A+ enjoyed the pottery painting class at Clay
with Me. She painted a small bowl, a tiny dish,
and a rainbow.
I let A+ scoot ahead to her class. I didn't even
see her when I got there, but I did find her
scooter and her helmet neatly put away, so I
assume that she made it there safely. Another
big step towards independence!
We did a few Bike Brigade deliveries as a
family, and I decided to help with their
newsletter.
We visited Popo and helped her with tech.
I wrote some code to visualize a specific day or
set of days, and I added that to my blog post
about time.
The weather was often warm and sunny, so we spent
more time biking and walking. We brought bubbles,
sand toys, and popsicles to the playgrounds. That
was nice.
A+ has been practising crossing the street by
herself. She's quite proud of being able to go
ahead of me. She was also proud of making her own
choices at the farmers market, carefully counting
out $5 and a collection of coins that all together
summed up to $12 for a bottle of very dark maple
syrup, and choosing a sourdough loaf after some
discussion with the baker.
A+ enjoyed doing an Easter Monster Math Hunt, as
is apparently now our tradition. I drew lots of
Minecraft mobs on brightly-coloured sticky notes,
labelled the front sides with letters and wrote
equations on the back sides. A+ wanted to practise
solving for variables, so I wrote two-step
equations of the form 2 * n + 3 = 7. As she
found each sticky note, she brought it to me and
figured out the answer in her head, and I wrote
her answer down. When she collected all of them,
she sorted them by number and then figured out the
phrase using the letters in the front (CHOCOLATE
EGGS), whereupon she received the chocolate egg
I'd brought along for snack.
In Minecraft, we switched from Create: Perfect
World to the Create: Ultimate Selection modpack
because A+ wanted to use Create 6.0. Fortunately,
this didn't mean restarting our world from
scratch, since it was an upgrade. After we got
everyone on board, I built a full enchanting table
setup, got myself a Fortune 3 pickaxe, and started
caving. We also experimented with a Minecraft
Create Mod club on Outschool, but it wasn't really
A+'s thing between the lag and the overwhelming
experience of stepping into a world that's already
quite built up. We'll probably just keep playing
ourselves. If A+'s cousins or friends from the
playgroup want to join in, we figured out how to
set up port forwarding, so we can set up a server.
I experimented with analyzing my time. I updated my color scheme a little, cleaned up the graph, and made it responsive.
I added sketches to my On This Day RSS feed.
I did some consulting and managed to get that front-end prototype mostly sorted out.
Wayne and I worked together to figure out how to do port forwarding so we could host a Minecraft Java server at home and possibly share it with A+'s cousins or friends.
We planted more radishes, lettuce, peas, cilantro, and spinach. We also
started marigolds, petunias, chrysanthemums, jalapeno peppers, cherry
tomatoes (Sweet Million), and mini bell peppers inside. (toot)
I planted some more radish and lettuce seeds. (toot)
It was nice getting some reasonably-continuous
thinking time done. There was still one instance
where I hadn't wrapped up properly and therefore
felt a little frustrated when A+ wanted my
attention, but that was on me and something I can
do better next time.
I enjoyed walking in the park this week, and we
started gardening too. Good counterbalance to the
chaos of whatever the US is doing. I also enjoyed
writing more about life.
I added sidenotes duplicated as footnotes to my
blog, inspired by citationneeded.news. The
sidenotes should show up on my blog if you have
Javascript enabled and the window is reasonably
wide. I like the way sidenotes allow me to me add
a little more context than a plain hyperlink.
Unlike the tangents that I've been tucking into
<details> elements, I don't even have to wait
until the end of the paragraph.
W-, A+, and I regularly played Minecraft after
dinner. This week, I set up tunnels going to a
trial chamber in the overworld and to a blaze
spawner in the Nether. A+ wants to get more XP in
a safe way, so I think I'll work on setting up
some XP farms. There's a skeleton spawner not too
far from our base, so that's probably a good
start.
I hadn't realized that there was an #OrgMeetup
[on Wednesday], didn't notice @yantar92's email
on my phone, and I totally missed both
announcing it in Emacs News getting the
BigBlueButton server up. I've now added it as a
recurring entry on my calendar and I've added
cronjobs for the next six months so that
BigBlueButton will probably scale up and down
automatically. I'm so glad Ihor had Jitsi as a
backup. Whoops! Embarrassing… (toot)
The kiddo helped me add composted cow manure to the front garden. We
planted radishes (Scarlet Globe, Easter Egg II Blend) and poppies
(Flemish Antique Peony, Canada Mix, and Purple Peony). (toot)
“BB: I've just finished writing a book, The Final Touchpoint I'd like to
get that out there. There are better and worse ways to handle our aging,
our denial of it, our acceptance, and—as Erik Erikson put it—our
being generative, to produce as much as we can while we can. I'm 98 but
I'm still trying to be generative.”
