Weekend Reading — 🤯 Can't wait to explain this week to my therapist
This week we watch the GameStop Show, dig into the history of lower case letters, drop into Clubhouse, and dig some Cookie Monster rocks.
Jan 31 |
Weekend Reading — 🤯 Can't wait to explain this week to my therapistThis week we watch the GameStop Show, dig into the history of lower case letters, drop into Clubhouse, and dig some Cookie Monster rocks.
Ygrene™ I feel attacked 🧰 Tools of the Tradenext-translate Next.js plugin and i18n API. Tiny library (~1kb, no dependencies) loaded with features. deep-email-validator One library that handles all the email validation strategies: regex, common typos, disposable email blacklists, MX record lookup, and SMTP to check the inbox exists. Jordan Singer “Flat image → interactive layers ✨ A Figma plugin to convert a flat image into text and shape layers on the canvas.” Cypress vs Selenium vs Playwright vs Puppeteer speed comparisonMicrobenchmark for five of the leading E2E testing frameworks. Mock Service Worker Seamless API mocking library for browser and Node. leahneukirchen/nq These small utilities allow creating very lightweight job queue systems which require no setup, maintenance, supervision, or any long-running processes. Alvaro Videla “What’s the reason old programming languages where often typed in CAPSLOCK ?” Funny story. In the beginning we programmed computers using punchcards. You wrote the program on a piece of paper, and someone would punch that into a card. Handwritten uppercase (print) is easier to read. When computers had limited memory, we used them for data processing. Only in the 70's did we start using computers for word processing and publishing, where you do need lower and upper case. And it didn’t come cheap. Check out this ad from 1976, you can add lower-card letters to your terminal for $100. That’s about $450 in today dollars!
🕸️ Web-end📓 Lines of CodeDavid Copeland 👇 From a thread about sustainable development with Rails. I mostly write about JavaScript, though, so here’s the choice quote:
Maximizing Developer Effectiveness It’s all about tight feedback loops.
🧑🤝🧑 TeamworkLatesha Byrd ⭐️
Marco Rogers Yeah, what's up with that?
Assaf So I wrote this thread about something that’s bothering me in certain corners of technical discourse. “No“ should be an acceptable answer, but instead we get pushed into faux technical objections, and maybe we can stop doing that?
🚫 no hello I love this website. Who’s building a bot that auto-responds to dangling “hi” with a link to this page? 📈 Business SideReddit 😂
The GameStop Game Never Stops. Everybody is talking about GameStop, so maybe I won’t. Just kidding. I totally enjoyed this episode of Reddit vs WallStreet, the reality TV distraction we all needed after secessionists tried to storm the US Capitol. But also worried about the potential to financial market meltdown due to the unintended consequences. Story so far, WSB is a Reddit forum where people congregate to discuss their trading strategy. DeepFuckingValue is a long term investor in GameStock, and bet on their success (< $1M). Citadel is a hedge fund that took a bigger and opposite bet that GameStop will go the way of Blockbuster ($20B). It turned into a meme (meme + stock = stonk) a bunch of people decided to pile on and bet on GameStock, driving the stock up, and putting a squeeze on Citadel. They poured money to make money, with a side dish of seeing a hedge fund go bust. Occupy WallStreet Online Edition. As the stock started getting hot, bigger investors joined in and bought the majority of shares on the way up. It got hot enough that Robinhood (and other brokerage) stopped retail investors from buying more shares. Side note, Robinhood doesn’t make money from its users, but from hedge funds, Citadel is one of their biggest customers. If you’re curious what shorting even is, BUST Magazine explains it in clear terms:
Sure this is gambling. Reddit bet on GameStop, and Citadel bet against it, and right now Citadel has the losing hand. And while retail investors bought 30% of the stock, large investors bought the other 70%. In the end, the house always wins. Nobody in Wall Street is shocked about the gambling, but that “the wrong people” — who don’t own Bloomberg terminals, and don’t work in Lower Manhattan — are moving the market. By design, the stock market gives limited access to a few insiders — market makers, activist investors, hedge funds, HFTs — to capture most of the gains. They have a good story about fundamental investing — revenues, P/E ratio, dividends — that they tell retail investors, so they don’t complain when they make scrap returns in their 401K. That is about to change. The day Volkswagen briefly conquered the world Paywalled, but a reminder that back in 2008, a short squeeze made VW the most valuable company in the world. Porsche made more money that year from its ownership stake in VW than from selling cars. Also, we had a financial crisis in 2008 … 🔒 Locked DoorsApple warns of “remote attacker” security threat on iPhone and iPad, releases iOS 14.4 update You really want to have this iOS update. Google researcher discovers new iOS security system With iMessage becoming an operating system in its own right — you can install and run apps — make sense that it has a dedicated sandbox:
BleepingComputer “DarkSide ransomware updates their "policies". Interesting new exclusion.”
🏛 PolitechsCoinbase spent $230k to lobby Congress in 2020, records show Remember when Coinbase instituted a “no politics” rule? ⭐ None of the Abovebigsurkate 30 minutes into the disaster flick: As of 7 am, photo by Heath Johnston, Rat Creek, MM 30”
Clubhouse: Drop-in audio chat I’m starting to get a feel for Clubhouse. Clubhouse is to podcasts what Twitter is to blogs. It has the immediacy (and FOMO) of “you’re listening or it didn’t happen”. A disorganized chaos that works extremely well. While Clubhouse lacks the production value of podcasts (scripts, editing, quality mics), the content is so much better. RIP podcasts. 🪦 I got five invites to give, share this post if you want one. The Michael Scott Theory of Social Class This theory breaks society into three separate social ladders. And I’m thinking how many people only see (or acknowledge) the ladder they're on, and judge everyone based on that ladder. A lot of social interactions make sense. alex Life motto: "run the dishwasher twice”
In Philadelphia, A Scandal Erupts Over Vaccination Startup Led By 22-Year-Old Cool. Cool. I mean, the guy has no healthcare background, but he can mansplain how healthcare should work, which is obviously better than relevant experience. What could possibly go wrong?
Alex Adelman “The Onion never misses.” Telegram can now import your WhatsApp chat history FYI Dr. Jacqueline Antonovich “My kind of news day: Geologist Finds Rare Formation Inside Rock That Looks Exactly Like Cookie Monster on Sesame Street" You’re on the free list for Assaf's Weekend Reading. For the full experience, become a paying subscriber. |
Sunday, January 24, 2021
This week we accidentally continue our subscription, reveal a fad, witness real patience, lolz a short-seller, repel mosquitos, and play for the win.
Saturday, January 16, 2021
This week we discover new genders, design our own retro computer, trust but don't verify, explore the sea shanty, and ride our bikes around town.
Sunday, January 10, 2021
This week we watch a coup, Big Tech goes 180 on content moderation, we release the Roombas, and observer the perfectly rectangular month.
Saturday, January 2, 2021
This week we reinvent email, weave some memories, resurrect Netscape Communicator 4.x, and create an army of craws.
Saturday, December 26, 2020
This week we trade the disaster 2020 for a hopefully much better 2021 🎉 Also, dev TikTok, the Mad Max musical, a boss auto reply, and an upbeat_anxiety.jpg.
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
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Thank you for reading Code Story — your support allows me to keep doing this work. ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏
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💰🪖 Silicon Valley's new gold rush: AI giants chase Pentagon dollars. US landlords caught using AI to fix rental prices. How China is stealing the world's semiconductor technology. ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
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