Add more links

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David Eisinger
2024-01-30 10:27:57 -05:00
parent 91b2863e34
commit 2b8ef1263f
6 changed files with 1940 additions and 21 deletions

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@@ -17,6 +17,22 @@ references:
url: https://www.chrbutler.com/2024-01-21
date: 2024-01-30T04:10:23Z
file: www-chrbutler-com-gbjxba.txt
- title: "Changes Arent Permanent, But Change Is The New Oil"
url: https://blog.thenewoil.org/changes-arent-permanent-but-change-is
date: 2024-01-30T15:04:20Z
file: blog-thenewoil-org-1zbu4k.txt
- title: "Stop Everything You're Doing and Enable Stolen Device Protection on Your iPhone"
url: https://gizmodo.com/stop-everything-enable-stolen-device-protection-iphone-1851188262
date: 2024-01-30T15:05:31Z
file: gizmodo-com-mbuz73.txt
- title: "Stride by Stride iRunFar"
url: https://www.irunfar.com/stride-by-stride
date: 2024-01-30T15:07:24Z
file: www-irunfar-com-ueqpx0.txt
- title: "Kimberly Hirsh · Now"
url: https://kimberlyhirsh.com/now/
date: 2024-01-30T15:08:36Z
file: kimberlyhirsh-com-z4tqvg.txt
- title: "Hypercritical: I Made This"
url: https://hypercritical.co/2024/01/11/i-made-this
date: 2024-01-30T14:48:57Z
@@ -37,6 +53,10 @@ references:
url: https://www.cygnoir.net/2024/01/20/how-i-pocket.html
date: 2024-01-30T14:49:00Z
file: www-cygnoir-net-9nlp2w.txt
- title: "How I Pocket Notebook | cygnoir.net - The Cramped"
url: https://www.thecramped.com/how-i-pocket-notebook-cygnoir-net/
date: 2024-01-30T15:13:18Z
file: www-thecramped-com-7kxkcb.txt
- title: "Paper notes - macwright.com"
url: https://macwright.com/2019/01/02/paper-notes
date: 2024-01-30T14:49:00Z
@@ -60,7 +80,7 @@ We spent MLK weekend with my folks in the Shennandoah Valley, and visited [Luray
{{<thumbnail IMG_2374.jpeg "600x800" />}}
{{<thumbnail IMG_9637.jpeg "600x800" />}}
I signed up for the [Wrightsville Beach Valentine Run][2] 10K in Wilmington in early February, which has added a little bit of focus to my running without the commitment of half-marathon training and gives us a good excuse to spend a weekend with Claire's sister in Wilmington. Might try to keep that going, finding organized 10Ks in places we want to visit.
I signed up for the [Wrightsville Beach Valentine Run][2] 10K in early February, which has added a little bit of focus to my running without the commitment of half-marathon training and gives us a good excuse to spend a weekend with Claire's sister in Wilmington. Might try to keep that going, finding organized 10Ks in places we want to visit.
[2]: https://runsignup.com/Race/NC/WrightsvilleBeach/WrightsvilleBeachValentineRun
@@ -78,7 +98,7 @@ Here's a new track called "Altocumulus":
<audio controls src="/journal/dispatch-12-february-2024/Altocumulus.mp3"></audio>
I really set out to make a track that didn't have a bass hit on one and three and snare on two and four, but some things you just can't resist, though you can tell I tried for the first 90 seconds or so. I also found a [really nice app][5] for practicing scales -- Apple catches a lot of shit (perhaps deservedly so) for its app store policies, but it's a pretty cool thing that I can so easily find quality software like this at a fair price.
I really set out to make a track that didn't have a bass hit on one and three and snare on two and four, but some things you just can't resist, though you can tell I tried for the first 90 or so seconds. I also found a [really nice app][5] for practicing scales -- Apple catches a lot of shit (perhaps deservedly so) for its app store policies, but it's a pretty cool thing that I can so easily find quality software like this at a fair price.