He died two years after the interview and I don't think The Final
Touchpoint has been published, but it might be interesting to find
similar books.
Time
Category
The other week %
Last week %
Diff %
h/wk
Diff h/wk
Discretionary - Play
1.1
3.8
2.7
6.4
4.5
Discretionary - Productive
21.6
24.2
2.5
40.6
4.3
Sleep
30.6
31.7
1.1
53.3
1.9
Discretionary - Family
0.1
1.0
0.9
1.6
1.5
A+
26.2
26.4
0.3
44.4
0.4
Business
0.6
0.2
-0.4
0.3
-0.7
Unpaid work
3.6
2.1
-1.5
3.5
-2.5
Personal
16.1
10.6
-5.6
17.8
-9.4
More writing and drawing this week, which was
nice. I still haven't gotten around to figuring
out how to squeeze those front-end consulting
requests in, since they take a fair bit of context
and concentration. It's okay.
“BB: I've just finished writing a book, The Final Touchpoint I'd like to
get that out there. There are better and worse ways to handle our aging,
our denial of it, our acceptance, and—as Erik Erikson put it—our
being generative, to produce as much as we can while we can. I'm 98 but
I'm still trying to be generative.”
He died two years after the interview and I don't think The Final
Touchpoint has been published, but it might be interesting to find
similar books.
“Today's heavily optimized websites have largely killed the "view
source" learning experience. The code is minified, bundled, and often
incomprehensible to beginners trying to understand how things work.
I got the ick from my own small optimisation. My personal website is
small and it isn't an urgent service. It's hardly ever visited from a
mobile phone. Maybe I shouldn't be using the little time I have to focus
on that side of front-end development in this instance?
But deep down, all I want for my personal website is to give back to the
web. I want anyone, regardless of skill level, to inspect elements,
understand the structure, and learn from readable code. And I am fully
aware my code isn't perfect. It's old and there's a lot of room for
improvement.”
On homework: (toot)
Homework experiments continue. So far, we have determined that homework
is more likely to be done if the kiddo is on top of me (2 instances) or
if she's dictating answers while eating lunch (1 instance) or playing
Minecraft (1 instance).
I added Mastodon links to my blog. I think the process will be: post the blog post; toot to Mastodon; edit the blog post and republish. I might be able to save time and just copy over the blog post during the first go-around, from make serve.
Oops: I forgot to check on Emacs Berlin and it turned out that the NAS timezone was set to GMT-5 instead of America/Toronto, so I scrambled to get it set up. I also got distracted while trying to figure out how to revoke the token the NAS was using so it wouldn't downscale automatically, so that might have wrapped up the meeting early. I set up cronjobs on xu4 for next time.
Next week:
Continue to reduce fretting about homework.
Work through intermediate piano course in Simply Piano. Practise1 more songs, too.
Take a look at that inbox and start dusting things off.
“One thing that really fascinates me is how I'm reminded of events and
readings that I'd completely forgotten – but, once reminded, I find
that these things are once again in my mind. Perhaps I can say what I'm
thinking more clearly — though I'm more than a little frustrated by
having absolutely no memory of experiencing or reading something I
describe in an entry written only a few years ago, I'm fascinated by how
reading what I wrote has brought that experience back to mind rather
vividly. Of course I'm reminded of what I described in the text that I'm
now re-reading, but I can also remember other things associated with
whatever it is that is described there. It's as though the small bit
that I wrote and can now read is the key that unlocks a much larger
trove of memory. Funny how the mind works.”
I am also quite fuzzy about things that happened, and I'm glad I've got
notes to help me sort of remember.
Although, as well researched and as thoughtful as Houston might be
there's a messiness at work here that I love; it is the true great
quality of a blog. That permission to roam, to let your curiosity grab
you by the lapel and hoist you across fifteen different subjects over
the course of a single paragraph; blogging is pointing at things and
falling in love.
Bull sharks and respiration (toot)
My 2021 post on A list of sharks that are obligate ram ventilators continues to pop up
every now and then. Someone had a question about whether bull sharks are
obligate ram ventilators, so I did a little research and added whatever
notes I could find there. I think maybe they aren't, although they're
sometimes described as such? Not sure, maybe someone can chime in. =)
Programmable Notes(toot)
Oooh, it could be fun to trawl through these for ideas for things to
port over to Emacs.
The Smartblocks plug-in for Roam Research is the system I personally
use to build these types of workflows. It offers a set of triggers,
variables, and commands you can chain together into fairly readable
statements like:
<%SET:topOfMindToday,<%INPUT:What's on your mind today?%>%> or
<%RANDOMBLOCKFROM:Writing Ideas%>.
Even with limited programming knowledge, many people in the community
have been able to fashion their own Smartblock flows. Plenty of them
have published their workflows to the community Github for others to
use.
