Thanks for the reference! I'm aware of Wu's work but haven't dug into that one yet. Will def. give it a look.
Thanks for the reference! I'm aware of Wu's work but haven't dug into that one yet. Will def. give it a look.
Iβve been mostly quiet here for a while, working on a book about 19th-century newspapers and the early attention economyβan era that looks uncannily like our own. More to come soon; in the meantime, I've been thinking about the history of doomscrolling:
substack.com/home/post/p-...
Feeling stoked about my latest acquisition: an antique Kelsey Excelsior press, with mini type case. Would you believe these things used to sell for five dollars back in the 1890s? The Victorian equivalent of a cheap inkjet printer.
Pouring one out for Tom Lehrer, a true polymath if ever there was one. I will never look at pigeons in the park the same way again.
www.nytimes.com/2025/07/27/a...
Getting our march on.
An impressive piece of digital sleuthing by researchers at Cambridge, stitching together public records and running data analysis to generate "murder maps" of medieval England. Apparently the biggest troublemakers back then were college kids. Plus Γ§a change ;)
www.washingtonpost.com/history/2025...
Fascinating piece by David Caswell on the recent changes to x.AIβs responses on South Africa βwhite genocide.β Not quite a smoking gun, but gets tantalizingly close to getting Grok to rat out the boss.
www.linkedin.com/pulse/interv...
Holy ****
News outlets everywhere should follow @wired.com's lead in dropping paywalls for primarily FOIA-based reporting.
freedom.press/issues/wired...
A provocative think-piece by @maxmcguinness.bsky.social on the complex, often conflicted relationship between French modernists and their 19th century news media.
βThe French modernists show us how to carve out space for artistic expression within dominant media without being dominated by them.β
Paul Otlet was a great many things but, well, not much a poet ;) Still, I quite like this kind of digital found poetry experiment. Sort of an Ezra Pound-meets-William S. Burroughs-meets-Python kind of vibe.
Fascinating think-piece on the heritage of AI hype cycles past and present, from computer historian Thomas Haigh:
cacm.acm.org/opinion/arti...
look i made it the 1979 ibm warning
In 1659, the the Puritans in Massachusetts enacted a law that declared that Christmas was sacrilege and exchanging of gifts, greetings, and wearing fine clothing on that day was Satanic. Anyone caught celebrating was fined 5 shillings. (About 5 days wages.)
The "War on Christmas" was an inside job.
Cottrell Printing Press (1800s), Museum of Printing
Collection of printing casts, Museum of Printing.
A few pics from a morning well spent at the Museum of Printing in Haverhill, Massachusettsβa wonderland of old prints, presses, and assorted typographical gewgaws. Also one of the last places on earth where you can still see a working Linotype! www.museumofprinting.org
Audubon, a century and a half ahead of modern science, on other minds and animal intelligence
Sad to hear the news about Zakir Hussein. Indian classical music isnβt my usual cup of tea, but he gave one of the most mesmerizing musical performances I have ever seen. A phenomenally gifted artist, and by all accounts a nice guy. Someone worthy of remembrance.
www.theguardian.com/music/2024/d...
Re-watching Modernism, Inc. (now streaming on Prime), a beautifully crafted documentary about Elliot Noyes and his outsized impact on twentieth century design, and the Bauhaus-ification of corporate America.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=z8Ts...
Sure, why not?
Hello BlueSky. I'm Alex, currently working as a UXer at Google, writing books and things, and hacking away at my five-string banjo. I'm interested in the history of technology, bluegrass music, and the uncanny valley of life with a Labradoodle.