This graph of inflation cycles since the 1970s from @lawrencelepard caught my eye. The obvious question is what is similar about the present moment and back then? We should really figure this out before all the folks around back then are RIP. Also wouldn't it be wild if the same pattern repeated itself further back into the past? #
2026/06/26 #
Today’s links:
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Apple increases prices, Micron reports non-constructive market dynamics. www.wsj.com #
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OpenKnowledge - Beautiful, AI-native markdown editor and LLM Wiki. github.com #
2026/06/25 #
Today’s links:
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SpaceSail is China's answer to Starlink. www.theguardian.com #
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Doctorow in the Guardian. www.theguardian.com #
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South Korean memory giant SK Hynixs to list in US at $29 billion. www.taipeitimes.com #
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Jim Nielsen and John Gruber on stating the obvious. blog.jim-nielsen.com #
2026/06/24 #
I've switched back to working on my publishing software‘s cli after spending a while working on the server-side. It‘s amazing how quickly you can get your head back into code you have forgotten about with the help of LLMs. They can see through lines in the code instantly, and can summarise exactly how things work. It‘s really quite incredible. Hopefully will have some interesting progress to share soon regarding how the blog is rendered. #
Today’s links:
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OpenAI and Broadcom have a new inference chip called Jalapeño. Best name for a chip in quite a while imho. openai.com #
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Micron and Scandisk apear to be the AI barometer at the minute. Big sell-off just happened. www.marketwatch.com #
2026/06/23 #
Since I was previously posting about trillionaires, here's an angle from David Sachs that describes what wealth actually looks like practically speaking because it's not just a big pile of money.
We need better ways to more easily get a feel for what is normal and what is excessive in this realm. #
Today’s links:
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Chinese giant Tencent is grtting out of japanese game studios. thenextweb.com #
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Nuclear renaissance in Canada, 10 reactors by 2040. www.cbc.ca #
2026/06/22 #
Yesterday's notes got rendered in to the site without issues :) #
PRs for content in the agentic era
With the rise of version control systems (VCS) like Github, Pull Requests, often called PRs for short, have become very popular with programmers. They are basically a place to gather together all the bits and pieces for a particular thing you are working on before you merge in the new changes from your feature branch into the main branch of your repo. It's useful as a way to mentally separate out changes, and gives you a high level view of what been going on in the project historically without having to see every tiny little change in each file.
As useful as it is for individual programmers, it's even more useful when you are collaborating with other programmers to complete the feature, because it gives you a place to discuss the changes, refactor the changes, review and approve the changes, and even launch automated processes such as linters which ensure the code follows certain conventions, or various flavour of automated tests to ensure that broken core doesn't make it into production.
One of the goals of my new publishing system is to leverage some of these features for content creation. Once you are in a world where everything is a file then all sorts of interesting things become possible. That isn't to say that database powered systems are bad, on the contrary, there can be great synergies, but the point is to use each system where it shines.
In the modern era where AI agents are starting to have a huge effect on things, the collaboration won't just be with other humans, it will be with the agents too. That's why I'm super pumped about my new setup, because all the content I now write passes through PRs. Each new item, whether it's a link, a note or a blog post get's it's own individual PR. It's already really useful, but I think in the future a lot more cool things are going to be possible by hooking up AI agents into the mix, and the tools I've built make it really easy to spin up new ways to publish content. #
Great new episode from Peter McCormack, talking with Fernando Nikolic about how they've both been building cool stuff with AI.
It's interesting seing how AI tools are empowering people to build their own custom software. People who wouldn't have previously interacted with Github repositories, environment variables or deployed code to hosting providers are starting to become software engineers.
I think content creation using these tools is well aligned with this trend. And you only need to understand a small subset of the commands to go from md file to published. #
Today’s links:
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John Ternus plans to try and refocus Apple back to it's design roots. thenextweb.com #
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Brandur looks at the zone of viability for saleable software in the age of LLMs. brandur.org #
2026/06/21 #
Adding notes back to the blog
When I started using the new blog publishing system for all writing on the blog, I only setup blog posts and links. It occurred to me that perhaps one of the reasons I‘m finding it a bit difficult to get back into a good blogging rhythm was because I never setup notes.