[5]: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/piano-chords-and-scales/id714086944
@@ -109,7 +129,7 @@ I finished [_Revenge: Eleven Dark Tales_][17] and decided to stay on the short s
[17]: #
[18]: #
I try to keep plaintext backups of the things I link to on this site, at least the text-heavy stuff I might want to refer to later (you can see them down below in the "references" section). I'd been using [Lynx][19] to get the text, but that was having issues on some sites, so I switched over to [w3m][20] after finding the right command-line flag[^1] to include link URLs in the text. I've got some ideas around building a more robust archiving solution but I'm gonna let it marinate for a bit.
I make plaintext backups of the things I link to on this site, at least the text-heavy stuff I might want to refer to later (you can see them down below in the "references" section). I'd been using [Lynx][19] to get the text, but that was having issues on some sites, so I switched over to [w3m][20] after finding the right command-line flag[^1] to include link URLs in the output. I've got some ideas around building a more robust archiving solution but I'm gonna let it marinate for a bit.
[19]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lynx_(web_browser)
[20]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W3m
@@ -123,30 +143,33 @@ This month:
Reading:
* Fiction: [_Story of Your Life and Others_][21], Ted Chiang
* Non-fiction: [_Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life_][22], Anne Lamott
* Non-fiction: [_Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life_][22], Anne Lamott (recommended [here][23] and [here][24])
[21]: https://bookshop.org/p/books/stories-of-your-life-and-others-lib-e-ted-chiang/16687839
[22]: https://bookshop.org/p/books/bird-by-bird-some-instructions-on-writing-and-life-anne-lamott/8649952?ean=9780385480017
[23]: https://www.irunfar.com/stride-by-stride
[24]: https://kimberlyhirsh.com/now/
Links:
* [I Made This][23]
* [The Rise and Fall of Getting Things Done][24]
* [Cold-blooded software][25] ([via][26])
* [How I Pocket Notebook][27]
* [Tom MacWright][28]
* [Tim Hårek][29]
* [Work hard and take everything really seriously][30]
* [I Made This][25]
* [The Rise and Fall of Getting Things Done][26]
* [Cold-blooded software][27] ([via][28])
* [How I Pocket Notebook][29] ([via][30])
* [Tom MacWright][31]
* [Tim Hårek][32]
* [Work hard and take everything really seriously][33]
[23]: https://hypercritical.co/2024/01/11/i-made-this
[24]: https://www.newyorker.com/tech/annals-of-technology/the-rise-and-fall-of-getting-things-done
[25]: https://dubroy.com/blog/cold-blooded-software/
[26]: https://blog.jim-nielsen.com/2024/cold-blooded-software/
[27]: https://www.cygnoir.net/2024/01/20/how-i-pocket.html
[28]: https://macwright.com/2019/01/02/paper-notes
[29]: https://timharek.no/blog/paper-notes
[30]: https://macwright.com/2024/01/28/work-hard-and-take-everything-seriously
[25]: https://hypercritical.co/2024/01/11/i-made-this
[26]: https://www.newyorker.com/tech/annals-of-technology/the-rise-and-fall-of-getting-things-done
[27]: https://dubroy.com/blog/cold-blooded-software/
[28]: https://blog.jim-nielsen.com/2024/cold-blooded-software/
[29]: https://www.cygnoir.net/2024/01/20/how-i-pocket.html
[30]: https://www.thecramped.com/how-i-pocket-notebook-cygnoir-net/
[31]: https://macwright.com/2019/01/02/paper-notes
[32]: https://timharek.no/blog/paper-notes
[33]: https://macwright.com/2024/01/28/work-hard-and-take-everything-seriously
[^1]: Running `w3m -dump -o display_link_number=1 <url>` gives a nice plaintext version of a webpage with numbered link references (via this [helpful StackOverflow link][31])
[^1]: Running `w3m -dump -o display_link_number=1 <url>` gives a nice plaintext version of a webpage with numbered link references (via this [helpful StackOverflow link][34])
[31]: https://askubuntu.com/questions/805014/getting-text-and-links-from-a-web-page/1493418#1493418
[34]: https://askubuntu.com/questions/805014/getting-text-and-links-from-a-web-page/1493418#1493418

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@@ -0,0 +1,143 @@
[1]The New Oil
Changes Arent Permanent, But Change Is
January 21, 2024
As a veteran, my approach to healthcare and job opportunities has always been
different than most. Ive always been in reasonably good health, never been
much of a thrill seeker, and have a pretty robust immune system. Other than a
hardcore sweet tooth, I generally take at least some care of myself. As such,
that meant I could be a little riskier, allowing for a successful freelance
career. But then, I got married. Suddenly, the math changed and I had to start
considering health care when I considered employment. This is hardly a unique
situation: after adopting pets you have to consider who will feed them when
youre on vacation, or when you have kids you have to consider what will happen
to them if anything happens to you.
