Now its time to move forward
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
- My Custom Miniflux CSS Theme
- SQLite DB Migrations with PRAGMA user_version
- 2024
- 2023
- Ladybird on Debian Stable
Recent Favorite Blog Posts
This is a collection of the last 8 posts that I bookmarked.
- Pluralistic: AI "journalists" prove that media bosses don't give a shit (11 Mar 2026) from Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
- Avi Alkalay: Uniqlo T-Shirt Bash Script Easter Egg from Fedora People
- Offline 23 hours a day from Derek Sivers blog
- Pluralistic: California can stop Larry Ellison from buying Warners (28 Feb 2026) from Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
- On Alliances from Smashing Frames
- Acting ethically in an imperfect world from Smashing Frames
- Diffusion of Responsibility from Smashing Frames
- My AI Adoption Journey from Mitchell Hashimoto
Articles from blogs I follow around the net
Keeping sponsor lists up-to-date
Keeping sponsor lists up-to-date across multiple READMEs and websites is tedious - so I wrote a tool to automate it.
via Carlos Becker March 25, 2026Code as a Tool of Process
Steve Krouse wrote a piece that has me nodding along: Programming, like writing, is an activity, where one iteratively sharpens what they're doing as they do it. (You wouldn't believe how many drafts I've written of this essay.) There’s an incre…
via Jim Nielsen’s Blog March 24, 2026Paris's Bicycle Mayor and the Hormuz Shock
Why Energy Independence is an Enduring Antidote to Trump's Demented Chaos
via High Speed March 24, 2026Generated by openring