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Cyberdeck Users Weekly

Cyberdeck Users Weekly

By Paul Miller

A podcast from Paul Miller about how to own technology.
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Decentralized messaging with John Cantrell of Juggernaut

Cyberdeck Users WeeklyJun 17, 2020

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01:11:48
Linux on mobile with Linmob

Linux on mobile with Linmob

Peter's way to mobile Linux Motorola A780: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorola_A780 Motorola A910: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorola_A910 Openmoko Neo FreeRunner: http://wiki.openmoko.org/wiki/Neo_FreeRunner Really old stuff Hardware 2000: Agenda VR3: The first Linux PDA https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agenda_VR3 2002: Sharp Zaurus (SL-5500): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharp_Zaurus 2004: Motorola E680, A780 Software GPE https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GPE_Palmtop_Environment Opie https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Palmtop_Integrated_Environment Gone Websites handhelds.org https://web.archive.org/web/20090304221733/http://www.handhelds.org/geeklog/index.php linuxtogo.org https://web.archive.org/web/20090318024046/http://www.linuxtogo.org:80/ Nokia N900, lineage and offsprings Maemo https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maemo (apologies for forgetting Maemo Leste, it's awesome. But: As long as it does not ship with a GUI for calling and texting, I doubt it's super relevant.) http://maemo.org/ Nokia N900 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nokia_N900 Nokia N9 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nokia_N9 Sailfish OS https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sailfish_OS Jolla https://jolla.com/ 10 Year Anniversary blog post: https://blog.jolla.com/happy-birthday-jolla/ Facebook Live Event video: https://www.facebook.com/jollaofficial/ (starts after ~5 minutes) Running a GNU/Linux userland on an Android kernel Original Jolla announcement, that they would run Android hardware https://www.theregister.com/2013/09/17/jolla_sailfish_os_android_support/ libhybris: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hybris_%28software%29 Halium https://halium.org/ Ubuntu Touch Ubuntu Edge https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ubuntu_Edge Ubuntu Touch (Wikipedia) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ubuntu_Touch ArsTechnica coverage of the announcement https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2013/01/canonical-unveils-ubuntu-phone-os-that-doubles-as-a-full-pc/ Ubuntu.com:
Nov 09, 202102:07:45
Jesus and Bitcoin

Jesus and Bitcoin

Who is J.M. Bush @jmbushwrites Thank God for Bitcoin Christianity 101 BibleProject Romans 15:4 The Most Important Commandment Micah 6:8 The law was our teacher Bitcoin 101 The Bullish Case for Bitcoin We reap what we sow Jonathan Blow - Preventing the Collapse of Civilization The Moral Case for Fossil Fuels Bretton Woods system Denial of self Christian questions about Bitcoin The rich young ruler The love of money is the root of all kinds of evil Easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle Proverbs 30:7-9 Give to Caesar what is Caesar's Zealot Vengeance is mine, says the Lord New FinCEN rule for Bitcoin custody Daniel 6 Jimmy Song and George Mekhail pod about Thank God for Bitcoin You Are What You Love God has made the wisdom of this world look foolish 1 Samuel 22 The poor you will always have with you Is Bitcoin the mark of the beast? Revelation 13:11-18 One more book plug Noded 76 with the Authors of Thank God for Bitcoin Thank God for Bitcoin: The Creation, Corruption and Redemption of Money
Dec 30, 202002:39:38
Our excellent dystopia with Matt Odell

