Kudos to @Cockos for offering a temporary ...
Kudos to @Cockos for offering a temporary Reaper license to anyone who needs one to work from home.
2020-03-17
There’s no way I know of to find old spam that came into WithKnown while I was not getting notifications. I had thought that my scheme of jumping on spam as soon as possible after receiving (restarted) notifications had found them all. But no. Today surfaced a bookmark post that had accumulated 10 spams since August 2018.Lotta continua!
COVID-19 by the Numbers by Anatole Kaletsky - Project Syndicate
On the plus side, maybe more people will stop using “exponential” as a synonym for “very large”.
Nah.
I very much share and understand Amani ...
I very much share and understand Amani Mena’s frustrations, and often feel the same way myself. That’s the problem with plurality, and building blocks, and many things, loosely joined. Too much choice. That’s why when I started I went for WithKnown out of the box. Today I might recommend micro.blog. Once you’re up and running, and have everything on your domain, you can learn and change systems as you do so. The key is to have everything on your domain. #IndieWeb
That's interesting, Chris. I've just checked, and ...
That’s interesting, Chris. I’ve just checked, and Huffduffer is picking up only my domain, and none of the other links present as rel=“me” on my Home page. I wander what the difference is. Might need to ask @adactio.
Just wondering, what's so bad, the way ...
Just wondering, what’s so bad, the way Hans sees it, about the way Italy has handled the coronavirus?
G-FEED: COVID-19 reduces economic activity, which reduces pollution, which saves lives.
“I calculate that the reductions in air pollution in China caused by this economic disruption likely saved 20-times more lives in China than have currently been lost due to the virus in that country”
Oh boy! Data analysis rocks.
Get political reporters off the coronavirus story because they don't distinguish between right and wrong | Press Watch
[W]hen they’re just talking smack, maybe the best thing to do would be to ignore them – and instead rely on sources who actually know what they’re talking about and reporters who know enough about health and science and reality to discern between what’s true and what’s not.That would be almost all the time, right?
There's much to applaud in Jason's write-up ...
There’s much to applaud in Jason’s write-up of a university student’s efforts to show people in Japan where positive responses to the coronavirus are. And one thing to abhor, and that’s the description of “a foreign virus running rampant”. The virus may have had an origin elsewhere, but there is no sense in which a pathogen can be considered foreign. This sort of wording legitimises xenophobia.
Nice idea, but anecdotally, the few people ...
Nice idea, but anecdotally, the few people on Twitter whom I’ve asked have said they don’t have a blog of their own.
Wait a minute. Are the campaign to ...
Wait a minute. Are the campaign to abolish recipe headnotes and the campaign to insist on listening to podcasts at 1x somehow related? I’m not going to tell anyone what to do with their time. Listen at any speed you like; but listen. @kathrynw5 @nwquah
Woke to an unsettling SMS and email ...
Woke to an unsettling SMS and email from Ryanair telling me the return flight at the end of March had been cancelled. What about the outbound flight? I need to decide what to do.
"My Brexit stash of tins of beans ...
“My Brexit stash of tins of beans and toilet paper has had a rebrand. It’s now the corona virus emergency stash.”
Very clever.
A Text Renaissance
Lots of interesting ideas here from Venkatash Rao, although I still don’t get the attraction of tweetstorms, or whetever they are called nowadays. Certainly, though, the focus on text as the thing has always made sense to me. Presentation matters, of course it does, but so does content. Just as it does in audio.