Yet, for some reason, people in the privacy community have a hard time wrapping
their minds around change. To some extent, I get that. I think at some level
were all a bit resistant to change. Change can sometimes make us feel out of
control, or sometimes its just the plain old “fear of the unknown.” Sometimes
theres a valid reason here; for example, Ive successfully managed to get
nearly everyone I know using Signal. If Signal turned out to be unsafe tomorrow
for any reason, it would be a monumental nightmare to not only pick a service
thats as polished, stable, and feature-rich but also to convince everyone to
move over. Its also unwise to simply rush into the latest new service blindly
because its new. Its always a good idea to slow down and first see if these
services even stand the test of time and second wait to see what the experts
think (or to examine the project yourself if you are one such expert).
But other times, I think we just get stuck in our habits. When I got into
privacy, iPhone was clearly superior to Android in the privacy/security front.
At the time custom OSs were nearly unusable for a normal person and Androids
security was a joke. But while I advanced in my personal privacy journey, the
entire Android landscape matured and soon Android became an increasingly
appealing option for me. Making that change represented a huge disruption for
my existing day-to-day life. I mean sure, at the end of the day a phone is a
phone and they all more or less function the same, but anyone whos ever made
the switch or even temporarily had to use the other OS that isnt their daily
driver knows that its a bit of a shock and it takes some time to get used to
the differing menus, capabilities, or thought that went into the design. In the
case of Android specifically, I also had new apps, features, and possibilities
to explore.
It is vital that as a community we become accepting of change because it will
come for all of us whether we like it or not. There are plenty of recent
examples. Encrypted messenger WickrMe was [2]fully retired this year, but even
before it was shut down it was on a downward spiral. Michael Bazzell claimed he
had detected it sending telemetry back to organizations such as Microsoft and
shortly thereafter Wickr was sold to Amazon. Two more recent, salient examples
include the sales of [3]Raivo OTP (once recommended on The New Oil) and [4]
Simple Mobile Tools. In most cases, there is little or nothing standing in the
way of negative changes, whether its as simple and (arguably) innocuous as
introducing telemetry that you disagree with or full-on shutting down or
selling out.
In the world of writing, aspiring writers are instructed to “kill your
darlings.” That means no matter how attached you get to a work, you must be
willing to set those feelings aside and do whatever it takes to make it the
best possible version of itself. That might mean cutting a part you really
like, rearranging some sections, or just throwing out the entire thing and
starting over. (I did a large amount of that in writing this very post.) In
privacy, we must have the same attitude.
Compromise and “[5]enshittification” are extreme examples, but I would argue
theyre probably the least common culprit forcing us into change. Im willing
to bet that by sheer numbers, simple life circumstances and growth are. As
mentioned above, getting married changed a lot of things for me, privacy
included. Prior to being married, I didnt even own a TV. Now we have two smart
TVs because my wife loves to consume streaming content. As such, we also use
ProtonVPN on our router because they promise to work with streaming services (a
promise that thus far has been kept). But if I were still single, I would
probably be using IVPN or Mullvad on my router and I would also be far more
aggressive with tracker blocking. A single woman dating may download one of
those safety apps that shares her location with trusted individuals to stay
safe on dates. A parent may decide that at least while their children are
younger its worthwhile to enable location tracking their phones (or to give
them phones at all) in case something bad happens. They may also decide to use
certain mainstream, less-private services to better control their childs
content intake. Im not condoning helicopter parenting, for the record, but the
internet is a vast and dangerous space and it would be pretty reckless to just
let your young children run wild on it without supervision.