Our excellent dystopia with Matt Odell

Really glad to have Matt Odell as a return guest. Instead of an interview we used this as an opportunity to talk about our wonderful dystopia full of 30 hour battery life, folded proteins, and zero privacy. Enjoy! SHOW NOTES Apple Silicon Mac Mini vs iMac 5K Syncing Bitcoin on M1 Why it's fast Community builds of Visual Studio Code The Verge's MacBook Air review Redox OS with Jeremy Soller (I was trying to remember the word "UEFI") Apple bricks its own hardware Jailbreaking your T2 Mac PopOS PopShop Your Computer Isn't Yours (Matt's right there's no version with 32GB of RAM) @bunniestudios - I can't think of anyone better than @marcan42 to be taking on a project like porting Linux to Apple Silicon Macs! GrapheneOS Chromium OS Verified Boot bunnie's Precursor open source mobile hardware The Facebook headcrab Pod people in Ready Player One Protein folding is "solved" Matt shames Paul for using TikTok The Social Dilemma Lex on AlphaFold 2 What machine learning isn't Michael Rectenwald on "The Google Election" Edward Snowden Signal Signal is the Messaging App of the Protests Apple bans Bitcoin wallets (in 2014) Follow Matt mattodell.com Matt's laptop (My mnemonic is busted, I bought Micro USB cables)
Dec 04, 202001:59:59
Local-first and freeform software with James Long

Local-first and freeform software with James Long

In classic podcasting style, I managed to frontload this episode with highly technical questions up front and then we slowly morphed the conversation into a more conceptual what-is-the-future-of-computers sort of thing. James is a really wonderful guy from what I've learned over the decade or so I've been following him on Twitter and you should def check out Actual if you're in the market for budgeting software. SHOW NOTES James Long Prettier Actual Budget Stripe Mozilla XUL React Reason rustfmt Silicon Valley season three, episode six The Local-first software manifesto CRDT Clarity Money ewwww Quantified Self Roam "I want Roam to be not just a tool for thought, but a tool for computation" @jlongster Using CRDTs in the wild Jupyter Observable Literate programming Light Table A Visual History of Eve: 2014 - 2018 Microsoft Fluid Framework Project Xanadu If you have 100 hours to read a million words, check out this Wired piece on Xanadu SHOUTOUT Ryan Florence
Oct 08, 202001:27:30
Is tech actually good tho

Is tech actually good tho

This is a tough one because I'm fairly undecided. Are we sliding toward an apocalypse? Is too much getting worse to expect anything to get better? Is YouTube actually kind of a great thing? I've been stuck on this long enough that I figured I should just put it out there and let you decide. A lot of different thoughts here but I swear it's all connected. Thanks to ZappyCode for buying a fake ad this week! SHOW NOTES GaryVee still preaches the hustle gospel in the middle of a pandemic "No problem can be solved from the same level of consciousness that created it." @pierre_rochard (quoting Einstein) The pleasure of walking tall YouTube Udemy Melodics Amazon Citi Bike "How often does the software you use on a daily basis (including web apps etc) succeed at fulfilling it's core purpose, without unreasonable levels of friction?" @masonremaley Halo Band
Aug 29, 202055:56
GPT-3

GPT-3

No offense to @jayriverlong, but I think his think piece on GPT-3 is kind of dumb: "In a GPT-3 World, Anonymity Prevents Free Speech" So I did a whole podcast about it. Also check out this book: How Innovation Works
Aug 01, 202044:00
Better won't be easy

Better won't be easy

Today's episode is a work-in-progress essay about the role of UX and "ease of use" in tech, with a specific focus on Bitcoin. Here are some links to what I'm talking about in the episode. The full essay will be published on my blog someday. Thank you for your patience. Bitcoin Node Q+A Bitcoin Governance Strike app Bitcoin bites the bullet Utreexo "Don’t make me think" thread
Jul 04, 202049:37
A computer from scratch with Jonathan Pallant