Books are maps to territories that are completely internal to the
reader. By focusing so heavily on extracting the surface symbology of
the map itself, these process-heavy note-takers risk losing sight of the
territory. A book's territory is the reasoning and argument that the
book presents to you as a path you take through your own psyche. The
goal isn't to remember everything the book contains. Remembering a
book's contents is useless. The book exists to contain what it contains.
If the contents are important, you keep a copy of it for you to look
things up again.
But that isn't the point of reading. The purpose of reading is to be
changed. Sometimes the change is trivial and temporary – a piece of
fiction that brings some joy in your life. Sometimes the change is
profound – a shift in your perspective on life. “Action items” from a
book are external and forcing yourself to follow through on them is
exhausting.
Added Pagefind search (toot)
I'm also experimenting with using Pagefind to
provide search for my static site using client-side Javascript. It
currently analyzes 10934 files and indexes 8183 pages (87272 words) in
40 seconds. The data is 125MB, but a search for, say, "sketchnote"
transfers only 280KB, so that's pretty good. I think I'm adding the date
properly and I know I can set that as the default sort, but I haven't
yet figured out how to make it possible for people to sort by either
relevance or date as they want. I also want to eventually format the
search results to include the date. Maybe
Building a Pagefind UI – dee.underscore.world will be useful.
Some walking, some writing, some Emacs tweaking. A+ and I went to a pottery wheel workshop. That was nice. My eyes have been dry lately, so I've been using eye drops.
“One of the consequences of his unique approach to writing is the many
digressions present in the Essais. And with many, I mean a great deal of
'em. Most, if not all, essays only mention the topic—as supposedly
made apparent to the reader via the title—in passing. Bakewell picks
out an example: About chariots. The text starts with a digression on
writing, sways over to the very compelling subject of sneezing only to
land on the actual topic two pages later to then to drift off again onto
a summary of recent happenings in the New World.”
“Someone else then advised to add context: why did you record this, or
why do you think this might be important? If you can't write that down,
then don't save it. This is added friction: constantly aiming to reduce
friction is not always beneficial to your system. We still have the
habit to collect too much stuff and do too little with it. This seemed
to be a shared struggle among attendants and speakers alike.”
Mapping the unknown. Many breakthroughs start when someone admits “I
don't understand why…” Sit down with your colleagues and explicitly
write down what you don't know or understand about a topic. This
turns knowledge gaps into shared opportunities for discovery.
Oh hey, Ness Labs = Anne-Laure Le Cunff, of the ADHD and curiosity paper
I've also got a link to somewhere in my drafts; adding another blog to
my feed reader
And these digital files take a different kind of stewardship. The
density of information per cubic inch of material is mind-boggling. Yet
that density of information exists invisible to our analogue self, we
need wizardry to make it visible and hopefully known. This density and
invisibility, I suspect, makes it easy to lose and misplace and
disregard.
It's difficult to get this sense of heft for
digital thoughts. I wanted go experiment with
that a bit using treemaps, but I'm not quite
there yet. Spatial relationships are interesting
too. I used to lay out index card sketches.
Maybe I'll learn how to use Noteful or similar
apps to get a handle on a larger topic by using
sketched and hyperlinked maps…
Learning the terminology is an important step that people struggle with.
Communities help with that.
Just as an example: I've realized that when I'm studying a problem, I
rely a lot on “second-order Googling”. That's a process whereby I don't
try to discover a solution in a single search. Instead, in my first few
searches, I just try to find other people talking about the problem
area, using my own naïve description of the task at hand.
Then, once I discover some conversations that are taking place among
people experienced in that domain, I read over them looking for the
specific terminology that I had missed. Once I have the terminology, I'm
able to use it to compose much more focused searches that usually lead
me directly to the answer I'm looking for.
It struck me the other day that there is probably more variation and
diversity among different users' Emacs configurations than among the
configurations of any other editor. Users are able to change almost any
aspect of the way that Emacs functions, with easy access to clear
documentation explaining how it works right now, and how you can change
it. This means that each instance of Emacs ends up a unique shape, like
an old tool with a wooden handle worn down into the shape of its owners'
habitual grasp. That simile doesn't quite work, because Emacs users work
hard and deliberately to shape their Emacs tools to fit their needs, so
it is more than just passive wear.
Jordan Grumet, the guest on the podcast, addresses this worry. He
distinguishes between big P Purpose and little p purpose. Purpose with a
big P is the one that gets me, and apparently a lot of people, stressed.
It feels like, “Why am I here? What am I meant to do?” It induces
anxiety if we want to find Purpose but don't know where to look. Little
p purpose, though, does not ask “why?”; it doesn't examine the reason
for our existence. Instead it asks, “what lights you up?”