Another example might be outdated devices. Perhaps you were quite happy with
stock Android so long as it was still receiving security updates, but if you
suddenly found yourself in possession of a device that has reached “End of
Life” and you didnt have the funds to upgrade, the math might change. You
might decide that its worth it to flash a custom OS so you can still receive
at least some updates.
And of course, theres always growth. Many of us never stop to consider this,
but for most of us we make a lot of changes when we first start our privacy
journeys. We go from Windows/Mac to Linux, SMS to encrypted messaging, Gmail to
encrypted email, Google search to private search, and more. Sometimes we even
make multiple changes, testing out several messengers, email providers, Linux
distributions, and more. Why then, once we settle into a suite that works for
us, do we suddenly decide that this is it, finality, the end, there can be no
room to improve after this at least, not significant changes like the ones
that got us here? This is ridiculous. Its called the “End-of-History
Illusion”: the belief that you have experienced substantial change or growth up
til now but now things will just be the same forever from here on out.
Change can be scary, but it is vital. As we go through life, different services
will come and go and in some cases services that are perfectly fine will no
longer fit our needs. We shouldnt be afraid of change. Change allows us to
grow and improve, but it also allows us to live fulfilling, full lives. Privacy
is a human right, but so is food, education, and shelter. Despite this, most of
us dont spend all of our free time learning about water quality, teaching, or
construction and architecture. We appreciate these things and want to have a
functional knowledge of them (how to spot bad water and buildings we should
absolutely steer clear of) but most of us have other hobbies, interests,
priorities, and desires. Privacy should be no different it should protect us
and our rights, but it shouldnt prevent us from getting the most out of our
lives the way we want to. Ive written on this subject before, so I wont
rehash it here. Ill just leave with the parting thought that time waits for no
one, so its best to accept the impermanence of everything in life, especially
technology and ourselves. Dont be afraid to embrace evolution and change up
your privacy strategy as needed. As the band [6]Rush so famously put it well:
“changes arent permanent, but change is.”
You can find more recommended services and programs at [7]TheNewOil.org, and
you can find our other content across the web [8]here or support our work in a
variety of ways [9]here.
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
published with [10]write.as
[piwik]
References:
[1] https://blog.thenewoil.org/
[2] https://web.archive.org/web/20240115224640/https://www.404media.co/wickr-closed-down-is-dead/
[3] https://youtu.be/Z0IkcyGUqKc?si=uMOEdhSwbX2Tjjfc&t=60
[4] https://youtu.be/dnVOdOC3E9c?si=dfzc6y6s-fv8kgDF&t=1005
[5] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enshittification
[6] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=auLBLk4ibAk
[7] https://thenewoil.org/
[8] https://thenewoil.org/en/links/
[9] https://thenewoil.org/en/support/
[10] https://write.as/

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@@ -0,0 +1,161 @@
[p]
• [1]The A.V. Club
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[29]
Smartphones
Stop Everything You're Doing and Enable Stolen Device Protection on Your iPhone
The feature is finally out; here's how to turn it on.
By
[30]Dua Rashid
PublishedJanuary 23, 2024
[31]Comments (8)
We may earn a commission from links on this page.
[32][33][34][35][36]
An image of a person entering their passcode on an iPhone.
Image: NurPhoto (Getty Images)
Apple recently announced a [37]Stolen Device Protection feature for iOS 17.3.
With the new OS finally released Monday, the safety feature is now available to
be activated on your devices. Heres how to turn it on.
Watch
The iPhone SE Offers Almost Everything You Want In An iPhone
CC
Share
Subtitles
• Off
• English
Share this Video
[39]Facebook[40]Twitter[41]Email
[42]Reddit[43]Link
[44]view video
[45]The iPhone SE Offers Almost Everything You Want In An iPhone
[46]
Is USB-C Finally Coming To iPhone?
