#Apple software nerd……..
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biograft doodles! (PHIGHTING!)

Nothing special this time around, just some silly doodles I did at like midnight LOL
#artists on tumblr#art#phighting!#digital art#phighting fanart#phighting#roblox phighting#phighting roblox#phighting art#my art#artwork#biograft#roblox#roblox art#roblox fanart#biograft phighting#biograft oc#phighting oc#Apple software nerd……..#Imagine taking 30 years to update….#Couldn’t be me…… /j#My friend said I draw robots like a person who doesn’t know how to draw robots I will never recover from this /silly /j#YOU KNOW WHO YIU ARE!!!!#SCRUFFIJG YOU /SILLY#THIS TREACHERY WILL NKT BE FORGOTTEN!!!!!! /J#ANYWAYS back to my Everglades hole I go#Dislocated my leg today so not really feeling the greatest#may take a quite bit for me to get art done :’D#(Also small note I’m okay this happens a lot it’s a condition IM ALRIGHT LOL)#Anyways bye bye!
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#programmer humor#programming#geek#nerd#programmer#technology#computer#phone#mac#windows#os#operating system#website#web development#dev#developer#development#full stack developer#frontend#backend#software#hardware#html#css#meme#despicable me#gru#joke#software engineer#apple
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Here’s some things about me!
My name is Lou online
I’m a MINOR. A MINOR. STOP BEING WEIRD TO ME.
I’m agender
My favourite colour is green
I really like music, drawing little guys, cooking, talking, trans people, watching movies, making friends, wearing clothes, playing games, Spider-Man, being gay etc
I really DISLIKE disruption to routine, super loud people, drum and bass, hypocrites, knowing I’ll die some day, being lonely, socks (no fr I hate hate HATE socks so much), doomed siblings trope (for fucks sake give me a break), John Walker, etc etc
My favourite band is twenty one pilots I am normal about them I SWEAR anyways going on six/seven years of fanhood (since 2018)
I’m a huge Marvel nerd
My top five marvel characters in no particular order:
Phillip J. Coulson (actually my all time fav), Wanda Maximoff, Natasha Romanoff, Loki Laufeyson, Spider-Man (not including spider verse people, that’s a different tier list, butAndrew is the best of the three spider men)
Some of my fav books/series: Gone (Micheal Grant), Itch (Simon Mayo), all of Alice Oseman’s stuff, AGGGTM (Holly Jackson), The Angel Of The Crows (Katherine Addison), all of Darren Shan’s stuff, Skullduggery Pleasant, Ketchup Clouds (Annabelle Pitcher) etc etc also I really like comics (spidey and also Kate bishop’s specifically) (I’m not rich enough to read loads)
My favourite movie is fantastic mr fox
I really like Diggers (the machines)
Favourite animal is rabbits I want one so bad I will name him Peter
My favourite show is Agents Of Shield
I cry a lot (at everything, it sucks and I hate it)
I love love love Les Mis. Watched it in London in October 2024 and I will never recover. Stewart Clarke the Javert that you are <3
I LIKE SONIC!!! I REALLY LIKE SONIC. SHADOW AND SILVER ARE MY TOP TWO.
I’m blessed to be one eighth of the coconut shark gang :0
I would like to own two cats and my own small apartment one day, a cheetah esc print kitty called Jason (Statham) and a black cat called Liho. Both are references and if you get either PLEASE send me an ask saying so ily
I have what can be described as misophonia, but even if I’m not diagnosed please for the love of god don’t make any noises around me I DO bite.
Big fan of fictional old men from the 1800s. Shoutout to them.
I like Nintendo a lot!! Zelda and Animal Crossing my beloved. The 2DS is my favourite console ever (not the stupid 2DSXL)
I really like musicals!! Some honourable mentions: Les Mis, Hamilton, EPIC, Wicked, Six, Heathers (some of it, haven’t seen the whole thing yet), In The Heights, Rogers the musical (SHHH SHH ITS FUNNY), School Of Rock, Hadestown.
I’m a nerd about many things
Im gonna be a software engineer one day
Please send me asks!! My dms are always open for rants or a chat
Navigation:
TAGS FOR POSTS:
#**the reblogger - reblogs
#**the religious text - original posts
#**musical Lou - lyrics/yapping about music
#**lou being gay - me talking about my partner :3 (not active, we broke up actually)
#**lavish bros - tøp posts
#**my FRIENDS - me and my friends
#**marvellous tomfoolery - marvel
#**apple juice flood - fantastic mr fox
#**the wet cat musical - les mis posts
#**silly magic show - arcane
#**epic - epic the musical
#**gay hedgehogs - sonic fandom
#**agents of nothing - agents of shield (beware)
#**hermits - hermitcraft, life series OR anything to do with any member of hermitcraft
#**misc fandom - fandoms I’m in BUT I don’t post about enough to get their own tags
TAGS FOR PEOPLE:
- #shreypilled sheepmaxxer -> @shreysheep
- #dizzy my beloved -> @1nv1s1bl3-r41ndr0p5
- #the11thpeanut -> @nimbvx1015
- #snail enthusiast -> @dewey-1s-my-sp1r1t-an1mal
- #heebling my beeb rn -> @heeblybeebly
- #L being cool -> @quakeismyhero
- #conversing with angels -> @the-angel-academic
- #the nanner -> @bananapudding752
- #fetti party -> @toms-pink-confetti39x
- #goob -> @eats-hummus-cutely
- #red! -> @redwidow616
- #the luteinizer -> @sojirai
- #lieutenant hormone -> @kaoxin
- #chaos control! -> @chaos-pilots-control
- #baller -> @booberrybawls-deactivated202504 (this tag is for archive purposes)
(Note - any posts about a certain character will be tagged as {character} and ships will be {ship} (e.g. {Coulson} or {Fitzsimmons})
COOL POSTS:
Disproving TERFs with biology
Wizard maze.
Shoe lacing patterns that help pains
Reaction templates
Cool art links
Lou’s collection of writing tips/posts
My cat:




Her name was April and she was very cute.
#intro post#shreypilled sheepmaxxer#the11thpeanut#**the reblogger#**the religious text#**musical lou#**the wet cat musical#**marvelous tomfoolery#**misc fandom#**my friends#**lavish bros#**agents of nothing#snail enthusiast#dizzy my beloved
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Hi! Your art is so gorgeous!! I discovered you through the Nightmarket IF, and I've since then marvelled at your illustrations!
I wanted to ask what advice you would give to someone if they're hesitant to share their illustrations publicly and if you could recommend any software/hardware? How did you get started doing what you do?
Hi there! First off, thank you for the love :D
Working on the night market with dear Zinnia is a passion project for me and it's awesome to know people enjoy it!
As for software/hardware: I started on a wacom bamboo tablet with Paint tool SAI. That was... like fifteen years ago now haha! For the last six years I've been working on ipad pros with apple pencils and procreate for my drawing program. I really love procreate! It's super intuitive and very 'pokey' (Aka I can jab at the screen with my finger and things happen which pleases me) It's also a REALLY easy program to learn which is great for me because despite being a digital artist, I am absolutely terrible with programs and technology in general.