This entry was posted in Internet and tagged Bruce Sterling, Chris
Pirillo, Clay Shirky, Dan Gillmor, Dave Winer, David Weinberger, Doc
Searls, Douglas Coupland, Douglas Rushkoff, Halley Suitt, Hugh MacLeod,
Jakob Nielsen, Jeff Jarvis, Kevin Kelly, Mark Cuban, Mark Ramsey, Nikol
Lohr, Scott Adams, Seth Godin, Steve Outing, Steven Levy, Terry Heaton,
Tom Peters
There is a strong correlation between the amount I’m reading, and the ideas I have for this blog. When I’m reading a lot, I feel like I have ideas coming out my eyes.
Writing nearly 350 years earlier, Galileo had declared books “the seal
of all the admirable inventions of mankind,” because books allow us to
communicate through time and place, and to speak to those “who are not
yet born and will not be born for a thousand or ten thousand years.”
Toronto Public Library workers have given their union a strong strike
mandate in ongoing contract negotiations with the Toronto Public
Library. The workers, represented by CUPE 4948, held a strike vote over
the weekend with a historic turnout, where over 96 per cent voted in
favour of authorizing the union to take strike action if necessary.
…
CUPE 4948 and the Toronto Public Library have multiple bargaining dates
scheduled throughout March. The union remains focused on securing a
contract that includes inflation-adjusted wage increases, solutions to
chronic understaffing and workplace violence, improved working
conditions, and stronger benefits.
CUPE 4948's Instagram has a few videos from librarians explaining issues
around short staffing, precarious work, and other things the union wants
to improve.
The library is one of my favourite parts of Toronto. Librarians are
awesome. I want them to feel safe and appreciated. I hope they can come
to a good agreement!
The solitary is one who is aware of solitude in himself as a basic and
inevitable human reality, not just as something which affects him as an
isolated individual. Hence his solitude is the foundation of a deep,
pure and gentle sympathy with all other men, whether or not they are
capable of realizing the tragedy of their plight.
The beginnings of an information workflow: read on my iPad (bigger
screen than my phone, easier to carry around the house than my laptop);
share interesting tidbits to Chrome on my phone; share a quote and maybe
a thought via Tusky (includes reasonably readable link to context, might
spark further conversation); collect those from my GoToSocial instance
and archive them in a blog post or Org Mode notes, keeping track of
ideas I want to connect or flesh out further
In Moments of Being (public library) — the posthumous collection of
her autobiographical writings — she writes:
A great part of every day is not lived consciously. One walks, eats,
sees things, deals with what has to be done; the broken vacuum cleaner;
ordering dinner; writing orders to Mabel; washing; cooking dinner;
bookbinding. When it is a bad day the proportion of non-being is much
larger.
In her 1925 novel Mrs. Dalloway — part love letter to these moments of
being, part lamentation about the proportion of non-being we choose
without knowing we are choosing — she locates the key to righting the
ratio in “the power of taking hold of experience, of turning it round,
slowly, in the light.”
On curiosity - quote from "The Hypercuriosity Theory of ADHD"(toot)
A+ and I both have strong interest-based focus, which means classwork
might be tricky. Fortunately, I can use my interest in helping her grow
to help me Learn All the Things so I can advocate for her and help her
figure out her brain. Might be ADHD, might be something else, but it's
probably a good idea to work with it instead of trying to squish it into
something that it's not.
Given that high trait curiosity might be a strength in ADHD,
interventions could focus on harnessing this natural tendency rather
than trying to suppress it.
For instance, AI-assisted tools have shown promise in providing
personalized learning experiences for individuals with ADHD, allowing
them to engage with material in ways that capitalize on their natural
curiosity. Game-based learning has also demonstrated positive effects on
engagement and interest, particularly in subjects like mathematics. The
Montessori classroom model, which is designed to foster curiosity, has
shown promising results—students with ADHD in Montessori settings
exhibit more actively engaged on-task behaviors compared to traditional
classroom settings. Lastly, outdoor socially-oriented activities have
been associated with higher levels of curiosity.
But parents have messed up view of what emotional support is, because
parents want gold stars for parenting. So the support most parents give
is to steer the kid to get gold stars. Parents mistake helping a kid get
gold stars for helping a kid feel loved."
Our kid is 9, bored at school, and procrastinates homework. I know what
that's like because I was like that too. (I think she's doing better
than I did.) I've been working on fretting less. Pushing her to get the
work done and check those checkboxes might not be in her best interest
anyhow.
I like this use of side notes/footnotes at
https://www.citationneeded.news/free-and-open-access-in-the-age-of-generative-ai/ .
Footnotes use letters to distinguish them from numbered references, and
are duplicated as side notes on large screens. I also like the “Show
buttons that expand the side note” or “Include side notes after the
paragraph on small screens” approaches on other sites.