Now its time to move forward

| blogging |

It was interesting to read through my old blog and pick out some of my favorite posts. Some of it was great stuff a lot of it was nonsense but it is interesting how the work as a whole has come together over the few years that it has been around.

I love how a blog is so dynamic. It is a living breathing thing, if you view each individual post in relation to that month’s posts in relation to that year’s posts in relation to the whole entire blog you can truly see the identity of the author. The exposed soul of the writer. It is a beautiful thing. The blog learns, grows, laughs, cries, and lives along side the author.

Now that I got that out of my system, I am looking forward to more blogging and learning, and growing. So If I ever decide to move to another blogging platform I will have plenty of material that I can pick and choose from this one! :)

Thank you for reading! Share your thoughts with me on bluesky, mastodon, or via email.

Check out some more stuff to read down below.

Most popular posts this month

Recent Favorite Blog Posts

This is a collection of the last 8 posts that I bookmarked.

Articles from blogs I follow around the net

Highlights from my conversation about agentic engineering on Lenny's Podcast

I was a guest on Lenny Rachitsky's podcast, in a new episode titled An AI state of the union: We've passed the inflection point, dark factories are coming, and automation timelines. It's available on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts. Here …

via Simon Willison's Weblog: Entries April 2, 2026

Flood Fill vs the Magic Circle

Musings from Robin Sloan: Most olive oil production at medium-or-greater scale depends on machines of this kind [over-the-row olive harvester]; they trundle over trees planted in long rows, almost like continuous hedges, and collect the fruit with vibratin…

via Information Overload April 2, 2026

The Blandness of Systematic Rules vs. The Delight of Localized Sensitivity

Marcin Wichary brings attention to this lovely dialog in ClarisWorks from 1997: He quips: this breaks the rule of button copy being fully comprehensible without having to read the surrounding strings first, perhaps most well-known as the “avoid «click here»…

via Jim Nielsen’s Blog April 2, 2026

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