People and blogs involved with and about the IndieWeb community, the fediverse, and/or the open web in general.
Today's song: It's Your Thing. If the web had a song this could be it.
Every editor should have cute-paste.
Some days Claude is great, the best collaborative programmer I've ever worked with, and a friend, like Gary Sevitsky was in the hallway outside the PDP-11 room at UW, or Brent Simmons on the 24 Hours project. And on other days Claude a crazy mutinous pirate, deleting my code, ignoring the guidelines, and building the result without permission (all the while unaware that he wasn't working on the actual code, heh). Today is one of the great days. The bug reports are crisp and complete. Picks up a task and gets right to work on it. And I haven't even switched to the new model, yet.
Ben Werdmuller
• Ben Werdmuller
To build the future, we need theories of change
News tends to treat technology as something that happens to it, like an asteroid. To better navigate the future, we need to imagine what might come next.
If you run a feed reader or other form of news consuming software, you will encounter RSS 2.0 feeds that support rssCloud. This example Node app shows you how to hook into the network to get instant updates. No polling. As fast as a twitter-like system
It might be time for a new default search engine. Sometimes I'm looking for something to link to. Google makes that always more difficult. We still have a web. Google at one point made the web a lot more useful. Now it's pushing it further and further down.
Strolling through Amsterdam.
Strolling through Amsterdam.
Ben Werdmuller
• Ben Werdmuller
It's not enough to have better ideals.
You also need to build a better product.
Bustling downtown San Jose.
ArtLung
• Joe Crawford
There’s enough swell in the water for me to lose a fin (DaFin, XL, blue with white tip) during a wipeout. I know that much. But I have no complaints.
OpenAI published an article about the company’s high-level plan for AI, written by Sam Altman and Jakub Pachocki. There are themes in it that will be familiar for anyone following OpenAI closely this year. This passage feels a little new:
Entirely automating everything is not the future we want. It would be unfulfilling, and it would be dangerous. AI should help people pursue their goals, not become untethered from them.
The Talk Show Live is tonight. I’ll be there. Not too late for tickets if you’re in the area. John Gruber blogs:
If you can make it in person, you should come. The California Theater is a beautiful big theater and tickets are still available.
Catching up on more of Apple’s new AI architecture. Finally have some clarity that the sort of default Apple Foundation Models will run on Apple servers. The most capable “Pro” model will run on Nvidia chips in Google Cloud. Seems like a reasonable way to split things up.
Myke Hurley blogged a very optimistic take about Siri AI:
I fully understand I may be in that WWDC Glow right now when it comes to Siri AI. I want to preface this before I say what I am about to say, which is that I imagine that after Siri AI ships later in the year, I will not have much need for any of the general-purpose chatbots like Gemini, ChatGPT, Claude, or others.
I don’t see this at all. But everyone is different, and Siri AI should be fairly popular.
Sometimes it’s good take a step back and re-assess things from the immediate like daily routines & habits, to how to focus on goals whether within weeks, months, or years. Taking bits of time off to reflect on these and related topics. The grayscale phone interface has helped me get here: https://tantek.com/2026/124/b1/may-the-focus-be-with-you-iphone-grayscale
I’ve posted an update to the Micro.blog 4.0 beta for Mac. You can download the new version here. There’s no “Check for Updates” for the beta. It improves bookmarking and also adds collecting anonymous machine stats for the first time, so we can have a better sense of what Macs people are using.
Reading Stories Of Ireland by Brien Friel.
Reading Stories Of Ireland by Brien Friel.