruminates on its past and future:

Know-how from the bakers themselves, tapped from internet sourdough forums and untranslated pâtisserie books, has been seeping into prime-time television for the past fifteen years, presenting Bake Off” with the same paradox that plagues RuPaul’s Drag Race”: there are no real amateurs anymore.

The summers are getting hotter, smokier, harder to navigate. Denise Balkissoon Gets it right: I have seasonal depression in the summer now.

Your zodiac sign is likely out of date. I guess that makes me an Aquarius instead of a Pisces, now? Not that a zodiac sign matters at all, but the science of how the night sky changes over time is fascinating.

This passage in this piece about the emotional resonance of kitchen objects—really, the significance we imbue into so many things we own, really struck me:

So many of us spend our whole lives denying ourselves the best things because the time is not right or we feel we haven’t earned them yet, or we fear that someone — probably our parents — will disapprove of us if we drop them.

I know it makes me someone who is behind the times, but I don’t fully get LLMs just yet. I don’t use them and can’t really see how they fit into my life. I was fascinated to see this piece in the New York Times highlighting 21 ways people are using AI at work. At my job, we are being encouraged to use Copilot, but I haven’t jumped in just yet.

Relatedly, this post — on being an AI hater — captures a lot of my visceral thinking about LLMs. I don’t think I’d go as far as saying I’m a hater, but I definitely don’t have any positive thoughts towards it.

Also relatedly: a high school student expounds on how AI changing their high school experience, not for the better:

Many of us are so accustomed to outsourcing that we’re dulling the very instincts that we need to prevail in life: grit, critical thinking, and the ability to function smoothly under stress.

One more about AI: this piece from May does an incredible job of outlining just how AI is eroding the foundation of scholarship in our post-secondary institutions.

Do you want to read? Or do you just want to have read — or even to be able to say, online and relatively convincingly, that you have read?“ If you’re looking to really read, you can’t go wrong by starting with the advice in this post by Alan Jacobs.

Loneliness is so challenging to understand because it combines the subjective and the objective, the structural and the personal.” A book review of So Lonely that looks at much of the discourse around loneliness through a critical lens—and makes me want to read the book.

Related: what’s happening to arts and culture criticism these days? Why does it seem to be disappearing, especially from major publications? I believe a well-written piece of criticism can be as valuable as the piece of culture itself; some of my favorite things to read are essay-type reviews.

This review of Arundhati Roy’s new memoir, doubling as a retrospective on her life and work, is a good example of the kind of criticism I really enjoy — particularly when the subject, Roy, is someone I have great respect for.

Loved this short history of the business card and how it evolved to be what it is now. I’m particularly fond of my business cards, but haven’t had a chance to give one out in ages (because I do all my work from home, mostly) and I’m a little sad about that.

In sad news: Robert Munsch has dementia. I loved his books growing up, and have been re-enjoying them recently as we’ve introduced them to Zoya.

You need to be bored. Put down your phone after going through these links—heck, put it down now, these links will still be here later—and be bored for a while.

Fascinated by the idea of traveling” third spaces: The traveling third space recognizes that public spaces are not a guarantor of belonging, they are merely a base upon which people form connections and bond over shared interests.”

No one has ever seen an Anguilla eel spawn. That’s fascinating. Turns out they have a dramatic and elaborate reproduction ritual that we’ve only recently been able to deduce.

So the next time you order unagi and salmon rolls, think about how the paths of their lives mirror one another: salmon spawn in rivers, live in the ocean, then fight their way back upstream to lay eggs, while eels do the reverse–born in the ocean, mature in rivers, and return to die in the deep. Upstream versus downstream, knowable and visible versus hidden, lost, and dark.

Oysters are making people sick, and if you read this article on why it’s happening, you likely won’t want to eat oysters again. (But I will, because they are so delicious.)

Deaf quarterback Paul Hubbard called for the football team at Gallaudet University to circle around him back in 1894 and invented the huddle.

This a ridiculous, mostly inconsequential story about a mystery of French fries left on a porch—and it’s completely entrancing and worth reading.

Tolstoy learned to ride a bike at the age of 67. I still have hope to learn, I guess.

To end, this wonderful Mastodon post by henry, about creating your home on the web:

you ought to make a website. you ought to make it a canvas, a great irrigated field, a confessional booth. make it an amphitheatre, a private tea service with friends, a graveyard, a bedroom, the sunset light through shutters. you ought to make a personal website, make it carefully, make it home


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Flashing Palely in the Margins

17 Sep 2025 at 14:49

[Note]

 Sofa Time is Best Time.

A champagne-coloured French Bulldog lies comfortably on a blanket on a sofa, her front paws crossed in front of her and a huge dorky bleppy tongue sticking out.

