Just finished re-reading Alan Moore’s entire Supreme run, for the first time in twenty years.
This run is one of Alan Moore’s most genuinely heartfelt and joyous works, full of playful admiration of the superhero genre, its history, and the people who made it.
Looks like 90% of all tech writing today is either hagiography (VCs and CEOs as saints spouting divine commandments), kremlinology (here’s what I think Facebook/Google/Apple is doing), or catechisms (let us recite the laws of the land as dictated by our betters).
I’ll stop worrying about COVID only if research confirms that breakthrough infections of those who have been vaccinated don’t result in long COVID.
(Early results would seem to indicate that I’ll be worried for a long time.)
One clear example of how tech is built on cargo culting are the various estimated read time widgets. How many of you have implemented this garbage without testing? Without looking into the research backing it? Without doing your own research on its utility for your readers?
“Lost Business - Think Different”
I’ve seen this in action way too often.
“PresentationDomainDataLayering”
“The reduced scope of attention reason is sufficient on its own.”
“The stockmarket is a machine for creating cults (Interconnected)”
“For each year back in time, the probability of a link still working decreases until there’s nothing but decay.”
The web is a wasting medium—our words begin to fade at the slightest hint of sunlight.
“A natural shadow with SVG filters - Stefan Judis Web Development”
Aside from the Safari bugs, last time I experimented with SVG filters on HTML elements, it disabled hardware-accelerated scrolling in a lot of Android Chrome browsers.
‘Inner-Loop Agility (or “Why Your Agile Transformation Failed”) – Codemanship’s Blog’
“A very common end result of a costly Agile transformation is often little more than Agility Theatre”
“Things I Learned Reading Webkit’s UA Stylesheet”
Namespace scoping in CSS is one of the reasons why I’m sad that XHTML isn’t a thing. (And it isn’t, XHTML docs still don’t support JS modules, even in a new browser.)
“BBEdit 14.0 arrives with Notes and LSP support – Six Colors”
People see that we keep using ill-fitting paradigms to think about web development and web authoring and conclude that it’s the web that’s broken, not our approaches or thinking.
Been digging through a few boxes of comics I haven’t touched in 20 years and found these two. Totally forgotten about them