diff --git a/assets/css/main.css b/assets/css/main.css index 9122579..1a31b4c 100644 --- a/assets/css/main.css +++ b/assets/css/main.css @@ -308,6 +308,10 @@ img.home-img { margin-bottom: 1.6em; } + .date { + font-family: "Jura Regular" + } + .centered-children { display: flex; flex-direction: column; diff --git a/blog/__template/blog.template.html b/blog/__template/blog.template.html index 48960d5..a8ef467 100644 --- a/blog/__template/blog.template.html +++ b/blog/__template/blog.template.html @@ -32,10 +32,12 @@ projects | blog +
I love a good highly-curated, lightly-annotated list of recommendations: Evil Mad Scientist’s periodic linkdump posts are a
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In response to previous post Clapping Music for two flip-disc displays, a reader
commented
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I present unto you: Steve Reich’s Clapping Music, as performed by a pair of flip-disc displays:
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One of my primary creative outlets this year has been playing with the CNC laser cutter1 at my library’s makerspace. It is the first CNC (“computer
numerical control”, i.e., computer-programmable) shop tool I’ve gotten comfortable and fluent with: while I’ve worked informally with plenty of manual shop tools for wood and metal, I’ve never previously bridged that
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A few weeks ago, Recurser friend Nicole Tietz-Sokolskaya published
Making progress on side projects with content-driven development, an excellent write-up about Doing
@@ -195,7 +197,7 @@ …but maybe I will! My tech writing these days follows DDD (Dopamine-Driven Development), which means that if you tell me what you want to read from me, I will be that much more likely to write it.
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Clapping Music for one flip-disc display: Byte and variations
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Clapping Music for two flip-disc displays
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Obsessed with Cuttle: Parametric CAD for prototyping, producing, and procrastinating
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Dopamine-driven development (DDD), spite-driven development (SDD), and other DDs
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Titles of blog posts I might never write
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First things first: Make a list
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First things first: Make a list
I am a big fan of Making A List, whether on paper or digitally.1
- As taught to me by Chuck2Chuck2, the most important thing about a to-do list is that the first item on it is “Make a list”. Then, when you’ve finished adding tasks to your list, you can check it off immediately. Bam, dopamine. Happy day, you’re already partly done with your list! Look at you, so much progress already! My notebook is filled with (partially-completed 😅) daily to-do lists, each of which starts with “make a list”. @@ -91,7 +93,7 @@
Adapted from a non-programming talk given while at the Recurse Center.
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My initial response to the 2022 video game Trombone Champ was a simple HELL. YES.