A computer from scratch with Jonathan Pallant

So I screwed up and didn't select my nice podcasting microphone for this episode and am instead speaking to you through that joke of a pinhole mic on my MacBook Pro. The good news is that we're not here to listen to me, we're here to hear from the fascinating Jonathan Pallant: Town Mayor, retro computing enthusiast, and embedded systems engineer. Jonathan Pallant, Town Mayor of St Ives, Cambridgeshire @therealjpster thejpster on GitHub St Ives 42 Technology Monotron and some context Monotron Monotron - a 1980s style home computer written in Rust Monotron - Building a Retro Computer in Embedded Rust C64 interrupts Memory segmentation DLLs On The Metal podcast Google Fuchsia Redox OS Windows Terminal Neotron and abstraction Neotron MS-DOS Cylinder-head-sector Neotron 32 KiCad EDA Let's Try PCB Etching! OSH Park Tiva C Series TM4C123G LaunchPad Neotron 528ST JLCPCB SMT assembly service VideoCore Explain yourself! "Woohoo! Made my EME-232 into Drive B: so I can boot from the Gotek but still read 3" disks. @ZxSpectROM, this has been so much fun :)" Commodore 128 Bill Herd's Story of Commodore from the Computer Engineers' Perspective
Jun 24, 202001:20:16
Topical tech news #1

Topical tech news #1

Something that's been refreshing about doing this new podcast is how little of my time is spent thinking about what "big" companies are doing. But these big companies keep doing stuff. So let's talk about it! Skate 4 Skate 4 has been announced! Vergecast segment about Skate 4 in 2019 (at around the one hour mark) Will Skate be the "Quake 3: Arena" of skateboarding games? Session Skater XL Burnout Paradise What I also want is a skateboarding shooter game. Trick combos generate shields. Hey email app Vergecast interview with @dhh and Rep. David Cicilline Starting to think big companies and big government sort of deserve each other. Will whatever antitrust tribunals we end up with this time around catch the subtlety and just ask Apple to allow sideloading? Or are we going to get a "Apple forever" mentality and enshrine it into law somehow? Also patents = monopoly. Audio tweets Twitter audio tweets I almost tried to care about this but I didn't pull it off. I always wonder if we can make it to a post-literate society tho. Interesting to think about. PS5 reveal It looks so dumb I'm sorry. Also it has approximately 10,000x more "next-gen" games than the Xbox so far so I'm feeling pretty bullish on it. Might have to learn to use those stupid thumbsticks. Wish there was a duck demo. Lego robots These are getting very, very good. Scratch AND Python? Yes, please.
Jun 20, 202036:06
Decentralized messaging with John Cantrell of Juggernaut

Decentralized messaging with John Cantrell of Juggernaut

On this episode I had the pleasure of speaking with John Cantrell, the lead of the Juggernaut decentralized messaging project. I'm very enamoured with the idea of decentralized, peer-to-peer, e2ee messaging. But there are so many drawbacks and pitfalls, and it's hard enough to get your friends to even use something like Signal, that I had begun to give up hope. Lately, however, a handful of Lightning-based messaging experiments have popped up, and it feels like they're on to something. @JohnCantrell97 Juggernaut Accouncing Juggernaut blog post whatsat Lightning messaging demo Lightning key send OP_RETURN "Micropayment" Plex GrapheneOS The ecosystem is moving Sphinx app Dr. Maxim Orlovsky Lightning Labs Loop Decentralized Twitter LN-Juggernaut on GitHub
Jun 17, 202001:11:48
Books I like

Books I like

These are some books I like! Fire in the Valley by Michael Swaine and Paul Freiberger The Mandibles by Lionel Shriver The Soul of a New Machine by Tracy Kidder Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson AI Superpowers by Dr. Kai-Fu Lee How the Internet Happened by Brian McCullough Life After Google by George Gilder The Bitcoin Standard by Saifedean Ammous The Order of Time by Carlo Rovelli The Master Algorithm by Pedro Domingus Seasteading by Joe Quirk Reamde by Neal Stephenson Stories of Your Life and Others by Ted Chiang Permutation City by Greg Egan The Information by James Gleick The Moral Case for Fossil Fuels by Alex Epstein Where Wizards Stay Up Late by Katie Hafner Rainbows End by Vernor Vinge
Jun 13, 202001:03:32
The command line and you