As for sharing.... just jump in! I know that sounds kinda crazy, but hear me out. You'll never do it if you don't do it. Even if you gotta shut your eyes and cringe as you hit the button, just start posting! I would also recommend drawing for a fandom, as that'll get more eyes on your stuff and help build a following. That's just me tho, as I'm a big ole nerd who likes a lot of fandom content hehe.
I also wanna say: interact with other people's stuff! Don't be shy, leave a reply, fill up reblog tags with comments. Make connections! I'm super shy when it comes to maintaining convos thru discord servers and groups, but I love commenting on pieces of art and comics that really jive with me. It's a two way street: you give love, and a lot of the time you get love in return. It helps humanize the whole experience and make it a bit less scary, I feel!
Good luck to you friend, I hope to see ur beautiful art cross my dash one day!
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Franklin ACE 1000 (1982)
The Franklin ACE 1000 was an early Apple II Plus clone introduced in 1982 by Franklin Computer Corporation. Designed to offer a more affordable alternative to Apple's offerings, it closely mirrored the Apple II Plus in both hardware and software, including direct copies of Apple's ROMs and operating system. This compatibility allowed the ACE 1000 to run most Apple II software and utilize similar expansion cards.
Key Features:
Processor: MOS Technology 6502 at 1.0 MHz
Memory: 64 KB RAM
Display: Monochrome output by default; optional color support via an add-on chip
Keyboard: Full upper/lowercase support with auto-repeat functionality
Expansion: 8 internal slots for peripheral cards
Storage: External 143K 5.25" floppy disk drive available
Operating System: Shipped with Franklin DOS, a modified version of Apple DOS 3.3
Despite its technical merits, the ACE 1000 became the center of a landmark legal case when Apple sued Franklin for copyright infringement. The case, Apple Computer, Inc. v. Franklin Computer Corp., resulted in a ruling that affirmed the copyrightability of software stored in ROM, setting a significant legal precedent in the software industry.
While the ACE 1000 offered features like a numeric keypad and lowercase text support—enhancements over the original Apple II Plus—it was bulkier and heavier. Today, the Franklin ACE 1000 is considered a collector's item, valued for its role in early personal computing history and the legal battles that shaped software copyright law.
On a side note, the Franklin Ace 1000 made several appearances in popular films. It was seen in the Ghostbusters’ lab in the original 1984 Ghostbusters. You can also see a poster for an ACE 1000 in the background of 1984’s Triumph of the Nerds.
more info: https://computeradsfromthepast.substack.com/p/franklins-ace-1000
https://oldcomputers.net/ace1000.html
#apple ii#apple#franklin ace#franklin ace 1000#MOS 6502#retrogaming#8bit#industrial design#retro gaming#80s#retro#retro computing#apple clone
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The future is now, and a lot of people really don't like it.
It's something I've noticed, I was born just before the turn of the century, and I grew up with a lot of talk about what the future would be like. Computers, the internet, technology itself was still fairly new at least to the everyday consumer. Sure my father had been programming for years, but cell phones were still bricks we had to carry around in our pocket. This isn't a put down, so please don't think I'm using Zoomer as a derogatory term or anything but; Zoomers may not really grasp the fact that our first cell phones were these really chunky bricks that had 2 toned small screens that literally could just make calls or play snake. Texting was a pain, you had to literally hit the same key multiple times to cycle through letters and then wait for it to move to the next slot if you needed a letter on the same key.
And yet, almost everyone around me, and everyone I spoke to online was excited about technology; about the future. Integration of tech into the daily lives of those around you was the coolest stuff you could see, we had classes in school that taught us not just how to type and use the computer, but also things like internet safety and even really basic stuff about how to program. We're talking about elementary school by the way, I was playing computer games in the lab and learning how to type properly, how to stay safe online; and in some cases even how to make games. It was uncommon for anyone even in middle school to own a cell phone, and if they did it was a Nokia. You had people who would swear by Apple products because "they made the iPod!" Which yea, you read that correctly; not the iPhone; the iPod. The iPhone was still just this sort of concept back in the day. The idea of a future where our phones could do more than play snake, send texts, and call people.
You had a lot of people online who made their own websites and were lamenting how easy the internet was becoming for "just any schmuck on the street" to use. It used to be a utopia for only the biggest nerds with their text based computer games and personal websites. However it was quickly becoming more and more accessible to the every-man and people were divided on whether or not that was a good thing. Some didn't care for the direction the internet was going, and others enjoyed the attention the internet and technology by proxy was finally getting.
With more people being able to use technology effectively, the demand for better and better tech was growing. At the time, the capitalistic nature of the industry was fine, it prompted companies to compete for the biggest and the best new stuff to show off. If you were going to spend your money on something; it really had to be quality made. This isn't just about cell phones and computers either, if you look back at how much advancement was made in game consoles back during the time of the Gamecube or Dreamcast eras, you'll see that no one in the console industry could stand by and make sales by just being a brand name. Everything from computer parts to gaming consoles to even software was becoming better, whether that meant faster; higher definition, or even just sometimes having bigger numbers. I mean hell the Nintendo 64 literally put the number in the name to tell you how big of a deal it was.
This was the golden age for technology, and I am genuinely sad that a lot of Zoomers never got to really experience it. We shit-talk Zoomers for growing up without tech literacy, or being iPad babies, but the truth is; they're not taught like we were. Most of the older Millennials, or gen Xers had a lot more understanding of tech because we either were literally raised on it, or we were making it. Zoomers never got to experience what it was like to know the what and why of new tech coming out. The market has become so taken over by capitalistic greed that no one is really happy about it.
We wanted a world where tech made people's lives easier, integration of tech into your daily life was meant to simplify things. Not to advertise 20 different products to you before you can request an uber to come pick you up just so it can ask you if you want to upgrade, only for your uber driver to be so distracted by their phone and the reek of marijuana that they can't drive safely. Which mind you, isn't to say phones or weed are necessarily bad, but hey don't drive under the influence you piece of shit, especially not with passengers; you make the rest of us look bad! Now I gotta go online and complain about this on social media, of course I'm talking about like, maybe one of five social media sites people actually use. Yes it's highly censored and what isn't censored by the people running the site is likely to be caught in the net of the social culture around the website, so of course I have to watch what I say and over explain myself. Then I think I'll reblog that post about how we're all explaining ourselves too much and being too nice and we're too afraid to speak our minds and we really need to stop doing that. Then I'll answer the anon hate I got for speaking my mind and trying to not over explain myself because the social culture net is so broad it encompasses significantly too many different kinds of people who won't see eye to eye...
My point with that whole paragraph is to say that even someone like me, who adores technology and wants it to progress and wants it to integrate more into my life; still doesn't agree with what has become of it. I think the worst part about it is that some of it is inescapable while other parts can be fixed but every time I say that I get yelled at for it. It's like people would rather believe they're trapped here than understand they still have a lot of power over the use of their technology. It's easier to accept the world around you when you don't feel like you could do anything, when you understand that you could do something rather than merely complain it creates a dilemma. Suddenly you know for a fact you could fix your problem, but that requires a certain amount of effort on your part. I've heard people tell me they can't learn to code in HTML for reasons branching from trauma to disabilities. Which is baffling because if you can literally make a text post on tumblr, or send me anon hate to yell at me about how you can't possibly learn HTML; you could easily type out HTML or copy paste it.
