I remember reading The Stand for the first time. The longest book I'd read before that time was a couple of hundred pages long, so it was a big challenge to tackle a 1000 odd page book. But it is such an amazing book and I breezed through it. It's still my favourite book because of how good it is and because it sparked my appetite for reading.
funny how we went from the "trust machine" blockchain grift to the "could be an acceptable level of trustable machine" ai grift
so the new feature in the next macos release 15.3 is "fuck you, apple intelligence is on by default now"
For users new or upgrading to macOS 18.3, Apple Intelligence will be enabled automatically during Mac onboarding. Users will have access to Apple Intelligence features after setting up their devices. To disable Apple Intelligence, users will need to navigate to the Apple Intelligence & Siri Settings pane and turn off the Apple Intelligence toggle. This will disable Apple Intelligence features on their device.
I love the word, the definition, but I agree with so few of his examples.
I latched on to it because it fit so well with my regular criticisms of tech products, particularly saas shit
yeah that is an interesting example. I immediately applied the term to commercial products. Like Notion for example - funny because I always say Notion takes wikis which are well established in their usefulness and just slaps them into saas product with other things like docs and spreadsheets (also well established in their usefulness) - but he calls wikis themselves a hyperkludge but what superior thing did wikis kill by network effects?
Just want to share this great term & definition "hyperkludge" coined by Jonathan Korman (@miniver on bsky and masto)
I need to write something else on mine. I just have to choose something from my 200 page list of things I'm annoyed about
this is cool. Considering their first album was all songs about accepting death I assume they're not fans of anything tescreal adjacent
I love that album, and i'll never forget when I was dating someone who was a classical pianist, the type that closes their eyes and sways their head when listening to classical, and when I put that album on it was a few notes into the first song and she made this tortured face and said "no, no, no! those chord progressions are so depressing!" It was so strange to me to hear that, but you know how you just know when someone knows what they are talking about and she was sure it had hit some kind of melancholy brown note.
Still... that era of interpol and white lies was great. That shit made me happy
I hear you, but I didn't say flat ui is due to processing power. My line of thought is that a sudden bump in available processing power might prompt designers to feel that elaborate uis are fine now because despite flat ui not being an efficiency thing, it is definitely perceived as one by the average designer who doesn't know how much of the css used to render it is generated client-side via js
yeah but I didn't say that flat ui was created for efficiency. Any efficiency of a flat ui is cancelled out by the excesses of client-side JS. I know it is fashion, I was there. But I also know that there is a sense that it is efficient by the designers that design with it.
that;s exactly the catch I was hoping wouldn't be the case. When the AI shit is abandoned, is the hardware useful for regular stuff...
So, from what you're saying: Generative AI is fucking up in the past, present, and future
oh yeah! That spiral-bound monster was great. I was too young and dumb at the time to actually learn basic but I used to copy the programs from that book into the command line and run them to see what they did. Great memories, thanks!