469 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
469 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
[1][fpjs]
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read
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[2][joc]
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read or [3]learn more
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[4]Send More Paramedics
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λ λ λ
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[5]Fogus' [6]Thoughts on life, [7]programming, and [8]thinking
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❤ [9]c [10]clj [11]erl [12]pl [13]frink [14]fth [15]cl [16]org [17]pure [18]icl
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[19]qi ❤
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Follow me on Twitter... [20]● or RSS... [21]●
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Run this blog in [22]mobile
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[23]2024 [24]2023 [25]2022 [26]2021 [27]2020 [28]2019 [29]2018 [30]2017 [31]
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2016 [32]2015 [33]2014 [34]2013 [35]2012 [36]2011 [37]2010 [38]2009 [39]2008
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[40]2007 [41]2006 [42]2005 [43]2004 [44]2003 [45]2002
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[46]The best things and stuff of 2024
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Dec 23, 2024
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Great things and people that I discovered, learned, read, met, etc. in 2024. No
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particular ordering is implied. Not everything is new.
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also: see the lists from [47]2023, [48]2022, [49]2021, [50]2020, [51]2019, [52]
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2018, [53]2017, [54]2016, [55]2015, [56]2014, [57]2013, [58]2012, [59]2011 and
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[60]2010
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Great posts | articles | talks read/watched
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• [61]ELITE: The game that couldn’t be written from Alexander the ok – Elite
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was one of my favorite games on my Commodore 64 1,000,000 years ago and so
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I’m a sucker for articles on this gem. If you’re interested, also check out
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[62]the annotated C64 source code. ^[63]1
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• [64]The Rich History of Ham Radio Culture by Kristen Haring – I missed out
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on the Ham radio craze and only recently learned about its rich history.
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This article is a good overview and starting point if you’re interested in
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learning too.
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• [65]Get to Know Your Japanese Bathroom Ghosts by Eric Grundhauser –
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Describes the interesting Japanese cultural folklore around bathroom
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ghosts.
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• [66]The History of WordStar by Abort Retry Fail LLC – A great historical
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article about one of the most influential software suites ever created.
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Additionally, the comments are a goldmine of additional information and
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corrections and should not be skipped.
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• [67]Combinatory Programming by zdsmith – Describes combinatorial
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programming using motivated examples — a technique that’s surprisingly
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scarce in articles about the topic.
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• [68]Philip K. Dick’s Favorite Classical Music by Open Culture – Discusses
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PKD’s love for classical music and the references to composers and their
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works in his fiction. The post also, includes an [69]11-hour classical
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music playlist for your listening pleasure.
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• [70]Goodbye, Kory by Andy Looney – The world lost Kory Heath, a game
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designer whom I admire immensely. I’ve talked about his magnum opus [71]
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Zendo on this blog before and have run numerous play sessions over the
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years. He was single-handedly responsible for hundreds of hours of
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enjoyment around my home and within my group of friends. The world is much
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the poorer without him in it. RIP. ^[72]2
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Most viewed blog posts by me
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• [73]On method values, part 1 – We released Clojure 1.12.0 this year and so
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I wanted to write about one of the features that I worked on. Method values
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are symbolic references to Java methods that can be used in value contexts
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and the design and implementation of this feature was interesting enough to
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talk about. The feature has been generally well received by the Clojure
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community.
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Favorite technical (and technical-adjacent) books discovered (and read)
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• [74]And so FORTH by Timothy Huang – I found this long out of print Forth
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tome via inter library loan and enjoyed it immensely. It’s a nice blend of
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the ideas in Brodie’s [75]Thinking Forth and something like Geere’s [76]
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Forth: The Next Step. It was a sad day when I had to return this beauty
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back to the library because I could have used another read or two at least.
