I’ll write it up fully later, but I was training people on folders when Windows 95 came out & made the metaphor mainstream. Users absolutely *hated* the idea that you could infinitely nest folders, and that they sat on your desktop (next to a trash can?!) but couldn’t be stacked.
Oh, this is a good one, even if you're not a coder. Today on @glitch, we're launching Playlists — for apps! blog.glitch.com/post/introduci… Now creating and curating a list of apps on Glitch is as easy, and rewarding, as making a mixtape for a friend...
What we've seen so far is that it's super handy for things like a teacher giving a playlist of example coding projects to their class, or companies that have an API showing off great demos to their dev communities.
Y'all know I love tweeting about art projects that Glitch users make, and this makes it easy to collect and share a set of apps; there's even a gallery view to let you click through a list of apps — just click the Play button on any app in a playlist. ▶️
This is absolutely brilliant. @playablequotes lets you reference any moment in a GameBoy game with real, live playable code. It’s like a YouTube video that you can embed or cue it to a particular point, but with a game instead of a video. joel.franusic.com/playable_quote…
The way it was made is fascinating; of course the part that jumped out to me: “@jf started by loading the GitHub repository for GameBoy-Online into @Glitch and directly making some edits. To his surprise, it was actually pretty easy to get one of our … Playable Quotes to work.”
You can check out the app for yourself at glitch.com/~tenmile and because it’s on Glitch, you can remix it or dig into the code to learn how it works.
Financial press is so bought in to crypto scams that they'll just run straight up lies now, and then update with an "ummm, we're still looking into it" message later. One big reason we need stronger regulation is because the journalistic checks & balances are non-existent.
The crypto insider take is "silly mainstream media doesn't realize Walmart would never pick that coin, they'd pick... this other cryptocurrency I own more of!" The issue is that the entire community's norms are broken, scams are rife, and exploitation is assumed.
When called in front of congress 3 years ago, Zuck tried to play-act accountability by saying they’d share key data with researchers. But FB made a fundamental error in gathering that data. nytimes.com/live/2020/2020… Since then all the links to the original announcement are dead.
Either Facebook is too incompetent internally to share the data necessary to enforce a bare minimum of accountability, or Facebook is so corrupt that they undermined the data-sharing process, knowing it would be years before the truth came out. Which is it?
And either way, Facebook culture will draw the lesson that trying to share accountability data only for them criticized, so they should even *try* to be accountable in the future. They’ll see any work with credible researchers as a PR risk.
This was a something rare & special, I finally got to see the video for a song that I've loved and known every word to for 30 years: Public Enemy's Brothers Gonna Work It Out. It's unfortunately every bit as resonant today as the day it came out.
The video alludes to the then-recent attack at Greekfest in Virginia Beach. A sort of predecessor to Freaknik, Greekfest was a flourishing annual gathering of mostly-HBCU students, and got big enough that year that De La Soul, LL Cool J & Q-Tip all came through just to hang out…
…until the city, and the cops, violently cracked down on the (overwhelmingly Black) crowd that was hanging out in the streets of the (overwhelmingly white) town. pilotonline.com/news/article_0… It ended Greekfest completely.
The two biggest mistakes I see repeated over & over in political discourse by moderate progressives & liberals are trying to (1) shame or (2) point out hypocrisy as ways to change what the fascist right does or says. These tactics don’t work on them, and are ineffective.
They see your finger-wagging, however sincere, as proof they’re doing something *right*, because they’re pissing off liberals while not being encumbered by anything so stupid as principles in their naked grasping for power & control.
And they have a criticism which is actually often true — these responses are more often about performing for fellow liberals than anything else. But fortunately, they give us a clear path for how they think failed extremist ideologies ought to be handled.