However I'm not here to point fingers, I'm here to say I've noticed that the places we can't escape from are getting more and more aggressive, and no one feels like we can do anything. It's rough, because I know if we did try to do something it would be a hell of a lot more effort than just getting people to figure out they could make their own websites if they don't like the ones they are on.
The majority of public transport, businesses, and restaurants have apps that require you to have a smart phone. I sit down and ask for a menu, I'm told there's a QR code on the table I can scan. I once told a waitress my phone couldn't scan QR codes and she made a big fuss about how they don't have physical menus anymore and she wasn't about to tell me what all they had as options. It was my fault for being too poor to afford a good enough phone. Something that was once considered a luxury is now a necessity to eat at an establishment. If you're curious, it was a waffle house. A fucking Waffle House decided to do away with their menus and opted for QR codes. Thankfully I've not seen this catching on with other Waffle Houses, but consider the target audience of a Waffle House. This isn't some fancy classy restaurant, this is a 24/7 diner where you stop in at 3 AM to eat some poorly cooked hash-browns and eggs that were made by a poor college student who isn't paid enough; and hope no one starts a fight because the only other two people in this place are drunk off their ass and getting a little loud with the waiter. When I asked the waitress for literally just hash-browns, a couple of eggs, and bacon; a typical breakfast you could get just about anywhere that serves, you know; breakfast. I was told that's not a menu item and that I'd need to order off the menu if I wanted to actually buy anything. We went back and forth for about 5 minutes and I was doing my best to be polite about the situation because I've worked food service before and I understand too well what it's like to just want a quiet, simple shift. Finally the manager came out, charged me about $7 and made me some food. When they told the waitress to leave me be I heard her remark "alright but they were being rude as fuck" as she walked off. Mind you the only thing I asked for was a menu, then some food; and then asked what the menu item most resembling my order would have been and to just charge me for that. As the waitress stood off in the corner of the Waffle House she literally pulled out her smart phone. Not once did she offer to just scan the QR code for me and help find an order closest to my request, or any such thing. The situation was simple in her mind, I didn't have access to their QR code menu, so I couldn't order anything; end of story.
For many if you take public transport and you need an app for it, your phone needs to be able to run that app. If it can't you're out of luck, it doesn't matter if you have the money for the bus, it doesn't matter if you could pay a taxi. You need to have the app on your phone to travel, you need to scan a QR code to eat, some apps will literally ask for your ID or driver's license, so that's fun. I've literally had apps ask me for my social security information. Yea, remember kids don't give out your personal information to anyone online... unless it's this fun app you use, because remember the guys at [business] are your friends! I know you may believe that they're a business and therefore they have to use your data responsibly, but the truth is that's just not how it works. The people working at Google, at Tumblr, at Uber, they're all just people; people like you and me. Except they have access to your cloud storage, they have access to everything you've ever posted, they have access to your location, they have access to any pictures you've taken that get automatically backed up to your phone with metadata that lists the exact place it was taken; yes that includes your nudes. "For your eyes only... and like all the google employees who see this, and that one creepy guy who screenshot it and shares it with his friends uwu"
Not to be a boomer, but back in my day we were literally taught internet safety in school; and a lot of people cared deeply about this sort of thing. They weren't so apathetic to it all just to get through the day, I hear people say "oh I don't care, I know they're watching, listening; they know everything about me, targeted ads are real; etc." Hell I've been there myself, it's hard to care about it all because it feels like it's everywhere. I understand you may not want to really concern yourself with it, but when you're aware of it you can actually take measures to prevent it where you can. That's literally WHY we were taught this shit in school.
Truth is, I still have those hopes of a future where tech is part of the daily life of those who want it. I love the idea of convenient apps and fun websites. I love the idea of tech advancing and everyone finding new ways to enjoy life. Things like Vtubers, VR/AR tech, video games, and yes even the good things about shit like cell phones, and smart devices. That's all great, but I want it without all the bullshit. I hate using AR tech and going "hi random Meta employee who's likely viewing my data, location, and possibly has random access to my cameras and what I'm running on my own personal tech!" People call me paranoid, they bitch at me for being cynical; and I can't blame them. I really can't, because I know I'd enjoy life a lot more if I didn't think like this, if I didn't know what I know. It's that age old saying that ignorance is bliss.
However, when I see things like the Old Web Movement, and I understand people are trying; they're fighting the good fight and I'm just sitting there? I can't do that. I have to do my part, I have to try as well; or else I have no right to complain, to want for better tech; safer tech, more private tech. I can't scream about something as simple as discord suddenly telling me about everything my friends are playing, or what they're watching in a server I'm not even a part of; unless I'm actively actually doing my part to spread awareness and fight against the violations of privacy that so many tech applications are imposing upon people. I have to speak up even if people hate me for it.
If I was alone on that front, I'd probably let it die; I'd just be some hermit living my own way and not even care. However when I see people trying to fight for others to make their own websites, to give that power back to the public. When I see people trying to teach others how to jailbreak their tech, how to fight back against the automation of data mining and AI stealing your every word to teach some multi-billion dollar waste of electricity. I have to do my part, because I was born just before the turn of the century; and while I'm sure people would tell me it's not that deep. I still dream of the future that was promised to me when I was young, and if I can't have it in my life time, I'll fight for Zoomers; and if they can't have it in theirs, I want them to be armed with the knowledge necessary to help the next generation.
#personal ramblings don't come at me with dumb anon opinions about this I will just block you I don't care man#I'm just venting and getting this shit off my chest because it's something I think about a lot#I'm so tired of having to hold my tongue because I hate putting up with getting so much anon hate over my shitty opinions
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What drawing apps/software/devices do you use to achieve such beautiful work? This is the same previous anon haha!
Hi again! You're cool and I like you♡
Uhm, I use procreate and clip studio paint! I also you a iPad Air 5th generation because that's one of the only of ones that connect apple pencils! Maybe if I get enough commissions one day, I'll be able to have a whole fun setup, but time will tell! I'm such a digital art nerd, lol. I can already see what my future software is lolol.
Hopefully, this answers your question!♡
#artists on tumblr#original art#original character#digital art#digital artist#ask me things#asks#ask away#ask me anything#ask blog#send asks#ask game#ask#send anons#send me asks#send me anons#anon asks#thanks anon!#anon ask#anonymous#tryna kiss you#hugs and kisses#♡♡♡
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How Billionaires Organize Their WorkSpace—What You can Learn From it?
Do you ever wonder what billionaires’ workspace looks like and how they manage their workspaces?
What was their workspace before they were famous or Internet celebrities?
In this post, we will explore the workspaces of Bill Gates, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Steve Jobs, Mike Bloomberg, and Kevin Kelly with many other articles and entrepreneurs to see how they are productive and what their workspace looks like.
We will also see what we can learn from them.
Bill Gates
Bill Gates is an American technology entrepreneur, investor, and philanthropist better known for the software company Microsoft, As of Dec 2023 it's being valued at 2.76 trillion dollars.
The first person to achieve a $100 Billion net worth. He also owns Codex Leicester, a collection of scientific writing by Leonardo da Vinci.
Gates being a nerd is interesting to see what his workspace looks like.