The command line and you

Today's episode is a little different. Basically, I want to convince you that you can and should learn to engage with the command line on your computer. There are a lot of tools that are only accessed, or best accessed, through the command line. In a perfect world maybe this wouldn't be the case, but in the world we live in the command line unlocks a lot of the hidden potential for your computer, and I feel like it's almost essential in the "owning" of modern technology. Here are the basics: pwd - short for "print working directory" Type this into the terminal and press enter. You'll see the full path to wherever you "are" right now on your computer. ls - short for "list" This will show the files, folders, and executables that are in your current working directory. cd - short for "change directory" If you just type cd nothing happens, you need to tell it where you want to go. A few examples: cd .. go to the parent directory cd foldername go to foldername cd ~ go to your home directory If you get lost in the command line or you want to do something you don't know how to do using the command line, try xdg-open . (note the trailing dot, that means "right here"). This should open the the current directory in your GUI file browser. Check out this week's newsletter (I'll link it on Twitter) for a more in-depth guide. Quick recommends Here's the list of basic tools I start the episode off with. DuckDuckGo for search. BitWarden for password management. Signal for messaging. Refurbished enterprise SFF PCs for home server. Fastmail for email. (Even cooler people are using Tutanota these days, but I haven't tried it personally) Firefox + AdBlocker Ultimate for web browsing.
Jun 06, 202027:31
Better software with William Casarin

Better software with William Casarin

Today I'm joined by William Casarin who is one of my favorite twitter follows. William is a freelance software developer, he runs a bitcoin consultancy called bitcoin wizard, and he's constantly building wild and weird projects that seem to "own" technology in the sense I'm always chasing after. Explain Yourself (talking about tweets) "thinking about hooking CI build events into my system notifications..." NixOS xmonad z - jump around pickdrop Noise Protocol Framework TLS Diffie-Hellman key exchange snow WireGuard Tailscale ZeroTier NEXT TWEET "just scraped 20k chess puzzles from http://wtharvey.com maybe I'll get around to using my C game engine for a 3d+2d fics/lichess client with puzzle support." chess-puzzle-db Vulkan NEXT TWEET "bitcoind + usdt + ebpf + bpftrace ohhh I'm going to have fun with this." secp256k1 NEXT TWEET "So when people ask me why I write mostly C now..." Haskell Jonathan Blow BitlBee NEXT TWEET "I need to figure out a good fediverse crossposting setup..." ActivityPub Mastodon Gopher "I have a gopher client running on my paper tablet lol" Gopher) Project Gemini sacc gopher client Second Life MUD Snow Crash reMarkable nix-bitcoin "I think for my satellite nix-bitcoin node, I would want..." nix-bitcoin Nix: The Purely Functional Manager
Jun 03, 202001:05:26
Facts

Facts

"You can't stop other people from reading that which you disagree with." @pierre_rochard on Noded 0.62.0 Speech laws and regulation and platform moderation are always about what "others" should see. Because you have to see it to moderate it. Just something to think about. The first amendment The way I'm thinking about "free speech," as a principle, is that I'm not going to use my power proactively to silence your speech. The actual law, of course, is about prohibiting the government from using its power to silence speech. But we're adults, we can talk about right and wrong it's okay. Censorship is not an educational tool, it's a tool of control. You don't know what's being censored because you never see it. That was the whole point. So how do you know whether the right things are being censored? The potential for misapplication and the lack of means of correction are sky-high. But platforms like Facebook and Twitter are in a dumb no-man's land where their "speech" is primarily the promulgation of other people's speech. I personally would not want to be forced promulgate information I find abhorrent. But I also don't want to stop other people from accessing information I disagree with. Censorship doesn't restrain conspiracy theories, it validates them. The cure for wrongthink isn't a ban, it's better information. I also believe people who have facts on their side aren't afraid of people hearing "different facts." And as great as I sound to myself when I say these things, none of it is useful as a prescription for how Twitter or Facebook should act. Maybe there's like a range of speech-adjacent activities we can define: Censorship: actively using power to limit what someone can say or hear. Non-promulgation: "silencing" others through inactivity. Promulgation: republishing others. Self-publication: creating your own platform to host your own speech or the speech of others. Promulgation is really some of the most powerful speech there is. And, of course, there's no promulgation without non-promulgation. Otherwise you're just transmitting static. Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube are self publishers with a truly historic level of promulgation, and now they're trending toward non-promulgation, which seems only reasonable. Meanwhile government is flirting with censorship, because it really has no power other than to destroy and oppose. Meanwhile meanwhile I'm thinking I need to get myself some of that self-publishing apparatus to secure and promote the ideas I think are good. As a sidenote, I do find it sad sometimes how narrow a view we often have of what is acceptable and useful discourse, but there's really nothing I can do to change that. If it's easy to stay within the appropriate bubble of thought, then times seem good. But it leaves you with no recourse if you start getting extra-bubble ideas. And it might be actively harming the formation of extra-bubble ideas (which was the whole point of non-promulgation, obviously). So what can I do?
May 30, 202050:34
Mesh networking with Richard Myers