Happy Seventeenth of Bleptember.

💖 RSS is fantastic, and so are you for using it. 🎆

Notes – Dan Q

17 Sep 2025 at 13:19

[memories] on this day: what is real

 

Today while reviewing posts I’d made “on this day” in previous years, I stumbled upon a post on reading my old livejournal entries and how it made me feel. In it I asked:

How would my 43 year old self react to the 33 year old me? I hope I will make her proud. I laugh at my 20s self, but there were things that remained constant – my desire to question and analyze every single bit of my life.

I am 44 years old now, and it is difficult to process that it has been 11 years since I’ve written that post. Am I proud of my 33 year old self? I think I am more concerned about how my 33 year old self would think of this 44 year old self.

My 33 year old self was misguided in some ways, emotionally immature in other ways, but I think she did her best she could at that time. Those years were still some of the best years of my life.

What surprised me from that post was a quote I included from my 21 year old self:

What is real, really? Who are we to define what is real?

I guess some things just never change.


Today also marks 10 years since I’ve moved back from the US. I don’t miss the place per se, but I miss the innocence and optimism I had while I was there.


related notes
Winnie Lim

17 Sep 2025 at 12:02

Lofree Flow84 keyboard

 
Lowfree keyboard

I’ve been using an HHKB since 2018 and it’s a great keyboard. Once in a while I tire of not having actual function or arrow keys, so I try something else.

The keyboard-driven nature of Omarchy has, er, forced my hand again.

Keyboards are a rabbit hole I didn’t want to go down again, so I grabbed something that I’ve seen recommended by a few people and ordered one. Also, although DHH is not someone I’d deliberately try to emulate, it’s what he uses with Omarchy, so I figured the odds of it working well were pretty good.

I went with a Lofree Flow84

I’ll miss the Topre switches on the HHKB, but the Flow’s switches feel pretty good. Different, but good. Oddly, I like that it’s not very customizable. With any luck, I’ll just type on it rather than futzing with custom caps or layouts.

What I don’t like is the printing on the keys. Rather than putting the shifted character above the default character, they’re laid out side by side. It’s weird and I’m not a fan. Also, a few keys have parts printed in a different color. I keep thinking I’ve dropped crumbs on the keys.

The worst thing is that when rebooting, I can’t type in my password when using Bluetooth. I’m using it wired, so it’s not a problem for me, but still not ideal.

Otherwise, I’m happily thwocking away over here on my new keyboard. Function and arrow keys are handy, btw. :)

Baty.net posts

17 Sep 2025 at 10:54

teach the history of history to defend it

 

In short, science classes pair a description of our best knowledge at the present with a story of discovery of how we came to know what we know now, with the clear implication that this method is how we will continue to discover new things.

By contrast in history this same story (we call it historiography – the history of the history) doesn’t generally attract sustained attention until graduate school. Students learn the names of rulers and thinkers and key figures but they rarely learn the names of historians. Likewise, instead of being presented with a process of historical discovery they are given a narrative of human development – it is not until advanced undergraduate courses that they begin to engage meaningfully with how we know these things. In my own experience the exceptions to this were almost invariably stories about the knowledge-making achievements of other disciplines – archaeology and linguistics, mostly – rather than narratives of historical investigation. So it is not surprising that many students at those introductory levels come away assuming that the narrative is pretty much fixed and has been known and understood effectively forever.

I went to an International Baccalaureate school for high school and while that was generally a mistake, boy I loved that they gave us historiography. If you are bored in a class you can do mental backflips to ascend to new heights of being-irritating. “But wouldn’t a post-revisionist object to your characterization there as overly driven by…”

On the other hand, I found the focus on great scientist narratives offputting in every science class I ever took. (Not that Devereaux’s wrong – I’m just contemplating how this is best done)

maya.land

17 Sep 2025 at 08:00

Waarom ik elke ochtend drie pagina's met de hand schrijf

 Elke ochtend fysiek drie pagina’s schrijven heeft iets fundamenteels veranderd aan hoe ik de dag begin. Na 100+ dagen met pen en papier ontdek ik dat de traagheid van handschrift precies is wat mijn brein nodig heeft. En dat brengt me op iets wat ik niet had verwacht over onze relatie met digitale tools.

Mijn ochtenden waren al jaren hetzelfde. Wakker worden, telefoon pakken, even snel door berichtjes, misschien wat typen in DayOne, en voor je het weet zit je al vol met de chaos van de dag. Ik schrijf al jaren in DayOne en ik had niet het idee dat ik dat stukje van mijn routine kon veranderen. Maar ergens rondom mei kreeg ik het gevoel dat ik te snel in die ratrace gleed.