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• [77]BASIC and FORTH in Parallel by S.J. Wainwright – This style of book is
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exactly the kind of book that I would one day like to write. While the
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specifics of any such book would be different, the central conceit is
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perfect. That is, this book uses BASIC to create a simple stack machine and
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Forth interpreter and then presents simple Forth programs exercising them.
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Favorite non-technical books read
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• [78]Butcher’s Crossing by John Williams – Follows Harvard drop-out Will
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Andrews as he escapes to the American frontier with a wad of cash to find
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adventure and “an original relation to nature”. Andrews eventually finds
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Miller who is more than happy to help the young man part with his money in
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an attempt to find a hidden Colorado valley filled with buffalo that may or
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may not still (if it ever did) exist. The book follows Miller and Andrews’
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(plus a skinner Schneider and driver Hoge) trek throw the frontier and
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describes in harrowing detail their tribulations. I could not stop reading
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and finished the book in a weekend. This one demands multiple reads to
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really absorb the nuance.
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• [79]The Spectral Link by Thomas Ligotti – Contains two stories by Ligotti:
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“Metaphysica Morum” and “The Small People”. The first is quite different
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than most of Ligotti’s work that I’ve read so far. It follows a
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self-described “metaphysical mutant” and blends overtly dark humor with an
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underlying pessimistic philosophy centered on a theme of euthanasia. “The
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Small People” is a dream-like exploration of paranoia and isolation. Both
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stories are a good introduction to the range in Ligotti’s work if you’re
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interested in checking him out.
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• [80]The Corvo Cult by Robert Scoble – Frederick Rolfe (aka Baron Corvo) was
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an little-known Edwardian author who is often remembered more for his
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bombastic personality than his fictional works. This book talks about the
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rise and growth of the still active “Corvo Cult” — an obscure literary
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fandom. In many cases, Rolfe’s fervid devotees matched the controversial
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author in eccentricity, but the true fascination lies in the broad range of
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people drawn to his eclectic works.
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Number of books written or published
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0
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Number of programming languages designed
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0.5
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Favorite music discovered
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• [81]The Paragons – At some point I became interested in the roots of ska
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and The Paragons were the best group that I discovered during my
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explorations.
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• [82]That’s All! by Sammy Davis Jr. – *A fantastic performance from a master
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of the vocal form. The songs are brilliant but the banter between songs
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will keep me listening into the distant future.
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Favorite films discovered
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• [83]Withnail & I – [84]Sam Aaron recommended this film to me years ago but
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I only managed to watch it in 2024. It’s a great example of a dry comedy
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following a couple of screw-ups and their misadventures.
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• [85]Jodorowsky’s Dune – A documentary about the most influential film that
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never was.
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• [86]Requiem for a Dream – I’m probably the last person in the world to
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watch this relentless survey of despair. Not for the faint of heart.
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Favorite podcasts
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• [87]Will Radio – Will Byrd started the year promising a KiloTube of videos
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(i.e. 1024 videos) in 2024 and it’s been a blast following along! There’s
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no one quite like Will and so any chance that I can get to experience more
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of him I will jump on.
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• [88]Eros + Massacre – Another podcast triumph by Samm Deighan surveying the
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weird world of psychotronic cinema.
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Favorite programming languages (or related) I hacked on/with on my own time
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• [89]Joy – Joy is a mindfrak of a programming language in the concatenative
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functional language family. The core of Joy is beautiful and among the
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foundational programming languages in my opinion.
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• [90]Forth – Sticking with the concatenative family in 2024, I continued to
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explore Forth. Interestingly the language is incredibly rich in history and
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conducive to a wide range of techniques and paradigms. I’m unsure if I’ll
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ever find the opportunity to use Forth in anger, but I will say that I
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should come out of my explorations a stronger programmer and program
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designer.
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Programming languages used for work-related projects
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• [91]Java – Working deep in the Clojure compiler means that much of my work
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in 2024 was in Java.
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• [92]Clojure – 2024 marks the 15th year^[93]3 as a full-time Clojure
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programmer and the 1st year as a full-time Clojure core developer.