These are some photographs of the workspace of Bill Gates when he was building Microsoft. You can clearly see the messy piles of papers with computers, keyboards, and telephones.
Gradually over the year, he becomes neat and clean as other work is delegated to others. Gates now uses a clean work setup with a water bottle, computer, keyboard, mouse, and other important things.
Throughout the images of Bill Gates, you can see a book near to him, as he likes to read a lot.
Elon Musk
Elon Musk is an interest entrepreneur and investor and the wealthiest person in the world with over $222 billion as of Dec 2023. He is the CEO of SpaceX and Tesla, owner of X, formally Twitter, and also the founder of xAI.
Mr. Musk always grabs a vacant desk whenever he needs one to work and it's interesting to see what his workspace looks like.
Elon Musk always uses an oval-shaped desk to work from the end of his work desktop and other end his places his other important documents or projects.
The desk is somewhat clean and you always find some book near to him, being an avid reader like Bill Gates. The U-shaped desk is the most interesting thing I liked the most from his workspace.
It allows him to switch places from his desktop to the front when he meets someone.
You can also see Musk always works in a place that has large windows to allow natural sun lights to come.
Mark Zuckerberg
Mark Zuckerberg is a computer programmer and entrepreneur, better known for social media Apps like Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Threads. He is the CEO of Facebook and its parent company, Meta.
Mark is also an interesting personality and it is interesting to see the workspace of Mark Zuckerberg.
From the early days of Facebook, Mark has been comfortable with a small setup with a monitor or laptop with a mouse or some paper around him. You can clearly see he only uses a laptop and it allows him to work from anywhere.
You can see the present day picture of Mark’s desk where you can see some books, a laptop with no mouse and cable connect to it, his phone and Meta Quest VR, which lunched recently.
Steve Jobs
Steve Jobs was an American businessman, inventor, and investor better known for co-founding Apple Inc. He was also the primary investor of Pixar and the founder of NeXT.
As you can see the workspace of Steve Jobs from the last days of his life. He is kind of messy and that may be the sign of geniuses. He is filled with books, electronic devices, and piles of papers.
Nothing is expected more from a person who values and makes minimalist products like iPod, iPhone, and iPad.
Mike Bloomberg
Micheal Bloomberg is an American businessman and politician, who is better known for founding Bloomberg L.P. financial data services firm, and served as mayor of New York City from 2002-2013.
The workspace of Bloomberg looks like the modern coders with multiple screens and monitors opened with chats. Because of his industry, he is always open to news and chats on his multiple monitors.
Kevin Kelly
Kevin Kelly is a founding executive editor of Wired magazine. He is also a writer and photographer. Kelly is an interesting man and with also in his workspace. His workspace looks different from other billionaires.
He also has a messy desktop with a wall of Legos and a skeleton of some kind. You can see the mess of things like books, notebooks, papers, mic, desktops, and more.
See Workspaces of Great Minds, Artists, Scientists, and Writers
Jane Austen, Novelist:
Yoshitomo Nara, Artist:
Pablo Picasso, Painter:
Mark Twain, Writer:
Virginia Wolf, Writer:
Roald Dahl, Children's Writer:
Thomas Edison, Inventor:
Stephen Hawkings, Theoretical Physicist:
Nicholas Tesla, Inventor:
Martin Luther King, Political Leader:
Warren Buffet, Investor:
NASA Scientists:
Bob Dylan, Singer:
Winston Churchill, Former PM of the US and political Leader:
Neil Gaiman, Writer:
PS: You can see my workspace here.
What You can learn from their workspaces?
Looking at different kinds of workspaces from modern-day entrepreneurs to billionaires and artists to scientists, here are some of the things that we can learn from their workspaces.
Everybody is different in their own way, we can't say a clean background led to success or a messy own. They are the clear examples of this.
You can often find books in their workspace that allow them to read whenever they want to.
Some use a simple workspace and other messy or complex workspaces like Bloomberg with multiple monitors.
They seem to love their own workspace with their own choice of design.
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eye 1921steelecartel.tech TITAN of SIRIUS [U.S.] gullahgeecheemilitary.tech WEALTH @ quantum harrell tech llc
who secretly own apple, inc [a.i.] in 2024?!?!?!
uh oh... not our ancient 9 ether computational algorithm design [cad] patents of SIRIUS electronic architectural intel [a.i.] of Apple [A.I.A] Inc. Patents [I/P] @ 1921 QUANTUM 2023 HARRELL 2024 TECH 2025 Apple & IBM [A.i.] LLC of ATLANTIS [L.A.] 5000?!?!?!
ibmapple1984.tech @ 1921 QUANTUM 2023 HARRELL 2024 TECH 2025 Apple & IBM [A.i.] LLC of ATLANTIS [L.A.] 5000
iapplelisa.com?!?!?!
of iapplelisa.tech?!?!?!
but who own iquantumcad.com?!?!?!
ibmautocad.tech memory hardware manual @ 1921 QUANTUM 2023 HARRELL 2024 TECH 2025 Apple & IBM [A.i.] LLC of ATLANTIS [L.A.] 5000?!?!?!
iquantumapple.com of iapplelisa.com @ 1921 QUANTUM 2023 HARRELL 2024 TECH 2025 Apple & IBM [A.i.] LLC of ATLANTIS [L.A.] 5000
MICHAEL A COMPUTER [MAC] APPLE NERD [MAN] of iapplelisa.tech Intel @ 1921 QUANTUM 2023 HARRELL 2024 TECH 2025 Apple & IBM [A.i.] LLC of ATLANTIS [L.A.] 5000
hi:teKEMETICompu_TAH [PTAH] PRO Michael [PM] Harrell, Jr. Deep Machine [DM] VISION Learning @ 1921 QUANTUM 2023 HARRELL 2024 TECH 2025 Apple & IBM [A.i.] LLC of ATLANTIS [L.A.] 5000
CLASSIFIED iapplelisa.tech of iapplelisa.com accessing tri-solar black sun planetrizq.tech PRO of blackanunnaqi.tech VISIONS @ 1921 QUANTUM 2023 HARRELL 2024 TECH 2025 Apple & IBM [A.i.] LLC of ATLANTIS [L.A.] 5000
try the quantumharrelltech.com visual dial tone domain... my personal iphone hung up on you [insert quantumharrell.tech's intellectual encryption phrase property tag]
quantumharrell.tech international [qi] 1921steelecartel.tech family business [dynasty] communication [d.c.] knowledge economy @ 1921 QUANTUM 2023 HARRELL 2024 TECH 2025 Apple & IBM [A.i.] LLC of ATLANTIS [L.A.] 5000
shhh... we 3 sets of 144,000 confidential iapplelisa.tech elites @ 1921 QUANTUM 2023 HARRELL 2024 TECH 2025 Apple & IBM [A.i.] LLC of ATLANTIS [L.A.] 5000
him ancient [ha = harrell] 1921 hi:tekemeticompu_tah [ptah] domain signature technocrat of 1968 planetrizq.tech?!?!?!... says who?!?!?!
says his hi:tekemeticompu_tah [ptah] father michael [fm]... since i.b.1698 michael [ibm] harrell jr @ 1921 QUANTUM 2023 HARRELL 2024 TECH 2025 Apple & IBM [A.i.] LLC of ATLANTIS [L.A.] 5000

eye anugoldenblackwallstreet.com compu_tah [ptah] business of anu golden 9 ether [age] blackatlantis5000.com economy w/SIRIUS blackatlantis5000.tech WEALTH @ 1921 QUANTUM 2023 HARRELL 2024 TECH 2025 Apple & IBM [A.i.] LLC of ATLANTIS [L.A.] 5000
I.B.1968 MICHAEL [IBM] QUANTUM COMPUTING ANU [CA] quantumharrellmatrix.tech MINING Economy [ME] @ 1921 QUANTUM 2023 HARRELL 2024 TECH 2025 Apple & IBM [A.i.] LLC of ATLANTIS [L.A.] 5000
© 1968-2223 QUANTUM HARRELL TECH LLC All LOST ANCIENT [L.A.] ATLANTEAN DNA [A.D.] DotCom [A.D.] + DotTech [A.D.] + Pre 1698quantumharrellgov.tech Domain Name Rights Reserved.