Eind mei bezocht ik de Dutch Pen Show in Utrecht. Tussen alle prachtige vulpennen en notitieboeken viel mijn oog op een simpel Midori A6 gelinieerd boekje. Het Japanse merk staat bekend om zijn eenvoud en kwalitatief goede producten. Iets later kocht ik nog een Lamy Safari vulpen, om zo de set compleet te maken.

Op 1 juni begon ik met Morning Pages. Naar het concept van Julia Cameron. Drie handgeschreven pagina’s, elke ochtend.

Van snelheid naar rust

Het eerste wat me opviel was de snelheid. Of beter gezegd, het gebrek daaraan. Na jaren van vlot typen in DayOne moest ik echt gas terugnemen. Mijn gedachten gingen sneller dan mijn pen kon bijhouden. In het begin was dat frustrerend, maar na een paar dagen merkte ik iets interessants.

Door die traagheid kreeg mijn brein meer tijd om na te denken. In plaats van de praktische planningen die ik meestal in DayOne typte, begon er een heel andere stroom van gedachten op te komen. Meer vrije associaties. Zorgen die ik nog niet had uitgesproken. Ideeën die ergens in mijn achterhoofd zaten te broeden. Dromen van de nacht ervoor. Herinneringen aan vroeger. Het was alsof met de hand schrijven een andere frequentie van denken aanboorde.

Een dag zonder ratrace

Na meer dan 100 dagen is mijn ochtend wezenlijk veranderd. Mijn telefoon ligt nu buiten de slaapkamer en is niet meer het startpunt van de dag. Ik sta op, loop naar beneden, pak een kop thee en mijn notitieboek. Ik begin elke pagina met de datum, de tijd en een klein icoon voor het weer. Een zonnetje, wolken met regendruppels, of gewoon bewolkt.

Daarna begin ik met één random zin en vervolgens vliegt het alle kanten op. Soms zijn het was losse gedachten over de dag er voor, soms zijn het zorgen over wat er in ons gezin speelt. Dan weer ideeën voor blogposts of interviews. Ik heb zelfs een keer per ongeluk een halve blogpost geschreven. Vragen aan mezelf. Uitkijken naar een vakantie. Het is echt free flow.

Het bijzondere is dat ik er nu naar uitkijk als ik opsta. Die 15 tot 20 minuten zijn echt mijn moment van rust voordat de dag begint. Ik heb nog geen dag overgeslagen, maar wel twee of drie keer wat later geschreven. Dat voelde niet lekker, alsof ik iets gemist had.

Vorm bepaalt motivatie

Bij de Dutch Pen Show zag ik veel verschillende pennen en notitieboeken. Voor elk wat wils eigenlijk. Je hoeft je niet te conformeren aan wat in de winkels ligt, je kunt compleet je eigen stijl bepalen met zowel notitieboeken als met pennen. Ik geloof echt dat de vorm van je materiaal bijdraagt aan de motivatie om het te gebruiken. Van goed papier tot een pen die lekker schrijft. Als het goed voelt, gebruik je het ook graag.

Dat merkte ik toen ik op een moment een nieuw boekje nodig had maar nog geen Midori had gekocht. Ik pakte een HEMA notitieboek. Een prima notitieboekje, eenvoudig en stevig. Maar het was toch anders. De lijnen waren sterker aangezet, het papier voelde anders en de interlinie was kleiner. Daardoor “klopte” het niet helemaal. Ook toen ik mijn Lamy eens moest schoonmaken maar wel wilde schrijven, pakte ik een Sakura Pigma PN pen. Dat werkte wel, schrijft ook lekker, maar het ritme was anders.

Links het boekje van de HEMA, rechts Midori. Duidelijk verschil!

Het is net als met muziekinstrumenten. Een goede gitaar speelt niet automatisch betere muziek, maar het inspireert je wel om vaker te spelen.

Niet PKM, wel creativiteit

De Morning Pages zijn geen onderdeel van mijn PKM systeem zoals mijn Obsidian setup of indexkaarten. Ik verbind deze notities niet aan andere systemen, categoriseer ze niet verder. Maar er ontstaan wel ideeën die ik later gebruik in blogposts of gesprekken. Tijdens interviews voor CreativeNotes praat ik regelmatig over Morning Pages, vooral als de geïnterviewde het concept kent of zelf gebruikt.

Het is meer een creatieve doorstroming dan kennisbeheer. Een manier om de gedachten die ’s nachts zijn blijven hangen op papier te krijgen, zodat ik frisser met de dag kan beginnen.

De patronen in mijn eigen handschrift

Ik maak van elke pagina een foto. Niet om ze direct terug te lezen, maar voor later. Misschien kan ik dankzij sterk verbeterde OCR en lokale AI-modellen, over een tijd patronen ontdekken die ik zelf lezend niet zo snel zou zien. Welke onderwerpen komen steeds terug? Welke zorgen spelen al maanden? Welke ideeën blijven terugkeren?