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• [94]ClojureScript – Less-so now than when I was consulting full-time but I
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occasionally dig into explore the implications of changes to Clojure on
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CLJS.
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• [95]Datalog – The [96]Datomic flavor of Datalog is the flavor of choice for
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database access, be it in-process or in the cloud. Again, my day-to-day
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usage is limited, but I have my share of personal databases hosted on
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Datomic.
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Programming languages (and related) that I hope to explore more deeply
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• [97]Joy – There’s a mountain of deep information on Joy that I would like
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to devour in 2025.^[98]4
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• [99]Mouse – Yet another concatenative language to explore that’s long-dead
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but still has some lessons to teach one such as myself.
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• [100]POP-11 – Another dead language that was designed to support AI
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applications in the 70s and 80s. I love the idea of exploring the language
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and the suite of applications that built up around it.
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Favorite papers discovered (and read)
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• [101]Recursion Theory and Joy by Manfred von Thun – Joy’s underlying
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reliance on combanatory programming manifests deep in the language even to
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the degree that recursion in the language is implemented in userspace via
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recursive combinators. This paper describes the “Joy Way” and its
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relationship to recursion.
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• [102]A Simple Applicative Language: Mini-ML (PDF) by D. Clement and J.
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Despeyroux and T. Despeyroux and G. Kahn – Presents a beautiful definition
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of ML language and its compilation to an abstract machine.
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Still haven’t read…
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I Ching, A Fire upon the Deep, Don Quixote, and [103]a boat-load of sci-fi
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Favorite technical conference attended
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• [104]Clojure/conj 2024 – This was the first Clojure conference that I
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played a somewhat active part in organizing. Let me be clear, my part in
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the matter was minimal at best, but it did provide me a window into the
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complexities of organizing a conference. The conference itself was a blast
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and it was great to meet old and new Clojure friends as well as [105]
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colleagues!
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Favorite code read
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• [106]Restrained Datalog in 39loc by Christophe Grande – I’ve learned over
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the years that if Christophe writes a technical article then it behooves me
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to study it deeply. The highlight of the year from Christophe was his
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simple, yet rich, Datalog implementation in 39 lines of Clojure code. It’s
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clear that 39 lines of Clojure goes a long way and especially so when a
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master of the language plays in it.
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• [107]Post-Apocalyptic Programming by Serge Zaitsev – I love the central
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conceit of the post, summarized as “what technology could/should we create
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in the absence of modern computing niceties?” The post starts with a CPU
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emulator, builds a language for it, and motives its decisions along the
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way. There’s a brilliant hard science fiction story in here somewhere, I
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can feel it.
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• [108]MINT – MINT is highly inspirational to me as a lesson in minimal
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programming language design. Based on Forth, MINT makes various design
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decisions and trade-offs to remain small and fast.
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Life-changing technology “discovered”
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Nothing this year.
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State of plans from 2023
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• Clojure 1.12 – Released in [109]early September and one of the biggest
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releases in years as far as feature additions go.
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• Go much deeper down the concatenative rabbit-hole – An unmitigated success!
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• Publish even more non-technical writing – My research into the
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Corvo-related archives stored at Georgetown University was a success.
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However, my efforts in writing up my findings has stalled.
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Plans for 2025
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• [110]Clojure 1.13 – Thinking around the 1.13 release is ongoing and we’d
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like to get it out sooner rather than later. Stay tuned.
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• [111]clojure.core.async next – We’ve laid the groundwork for a new version
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of core.async and released it as version 1.7.701. We’d love to leverage JDK
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21+ virtual threads to vastly simplify core.async’s implementation and have
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started along this path in earnest.
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• [112]Simplify my blog – I’d love to move away from WordPress in 2025.