Mesh networking with Richard Myers

Richard Myers is a "decentralized applications engineer" at Global Mesh Labs, which is a very good job title in my opinion. We talk about his work on Lot49, a protocol for incentivized mobile peer-to-peer communication. A Richard Myers primer @remyers_ on Twitter goTenna goTenna Mesh Global Mesh Labs Tales from the Crypt #88: Richard Myers Stephan Livera's podcast with Richard Myers The opportunity RISE:NYC Small Business Resiliency Program Lightning Network NetBlocks One NSA data center How to Hide in Plain Sight (with Pictures) - wikiHow How Lot49 could help Lightning Network for BEGINNERS playlist Lot49: A lightweight protocol to incentivize mobile peer-to-peer communication Tor (onion routing) whatsat Juggernaut Sphinx goTenna VINE protocol Where we're at lightning payment over (simulated) HAM radio Lnproxy - Proxy connections from a patched C-Lightning Lot49 in C++ Bigger picture: when Netflix? Incentives Build Robustness in BitTorrent NYC Mesh Change.org Abolish the FCC petition (11 signers) IPFS A quick plug for my favorite programming language Square Crypto's Rust-based LDK c-lightning
May 28, 202001:37:35
What a Bitcoin future looks like

What a Bitcoin future looks like

I did a pod about Bitcoin, I hope that's okay! Bitcoin resources I recommend Tales from the Crypt Noded Bitcoin Audible Satoshi Nakamoto Institute The Bitcoin Standard A Bitcoin Future What if everything you bought got cheaper every year, but your salary stayed the same? You'd eventually go to space, right? Human material needs are in some sense finite, but human wants are infinite. Human time is absolutely finite, but human ingenuity -- the ability to do more with the same amount of time -- is multiplicative and exponential. In an economy we create value as we transact voluntarily, and in an economy with money we use money as an intermediary to store that value we create. In a Federal Reserve economy, that value creation is skimmed off the top and given to banks so they can give us more credit card debt. In a Bitcoin economy, we all get to benefit from value creation. Bitcoin wouldn't fix theft, or the desire to steal. It just makes theft no longer our national monetary policy.
May 23, 202053:47
IoT with Internet of Shit

IoT with Internet of Shit

Internet of Shit: the origin story @internetofshit Product Hunt "Samsung smart fridge leaves Gmail logins open to attack" "Hackers can hijack Wi-Fi Hello Barbie to spy on your children" "how many servers could it take to turn on a light bulb lol" A history of IoT JavaScript Raspberry Pi Gartner 2014: "In 2020, 25 Billion Connected "Things" Will Be in Use" Smart socket botnet Highlights of IoT Philips Hue Sonos Litron Brilliant Cats Petnet outage A better way? (Probably not) Home Assistant Apple HomeKit HUGE: INTERNET OF SHIT FULLY ENDORSES GOOGLE HOME Alexa everywhere I always forget GlassWire exists and then I look like a dummy when I talk like it doesn't exist. Sony patent where you yell "McDonald's!" to skip an ad Less internet, less shit Stagg EKG electric kettle Oh dang there's a Bluetooth version now IoT might be useful if you can "own" it Nest Thermostat Ring + police UniFi doorbell (early access) Apple Bounjour / Rendezvous Internet of Shit merch Stickers
May 20, 202045:06
"Next-gen"

