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Johan Bové

Johan Bové

Johan Bové

Johan Bové

Is this Wordle history another variant of Flappybird ? Not getting the whole hype and why it's worth so much money for NYT.

Johan Bové

So fortunate that I appeared in a universe where "Crockett's Theme" by Jan Hammer exists.

I have fond memories of my first CD with synthesizer songs and this is one of my all-time favourite tunes.

Jan Hammer's history as a composer is also worth the read.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jan_Hammer

Johan Bové

In my spare time I like to read the history of songs, albums and bands on Wikipedia. The history of the song "Let's all chant" by Michael Zager Band is one of those gems. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Let%27s_All_Chant

Johan Bové

Does anyone actually enjoy the way contacts are organized on Android? My contacts list has been very difficult to manage due to the merge history of Gmail, Facebook, LinkedIn and others and now it's a bit of mess.

Johan Bové

Gerolamo Cardano

"Cardanus" redirects here. For the lunar crater, see Cardanus (crater). history, math, syndicated

Johan Bové

Johan Bové

Director’s Cut: Ted Nelson on Hypertext, Douglas Englebart, Xanadu and More - YouTube

Reading "Weaving The Web" by Tim Berners Lee on his history of creating the WWW and he mentions his encounter with Ted Nelson in 1992. Looked up the state of Xanadu and found this video of Ted. Wondering that his vision of how we can access and handle digital documents away from the "paper-plain" will some day become reality. Was wondering if Chris Aldrich would have written something about these ideas and just recently he did.

Johan Bové

My reasons to support the Gemini Internet Protocol

3 min read

Why do I believe Gemini is great for personal Internet presences? First of all, it's a real grass-roots initiative which I am very excited about.

If you're reading this, chances are high you are already using Gemini. But for history reasons and to share my opinions of Gemini I would like to offer you here some views of mine.

Collecting some of the strong-points of Gemini from my perspective of having some experience with Gopher and running personal websites.

Fast and lightweight

  • It's very easy on the system resources. So the protocol works really well on slower hardware without any problems. Hosting on a Raspberry Pi3 is easy-peasy.
  • Since there are no fancy design in Gemini capsules, it is really optimized for low bandwidth.
  • It should work really fine on a feature-phone, like for KaiOS. I don't believe there is a client yet for KaiOs at this time.
  • It's fairly easy to build clients and servers for the protocol.

Simple yet complete

  • The specifications provide enough functionality to do basically what you would expect to be able to do online.
  • Much lower learning curve compared to Gopher and HTML. You can start publishing Gemini pages within minutes.
  • Even-though the syntax is limited, it still gives enough playroom for creative expression.
  • Use of TLS certificates promises security and privacy.
  • It is more international than US-centric Gopher.
  • The procol supports the UTF-8 character set so any language can be used to publish sites in.
  • This should help make the protocol more popular in non-ascii wielding regions in the World.

Easy to publish

  • Content will be probably first of all stored in static text files which are future-proof and easy to maintain.
  • Many servers already available that require minimal technical skills.
  • Yes, you still need a server, but there are many collectives which you can join to facilitate this.

Focus

  • No popups, animations, videos, sound effects.
  • Focus on actual content instead of fluff and effects.
  • No advertisemens and commercial tracking.
  • No Facebook, Google or Twitter.

Accessible

  • Power of formatting goes into the clients or readers. Like in the good old days of the early Web, people are expected to style the content to their own liking.
  • It's pure text, has simple navigation rules, so should be great for people with disabilities.
  • No JavaScript so you really see what you get.

And on top of this, the young Gemini community is driven to make this a success!

I'm sold.

ps. I published this first in plain text on my Gemini capsule and now that I copy paste this into a HTML document I can really tell just how easy it is to publish on Gemini.

Johan Bové

Solarpunk: A grand dress rehearsal in remaking our present and future history.

This talk was delivered at Het Nieuwe Instituut in Rotterdam on the 18th of May 2018. I spoke along side Jaya Klara Brekke as part of the public start of the Terraforming Earth programme, a series of lectures and design labs about 21st-century society. solarpunk, syndicated

Johan Bové

Hawkwind

Hawkwind are an English rock band and one of the earliest space rock groups. Their lyrics favour urban and science fiction themes. hawkwind, history, music, syndicated

Johan Bové

Somehow my @deezer playlist and last.fm scrobbling history was filled up with French modern songs between September 12 and 24. I changed the Deezer and Last.fm passwords today. Clearing the Last.fm history is a bit of a chore as it does not allow multiple files at once to be deleted. Wondering what happened though?

Johan Bové

DEV Podcasts - The History of IRC and the Evolution of Community Tools

In this episode, we talk about the history of IRC and the evolution of other community building tools with Sara Chipps, co-founder of Jewelbots and director of public Q&A at Stack Overflow, and Jason C McDonald, CEO and Lead Developer at MousePaw Media.

Johan Bové

Inferno (Dante)

Inferno (Italian: [iɱˈfɛrno]; Italian for "Hell") is the first part of Italian writer Dante Alighieri's 14th-century epic poem Divine Comedy. It is followed by Purgatorio and Paradiso. The Inferno tells the journey of Dante through Hell, guided by the ancient Roman poet Virgil. books, dante, history, italian, syndicated

Johan Bové

Johan Bové

``git log --all --graph --oneline`` is an excellent way to see the history of a git repository.

Johan Bové

Isaac Newton Changed the World While in Quarantine From the Plague

Credited as one of the great minds of the Scientific Revolution, Newton's 17th-century findings have molded our modern world. history, psychology, syndicated

Johan Bové

KarachiBeachRadio

(Not a radio station), Karachi Beach Radio uses oral history and experimental sound as media of inquiry to study complex relationships between the ecology of the commons and Karachi’s rapidly commercialising (public) Seaview coastline.
KBR listens to the commons as it happens; and as it disappears… asking what the future of the commons might be? It records the insistent presence of local ecologies that create the commons. It also records the sounds of toxic agents and invasive flows that are now a part of it; and the transformations of open space into impermeable projections of generic world cities.