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• [113]Juxt – Juxt is my exploration in functional concatenative language
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design built on the JVM. It’s not yet clear to me if or when I would ever
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release this into the wild, but the explorations have been great fun and
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I’ve used Juxt as a vehicle for finding relevant books and papers.^[114]5
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That said, most of my programming time is spent maintaining and evolving
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Clojure, but there are rare moments of time that I can spend on Juxt, and I
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plan to continue to do so in 2025.
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[115][juxt-274x300]
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2024 Tech Radar
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• try: [116]Boox Go 10.3 tablet – recommended by many colleagues
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• adopt: [117]Blank Spaces app – helps to avoid phone brain-drain
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• assess: [118]TypeScript – What does it buy me over JS?
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• hold: [119]Zig – This looks like a dead-end for me
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• stop: [120]Joy of Clojure 3rd edition – Another edition is unlikely but
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hopefully something else may come of this work… this is an evolving
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situation.
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People who inspired me in 2024 (in no particular order)
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Yuki, Keita, Shota, Craig Andera, Carin Meier, Justin Gehtland, Rich Hickey,
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Nick Bentley, Paula Gearon, Zeeshan Lakhani, Brian Goetz, David Nolen, Jeb
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Beich, Paul Greenhill, Kristin Looney, Andy Looney, Kurt Christensen, Samm
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Deighan, David Chelimsky, Chas Emerick, Stacey Abrams, Paul deGrandis, Nada
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Amin, Michiel Borkent, Alvaro Videla, Slava Pestov, Yoko Harada, Mike Fikes,
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Dan De Aguiar, Christian Romney, Russ Olsen, Alex Miller, Adam Friedman, Tracie
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Harris, Alan Kay, Janet A. Carr, Wayne Applewhite, Naoko Higashide, Zach
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Tellman, Nate Prawdzik, Bobbi Towers, JF Martel, Phil Ford, Nate Hayden, Sean
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Ross, Tim Good, Chris Redinger, Steve Jensen, Jordan Miller, Tim Ewald, Stu
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Halloway, Jack Rusher, Michael Berstein, Benoît Fleury, Rafael Ferreira, Robert
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Randolph, Joe Lane, Renee Lee, Pedro Matiello, Jarrod Taylor, Jaret Binford,
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Ailan Batista, Matheus Machado, Quentin S. Crisp, John Cooper, Conrad Barski,
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Amabel Holland, Ben Kamphaus, Barry Malzberg (RIP), Kory Heath (RIP).
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Onward to 2025!
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:F
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━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
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1. I also recommend and excellent YT video [121]“The Making of ELITE”. [122]↩
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2. Dave Chalker also wrote about Kory on his blog at “[123]Remembering the
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Master: An Inelegant Eulogy for Kory Heath“. [124]↩
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3. This is strictly my work-life time. My total use of Clojure has been
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longer. [125]↩
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4. Sadly the death of Manfred von Thun brought the death of Joy with it. The
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literature the language is indeed deep but it’s finite and has stopped
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growing entirely. I would like to help fix this stagnation if I can in
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2025. [126]↩
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5. You can see the current [127]Juxt bibtex on Github. [128]↩
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Related posts:
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1. [129]The best things and stuff of 2023
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2. [130]Goodbye Sir Arthur Clarke
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3. [131]The best things and stuff of 2012
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No Comments, [132]Comment or [133]Ping
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Comments are closed.
