week 144

– Google / Nest might just turn your house off, one day.

– Verilog for cells is a thing.  I was talking to a neuroscientist friend of mine recently about how bio/tech is going to become very very serious very very fast, and I think it has and I have not noticed.

– What do the Big Five want from you?  Data, among other things.

under the water, carry the water

I’ve been trying to draft a “Things I Learned From Working At Drip” post that is useful, interesting and not fodder for Our Incredible Journey – which is tricky.  I did learn many things, despite the company failing, and I am grateful for Sam & Miguel for trusting me to run their system … even though those are both peak tech company cliches.

Let’s say that you should add or remove as much start-up verbiage to or from the below statements as you need to be happy, and leave it at that.

  • HTML and CSS have changed since I looked at them in a serious way.  Out to Daniel for helping me with the new world of modular CSS, implicit grids, and so on.
  • Michael Hobbs is a saint for answering my dozens of questions about AWS.  Also thanks to Mike Perham of SideKiq for his speed in replying to questions.
  • New Relic is great.  So is HoneyBadger.
  • I learned a lot about memory in Ruby, as written up here.
  • Scaling is a thing, even with small systems.  Drip never had a huge userbase, but we ran into problems that I did not expect as we went from very, very small to very small.  (We dealt with those problems by either improving the Rails code or adding AWS machines, depending on the problem.)
  • Tests are great.  I remain a bit skeptical of tests in principle (for example, is it because of Rails’ insane magic  that testing is required?), but in practice, tests saved my bacon countless times.
  • More generally, thinking about what a system should do and how I’d ensure that my changes to that system were working was very, very helpful.
  • This was the first time that I’ve been the most senior technical person at a company.  When it is just you and Stack Overflow against the world, you get a lot better at solving problems.
  • With that said, no problems get solved after 1700.  Go home and relax – you’ll have it figured out by 0915 the next day.
  • And yet, I’ve had a lot of self-debate around if I should have worked harder or faster, and what that might have done for the company.
  • I did not finish some features that should have been finished, due to time constraints.  This was bad, as those half-finished features ended up popping up in unexpected places.
  • Lauren taught me many excellent things about community and users and distilling meaning out of data.
  • I struggled, and always have struggled, and I think always will struggle, with where to be on the line between now and perfect – but I also got better at deciding where to be on said line.
  • Hannah kicked my ass about usability and quality basically every week.  She’s great.
  • Hiring other engineers is impossible.  There’s probably a whole ‘nother post about what I think about hiring technical people.
  • Don’t be a dick.  This is harder than I thought.

week 143

Systems thinking as LARP.  No, really.

– At the last MMHD, Halley Young spoke about sonification of algorithms, and played a great example of running mergesort on a collection of randomized pitches.  Are there references of this sort of thing for, say, Quicksort, or Dijkstra’s?  (I sure hope so)

– Some cats I know are involved in PubPub, which is like science publishing, only better.

week 142

– Genetically modified mosquitoes are being released in Brazil.

– I think I’ve mentioned Jukedeck, who algorithmically generate royalty-free music, before, but they’re worth talking about again.

Driverless trucks are already in use in the mining industry – these appear to be mostly autonomous, but not totally.

– Block some ads, use Brave.

– Y Combinator, of all people, are looking at doing some basic income experiments.

comrade spotify, comrade apple

I went to a hack day, and finished a thing!  It is called Socialist Streaming, and it lets you see what would happen if streaming services like Spotify, Tidal, and Apple Music taxed rich streamers and gave the money to poor streamers.

There’s a lot of things I could say about this – most of them are dealt with on the site itself.  I do need to shoutout Hannah Donovan and my cats at Drip for helping me work all this out. And, of course, this idea is at once ridiculous (no label or service would ever go for it), and also, like all socialist ideas, totally beautiful.  I mean, why not?

 

turning off the faucet

As you may have seen on the internet, we’re shutting down Drip, as of March 18th.

I’ll write more about things that I did and things that I learned at Drip, but for now I need to thank Sam & Miguel for taking a chance on me, and thank Daniel, Lauren, Hannah, Joe, and Amanda for being great.  Much love.

 

week 141

The more things change.

Audio feature extraction in JavaScript.  The JavaScript-only world continues to arrive.

– Iffy branding aside, it looks like Serato Pyro has done a really, really good job of transitions between tracks – I’ve heard fades, echoes, and beatmatching so far, all are which are pretty good.

– I was hepped to the work of Regina Flores recently, which is super great.

week 140

New York City remains too too warm.

A video game character is modelling for Louis Vuitton.  Of course.

Pauline Oliveros has a Second Life Orchestra, also of course.

– Guesstimate:  spreadsheets for uncertain things.

Pi, Pi, Pi.

– Of Oz the Wizard:  The Wizard Of Oz in alphabetical order.

new york is killing me

Not really – but if you go to the DJ sets page, you’ll see my latest series.  It’s been a tough year, with not enough time to really DJ properly, but there’s still some magic in there.  It is notable that I’ve crystallized into basically three styles:  endless house / techno sets; ice-cold collections of ambient, neo-idm, classical; and smooth, throwback disco.

The first is the logical evolution of what I’ve always played.  The latter comes from having access to amazing record stores in New York.  The middle one comes from both the amazing surge in this sort of music of late, but also from the affect of living in Brooklyn and looking at the Manhattan skyline as a storm rolls in.  New York will eat you – make sure you’re ready for it.

Next year I need to get something like an album done, so there probably won’t be time for much recording – but we’ll see.

week 139

– The complete works of Walter Benjamin are available as PDFs.  Here’s the big one – thanks to Sam Valenti for the tipoff.

– James Bridle continues to do amazing things.  All Roads Lead to _____?

– “Light Pattern is a programming language where one communicates with the computer through photographs instead of text”.  I can’t top that – take a look.

– Spotify has a beatmatching Party Mode.  Need to check that out and see how they’re doing it, yes indeed.