May 18, 2022
[47]
Is This the End of Apples Lightning Cable?
June 24, 2022
First, you want to make sure to update the [48]iPhone to the latest 17.3
version. Then go to Settings, scroll down to Face ID & Passcode, look for
Stolen Device Protection, and turn the toggle switch on. Itll take a few
seconds.
Advertisement
The feature aims to apply a couple of layers of security so that someone who
gets access to your passcode cant get a hold of your entire digital life.
Thats a pretty dangerous thought considering a thief could easily glance at
your screen while youre unlocking your device, and then strategically plan the
theft.
Advertisement
The passcode vulnerability is a big one because having that can let someone
else change your Apple ID password, and Apple ID is crucial for accessing the
Find My app when your iPhone goes missing.
Advertisement
One of the ways in which the Stolen Device Protection feature helps is by
making you enter your biometrics (Face or Touch ID) when youre trying to
change your Apple ID password at a place that your device doesnt recognize as
either your home or workplace. It does this once and then it makes you re-enter
your biometrics one hour later for that extra layer of security and confirm
that its really you.
Youd also need to enter your biometrics twice with a one-hour delay to change
your recovery key and iCloud keychain, which is the place where all your
passwords are saved. Also, of course, you need to use your biometrics to turn
the Stolen Device Protection feature off too, or the feature would be
practically useless.
Show all 8 comments
References:
[1] https://avclub.com/
[2] https://deadspin.com/
[3] https://gizmodo.com/
[4] https://jalopnik.com/
[5] https://kotaku.com/
[6] https://qz.com/
[7] https://theroot.com/
[8] https://thetakeout.com/
[9] https://theonion.com/
[10] https://theinventory.com/
[11] https://gizmodo.com/how-to-tip-gizmodo-1843880833
[12] https://store.gizmodo.com/
[13] https://gizmodo.com/newsletter
[14] https://gizmodo.com/
[15] https://gizmodo.com/
[16] https://gizmodo.com/search
[17] https://gizmodo.com/
[18] https://gizmodo.com/
[19] https://gizmodo.com/latest
[20] https://gizmodo.com/tech
[21] https://gizmodo.com/reviews
[22] https://gizmodo.com/science
[23] https://gizmodo.com/earther
[24] https://gizmodo.com/io9
[25] https://gizmodo.com/tech/artificial-intelligence
[26] https://gizmodo.com/science/spaceflight
[27] https://es.gizmodo.com/
[28] https://gizmodo.com/top-video
[29] https://gizmodo.com/reviews/smartphones
[30] https://gizmodo.com/author/drashid
[31] https://gizmodo.com/stop-everything-enable-stolen-device-protection-iphone-1851188262#replies
[32] https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?via=gizmodo&url=https%3A%2F%2Fgizmodo.com%2Fstop-everything-enable-stolen-device-protection-iphone-1851188262%3Futm_medium%3Dsharefromsite%26utm_source%3Dgizmodo_twitter&text=Stop%20Everything%20You%26%2339%3Bre%20Doing%20and%20Enable%20Stolen%20Device%20Protection%20on%20Your%20iPhone
[33] https://facebook.com/sharer.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fgizmodo.com%2Fstop-everything-enable-stolen-device-protection-iphone-1851188262%3Futm_medium%3Dsharefromsite%26utm_source%3Dgizmodo_facebook
[34] https://www.reddit.com/submit?url=https%3A%2F%2Fgizmodo.com%2Fstop-everything-enable-stolen-device-protection-iphone-1851188262%3Futm_medium%3Dsharefromsite%26utm_source%3Dgizmodo_reddit&title=Stop%20Everything%20You%26%2339%3Bre%20Doing%20and%20Enable%20Stolen%20Device%20Protection%20on%20Your%20iPhone
