Image Manton Reece
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  • Watched: All You Need Is Kill. We love Edge of Tomorrow so had to see this. It would be fun if there were more adaptations or spinoffs. 🍿

    → 9:28 PM, Jan 17
  • Went to see Marty Supreme. Wild, much different and better than I was expecting. Loved it. 🍿

    → 10:01 PM, Jan 16
    Also on Bluesky
  • Fascinating drama in Elon Musk’s court filing against OpenAI. OpenAI’s web response is well done, with color highlighting of passages from Greg Brockman’s journal.

    Always good to take notes. I wouldn’t be able to remember these kind of details from 8 years ago without writing them down.

    → 5:20 PM, Jan 16
    Also on Bluesky
  • Rewrote some WebSocket code this week and it seems to have made a dramatic improvement not just for Nostr (which uses it) but general stability with hung Sidekiq processes. Reviewing Nostr, I still find it an elegant protocol. Just not sure how it fits in the modern social web.

    → 3:36 PM, Jan 16
    Also on Bluesky
  • Ads are coming to ChatGPT. OpenAI is attempting to head off some of the inherent misalignment with ads and users by outlining some ad principles:

    Ads do not influence the answers ChatGPT gives you. […] We keep your conversations with ChatGPT private from advertisers, and we never sell your data to advertisers. […] We do not optimize for time spent in ChatGPT.

    The problem is once you’re making money with ads, it’s hard not to optimize for more ads. I just hope ads will remain a small part of their business compared to Plus and Pro subscriptions.

    → 2:53 PM, Jan 16
    Also on Bluesky
  • AI and Wikipedia

    This announcement from Wikipedia seemed to spark some debate. I think it’s only good news. If a company is significantly benefiting from Wikipedia and is able to help offset hosting costs, they should.

    From the announcement:

    Tech companies that rely on Wikipedia content must use it responsibly and help sustain Wikipedia for the future. One key way to do this is through Wikimedia Enterprise. Developed by the Wikimedia Foundation, Wikimedia Enterprise is a commercial product for large-scale reusers and distributors of content from Wikimedia projects.

    It’s a little like supporting open source. Micro.blog has a recurring donation to the Hugo project. It’s honestly not very much money, but it’s a good habit and can increase as Micro.blog grows.

    Molly White in a longer thread on Bluesky:

    AI companies have ALWAYS been training their models on Wikipedia content, which under the free and open access model is available to anyone — including AI companies. Agreements like these require AI companies to limit and offset the strain they place on Wikimedia infrastructure.

    AI using Wikipedia reminds me of the FAQ on setting up a Little Free Library:

    I think someone is stealing books from my library and selling them, what do I do?
    Remember that the purpose of a Little Free Library is to share books—you can’t really steal from it.

    Wikipedia is an incredible resource. Even though I use AI chatbots all the time, I still find myself reading Wikipedia pages fairly often. There’s always going to be value in reading something longer that was researched and written by humans.

    → 2:10 PM, Jan 16
    Also on Bluesky
  • I blogged briefly this morning about the W3C. Connected Places has a much longer post today about the new working group and participation.

    I’ve submitted my name as an invited expert. I think they will have plenty of ActivityPub experts, but I’d like to help with testing LOLA and updating Micropub.

    → 11:11 AM, Jan 16
    Also on Bluesky
  • Reviewing some of the W3C policies, kind of interesting who can be part of a working group. Small companies can be members for $2k/year. Invited experts can also participate, but:

    Invited Expert status is not normally granted to individuals employed by organizations which have significant business interest in results from W3C.

    If they’re too strict about this, which I think is unlikely, it might create a hole where very small companies don’t have a clear place.

    → 9:39 AM, Jan 16
    Also on Bluesky
  • A long story in The Hollywood Reporter about George R.R. Martin and all the work he is juggling. The problem with a book taking so long — I know this firsthand — is that the author’s expectations keep going up, as if it needs to be even more perfect. But it never will be. Maybe best to just ship it.

