Reverse engineering the prompts for every Notion AI feature
— entertaining post explaining creative techniques for getting GPT-3 to leak its source prompts (via) #
Mastodon founder rejected multiple six-figure investment offers to preserve nonprofit status
— building on decentralized protocols makes the network more resilient than any centralized platform #
Atlas of Blobs
— Zach Lieberman asked ten writers, artists, and researchers to pick one of his blob forms, then give it a name and describe it (via) #
The Originals
— wonderful animated short where five old friends recount life growing up in Brooklyn in the 1970s #
NYT on Steamboat Willie entering the public domain in 2024
— the early version of Mickey Mouse will be theoretically free for reuse, but still trademarked and actively policed by Disney (via) #
Why The Super Rich Are Inevitable
— The Pudding's visual explanation of how our current economic policies inevitably created massive income inequality (via) #
Jealousy List 2022
— the stories that Businessweek writers wished they'd written, a roundup of some of the year's best journalism #
Productivity Blocker
— instead of blocking online distractions, this Chrome add-on only blocks websites that help you get work done (via) #
Tom Lehrer releases discography into public domain
— he donated all his lyrics/music in 2020, but at age 94, just added all recording/performing rights (via) #
Jacked directly into the feed
— "Twitter is currently doing to one man’s psyche what it has done to countless societies around the world" #
Twitter starts blocking links to many popular Mastodon instances
— links in tweets, DMs, and profiles are all now blocked, and clicking links in existing tweets are blocked for being "unsafe" #
Twitter starts banning high-profile journalists with no explanation
— reporters from NYT, WaPo, CNN, Mashable, and The Intercept, plus Aaron Rupar, Keith Olbermann, and the official Mastodon account #
Inside the world’s biggest tech bazaars
— from Bengaluru to Tokyo, pictorial reporting on how eight major tech districts fared during the pandemic (via) #
Benj Edwards on ArtStation’s anti-AI artist revolt
— the ArtStation homepage has looked like this for days #
Databots and Silverstein’s Fake Feelings
— 26-hour, 1,000-song album of "AI emo" trained with permission on a post-hardcore emo band's discography #
The Luddite Club, a group of NYC teens opting out of smartphones and social media
— “I still long to have no phone at all… My parents are so addicted. My mom got on Twitter, and I’ve seen it tear her apart.” #
The Doors of McMurdo Station
— from the excellent Brr.fyi, a Bay Area IT contractor blogging about life in Antarctica #
Ghostwriter, a haunted AI-powered typewriter
— hacking an Arduino and Raspberry Pi into a Brother AX-325 to make a typewriter that replies to you #
Apple orders Mythic Quest spinoff based on its bottle episodes
— I loved "A Dark Quiet Death" more than the rest of the series, so excited to hear this #
Riffusion
— open-source AI music generator powered by fine-tuning Stable Diffusion on spectrogram images (via) #
Web Yule Log
— reminiscent of Yule Log 2.0, an annual project where artists animated a yule log for a looping website #
Nilay Patel interviews Matt Mullenweg on how the Tumblr acquisition is going
— great conversation about ownership and moderation, contrasting Automattic's thoughtful approach vs. the Twitter garbage fire #
The history of Christmas kiddie monorail rides in U.S. department stores
— Peter Dibble does a thorough deep dive into a quirky holiday tradition I've never heard of #
Benj Edward’s secret life as an 11-year-old BBS sysop
— this feels like it's ripped from the pages of Incredible Doom #
Internet Archive Scholar
— launched in 2021, a new-to-me project indexing 25 million research documents from the 18th century to today #
A year of new avenues
— Robin Sloan pens a call to arms for online experimentation and invention in 2023 #
Animated timeline of most popular social networks from 2003-2022
— ballpark estimate of monthly active users over time #
Level, a clever one-screen puzzle game
— the first day of this year's Confounding Calendar, an advent calendar of tiny puzzle games #
Polygon reviews Dwarf Fortress’ graphical update, out now
— one of the most complex games ever made is more approachable, without sacrificing depth or difficulty #
Building a virtual machine inside ChatGPT
— hallucinating fake virtual machines inside fake virtual machines on fictional internets #
Inventing a new language with ChatGPT
— a progressively wild case study making a fictional language for slime people #
ChatGPT, OpenAI’s conversational AI model
— free to play with, it can "answer followup questions, admit its mistakes, challenge incorrect premises, and reject inappropriate requests" #
mindmelt.party
— "real-time hallucinatory music visualizer and networked culture explorer" from Nullsleep and friends (via) #
Vanity Fair interviews Billie Eilish for the sixth year
— this will be her last annual video for a while, she plans to keep recording them but stagger the releases (via) #
Movetodon, find your Twitter friends on Mastodon
— new tool with a streamlined UI; I'm [email protected], if you want to join me #
Why Japanese web design looks different from the rest of the world
— don't miss Sabrina's accompanying article and resources #
The Barnacle Goose Experiment
— Everest Pipkin's latest is an "abiogenesis body horror idle clicker" (via) #
Marine Beaufils’ videogame needlepoint
— especially love the series inspired by The Sentinel (via) #
Stable Diffusion 2.0 released
— trained from their new OpenCLIP encoder, with higher resolution, a 4x upscaler, and a new depth-guided img2img model #
Defunctland’s documentary on who wrote the Disney Channel theme
— Kevin Perjurer solves a mystery with impeccable production values and a meditation on legacy #
Meta made an AI that can win at Diplomacy
— building extremely persuasive AIs that are more effective negotiators than humans, what could go wrong #