"Next-gen"

The next generation of consoles Faster storage, ray tracing, higher resolutions. Unreal 5: "nearly a polygon per pixel" But what about Simulation? Single shard MMOs? Multiplayer physics? To me, Dwarf Fortress still feels like the most next-gen game on the planet Minecraft with RTX is the perfect example of what's going well and what's not improving in games. Portable assets and avatars As photogrammetry matures and we approach photorealism, assets might be more shareable. And easier to create. See: Quixel Megascans There's probably a rough DIY photogrammetry aesthetic that will differentiate non-pro games from "pro", but it will still look great IMO. If there's unification of the art pipeline, "remixing" game assets and game modes seems more possible. That would be truly groundbreaking. What I want is a skateboard game that's also a multiplayer shooter. Cheating What would a game be like where everyone was running the maximum amount of cheats they can get their hands on? If you think about it, cheating is a form of "AR" for a virtual space. Maybe it doesn't have to be a bad thing for all games, it could be a feature! What about the holy grail of anti-cheat: peer to peer multiplayer games. It works with chess! I think it could come down to multiplayer physics simulation. If your character is only capable of producing forces within a certain range... those could be the rules you abide by. just thinking out loud. Single shard Eve Online and Dual Universe are "next-gen" in this sense. Beyond single shard: the "metaverse." Whatever happend to VRML? Digital scarcity Reamde. Hats. Real money poker. "The dream is, I want a 12 year old camper from thailand to help pay for his family's food by killing me in an online video game and my slow reflexes" - Matt on TFTC How do you have digital scarcity without centralized control? Bitcoin actually only solved Bitcoin's problem in this regard. In Minecraft you choose to have scarcity to maximize fun. What's the point of games? Factorio StarCraft Overwatch Path of Exile Minecraft
May 16, 202055:03
Redox OS with Jeremy Soller

Redox OS with Jeremy Soller

Everybody needs an operating system. But do we need a new kind of operating system? Right now we basically have three major options: Windows, macOS, and Linux. Windows and macOS aren't open source, but that's not the only thing that's wrong with them. Linux is open source, but oftentimes that feels like its only advantage over the other two. For years now I've dreamed of an alternative desktop OS with a fresh new foundation. Something we can build the future on with more speed and confidence because it got the fundamental abstractions correct. An operating system shouldn't feel bloated or fragile or like a monumental hack on top of 70s-era technology. It should be the minimal layer of software that can effectively and safely abstract hardware and allow multiple user programs to run together in harmony. For the past five years, my guest Jeremy Soller has been actually building an alternative operating system: Redox OS. I think it might be our best hope. WARNING This conversation is extremely technical. In a sense, this is the sort of technical stuff that most users never have to think about. But I find it interesting because someone has to care about these technical details or nothing would get done. I'm interested in the low-level details because I think getting those right can enable more capabilities and excellence at the user level. If you absolutely hate operating system talk, you can fast forward to around the hour mark where we talk about the Linux computer company Jeremy works at: System76. Setting the stage Redox OS System76 Pop_OS Rust Window 3.1 Assembly language A Taxonomy of Kernels Monolithic kernel Unikernel Microkernel How drivers work PS/2 port LPC bus L4 microkernel Trying Redox in a virtual machine QEMU The problem with phones UBports PinePhone Librem 5 Making Linux computers Thelio desktops Lemur Pro laptop KiCad FreeCAD coreboot How to pitch in Follow @jeremy_soller on twitter Follow @redox_os Redox OS website Donate to Redox OS Redox Summer of Code Security Meltdown and Spectre oreboot
May 13, 202001:37:32
Hmm are we using computers correctly?