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[134][ ][135][Submit]
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Copyright © 2002 - 2011 by [136]Fogus ([137]license information)
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[138]read about my policy on affiliate links
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Theme heavily influenced by [139]Ryan Tomayko
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[ | [140]Log in | [141]top]
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References:
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[1] http://www.amazon.com/Functional-JavaScript-Introducing-Programming-Underscore-js/dp/1449360726/?tag=fogus-20
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[2] http://www.joyofclojure.com/buy
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[3] http://www.joyofclojure.com/
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[4] https://blog.fogus.me/
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[5] http://fogus.me/me/
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[6] http://fogus.me/static/
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[7] http://fogus.me/fun
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[8] http://blog.fogus.me/linkage/
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[9] https://github.com/search?q=username%3Afogus+language%3Ac
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[10] https://github.com/search?q=username%3Afogus+language%3Aclojure
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[11] https://www.erlang.org/
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[12] https://www.swi-prolog.org/
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[13] http://futureboy.us/frinkdocs/
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[14] https://colorforth.github.io/
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[15] http://www.cons.org/
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[16] http://orgmode.org/worg/org-contrib/babel/
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[17] https://agraef.github.io/pure-lang/
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[18] https://clean.cs.ru.nl/Clean
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[19] http://shenlanguage.org/
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[20] http://www.twitter.com/fogus
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[21] http://blog.fogus.me/feed/
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[22] http://blog.fogus.me/index.php?wptheme=Carrington+Mobile
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[23] https://blog.fogus.me/2024/
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[24] https://blog.fogus.me/2023/
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[25] https://blog.fogus.me/2022/
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[26] https://blog.fogus.me/2021/
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[27] https://blog.fogus.me/2020/
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[28] https://blog.fogus.me/2019/
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[29] https://blog.fogus.me/2018/
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[30] https://blog.fogus.me/2017/
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[31] https://blog.fogus.me/2016/
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[32] https://blog.fogus.me/2015/
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[33] https://blog.fogus.me/2014/
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[34] https://blog.fogus.me/2013/
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[35] https://blog.fogus.me/2012/
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[36] https://blog.fogus.me/2011/
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[37] https://blog.fogus.me/2010/
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[38] https://blog.fogus.me/2009/
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[39] https://blog.fogus.me/2008/
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[40] https://blog.fogus.me/2007/
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[41] https://blog.fogus.me/2006/
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[42] https://blog.fogus.me/2005/
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[43] https://blog.fogus.me/2004/
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[44] https://blog.fogus.me/2003/
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[45] https://blog.fogus.me/2002/
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[46] https://blog.fogus.me/2024/12/23/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2024/
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[47] https://blog.fogus.me/2023/12/18/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2023/
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[48] http://blog.fogus.me/2022/12/13/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2022/
|
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[49] https://blog.fogus.me/2021/12/27/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2021/
|
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[50] http://blog.fogus.me/2020/12/31/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2020/
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[51] http://blog.fogus.me/2019/12/30/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2019/
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[52] http://blog.fogus.me/2019/01/02/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2018/
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[53] http://blog.fogus.me/2018/01/02/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2017/
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[54] http://blog.fogus.me/2016/12/29/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2016/
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[55] http://blog.fogus.me/2015/12/29/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2015/
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[56] http://blog.fogus.me/2014/12/29/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2014/
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[57] http://blog.fogus.me/2013/12/27/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2013/
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[58] http://blog.fogus.me/2012/12/26/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2012/
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[60] http://blog.fogus.me/2010/12/30/the-best-things-in-2010/
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[61] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lC4YLMLar5I
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[62] https://elite.bbcelite.com/c64/
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[63] https://blog.fogus.me/2024/12/23/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2024/#fn:elite
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[64] https://thereader.mitpress.mit.edu/the-rich-history-of-ham-radio-culture/
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[65] https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/japans-bathroom-ghosts
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[66] https://www.abortretry.fail/p/arrogant-difficult-powerful
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[67] https://blog.zdsmith.com/series/combinatory-programming.html
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[68] https://www.openculture.com/2014/05/philip-k-dicks-favorite-classical-music.html
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[69] https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1RsnkX0bQWd2CVWW8jcxBR
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[70] https://new.wunderland.com/2024/11/20/goodbye-kory/
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[71] https://blog.fogus.me/2014/10/23/games-of-interest-zendo/
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[72] https://blog.fogus.me/2024/12/23/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2024/#fn:chalker
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[73] https://blog.fogus.me/2024/08/19/on-method-values-part-1/
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[74] https://books.google.com/books/about/And_So_FORTH.html?id=iqUZAQAAIAAJ
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[75] https://thinking-forth.sourceforge.net/
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[76] https://archive.org/details/forth-the-next-step-ron-geere
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[77] https://www.amazon.com/BASIC-FORTH-Parallel-S-J-Wainwright/dp/0859341135?tag=fogus-20
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[78] https://www.amazon.com/Butchers-Crossing-Review-Books-Classics/dp/1590171985/?tag=fogus-20
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[79] https://www.amazon.com/Spectral-Link-Thomas-Ligotti-ebook/dp/B00LE52256/?tag=fogus-20
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[80] https://www.amazon.com/Corvo-Cult-History-Obsession-2014-10-09/dp/B01FIY47AQ/?tag=fogus-20
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[81] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o6TI2FfqGJ8&pp=ygUOInRoZSBwYXJhZ29ucyI%3D
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[82] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/That%27s_All!
