emdash : wordpress :: web3 : web 2.0
Posts by Jed Schmidt
same, just wish MCP weren’t so overwrought. this seemed like a cute idea half a year ago, but now MCP apps as a release valve when you need a UI it’s now a better idea than ever.
on the bright side, his ambiguous hyphenation means that i might be one of those coveted 24 year, old engineers!
[me, pointing at the calendar tomorrow]: i am here, tuesday.
Tickets are on sale for Brooklyn Web Workers on September 29th, featuring:
Annabelle Adelaide on Forth
@eligundry.dev on knowing where your money comes from
Victoria Kirst on the wisdom of paper
@demarko.org on Kickstarter United
music by Corn Mo
withfriends.events/event/dDagl3...
taking chatgpt up on its offer to show me how to load an IKEA SMÅSTAD bed in my RAV4.
bo the dog
grappling with the end of summer.
looking all over for where the soggy bottom boys bust out the chromatic mediant A major chord when i realized what had happened.
dill the dolphin flying through the air
son pointing at a ray
red jellyfish
back at the kyoto aquarium for a morning out of the heat.
forgetting the fact that EN readers are subject to 50% more rules (the last 3 EN rules are basically the last JA rule), interesting that they allow only JA readers to use the bath _before_ drinking.
not used to the overwhelming parallax of hiking in japanese cedar forests.
slide showing how durable objects turned [network, network, network] [compute, compute, compute] [storage, storage, storage] into [network, compute, storage] [network, compute, storage] [network, compute, storage]
in the same way, DO took the cloud silo (ie, network, compute, and storage split into API Gateway, Lambda/EC2, and DynamoDB/S3) and turned it on its side; each object has a bit of all three. this is more natural and also drops ton of config (IAM, et al). i think this innovation is under-appreciated.
slide showing how react turned [style, style, style] [markup, markup, markup] [logic, logic, logic] into [style, markup, logic] [style, markup, logic] [style, markup, logic]
like, before react became popular, there was a lot of overwrought dogma about separation of concerns; it was gauche not to co-locate your scripts, styles, and markup in separate silos. react turned this on its side, prioritizing co-location by component, which always made more sense to me.
one thing i've always thought but never really expressed in a talk (mostly because i don't really do talks anymore) is how durable objects changed the way i think about the backend in much the same way react changed the way i thought about the frontend.
had a good time meeting local devs and chatting about building where.durableobjects.live a few years ago, at kyoto's inaugural workers tech talk. thanks for the invite, @yusukebe! x.com/yusukebe/sta...
email from chase misspelling compliance as complaince
bummed to get a transfer rejected by my bank, but at least they seem prepared for my feedback.
oh wow, there’s a great sticker idea.
thanks! didn’t feel like much a feat given all the trail runners who breezed past me.
“japanese first” sanseito campaign poster
seeing a lot of these "japanese first" (not "japan first", mind you) campaign posters. interesting that sanseito reached right-wing/anti-vax product market fit years before MAGA/MAHA did.
anyway, despite the lingering foot pain and leech bites it was a worthwhile hike. definitely drop a line if you're thinking of tackling it and need any tips.
or even spiritually frothier times. i passed so so many temples, some i'd seen but mostly those i hadn't.
not to mention the state of abandonment in the long yet still wabisabi shadow of economically frothier times.
it was interesting to see the various states of (dis)repair in the forests around the city as a result of dieback and disease due to abandoned forestry development, post-war conifer monoculture, and climate change.
it was nice to have the city always at my left, close enough if i needed it, but far enough to mostly avoid the crowds of summer tourists. here's kyoto from the east, north, and west.
WristTopo in particular is probably the most killer app i've ever used on my watch. so amazing to just raise your wrist to see your trail map centered on your location and oriented to your direction. it saved me from getting derailed in areas where the trail was poorly marked.
to get the routes, i downloaded this gpx[1], simplified/split it with GPSBabel and GPX Editor, loaded it on my phone with GPX Viewer 2[2], and then finally onto my watch with WristTopo[3].
[1] fastestknowntime.com/route/kyoto-...
[2] apps.apple.com/us/app/gpx-v...
[3] apps.apple.com/in/app/wrist...