After the girls discuss recent tech-art exhibitions they’ve seen in New York and London, Camila introduces Ana to some stories about the history of computer eduction in Australian schools. This months episode is a two-for-one! Firstly, we learn about a government plan to develop an especially Australian computer for use in schools with options for networking and for portable ‘laptop-style’ use. Then we hear about the rise and fall of the ‘Microbee’ computer—Australia’s first home-grown personal computer. This computer, which was designed and manufactured in Australia, controlled a large portion of the primary school computer market not just in Australia but also Scandinavia and Russia, winning contracts over Apple!
adriau
Bob Vylan — Health Is Wealth
youtube.comPlusminus
diezoffice.comPlusminus is a versatile lighting system that takes the concept of the light rail to a new level. The conductive textile ribbon at its core allows for free placement of the luminaires and the creation of unique light solutions on the spot.
Advanced macOS Command-Line Tools
saurabhs.orgmacOS is fortunate to have access to the huge arsenal of standard Unix tools. There are also a good number of macOS-specific command-line utilities that provide unique macOS functionality.
Text Rendering Hates You
faultlore.comRendering text, how hard could it be? As it turns out, incredibly hard! To my knowledge, literally no system renders text “perfectly”. It’s all best-effort, although some efforts are more important than others.
An interactive guide to color & contrast
colorandcontrast.comA comprehensive guide for exploring and learning about the theory, science, and perception of color and contrast.
Vanessa Barragão
vanessabarragao.comDIY Audio Heaven
diyaudioheaven.wordpress.comEnjoy music through headphones on a low budget.
Lemmy Community Browser
browse.feddit.deNicola Gower Wallis
ngowerwallis.portfoliobox.nettrumporbiden2024
twitch.tv…this is just as unhinged as the real thing. AI Trump vs Biden debate.
Reduce Friction
blog.ceejbot.comObliterate toil: automate it.
Automate ruthlessly. This is where I have seen the most surprising pushback. We’re programmers. Automating processes is what we do! People will flinch about this, afraid of time spent automating things that won’t pay off. Yes, we’ve all been there. So don’t do that. Don’t automate things that are really one-offs. If there’s any chance you have to do the same thing more than five times, automate it. If it’s complex and difficult for a human to do, automate it. If the blast radius of the explosion caused by a human doing it wrong is large, automate it. If the end results need to be the same every time, automate it.
Infrastructure should be automated as far as you can push it.
The upside of automation is that the software that does the work for you can be instrumented.