Making you happy is too high a bar for anything. It’s unfair to ask that of anyone or anything — it’s something you can really only ask yourself, or bring yourself.But enjoying something? That’s possible! It’s very much within reach.
So I said, will you enjoy the car? Could you see yourself enjoying the car? Will you enjoy the drive?
And that’s a much easier question to answer. And an expectation that’s easier to accept.
Objects (and experiences) don’t make you anything, you have to enjoy them.
Enjoying something is plenty.
I think he’s going to buy one.
[Happiness is a choice.]
Source: Jason Fried
Never run after money
My father once told me: “Never run after money; it’s generally not worth it. Run after problems; solve them — and everything else (fame, money, appreciation, awards) will follow.”
[Great advice.]
Where Is Webb? NASA/Webb
The Aft Unitized Pallet Structure (UPS)
Nominal Event Time: Launch + 3 days
The UPS supports and carries the five folded sunshield membranes. Prior to this, the spacecraft will have been maneuvered to provide warmer temperatures on the forward UPS and various heaters have been activitated to warm key deployment components. Key release devices have been activated. Various electronics and software have also been configured prior to support the UPS motions, which are driven by a motor.[Follow along!]
Please don’t use Discord for FOSS projects
Please don’t use Discord for FOSS projects:
You are making an investment when you choose to use one service over another. When you choose Discord, you are legitimizing their platform and divesting from FOSS platforms. Even if you think they have a bigger reach and a bigger audience,2 choosing them is a short-term, individualist play which signals a lack of faith in and support for the long-term goals of the FOSS ecosystem as a whole. The FOSS ecosystem needs your investment. FOSS platforms generally don’t have access to venture capital or large marketing budgets, and are less willing to use dark patterns and predatory tactics to secure their market segment. They need your support to succeed, and you need theirs. Why should someone choose to use your FOSS project when you refused to choose theirs? Solidarity and mutual support is the key to success.
[ A difficult issue for sure…]
Source: Dave Winer’s Twitter
All criticism of journalism…
Part of a larger thread: “All criticism of journalism has to come through journalism. Hence not much gets through.”
[Of what gets through, even less has an impact.]
Source: Scripting News
I am for being for things (Part 2)
Part 1 is here.
##For thoughts
So this year I will continue to be for things. I’m completely for being for things. I am simply and expansively for.
I’m for the team and it, in turn, is for me.
I am for the parts that are not great because they are large and coupled and ignoble and insufferable and wish to be better and I with them.
I am for building into it and building through it because inside there is where I find out (or remember) that after all the inhumanity (oh!) of it all, it all turns out to be endurable and worthy of my efforts.
I am for that which does not endure, too. I am for forgetting and moving beyond and above and between and forgiving my past failures.
I am for working when it is just work and also when everything is riding on the work.
I am for caring too much about the work and nothing at all about the work, either way and sometimes both ways and sometimes any and all ways in between, part of the way sometimes, sometimes all the way, on and on until I know I can never know really what I am working for and, not caring, I work, and I work and work and work, for no reason other than to work and better myself.
I am for that—all of that, and also you and my teammates, and all of yours.
When I acknowledge that there is no such thing as perfect code or a perfect team or a perfect project, that only the idea of it exists… then the real purpose of striving toward perfection becomes clear:
To make me/we/us happy!
That is what it is all about. And I am all for that all the time. No one has more fun than we!
Happy New Year!
Unleashing Beaver to Restore Ecosystems and Combat the Climate Crisis
Unleashing Beaver to Restore Ecosystems and Combat the Climate Crisis:
The creek bed, altered by decades of agricultural use, had looked like a wildfire risk. It came back to life far faster than anticipated after the beavers began building dams that retained water longer.
“It was insane, it was awesome,” said Lynnette Batt, the conservation director of the Placer Land Trust, which owns and maintains the Doty Ravine Preserve.
“It went from dry grassland… to totally revegetated, trees popping up, willows, wetland plants of all types, different meandering stream channels across about 60 acres of floodplain,” she said.
The Doty Ravine project cost about $58,000, money that went toward preparing the site for beavers to do their work.
In comparison, a traditional constructed restoration project using heavy equipment across that much land could cost $1 to $2 million, according to Batt.
See also The Beaver Manifesto and this long piece from Places Journal about beavers as environmental engineers.
Across North America and Europe, public agencies and private actors have reintroduced beavers through “re-wilding” initiatives. In California and Oregon, beavers are enhancing wetlands that are critical breeding habitat for salmonids, amphibians, and waterfowl. In Nevada, Utah, and New Mexico, environmental groups have partnered with ranchers and farmers to encourage beaver activity on small streams. Watershed advocates in California are leading a campaign to have beavers removed from the state’s non-native species list, so that they can be managed as a keystone species rather than a nuisance. And federal policy is shifting, too. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service sees beavers as “partners in restoration,” and the Forest Service has supported efforts like the Methow Beaver Project, which mitigates water shortages in North Central Washington. Since 2017, the USDA Natural Resource Conservation Service has funded beaver initiatives through its Aquatic Restoration Program.
[I believe they saw similar effects when reintroducing wolves. We should know by now that we should leave well enough alone.]
Source: kottke.org
DuckDuckGo in 2021: Building the Privacy Super App
DuckDuckGo in 2021: Building the Privacy Super App:
Like we’ve done on mobile, DuckDuckGo for desktop will redefine user expectations of everyday online privacy. No complicated settings, no misleading warnings, no “levels” of privacy protection – just robust privacy protection that works by default, across search, browsing, email, and more. It’s not a “privacy browser”; it’s an everyday browsing app that respects your privacy because there’s never a bad time to stop companies from spying on your search and browsing history.
[This is great news…]
The Habit of Adequacy
I honor the word habit on the days that it is hard, but I show up anyway. The habit serves me on the days when I doubt that I can, but I show up and give myself the opportunity to surprise myself. To have it be great even though my expectations are low.
[I think about how bad habits are easy and good habits are hard. “Is the Dark Side stronger? ‘No, no, no. Quicker, easier, more seductive…’ “]
Source: Accidentally in Code
The Effects of Four Years Without Net Neutrality Rules in the U.S.
The Effects of Four Years Without Net Neutrality Rules in the U.S. — Pixel Envy:
Many tweets about 2017’s coverage of the end of net neutrality rules were clearly inaccurate and hysterical — that is for certain. But the loss of those rules has not magically solved U.S. broadband problems, either; on the contrary, it has exacerbated the worst tendencies of telecommunications conglomerates as many people — including yours truly — predicted. U.S. ISPs, which should be mere utility providers, are abusing their positions to advantage their own products and services. Net neutrality rules should be restored and, just as importantly, ISPs should not be excluded from antitrust discussions.
[Absolutely]
Source: Pixel Envy