Links
Add[AI hype companies are] selling the idea that doing things is worthless.
Long, but very good read about hype, that the author calls Whatever.
A good alternative to wetransfer
I want to start using the temporal API for my clocks.
Interesting “brutalist” typefaces
Tips for enterprise UX. If we do this at CMD, this could be interesting
Oof, depressing article about the collapse of education
Depressing stats about using ridiculous amounts of energy
Interesting tool to see how music is linked. Works the same with all kinds of creativity and art of course, we could use more of these visualising tools
One of many people warning for a bubble
AI is an everything machine, which fits perfectly in a frictionless dystopia. A plea for more friction. I agree fully.
I agree with the idea that businesses do not need to grow. Growth is the ideology of a tumor, of a parasite.
Brilliant and wonderfully written article which says that everybody who doesn’t use a microwave for all their cooking is missing out.
A comment on the value of estimating the carbon footprint of websites.
Tool for better audio control on Mac
Very interesting article that points out that the EAA goes much further than the WCAG. We should focus on that as well.
Google AI feature in its search results is really bad.
Brilliant video showing the three shapes of stories.
The missing article on font size on websites, while also taking the user’s preference seriously.
While the idea is nice: own your time, don’t let notifications and managers own it. There is one important flaw though: the word billionaire. Becoming a billionaire is not a good idea, it is a ridiculous american dream.
Mooi artikel over tijd, over The Clock, over de expo in Breda, over verschillende soorten tijd.
Zeer uitgebreid artikel over Malcolm X
Oef, wat zijn digitale directeuren toch belachelijk voorzichtig.
Shocking article about the ‘hysterical obedience’ in Germany:
very common in Germany, that to be law-abiding means not merely to obey the laws but to act as though one were the legislator of the laws that one obeys.
The question is just as relevant and just as meaningful as the question whether submarines can swim.
In retrospect, this accident of history has been a disaster, since almost all the opinions pushed by the commercial propaganda were false, and, in addition, the propaganda has been so effective that for many those opinions have become dogmata that can no longer be challenged without committing heresy.