[35] mailto:?subject=Stop%20Everything%20You%26%2339%3Bre%20Doing%20and%20Enable%20Stolen%20Device%20Protection%20on%20Your%20iPhone&body=https%3A%2F%2Fgizmodo.com%2Fstop-everything-enable-stolen-device-protection-iphone-1851188262%3Futm_medium%3Dsharefromsite%26utm_source%3Dgizmodo_email
[36] https://gizmodo.com/stop-everything-enable-stolen-device-protection-iphone-1851188262
[37] https://gizmodo.com/apple-iphone-theft-protection-ios-17-3-1851095703
[39] https://facebook.com/sharer.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fgizmodo.com%2Fiphone-se-review-1848690777%3Futm_medium%3Dsharefromsite%26utm_source%3Dfacebook
[40] https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?url=https%3A%2F%2Fgizmodo.com%2Fiphone-se-review-1848690777%3Futm_medium%3Dsharefromsite%26utm_source%3Dtwitter&text=The%20iPhone%20SE%20Offers%20Almost%20Everything%20You%20Want%20In%20An%20iPhone
[41] mailto:?subject=The%20iPhone%20SE%20Offers%20Almost%20Everything%20You%20Want%20In%20An%20iPhone&body=https%3A%2F%2Fgizmodo.com%2Fiphone-se-review-1848690777%3Futm_medium%3Dsharefromsite%26utm_source%3Demail
[42] https://www.reddit.com/submit?url=https%3A%2F%2Fgizmodo.com%2Fiphone-se-review-1848690777%3Futm_medium%3Dsharefromsite%26utm_source%3Dreddit&title=The%20iPhone%20SE%20Offers%20Almost%20Everything%20You%20Want%20In%20An%20iPhone
[43] https://gizmodo.com/iphone-se-review-1848690777
[44] https://gizmodo.com/iphone-se-review-1848690777
[45] https://gizmodo.com/iphone-se-review-1848690777
[46] https://gizmodo.com/the-gadgettes-talk-about-apple-rumor-that-might-finally-1848948230
[47] https://gizmodo.com/is-this-the-end-of-apple-s-lightning-cable-1849105142
[48] https://gizmodo.com/apple-iphone-15-review-is-worth-the-upgrade-1850887870

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@@ -0,0 +1,65 @@
[1] Kimberly Hirsh
Follow [2]@KimberlyHirsh on Micro.blog.
[3]Hello [4]About [5]Now [6]I'll Read It [7]Follow [8]Reading [9]Links [10]
Archive [11]Stats [12]Feeds
Now
(This is [13]a now page, and if you have your own site, [14]you should make one
, too.)
Last updated January 28, 204.
Recovery
Im currently focused on my health, recovering from a couple of intense years
of caregiving and research work, doing freelance writing, and applying to be
the librarian at my kids school.
Currently Watching 📺
Star Trek: The Next Generation
Currently Playing 🎮
The Legend of Zelda: Links Awakening
Currently Reading 📚
[15]Cover for Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and LifeBird by Bird:
Some Instructions on Writing and Life
by Anne Lamott
[16]Cover for Age of CageAge of Cage
by Keith Phipps
[17]Cover for How to Be Parisian Wherever You AreHow to Be Parisian Wherever
You Are
by Anne Berest
[18]Cover for Collection Management for YouthCollection Management for Youth
by Sandra Hughes-Hassell
References:
[1] https://kimberlyhirsh.com/
[2] https://micro.blog/KimberlyHirsh
[3] https://kimberlyhirsh.com/hello/
[4] https://kimberlyhirsh.com/about/
[5] https://kimberlyhirsh.com/now/
[6] https://kimberlyhirsh.com/ill-read-it/
[7] https://kimberlyhirsh.com/follow/
[8] https://kimberlyhirsh.com/reading/
[9] https://kimberlyhirsh.com/links/
[10] https://kimberlyhirsh.com/archive/
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How I Pocket Notebook | cygnoir.net
Posted on [13]January 20, 2024 by [14]Patrick Rhone
[15]How I Pocket Notebook | cygnoir.net
Much has been written by smarter minds about the pocket notebook and its
myriad uses. For this post, Ill be focusing on my particular setup and
sharing how I use it in the hopes you might also find it useful.
The hack with the magnetic clips blew my mind. Its genius!
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