Ayurveda, TCM.
Ayurveda, TCM.
for the best, illegibility is a virtue for a reason
for the best, illegibility is a virtue for a reason
Thereβs western science people. Then, we have the grounding/red light/nasal breathing people. But these are different from the traditional woo people (crystals, etc).
Peaters, keto, anti-BCAA. Who else?
Thereβs western science people. Then, we have the grounding/red light/nasal breathing people. But these are different from the traditional woo people (crystals, etc).
Peaters, keto, anti-BCAA. Who else?
Complete this 100 question multiplication speed test as fast as you can."
Complete this 100 question multiplication speed test as fast as you can."
They had a few videos demoing what a modern OS could be, which was exciting. But turns out that's a hard problem, and Google's appetite for 10+ year projects diminished.
They had a few videos demoing what a modern OS could be, which was exciting. But turns out that's a hard problem, and Google's appetite for 10+ year projects diminished.
The demo I saw allowed for sandboxed apps that could easily move between devices. Have an app on your laptop, instantly loaded on your desktop. Or phone. State was synced real time.
The demo I saw allowed for sandboxed apps that could easily move between devices. Have an app on your laptop, instantly loaded on your desktop. Or phone. State was synced real time.
Thoughts about this? Does this break in any predictable manner?
Thoughts about this? Does this break in any predictable manner?
What if social feeds ranked content, but then only displayed it linearly?
What if social feeds ranked content, but then only displayed it linearly?
I've designed a lot of my content consumption around the concept of separating curation from consumption
I've designed a lot of my content consumption around the concept of separating curation from consumption
Overall, I think this is bad. You can never "catch up" on your feed. It's infinitely long, and if you wait an hour and come back, you'll see new posts mixed with old ones.
Overall, I think this is bad. You can never "catch up" on your feed. It's infinitely long, and if you wait an hour and come back, you'll see new posts mixed with old ones.
Digg was the first time I remember seeing dynamic algorithmic ranking, though I'm sure it existed earlier. Reddit did it as well...
Digg was the first time I remember seeing dynamic algorithmic ranking, though I'm sure it existed earlier. Reddit did it as well...
Algorithms are useful/needed bc the amount of content is too much even if you consider just your follows. ie, do you want every reply? every liked post?
Content from people you don't follow can be good as well!
Algorithms are useful/needed bc the amount of content is too much even if you consider just your follows. ie, do you want every reply? every liked post?
Content from people you don't follow can be good as well!