    → 4:55 PM, Jan 15
    Also on Bluesky
  • There’s never been a better time to learn a little about nearly everything in web technology. 2026 will be a year for generalists and new tools that span platforms. And yet I see folks on the fediverse who have strong opinions about Bluesky without really understanding why it exists or how it works.

    → 10:53 AM, Jan 15
    Also on Bluesky
  • We officially have a new W3C working group to advance ActivityPub and related specifications (including IndieWeb standards). There has been a lot of work in the years since the last specs were updated, so it’ll be good to see conventions formalized.

    → 10:02 AM, Jan 15
    Also on Bluesky
  • I’ve been watching some of the CNN live coverage from Minneapolis. Looks precarious. Sad and worried for a city that has already gone through so much.

    Stay safe everyone.

    → 10:38 PM, Jan 14
    Also on Bluesky
  • Two co-founders of Thinking Machines are going back to OpenAI. Last July, a co-founder of Safe Superintelligence left for Meta.

    Building a business is hard, even with funding. The near implosion of OpenAI and the board shakeup that led to these companies’ founding now feels like ancient history.

    → 10:12 PM, Jan 14
    Also on Bluesky
  • Reading this post on Daring Fireball today about the explosive growth of the iPhone made me curious what I had blogged about the launch. We tend to slightly reframe history when looking back, so older posts are a snapshot of how things really felt. My post in 2007 also collected some tweets.

    → 7:22 PM, Jan 14
    Also on Bluesky
  • Really unique design for Honda’s prototype camper trailer. I like it. There’s some video and commentary here on YouTube.

    → 5:04 PM, Jan 14
    Also on Bluesky
  • David Pierce writes that all the AI pieces are falling into place for Google:

    Three years after being caught off guard by ChatGPT, Gemini appears to have everything it needs to take down OpenAI and everyone else.

    And:

    It announced an opt-in feature called “Personal Intelligence,” which connects Gemini to the vast ocean of information Google has about you in order to give you better responses.

    I don’t think Gemini will ever reach the level of market share that Google search had. There’s still a lot of room for a few successful companies.

    → 4:47 PM, Jan 14
    Also on Bluesky
  • There’s a major Verizon outage, still impacting us here in Austin. My phone is currently on SOS. I don’t think I’ve ever seen something on this scale before… Despite how much we gripe about cellular service, it’s actually very reliable.

    → 1:42 PM, Jan 14
    Also on Bluesky
  • The Information report on Gemini + Siri answers most of my questions, including deployment:

    To maintain Apple’s privacy pledge, the Gemini-based AI will run directly on Apple devices or its private cloud system, which is powered by Apple’s own server chips, rather than running on Google’s servers. Google put significant engineering effort into getting a version of Gemini working on Apple’s servers, according to a person familiar with the partnership talks.

    No small thing for Apple to scale this up on their own. We’ll see small improvements in iOS 26.4, with the biggest changes in the fall.

    → 11:42 AM, Jan 14
    Also on Bluesky
  • John Gruber commenting on Meta’s plans to sell more glasses:

    20 million units is a real number. But building the capacity for 20 million units isn’t the same as selling 20 million units, and, to my knowledge, actual sales of Meta Glasses are only Bezos Numbers.

    In NYC last week, I walked by the Meta Lab store. There was a 30-minute wait to try Ray-Ban Display glasses. I don’t want to actually buy them, so I didn’t waste everyone’s time by taking up a slot. The store had real people in it, though. (Not Apple Store level crowdedness, of course.)

    → 11:21 AM, Jan 14
    Also on Bluesky
  • Caught myself writing a blog post to complain about someone else’s blog platform and API. Deleted the draft. There is plenty of complaining to go around already. “Everything is amazing and nobody is happy.”

    → 10:43 AM, Jan 14
    Also on Bluesky
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