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[83] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Withnail_and_I
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[84] http://sam.aaron.name/
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[85] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jodorowsky%27s_Dune
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[86] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Requiem_for_a_Dream
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[87] https://www.youtube.com/@WilliamEByrd
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[88] https://cinepunx.com/podcast-episodes/eros-massacre/
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[89] https://hypercubed.github.io/joy/joy.html
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[90] https://www.forth.com/forth/
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[91] https://mail.openjdk.org/pipermail/amber-spec-experts/2023-December/003959.html
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[92] http://www.clojure.org/
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[93] https://blog.fogus.me/2024/12/23/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2024/#fn:15th
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[94] http://www.clojurescript.org/
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[95] http://www.datomic.com/
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[96] https://www.datomic.com/
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[97] https://hypercubed.github.io/joy/joy.html
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[98] https://blog.fogus.me/2024/12/23/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2024/#fn:joy
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[99] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mouse_(programming_language)
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[100] https://poplogarchive.getpoplog.org/poplog.info.html
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[101] https://hypercubed.github.io/joy/html/j05cmp.html
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[102] https://www.cs.tufts.edu/~nr/cs257/archive/dominique-clement/applicative.pdf
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[103] http://blog.fogus.me/2012/09/21/the-amazing-colossal-science-fiction-ketchup/
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[104] https://2024.clojure-conj.org/
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[105] https://www.nubank.com/
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[106] https://buttondown.com/tensegritics-curiosities/archive/restrained-datalog-in-39loc/
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[107] https://zserge.com/posts/post-apocalyptic-programming/
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[108] https://github.com/monsonite/MINT
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[109] https://clojure.org/news/2024/09/05/clojure-1-12-0
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[110] https://www.clojure.org/
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[111] https://github.com/clojure/core.async
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[112] https://blog.fogus.me/2024/12/23/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2024/
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[113] https://gist.github.com/fogus/6d716276678b0698c96dd13e040c71eb
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[114] https://blog.fogus.me/2024/12/23/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2024/#fn:juxtbib
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||
[115] https://blog.fogus.me/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/juxt.jpg
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||
[116] https://www.amazon.com/BOOX-Tablet-Go-10-3-ePaper/dp/B0D4DFT3W3/?tag=fogus-20
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[117] https://apps.apple.com/us/app/blank-spaces-launcher/id1570856853
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[118] https://www.typescriptlang.org/
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[119] https://ziglang.org/
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[123] https://critical-hits.com/blog/2024/11/20/remembering-the-master-an-inelegant-eulogy-for-kory-heath/
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[130] https://blog.fogus.me/2008/03/19/goodbye-sir-arthur-clarke/
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[133] https://blog.fogus.me/2024/12/23/the-best-things-and-stuff-of-2024/trackback/
|
||
[136] http://fogus.me/
|
||
[137] http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/
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[138] http://blog.fogus.me/about/mo-money/
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[139] http://tomayko.com/
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[140] https://blog.fogus.me/wp-login.php
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