Ik vind het interessant om te ontdekken wat mijn onderbewustzijn al die tijd probeerde te vertellen.

Voor wie werkt Morning Pages?

Het schrijven van de Morning Pages moet je wel liggen. Het is echt een activiteit waar je aan moet wennen verwacht ik, zeker als je gewend bent aan toetsenborden. Maar ik denk dat het een goed rustpunt is voor mensen die het gevoel hebben dat ze meteen in een ratrace komen ’s ochtends. Of die vol zitten met gedachten die ze ergens kwijt willen. Die 15 tot 20 minuten schrijven geven mij echt de rust om alles op een rij te zetten voordat de dag begint.

Het belangrijkste is wel dat ik de pagina’s schrijf als ik alleen ben. Als er al gezinsleden om me heen zijn met hun eigen telefoons, verhalen en de haast van de dag, dan werkt het niet. Het is voor mij echt een stiltemoment. Ik hoop dat ik dat vast kan houden, ook als de dagen korter worden en het drukker wordt.

Klein beginnen

Als je deze routine eens wilt proberen, begin dan klein. Gebruik een A6 notitieboek, dat is handzaam. En je hoeft ook niet meteen die drie pagina’s te schrijven, maar begin eens met één pagina. Maak je niet druk om je handschrift of als je hand verkrampt. Dat is gewenning. Zoek vooral materiaal dat bij je past. Een Lamy Safari vulpen kost 22,50 euro, extra inktpatronen zijn nog geen een euro per stuk en gaan maanden mee. Mijn Midori A6 gelinieerd kost 12 euro voor 176 pagina’s, dus ongeveer twee maanden schrijven. Dat is het mij waard, maar ik kan niet in de portemonnee van een ander kijken. Probeer het gewoon eens 10 dagen en kijk wat je ervan vindt. Misschien ontdek je, net als ik, dat traagheid soms precies is wat je brein nodig heeft.

Frank Meeuwsen

17 Sep 2025 at 07:01

Scripting News: Wednesday, September 17, 2025

 

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

I had a great talk/podcast interview yesterday with Matthias Pfefferle about everything I'm interested in re WordPress and networking, and our interests overlap a lot. I was explaining how I wanted to see a whole market of editors. You could see them as "For WordPress" but there's another way to look at them. They're plug-in replacements for the dreaded "tiny little textboxes" we see in twitter-like systems. Those awful little things. We know so many ways to make better editors. Now imagine that we store your Mastodon posts in WordPress documents (we do). And you see how the pieces start to fit together. Think of WordPress as the command line of the social web. And it really will be the web, not a promise of someday maybe being the web. It's like a Wordle puzzle. You have to move the parts around until you see a picture develop. Another fun thing, WordPress has a great simple REST api that's been around since 2017, and it covers most of the product functionality and is debugged, scaled and stable. It probably is the simplest API for ActivityPub. Now does that blow your mind? This is how you know this is the web, because your mind keeps exploding once you realize the things you could do just by connecting two things together and it works because they interop. Matthias has been working on this stuff since 2008. Our paths didn't cross until earlier this year. #

This town, at the end of the Metro North line, looks like an ideal place to park yourself for easy access to the city, yet a fairly country experience. #

There have been reports of people having trouble using WordLand. I was just able to do a test post, and I can see from the logs that other people are successfully posting. It would be helpful if people with accounts could do a short test post. And if you have something to report, here's a good place to do it. #

In a piece I wrote yesterday on my WordPress blog, I offered to do a virtual handshake with the people who worked at Netscape when it disappeared just as RSS 0.9.1 was being adopted by the blogosphere in 1999. I never considered their point of view, but in fairness, they never would talk to us except to dictate and dominate. In the piece I try to explain how it all looked from my point of view, that of a developer who had adopted RSS 0.91 in favor of my own earlier format. Most of the stories miss the real innovator, and when you find out who it is you will be surprised. (It's not me, most of my job re RSS has been fairly thankless and not creative, and definitely not profitable, but still worth doing because the web is the only place independent developers can work without the interference of big tech companies.)#

A bunch of new people are trying out FeedLand news products. I haven't looked at them in a long time. I'm glad they're looking, but most of my demo news products were broken. Oy. It was hard to untangle. It should be a lot easier, and next time I can dig in and do it over I think it will be. Anyway as I convert my demos, I'll list them here: mblriver.com, politics.newsriver.org, bloggers.scripting.com, dave.podcatch.com.#

Scripting News for email

17 Sep 2025 at 05:00
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