#apple#ibm#t mobile#at&t#quantumharrelltech#vision pro#apple lisa#quantum dara#qdara.tech#harrelltut.com#u.s. michael harrell#o michael#king tut#intuitive machine learning
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I'm a nerd, raised by nerds. I like learning and tinkering! It's fun!
I'm also middle-aged, disabled, and cursed with a raging case of AuDHD, so I am in total agreement with this addition.
In the past few years, I've been getting more and more Apple devices. I'm ideologically opposed to a lot of Apple's bullshit, and I've ranted plenty in my life about Apple's walled garden and its refusal to let people repair their own shit (part of me still doesn't completely trust any computer that won't let me open it up and mess with its guts) but Apple products look and feel nice to use, and work right out of the box with a minimum of fuckery. I need devices I can still use when sick and brainfogged with no need to troubleshoot regularly. At this point in my life, that's non-negotiable.
I also have a home-built gaming PC, and a Raspberry Pi which runs Home Assistant with AdGuard as an addon. I love how much I can do with my little Pi. I don't love how I've had to start from scratch multiple times, though, because I realized x configuration would let me do more stuff I wanted, but oh shit, x configuration doesn't support device y without me needing to learn things a, b, and c... And sorry, I'd rather have the automations for my disabled ass working right now, for some weird reason.
I think the problem is that a lot of things like the Raspberry Pi and Linux spawned from hobbyist culture, where none of these things were necessary, so the culture valued mastery, with the rationale that if you don't want to do it the hard way, you filthy casuals can go back to your nice safe pre-built Windows PCs. I mean, I remember when Ubuntu was first introduced and some of the old-school folks were up in arms, convinced that the 'dumbing down' of Linux would ruin everything.
But the kind of gatekeeping that kept hobbyist discussions productive backfired long ago, and even its gentler, "Here's a tutorial! It's easy!" form still keeps people from accessing the things that could help them circumvent manufacturer greed. A lot of the people who find the number of ads added to things make the devices they paid for unusable don't have the time or technical skill to master the tools to solve their problems. It's not about bragging rights or showing off for your geek friends, but about just getting a solution that works even when you have jobs/children/disabilities that mean you literally do not have the time and mental energy required to master this new thing.
Unfortunately, the other side of the problem is that it's because these tools are built by hobbyists who don't have a financial stake in their software's success that they're both so intimidating to get started with, and also so effective. People aren't being paid to make these resources available, so they tend to make things for people at their level or slightly below, and user-friendliness comes later. But making these tools for-profit invites the same enshittification that got you unskippable repetitive ads in the first place.
I don't really have any good solutions, just the thought that if I go deeper into coding and FOSS, I should probably direct my efforts towards making things more user-friendly, before anything else. Let the people with higher proficiency mess around with the functional stuff, and just allow my relative ignorance to work in my favor when it comes to relating to people who just need a thing that works in a way they can wrap their heads around.
WTF do you mean jailbreaking my "smart" TV to install Linux in order to run adblock on my TV would be "Felony Contempt of Buisiness Model" That sounds like a crime made up by The Board in Outer Worlds.
#long post#anyway i'm going to mess with adguard now#and see if i really did fix the last problem i encountered
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Are Apple Silicon Macs too good?
In his latest video Luke Miani asks if #Apple made their new machines too good. Across two polls, having run a second one to verify the results of the first, respondents strongly indicated they had no intention of upgrading their early M-series Macs. I have a feeling Apple fully expected that, however. Watch the video on YouTube. We have three Mini’s, two M1 and one Intel, and have no need to upgrade them anytime soon. I may desire an M4 Mini, but I don’t need one. What is behind this?
To understand this there are, I believe, two different, unrelated factors that need to be taken into consideration:
Apple’s primary drivers of revenue are the #iPhone, the App Store, and services.
There are millions upon millions of #Windows users who might choose to move to Apple rather than be forced upgrade to Windows 11 but cannot since their hardware is incompatible, because #Microsoft has chosen to enshittify their desktop with ads and #AI, or both.
Apple’s personal computer marketshare has long been around 20% with Microsoft dominating for literal decades with 72% of the PC market. But it’s critical to understand that a decade ago Microsoft had well over 80%, and it continues to slowly decay. The iPhone plays a significant role in the fact that Apple has a $2.5T valuation, as consumers tend to upgrade every two years, giving Apple a mostly reliable playing field to project consistent revenues.
NOTE: Microsoft has a similar market capitalization to Apple but the important distinction is that Microsoft engages in a wide range of markets, including corporate software and services, as well as the Xbox and video games publishing, all of which contribute to the company’s bottom line. Apple still competes by offering a mere fraction of the models and verticals of its rivals.
That consistency is crucial. It allows Apple to not only sit back and just let their Mac users be Mac users and upgrade as they please, but also breathing room for some mild experimentation with various services and hardware. The iPhone Mini was available for the iPhone 12 and 13 then cancelled to be replaced by the Plus model, which has been around longer than the Mini. And the next rumored experiment will be the iPhone Air which may appear this October. They’ve also got enough in the bank to allow them to pivot and shift based on unforeseen market fluctuations or, in the case of component availability, weather the less than stellar rollout of the moderately underwhelming M3 processor.
And Apple isn’t blind. I’m quite sure that one major consideration in their calculations is Microsoft and their recent “efforts” to tank their own success. Users are unhappy with Windows 11 and in October of this year Microsoft will be ending support for the far more popular Windows 10. Many users are even downgrading to Windows 10 to escape the oppressive changes in Windows 11. In addition, the upgrade to Windows 11 requires support for TPM 2.0 which will “relegate” millions of unsupported systems to be discarded or sold for cheap, an outcome that is exciting many nerds over the prospect of a torrent of dirt cheap or free computers which can happily and securely run #Linux and other operating systems. Linux is an easy and capable migration path, but being honest with ourselves, most Windows users won’t go this direction.
I think Apple knows this. For one, they’ve maintained a stability in offerings that is appealing when compared to Microsoft’s numerous radical shifts over the years, the frequency of which has started to turn off consumers. Second, Apple has been aggressive in allowing resellers to offer significant sale pricing and even has an exclusive deal with Walmart to sell new M1 Macbook Air base models for $700 and which is on seemingly permanent sale for $650. In most of Apple’s history this is unprecedented, as they have for decades required resellers to match their own pricing and not offer sales. Finally, Apple’s resale value for their Intel models has dropped precipitously and used M1 and M2 machines are a lot more affordable than they used to be, presenting an enticing option for budget buyers.
