Bare-Metal Writing: What Our Word Processors Are Missing
Over the decades, word processors have continually gained new features that get in the way of the ultimate goal: writing. How do we get back to that goal?
A letter of appreciation to the guy who spent years developing one of the few modern web browsers for vintage Macs.Editor’s note: I’m taking the week off this week from MidRange. While I’m out, I’m going to share some of my favorite issues from the past nine months. These pieces will run as they did when they were written, with no changes.
The series of concessions Apple has made over the past week feel like they’re bracing for a potentially even larger concession around the App Store. We should have never let it get to this point.
Between Microsoft and a buzzy laptop manufacturer, two separate visions are floating around out there of more sustainable computer upgrade paths for consumers. Maybe we should just be glad that folks are thinking long-term.
Tumblr has all the elements to be a successful social network, including (now, at least) a monetization strategy that could make sense for both creators and the network itself. But they may have waited too long—and its community may not be as flexible as its owners are.
Analyzing the complicated state of affairs, and the long goodbyes, that come when one TV network or cable channel replaces another. Here are 10 examples.
For some people (read: me), the secret to being able to create is having a little tension. Which is to say: The deadline is an important element of the work.
“I should make a phone app that’s nicer than the iPhone’s built in phone app, submit it, and see what happens. It would let me answer calls on an Android phone by transmitting the signal there directly. Of course I will call the app Carterfone.
https://t.co/MH4rI08oVp”
The problem with the old internet isn’t that we treat it like the good old days of digital utopia; it’s that we don’t have enough detail about it to properly understand it with the depth and nuance it deserves.
“@NeoYokel It might amuse you to know, given your comments, that I at one point jokingly considered reviewing this by directly comparing it to the OnePlus 9 Pro, but decided against it. I do think external input like you suggest would be useful.”
Should the National Register of Historic Places Apply to Websites?
Corporate motivation isn’t enough when it comes to digital preservation. Here’s a case for creating a National Register of Historic Places for websites.
Each year, we ask some of the smartest people in journalism and media what they think is coming in the next 12 months. At the end of a trying 2020, here’s what they had to say.
LAMP Stack History: It’s Everywhere, But Developers Hate It
Giving some well-deserved appreciation to the LAMP stack, a key building block of the modern-day internet that you use daily. It’s everywhere. It may never die.
Remote Desktop Access History: Pretty Cool, Until a Hacker Does It
The evolution of remote desktop access, and why it’s a bad idea for water supplies to be managed through remote desktop access without decent security measures.
Pondering why, in the internet era, it has become so common for big tech companies to treat their power users like dirt. (Yes, this is about Google Reader.)
Beyond Outsourcing: The New Threats Facing Local Journalism
Local newspapers have already faced issues with outsourcing and an array of cuts for years. But the threat is changing—and you should know what it looks like.
Early Digital News: Newspapers' Many Online Experiments
Newspapers said they wanted to protect the print product, but they were raring to go when it came to experimental online news approaches in the early '80s.
BBS Graphics History: Pretty Awesome, Until the Web Showed Up
Most people remember bulletin board systems as having chunky text-based graphics. One developer tried fixing that, but RIPscrip ran head-first into the web.