Feed Weekly #188

Feed weekly februar 17, 2023

Allow yourself a brief period of strict inspiration, devoid of everything that's going wrong in the world. Tune out by tuning in to stuff that might be interesting and/or useful in your work life.

Reading list

  • Well shit. Seems we overpromised in the lead. Things are still not alright over at Twitter, and Mr. Musk was upset about not reaching more than some 9 million of us in a Super Bowl tweet and his ego was forced to deal with the fact that President Biden har a wider reach. So his ego went ahead and ordered changes to the algorithm favouring his own tweets. Cool beans.

Design of the week

  • Here we go, just enjoy this page for a moment. Ain't No Trash is a curated second hand furniture in Hamburg, who also host Ain't No Studio for all your workspace needs. while those two businesses go well in hand, we really just want to point you to their sweet website.
  • Graphic Design Festival Scotland is renamed International Assembly. While always great and well worth everyones attention, it's cool that they're doubling down on being an arena for the whole international community.

Tech of the week

  • How about a command line interface that uses AI to write your git commit messages for you. Most likely totally unbiased and non-sentient.
  • core-js
  • Tired of having to describe everything you want AI to do for you textually? How about some image-to-image action to ease your cognition. Like say you have a picture of your sad face but want to have a happy face. pix2pix-zero is here to save the day.
  • The University of Oslo launches Autotekst, an openly accessible tool to transcribe audio files. It's based on Whisper from OpenA, handles audio and video file types of your choice, and outputs in Norwegian or English. It'll even translate.
  • We're finally seeing Apple delivering on an old promise from last WWDC where they promised Web Push for Web Apps. As of iOS and iPadOS 16.4 beta 1, you can try it out. This is kind of big news, if it works as well as promised at least. Push notifications is in many cases one of the last strongholds that forces projects towards native deployments. This should make Web Apps even more viable in many cases.

They took our clowns, and now balloons are scary too. 'Till next week.