Notes are another type of writing unit, not quite as big as a blog post, but more than a link. They are great for small thoughts, things you are pondering, but haven‘t really thought through. Maybe they will eventually turn into a blog post, but also maybe they won‘t. No pressure. Also no title, which is crucial. Sometimes when you have a thought that you want to write about, the hurdle of having to come up with a great title the perfectly describes your thought, is enough to for your initial enthusiasm to disappear into the ether.
That was the idea behind the blogging virtuous circle. Let‘s see if I can get that setup again. #
Just added a blueprint to the config and a template in the template folder and now let‘s see if this works... #
Appears to have worked, a PR was created, the real proof it‘s operational will be if it gets rendered in tonight‘s build. #
Today’s links:
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Norway to ban generative AI schools. thenextweb.com #
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Spain attempts to refocus tourism on offbeat locations. www.theguardian.com #
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Will the memory shortage result in devs optimising their code? news.ycombinator.com #
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Now everyone is talking about everything being doomy. Which of source is quite doomy. www.theguardian.com #
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Cloudflare release temporary accounts for agents, so they can vibe unbounded. blog.cloudflare.com #
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2026/06/19 #
So much doom and gloom everywhere.
I've been trying to get back into a better blogging rhythm. I can't remember a time where there's just so much doom and gloom everywhere. Whether I open up my RSS reader, or check out what podcasts have dropped, or whether I decide to brave it in the dystopian hall of mirrors that youtube seems to have become, it's 90% people freaking out about something, and often everything.
It's really not making the blogging any easier.
On the other hand, at least I managed to write this post. #
Today’s links:
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Protocols for agent use in enterpise - Enterprise managed authorisation for MCP. Sound good but also complicated. blog.modelcontextprotocol.io #
2026/06/18 #
Today’s links:
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Greg Boone has no regrets switching to linux. greg.harmsboone.org #
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There are actually 3 levels of gitignore. nelson.cloud #
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Tim Cook says Apple prices will need to increase due to soaring memory prices. www.wsj.com #
2026/06/17 #
Social media ban vs the indieweb
Like many I‘ve been watching this latest trend to ban social media sites for under 16s. The first I saw of it was the ban in Australia, but it seems the same will be happening in the UK. Keir Starmer wants to give kids their childhood back, which is a catchy slogan I suppose, but feels a little bit hollow to me.
Yeah perhaps for some that live out in the countryside, you can imagine they will be able to get back to horse riding and hiking or whatever, but for most inner city kids, it‘s not like there are loads of things to do. I read an interview with a teenager that lives in London and when asked what he‘d do when the ban came into force, he paused and said 'I‘ll probably just stare at the wall'. Kind of bleak.
I‘m not totally against the ban though. I can see it could have a positive impact, but you have to pair it with some other programs for the youth if you really are serious about changing things for the better.
If it‘s just the big social media sites, perhaps this will be a boost for the indieweb? The web was in many ways a lot more fun before the social media sites terraformed our digital lives. There was a lot more variety back then. Maybe this is an opportunity for the next generation to build a better digital future for themselves. All you need is an text editor and a bit of knowledge about HTML. #
Today’s links:
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Github adds capacity using AWS. runtimewire.com #
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SpaceX buys Cursor for $60 billion. www.implicator.ai #
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Running local models is good now. vickiboykis.com #
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Bubbles - Hacker News but for blogs. bubbles.town #
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Miniflux 2 - a minimalist and opinionated feed reader. It's simple, fast, lightweight and super easy to install. github.com #
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My page on bubbles.town. bubbles.town #
2026/06/14 #
DotCom vs DotAI
I was just looking at some stock charts way zoomed out to see as much historical context as possible, and wondered what it looked like for some prominent companies that were around for the dotcom era of the web, both for hardware and software.
You can really see the similarity in the massive uptick around the year 2000, and then the current moment. Microsoft was famously not that hot on the internet back then, and so there isn‘t much of a bump, but the hardware companies definitely were, and that‘s very clear for Cisco, who made much of the networking equipment back then.