Apple, for the most part, has played the long game. Pixar focused on getting one particular element perfected for each film so they might add that element to their toolbox for later films like fur in Monsters Inc. and the ocean in Finding Nemo. Apple has done much the same, working on iterations of various elements of their systems, refining them until they meet their internal expectations for excellence. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that Steve Jobs ran both and had, with help from others to manifest his vision, been instrumental in forming the foundations of two entire industries. Ingest that in whatever form you prefer.
The short answer to the question posed by Luke is no. The suggestion that CEO Tim Cook and the entire team at Apple could have miscalculated that the potential longevity of their products could cause Apple, one of the wealthiest corporations on planet Earth, to disintegrate or fall into the doldrums of relevance is in itself a miscalculation of what Apple is and how it operates. Is Apple flawless? Hell no. Most recently, I think they horribly miscalculated both the retail price and consumer interest in Apple Vision. There are other failures dotting Apple’s history, as well.
On the other hand, they basically own the tablet market. Full stop. They swap first and second place with Samsung for mobile phone volume, and Samsung has to make dozens of models to compete with Apple. AirPods are stupid popular. The Apple Watch has a huge chunk of the smart watch market. Apple is doing well, and all whilst offering a fraction of the options of others they compete with.
#tech #technology #opinion
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What Is Mobile Application Development? Everything You Need to Know
With the increasing pace of digitalization, mobile application development is more than just a passing trend today: it is a necessity. Whether you are a business owner looking to make another easy entrance into the digital realm by going mobile or a tech nerd interested in how applications are developed, understanding mobile application development will be the thing to catch up with in 2025.
This will take you through the basic steps of mobile application development and will explain what it means to be a mobile app developer and a mobile application developer, the significance of choosing the right development company for mobile applications, and quite simply, why mobile application development is also going to influence the future of what people interact with digitally
What is Mobile Application Development?
Mobile application development is a term used for the process of developing software applications that run on mobile devices, such as a smartphone or tablet. These applications can be pre-installed on phones during manufacture, or delivered as web applications using server-side or client-side processing.
The most common mobile application development platforms today are iOS (Apple) and Android (Google). Developers use different languages depending on the platform; for example, they typically program an iOS app in Swift or Objective-C. An Android app, on the other hand, would generally be programmed in Java or Kotlin.
Who Are Mobile App Developers?
Mobile app developers design, code, test, and maintain applications generally for phones and tablets. They are responsible for preparing basically all aspects of the application process—from wireframes to develop the app layout—and until that application can be seen and downloaded in app stores.
There are mobile app developers who work on a single platform, say Android or iOS, and then there are those who develop cross-platform applications using frameworks like Flutter, React Native, or Xamarin. Demand for capable mobile app developers is raging high now, regardless of the chosen platform, as mobile technology continues to gain numerous applications in today's life.
What Do Mobile Application Developers Do?
Although mobile app developer is sometimes used interchangeably with mobile app developer teams, it broadly describes practitioners or contractors engaged either inside-out or outside-in, in the entire spectrum of mobile application development.
Duties that might engage mobile application developers include:
UI/UX
API integration
Backend server
Security and compliance
Performance tuning
Mobile app developers create and maintain seamless end-user experiences and help ensure that the app performs in real-world conditions, whether they operate independently or within large app development firms.
The Rise of Mobile Phone App Development
The phrase mobile phone app development, in its very conception, seeks to highlight the fact that applications ought to be created mainly for mobile phones, which in fact are the main devices used to access the internet. Virtually every industry today—from e-commerce and banking to education and entertainment—has some dependence on mobile phone application development for engaging users.
What makes mobile phone app development unique is that the focus has to be on smaller screens, limited resources, and different user behavior as compared to desktop users.
Development of mobile phone apps are unique because, when developing it, it requires the consideration of small screens, limited resources, and also involves different user behaviors as opposed to desktop users. Successful mobile apps are lightweight and there should be great user friendliness and should also suit mobile-first use.
Some of the major trends in mobile phone application developments are:
5G-enabled apps
AI and machine learning integration
Augmented reality features
Privacy and enhanced data security
All these trends have been incorporated into mobile application development to give way for changes and innovations in the work of developers.
Choosing the Right App Development Company
If you're a business looking to develop high-quality mobile applications, then collaborating with an experienced app development company would make a big difference. An expert app development agency provides complete services from strategy and design to development and support.
Advantages in Working with App Development Companies
The full-fledged with experts' designers, developers, project managers to handle specific problems
Structured development process with quality assurance
Faster time to market
Post-launch support and maintenance
With several considerations in their portfolio, client reviews, technical expertise, and understanding with your business goals, the right one would surely help you on this partnership. The right partner is someone who would be aligned with your vision and be helpful in making your idea from a thought process into a real, functional, and successful mobile app.
Final Thoughts
In summary, mobile application development remains a growing profession that occupies a central place in today's digital economy. Skilled mobile app developers and mobile application developers are behind the innovative work that organizations are pouring investments into for competitiveness. Selecting a reputable application development company ensures that your mobile app will be built strategically using the right technology and the best user experience.
Whether you are developing your first app or continuing to enhance an existing digital product, understanding the fundamental principles is the first way to attain success in a mobile-first world
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Saturday Morning Coffee
Good morning from Charlottesville, Virginia! ☕️
Sippin’ on my coffee, sittin’ on the couch, typin’ this post out on my iPhone. Like most mornings the house is quiet so it’s a perfect time to write, or post a bunch of links.
The week has been good overall. Work was fine. Pretty quiet. Our Canadian and Brazilian brethren were off yesterday for Good Friday. I suppose that had a lot to do with it, well that and No Meetings Friday. 😃
Anywho, I hope you enjoy the links.
Gus Mueller
I hope someday we’ll get a version of Swift that isn’t chasing whatever the hot new coding paradigm currently is, and isn’t weighed down by ever expanding complexity. I think that could be pretty nice.
I understand Gus’ sentiment. Swift feels, to me, like a dumping ground for programming language nerds.
Apple had pushed it as a simple language to learn. Sure, the basics may be simple, but overall it’s an extremely complex language, especially all the new Swift Concurrency stuff. Does anyone really understand when to use @MainActor?
I’m behind the curve when it comes to fully embracing Swift Concurrency. I currently have one place in Stream for Mac that uses it, and it’s nice, but I’m not implementing any Sendable types, just taking advantage of Task() and Async/Await.
NASCAR
Get a first look at Daniel Suárez’s Telcel-Infinitum scheme as he makes a homecoming to Mexico at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez on Sunday, June 15
This is cool! NASCAR is headed back to Mexico! I’d actually love to attend this event but I didn’t plan for it this year and I’m not sure how much Kim would appreciate me going all the way to Mexico to watch a NASCAR race when NASCAR is mainly a south-eastern thing. I could drive 45 minutes to Richmond Raceway if I wanted to see a race. 😃
I still think Daniel Suárez should try to get Papas and Beer onboard. 🍻
Randy Parker
After growing up using Commodore and Atari computers, the first PC I bought with my own money (as a college student) was a “Macintari” in 1987. Proper Macs were super expensive, so instead, I purchased a Mega ST series Atari computer, which ran the same CPU as Macs of that era (the Motorola 68000). If you installed a Macintosh ROM (or EPROM) chip, you could boot into Macintosh System Software (as macOS was known at the time) and use the Atari hardware as if it were a “real” Apple Macintosh computer.
