With the exception of 2-3 critical sites, I’ve closed every single tab when presented with a subscribe, sign in, register, or “download our app” message. I’ve discovered that, without exception, all of these places are aggregators/processors of actual useful information freely available elsewhere
Information silos are essential to the consumerist, attention parasitism fueling the modern web economy and there’s no reason to enable it
There has been a lot written about it over the years, but the one thing I keep wondering about the Kowloon Walled City is what happened to all the kids
There’s a durability to older technology, aside from that capacitor debacle from the 90s. I wonder if older tech in some form will be one of few functioning remnants decades or a century from now
There’s a project called Collapse OS to “Bootstrap post-collapse technology” https://collapseos.org
Basically tools and programs for the Z80, a proven workhorse for decades available as scavenged parts by the millions
I made the first test page of the editor UI for my blog. It has the absolute bare minimum I would consider for my purposes
For now, it has just 3 files, uses no images, and came in just over 12K in size. It also works as-is without JavaScript and is usable with CSS removed so I think it would be fine in a text-based browser
@amphetamine I meant nothing negative by it. Just a fascinating observation of juxtaposition between the common perception of Japan as a very modern country and these tidbits of history
> displays take 750mW for 120ms to do a 1-bit (non-grayscale) update,
I think the problem is a little bit more complex. As I mentionned in my article, you basically have 4 different way to update a pixel, 8 if you have a partial refresh system.
It'll mostly depend on the current color of the pixel as well as the desired color.
So in the case of a white -> black or black -> white full update, you're going to draw some serious intensity for at least 3 seconds where in the case of a white -> white fast refresh, you'll probably end up not drawing any power at all.
What I'm trying to say is that I think you can go pretty far in term of power efficiency with a e-ink display (mostly by leveraging their bi-stable nature).
@Shufei@cypnk I do listen to a couple of international broadcasts, Radio Sonder Grense on 3320 kHz from South Africa, Radio Santa Cruz on 6135 kHz from Bolivia, Radio Exterior de España on 17715 kHz, and others. Since the PL880 covers the full shortwave spectrum 1711 to 29999 kHz i can pretty much tune to anything, including hams on 80m, 40m, 20m, and 10m. I also enjoy listening and dxing to far MW stations including several from Argentina.