“How to be a good manager of a self-improving team — Quartz at Work”

This one has showed up for work

A resin statuette of Gaston Lagaffe carrying a pile of books.

“Our Leaders Kill For Their Own Benefit - Ian Welsh”

“The WeWork IPO – Stratechery by Ben Thompson”

“Digital sweatshops then and now – Jon Udell”

“Collections is now available to test in the Canary channel - Microsoft Edge Blog”

This is a great idea and well overdue. Nice to see this kind of innovation in the browser space.

“Why Archive Of Our Own’s Hugo win is so important for fandom - The Beat”

“Celebrating Software as a Tactic, Not a Profession - DaedTech”

“Six FAQs – Think Different”

Five years old but always relevant (unfortunately).

“Dom diffing with vanilla JS: part 1 - Go Make Things”

“The birth of Inter”

“Best moment of the academic year — Crooked Timber”

“What’s The Point of Code Craft? – Codemanship’s Blog”

“Touchscreens and the Loss of Nuanced Control – Jorge Arango”

Easily the main reason why I take most of my photos on a dedicated camera with knobs and buttons (the Fuji X-T20)

“New Things In New Ways, or Same Old Things In Old Ways?”

“Backlogs make you feel guilty.”

This podcast episode where Jason Fried talks about Basecamp’s ‘Shape Up’ development process is pretty interesting

“Art Spiegelman’s Marvel essay ‘refused publication for Orange Skull Trump dig’ - Books - The Guardian”

“The Purview Model of Organization - Boris Anthony”

“Accessibility and web performance are not features, they’re the baseline - CSS-Tricks”

“ReaderWriterLinks: How To Read a Book edition - ReaderWriterVille”

“Why the hell am I building a product with a tiny market?”

“Serge Toarca Offers Three Reasons To Bootstrap In a Small Market”

“Mark Bernstein: Plot”

Mark Bernstein unintentionally explains why I find Michael Joyce, his work and his papers, tedious as hell.

“On Guilt-Free Open Source - hueniverse”

“I consider Twitter to be a very effective sewage system — you put stuff in and it floats away, but you don’t really want to then stick your head and see where it goes”