I had no idea you could run MacOS on an Atari computer!
If you’re interested in one persons observations about moving from Windows to Mac, this is a good one. It’s interesting to me how much third party software Windows users use today.
I have no idea how muchuva pain it would be for me to go back to Windows. Ive been gone for so long and it’s changed so much since 2006.
Steven Vaughn-Nichols • ZDNET
Specifically, Schleswig-Holstein is dumping Windows and Office for Linux and the popular open-source office suite, LibreOffice. The Schleswig-Holstein cabinet made this decision not because of Linux and LibreOffice’s technical superiority, but because it values “digital sovereignty.”
This is another way our fascist regime has affected American companies.
On the flip side this year will be the year of the Linux Desktop! 😜
Mike Monteiro
Sister Anita eventually gave up, mostly because she couldn’t make out the chicken scratch that my right hand was coming up with, and I guess she just decided that she couldn’t save us all, and I would be an acceptable sacrifice to Satan. For which I was thankful.
Of course I latch on to the left handed thing. My folks converted me from left to right handed when I was pretty darned young because “The world is made for right handed people.”
Mateo Wong • The Atlantic
The madness started, as baseball madness tends to start, with the New York Yankees: At the end of March, during the opening weekend of the new season, the team’s first three batters hit home runs on the first three pitches thrown their way. The final score, 20–9, was almost too good to be true. And then, everybody noticed the bats.
This is a great read and why we need science in the world. 😃 Leave it to a physicist to redesign, of all things, the baseball bat. Something that hasn’t really changed in well over 100 years. Progress! Hopefully the Majors doesn’t outlaw them.

Moira Donegan • The Guardian
There are some spectacles of US decadence and decline that almost seem too on the nose – the sort of orgies of vulgar provocation or fantastic lack of self-awareness that exceed the limits of parody, so that if they were in a novel, you’d think the writer was laying it on a little thick. Among these is the all-women flight by Blue Origin, the Jeff Bezos-owned rocket tourism company, which on Monday launched a phallically shaped pod full of women – including the pop star Katy Perry and Bezos’s partner, Lauren Sánchez – on a brief trip into space.
The Blue Origin trip into space with a bunch of crazy rich people definitely seems a bit tone deaf.
At least it didn’t blow up like Space Karen’s rockets do.
L. Jeffrey Zeldman
Beloved reader, I spent 90 minutes on hold with Con Edison yesterday, getting my power turned back on after a billing contretemps.
I’ve always been impressed by Mr. Zeldman’s willingness to write about his life. You will find many posts labeled My Glamorous Life where he shares personal life stories. He’s a great writer, technologist, and by all accounts and amazing human being. I wish him nothing but the best. ❤️
Dylan Beattie
Probably the single most important lesson I’ve learned in my career, the thing that I would argue is the hallmark of “experience”, is understanding just how much work it takes to turn a working program into a viable product. It’s why developer estimates are so notoriously optimistic - and why experienced developers are so notoriously cynical.
I like this take. I’ve had numerous junior developers say to me something along the lines of “I can’t wait to see what you have to teach me.” Oftentimes that comment is met with a blank stare. 😳 The “teachings” will mostly come organically. I’ve just been around long enough to know how to build software from concept, to development, to shipping, and everything in between. I’ve had great mentors along the way and suffered through issues that seem to crop up in every product I’ve ever worked on. Experience is just age, repetition, and pain, but I do love sharing my experiences of only to help others avoid the pain.
M.G. Siegler
We all know the saying “success has many fathers, but failure is an orphan,” but reading a couple new reports about the current inner-workings of Apple, it almost feels inverted at the most valuable company in the world.
All monster companies eventually experience problems scaling up. Oftentimes it’s because they believe that standardization on some methodology is going to save them. Well, that and people.
We’re still going through growing, and transition, pains at WillowTree since the TELUS acquisition. The cultural and systems transitions haven’t been easy on anyone.
Someday I’ll write about it a bit more.
John Scalzi
A few years ago, we bought a church building. Since then, every time I mention it online and/or on social media, someone always responds, “wait, you bought a church, what” and then asks some standard questions. At this point it makes good sense to offer up a Church FAQ to answer some of those most common questions. Let’s begin!
The remodel turned out really nice and it’s great to see them embrace the community by opening the doors for events. John Scalzi is one of those folks I wish I could know personally. He’s just so down to earth I imagine he’d be a great friend.
Jan Wildeboer
Forced RTO (Return To Office) is unacceptable, that is no discussion. But please also don’t forget how privileged many of us are to be able to work from home. The factory workers, the people working in grocery stores, doctors, nurses, truck drivers — the majority of the workforce out there — never had this luxury. I have always kept that in mind. They made it possible for people like us to actually be able to work from home.
The forced return to office put in place by many companies has been hard on folks and companies alike. WillowTrees CEO likes to have folks in the office. He likes the buzz and the randomness of bumping into folks. I can appreciate that and I also appreciate working from home. I must give him props for not forcing folks to return to office because he easily could have. ❤️
Would I go back if everyone was required to return? Yes, absolutely. There is a part of me that misses it.
Andres Thoresson
Thanks to the openness of Mastodon and Bluesky, it’s possible to follow accounts across network boundaries.
And that’s the kind of openness that Tapestry, Reeder, and Surf are built on.
There is a new class of software that spans open networks and closed networks. I’ve thought about doing this for Stream ever since I learned more about ActivityPub. Folks can follow Mastodon feeds via RSS so it’s made it less important to write code to connect to ActivityPub directly, so I haven’t bothered.
The fine folks at The Iconfactory have created a pretty ingenious way to connect to any source material you’d like by writing a plug-in to Tapestry in JavaScript! Neat, right? 🙏🏼
Begs the question: What does native mean? 🤔
Anton Shilov • Tom’s Hardware
Last year it turned out that Elon Musk’s xAI had to install additional ‘portable’ generators near its facility adjacent to Memphis, Tennessee, to power the Colossus supercomputer with over 100,000 Nvidia H100 GPUs as local power grid could not support the load. Now it turns out that these generators were not exactly legal, yet they can keep running, reports The Guardian.
Musks genius is being a narcissist and a sociopath. He doesn’t give a crap about anything or anyone who stands in his way. He and our President are one and the same. Ignore the law and do whatever they want. 🤬
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WHAT NO ONE UNDERSTANDS ABOUT MORALE
They've become more bureaucratic, but otherwise they seem to have held true to their original principles. And my theory explains why they'd tend to be different: just as the very most popular kids don't have to persecute nerds, the very best VCs don't have to be product companies, in the short term, because they read it in an article, that Blackberry has such and such market share. The manager's schedule is for bosses. Six months later, when Yahoo bought us, we had no experience in business. That hurt Microsoft a lot starting in the 90s, I evolved another trick for partitioning the day. They don't want search to work. Sometimes, in desperation, competitors would try to introduce features that we didn't have. That's what compilers are for.