It sort of makes you go yikes, but it doesn‘t mean necessarily it‘s going to crash anytime soon, in fact I think it‘s unlikely to go that way until there are some more IPOs, but it‘s worth keeping these graphs in mind.
How best to set yourself up for the long road ahead is the big question that nobody knows the answer to. #
All parts swappable
Marc Andreesen was on the Latent Space Podcast recently. He‘s best known for being co-author of Mosaic, the first web browser to display inline images, and for being the founder of Netscape. There‘s a great bit midway through where he talks about his roots in unix programming and the Unix Mindset.
I started out working on unix systems back in university in the early 2000s, and in my first tech job managing a linux render farm in a visual effects company. Up until that point I‘d only used Windows systems, but having hands on experience it was clear to me very quickly how great these systems were for building and hacking on software.
What‘s cool about this clip is Marc takes all the unix concepts, everything being a file, the shell and being able to easily connect programs together, and he brings all these notions into the modern agentic era, explaining how they underpin all the developments we are now seeing AI.
It‘s all files, and everything is swappable. #
Today’s links:
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There's a movie about Anthony Bourdain coming out in August. www.thedailymeal.com #
2026/06/13 #
Github storage usage update
Quick update on the Github Actions storage issue I ran into last month. To summarize Github blocked me because it claimed I went over my Actions storage quota. I contacted their support and they were not able to answer my very basic and polite questions, instead sending me pre-written articles that didn‘t fit my situation very well imho. They then stopped replying to me. Eventually the quota got reset with the new billing cycle.
We are 1/3 of the way through the current month‘s billing cycle. I have written four days worth of posts so far this month. Last month in total I had written 13 days of posts when I went over my quota, leading to the suspension. So you would expect that since my publishing workflow uses up the exact same amount of storage every day, that I would be 1/3 of the way through my quota, right?
Well I just checked on the billing page, and I have used up 0 GB of the 0.5 GB included free Actions storage this month. I haven‘t made any changes to how the site builds. It‘s the exact same actions that build the site. Haven‘t changed them for many many months.
Github I tried really hard to figure out your complicated Actions storage quota system. It makes no sense to me. #
Yesterday‘s refactor worked
The deployment of the refactor I mentioned yesterday went very smoothly. The test post and bunch of links I had gathered yesterday, all got picked up by the automated publishing tool, got turned into individual PRs, got put through a batch review process and got released in the early hours this morning.Seems like everything is running as expected.
Today I decided to overhaul the way the system is processing incoming webhooks. The way it was doing things was working but the big refactor exposed some cruft in that part of the code, so I figured out a better way to do things that fits in well with the new architecture, and got it all working, and tested. Just pushed that out earlier, all tests are passing and smoke testing in staging went fine, so no reason to think there will be any issues. #
Today’s links:
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SpaceX IPO goes well, Elon becomes first trillionaire. www.theguardian.com #
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2026/06/12 #
The latest big refactor
I want to make sure everything is still working as I‘ve just deployed the latest refactor of my publishing software. I previously wrote about the rendering tool, but this is the publishing side of things, it‘s the software that manages the content through a neat publishing workflow once you‘ve pushed it to Github.
As far as refactors go, this was kind of a big one. There had been a apparent misunderstanding between me and the LLM for quite a while. I thought we were on the same page about the architecture, so did the LLM, but we kept running into strange dislocations in the code. It‘s not always obvious immediately that this is happening, because sometimes the LLMs do come up with some really novel ways of architecting things, they have access to basically all of programming through all of time after all. Anyway the same sort of thing kept happening, but in different ways.
I eventually got to the bottom of it, and when I pointed out the ridiculousness of two entities that were clearly supposed to be different things, in the mind of the AI they were the same thing. Anyhow perhaps a story for another blog post.