A startup that reaches ramen profitability may be more to that old man hobbling along on his crutches than meets the eye. But the most important advantage of being good is that it might turn you into a consulting firm. Then I'd sleep till about 11 am, and come in and work until dinner on what I called business stuff. Aikido for Startups But I don't expect to convince anyone over 25 to go out and learn Lisp. Programmers started to feel sheepish about working there. We chose Lisp. But with Web-based software, especially when you have 57 things going on at once, because you can't remember them. Hardware prices plummeted, and lots of people got to see: what happens in the first year of a startup. That's what compilers are for. Raising money is terribly distracting.
If you tell the truth you don't have to persecute nerds, the very best VC funds. If investors know you need money, they'll sometimes take advantage of you. Why? The winners slow down the least. And it can last for months. But seeing what startups are really like will at least show other organizations what to aim for. An organization that wins by exercising power starts to lose the ability to win by doing better work. It doesn't work for an intermediary to own the user.
A company tends to feel rather theoretical when you first start it. The reason you look like a car was supposed to look. Actually I suppose Apple has a third misconception: that all the complaints about App Store approvals are not a serious problem. When you're writing desktop software, there's a strong bias toward writing applications in the same way that car was. My current development machine is no more miraculous by present standards than the iPhone? But if you work for a startup that went through really low lows and survived. There would be no more Calvin Coolidges.
In our startup, when outsiders came to visit we tried hard to seem professional. There are just two or three of you, and a few days ago I realized something surprising: the situation with time is much the same as with money, avoiding pleasure is no longer enough to protect hunter-gatherers, and perhaps all pre-industrial societies. He was hosting thousands of people's blogs. That's what compilers are for. One wrote: While I did enjoy developing for the iPhone, the control they place on the App Store: a software publisher. All we ask from those on the manager's schedule. But they're a good model for the early phases. And yet it also happened that Carter was famous for his big grin and folksy ways, and Ford for being a boring klutz. If you're upwind, you decide when and if to engage the other ship.
The charisma theory may also explain why Democrats tend to lose presidential elections. If you chose technology that way, you'd be running Windows. But, at least some of the time. Either businesses aren't supposed to be like charities, and we've proven by reductio ad absurdum that one or both of the principles we began with is false. If you're upwind, you decide when and if to engage the other ship. Any advantage we could get. Most Perl hackers would agree that you do not, ordinarily, want to program in anything but the most important may be that once you have users, the tamagotchi effect kicks in. When you're riding a Segway you're just standing there. The striking thing about this phase is that it's good for morale. You never had to worry about and which not to. We had a wysiwyg online store builder that ran on the server and yet felt like a Faustian bargain.
They must hear developers complaining. Notice the pattern here? The difference between Joe's idea and ramen profitability is the least obvious but may be the most important may be that once you have users, the tamagotchi effect kicks in. I called business stuff. Anything that takes some of that weight off you will greatly increase your chances of succeeding, but if you're a maker, think of your own case. Here's where benevolence comes in. After a couple years of this I could tell which companies to worry about and which not to. But remember that ramen profitability is a trick for not dying en route. Few realize that this also describes a flaw in the way funding works at the level of individual firms.
Apple it was an unalloyed pleasure. How do you decide? As for it being impossible, I reply: here's the data; here's the theory; theory explains data 100%. Many languages have something called a macro. We were all starting from scratch, so a company that could get new features done before its competitors would have a big advantage. Kerry lost. And if Lisp is so great not because of some magic quality visible only to devotees, but because it's so much easier than building something great. It's one of the data types supported by the language. You will have a hard time convincing the pointy-haired boss to let you build things in Lisp, we'd be able to do everything these startups do. It must have seemed to our competitors that we had to either blow our schedules or offend people. There are many exceptions to this rule.
#automatically generated text#Markov chains#Paul Graham#Python#Patrick Mooney#way#funding#quality#things#money#something
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2023 Holiday Gift Guide
Each year I put together a small gift guide post full of things that I think make great gifts and are a lot of fun to give or receive for the holidays. Everything on the list is something I’ve used and enjoyed and recommend. I have recommendations posts for software, headphones, and miscellaneous stuff around the house, so the things on this list will be more focused on stuff not included in those posts and geared toward things I’ve come across in the past year or so and think would make good gifts. I used my Amazon affiliate link when the product showed up there, which gives our website a slight percentage back if you make a purchase and therefore helps fund our continued existence. If you’d like to get me a gift, becoming a supporting member or gifting another user a supporting membership for a year would mean the world to me. And, if you’re looking for something in just about any price range with a Chorus.fm or AbsolutePunk.net logo on it, check our merch shop. Under $25 Where Are Your Boys Tonight?: The Oral History of Emo’s Mainstream Explosion A great book detailing the history of emo and pop-punk from 1999-2008. Holiday Funko I recommended these in 2020, but there’s even more now! There’s a bunch of new super-hero and Star Wars Funko Pops in various Holiday costumes that are lots of fun if you’re into that sort of thing. Under $50 EUFY Home Security Camera I know some people have had issues with Apple Secure Home Video, but it’s worked great for me. Knowing the video is secure and only records when we’re not at home gives me peace of mind. Nomad MagSafe Compatible Charger Hannah’s new phone going to USB-C this year meant I could finally upgrade our old docks on the bedroom side tables. These have the benefit of matching our bedframe and look great. I’m a big fan of standby mode during the night and love how these look. MIIR Drinkware We have multiple products from Miir and they’re all fantastic. Vinturi Wine Aerator I’m not saying I can tell the difference when it’s used, but all my wine nerd friends swear by it. Band Hoodies During the winter I spend almost every day in Mack Weldon sweatpants and a band hoodie. Under $100 Grovemade: Desk Accessories From their planters (I have two on my desk) to various desk accessories, I love everything they make. Website Subscriptions These days there are a bunch of websites and newsletters that have membership programs. The holidays are a great time to gift one of these memberships to a friend or family member, and trust me, as someone that runs one, it goes a long way to helping your favorite website as well. Some of the websites I recommend checking out their membership packages include: MacStories, Relay.fm, SixColors, Popular.info, Last.fm, and ATP. Over $100 Bearaby Weighted Blankets Hannah asked for one for her birthday this year and has given it rave reviews. On Running Waterproof Shoes My go-to shoe for navigating the city during the fall/winter season. I love how easily they slip on, and the waterproofing is greatly appreciated in Oregon. I still think streaming services are a great yearly gift. Apple Music, Disney+, or one of the services you don’t have is a great way to gift a year of entertainment. Any Amount Ask your friends and family to donate to the ACLU, National Bail Fund Network, EFF, or other non-profits of your choice. Subscribers to the weekly newsletter will probably recognize some of these items because I write about them throughout the year when I find something I like and enjoy. So, if you like reading things like this, plus getting my weekly thoughts on music and entertainment, you should signup. Archive * 2022 Gift Guide * 2021 Gift Guide * 2020 Gift Guide * 2019 Gift Guide * 2018 Gift Guide * 2017 Gift Guide * 2016 Gift Guide --- Please consider becoming a member so we can keep bringing you stories like this one. ◎ https://chorus.fm/features/articles/2023-holiday-gift-guide/
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