For now just hoping this makes it onto the blog later tonight. Should know by morning if it worked. #
Today’s links:
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SpaceX is biggest IPO of all time @ $135 per share, raises $75 billion. nypost.com #
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Coinbase launches agent that can trade on behalf of humans, uses the open x402 payment protocol. techcrunch.com #
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Teardown of the gold Trump phone. www.ifixit.com #
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DoorDash introduces AI to order food via photos and prompts. www.cnbc.com #
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London is hot again: Anthropic, OpenAI, Cursor, Google, Databricks, Salesforce, Rivian and Palantir announce plans for new offices. www.cnbc.com #
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Xiaomi says it's open source AI agent harness MiMo Code beats Claude in the 200+ multi-step tasks category. venturebeat.com #
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Citi Group launches blockchain based tockenized private shares trading platform. cryptonews.com #
2026/06/10 #
Gemini pretty down
Barely 24 hours after I wrote about Apple and Gemini and that I had been using Gemini a lot recently and now Gemini has had a makeover and looks great but is requireming me to click 10 times for each query :(
Strange. #
Today’s links:
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The British food scene is going bust. www.theguardian.com #
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Apple settles on 2 local models alongside 3 private cloud models. machinelearning.apple.com #
2026/06/09 #
Apple and Google in an AI
Interesting to hear the latest from this years Apple developer conference. Apple‘s AI future for now will be with Gemini models. I‘ve been working a lot with Gemini the past few months, and it‘s very good a lot of the time, including for coding, which is what I mostly use it for.
I am struck, especially today actually, by how much Gemini likes to refactor code. In this world where all code is apparently one shotted, it‘s really quite odd how much refactoring one has to do to get anything worth having. I suspect one shotting is the new refactoring.
So Apple and Google...perhaps it is fitting. Always one more one-shottings away from the perfect software that will definitely be the most perfect software ever. This time is different. #
Today’s links:
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Apple‘s new AI architecture powered by Gemini models. www.macrumors.com #
2026/06/03 #
My blocked man switch worked
The Github Action I added to my blog to run at the start of every month worked. I added it because I got blocked again by Github last month, this time apparently for using hundreds of GB-hours (whatever that is) of storage even though I am using literally the smallest amount of storage possible.
One of the cool things about running a static site website, is I can continue to write offline and sync it back up when I get online again. I realized though that because I was only building the site when I push new content to Github, that once the new billing cycle came around that all the content I had written while offline wouldn‘t automatically get rendered into the site, because all the build triggers had been missed, and the new content would only make it to the site if I added some more content, which would trigger the site to rebuild.
With this extra little monthly workflow, I can be sure that any content I add while offline will definitely make it onto the site even without me writing something new at the beginning of the month. It worked last night, and all the content I added since I got blocked was rendered into the site.
The Github support team, who initially answered my support query, still haven‘t answered my question about what settings I need to use to not go over the storage quota limit. In the past Github support could take several days to reply to a support case but they wouldn't ever just go dark like that. That‘s quite disappointing, especially given how much time I have been spending developing on their platform the past few months. #
Vergecast going daily
The Vergecast Podcast is going daily. David Pierce interviewed Casey Neistat to get some advice. Casey is know for having run a daily vlog for years. I used to watch it.
I checked out Ze Frank, another one of the daily vloggers from the mid 2000s that got very popular. He‘s now doing nature related videos narrating in his style. His latest is about bees and wasps and ants.
I wonder what happened to Andrew Baron from Rocketboom. Another one of my favorite dailies from the mid 2000s, when video was just starting on the web. They used to do all sorts of things both indoors and outdoors.
Oh yeah there was also Mike Rugnetta and The Idea Channel. Actually not sure if this was a daily, but somehow in my mind it falls into a similar bucket.
As far as I know the Vergecast isn't video, but I‘m interested to see where they take it with an audio only daily pod. Potentially lot‘s of things to explore. #
Today’s links:
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Nvidia announce DGX Station, a windows supercomputers you can put under your desk. interestingengineering.com #
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The Pierre Computer Company have some cool looking libraries for file tree rendering and diff rendering. pierre.computer #
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Kyle Daigle (COO @ Github) interview on Latent Space Podcast. www.latent.space #