Hmm are we using computers correctly?

A skateboard for our minds The computer is "a bicycle for our minds," as Steve Jobs once said. Do you ever watch those velodrome events in the Olympics? They either have a rolling start, or they have to have someone holding them up for a standing start. The bikers look silly and helpless until they get moving. And then they go in a loop, round and round, very, very fast. If you turn a little too hard your wheels slide out from under you and you eat it. When bikers crash in the velodrome the road rash is horriffic and their paper-thin costumes are torn the shreds. What if we thought of the computer as a "skateboard for the mind?" What would a "skateboard" computer be like? How do we get there? The Cuckoo's Egg “The future is already here – it's just not evenly distributed." - William Gibson I brought this up on the last episode, but I'm reading a book called "The Cuckoo's Egg," and it's making me very jealous of how much agency this guy has over his machines. In 1989! The Unix Philosophy Smalltalk Wearables I don't want to brag but I've been thinking about how we use computers, and how I'm disappointed by how we use computers, for a while. Here's a piece I wrote about the history of wearable computers in 2012, and how I was pretty sure Google Glass was the wrong direction. Dyson sphere Along the lines of affective computing, another piece I wrote even longer ago attempted to explain how much our computers are dropping on the floor when they interact with us. My comparison was to a Dyson sphere. Here's the Wikipedia definition: A Dyson sphere is a hypothetical megastructure that completely encompasses a star and captures a large percentage of its power output. Wrap-up There are some really cool people in the computer industry who are challenging the assumptions of inherent complexity. Jonathan Blow, Casey Muratori, Raph Levien. Sometimes they might come across and curmudgeons on Twitter. But I think they're fighting the good fight. There's also a really good talk about what's gone wrong in computing called called "The Mess We're In" by Joe Armstrong, RIP. Finally, I recommend the On The Metal podcast for a dive into this from fairly technical perspective. There's a whole battle raging just to make it simpler and more secure to boot a computer. I know not everyone can dip into this particular battle usefully, but it's at least cool to know it's happening. I love riding my bike. And I'm actually really bad at skateboarding. But I want to get better.
May 09, 202047:52
Bitcoin with Matt Odell

Bitcoin with Matt Odell

This week I'm joined by Matt Odell, the co-host of the Tales from the Crypt podcast. Not only is Matt Bitcoin-famous, he's also hugely informed on technology in general, especially when it comes to security and privacy. I'm grateful to have him as my first guest on Cyberdeck Users Weekly, and grateful to have someone as practically paranoid as Matt in the world pushing for better ways to use and own technology. Here's what we talked about: Matt's podcast Tales from the Crypt Bitcoin Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System Bitcoin Core on Github Dear Family, Dear Friends, A letter to all of you who still have no bitcoin Not bitcoin Ethereum Web 3.0 Namecoin Dentacoin Cryptography PGP GPGTools Blockstream Satellite "Nyms" WebAuthn Signal Messaging Lightning Network Juggernaut Sphinx Matt's dead man's switch FinalMessage SCANDAL: Paul doesn't use a VPN Mullvad VPN Carl Dong's Mullvad top-up service Practical Bitcoin privacy BTCPay Server Wasabi Samourai JoinMarket Coldcard Phones PinePhone Librem 5 GrapheneOS Open source image processing Paul's Bitcoin setup Let Paul scam you out of BTC myNode "Bugatti of nodes" Matt's recommended resources Matt's YouTube guides Matt Odell's website bitcoin-intro
May 06, 202002:19:40
The Optimistic Case for Decentralization

The Optimistic Case for Decentralization

WELCOME TO THE POD In this episode of Cyberdeck Users Weekly we'll review a bunch of tech giants and what their potential weaknesses are: AMAZON: MAKE IT MORE LIKE DEPOP Amazon can't track counterfiets (scale fail) and it uses its vendors for market research (evil). Solution Why can't I just order from local stores and self-run warehouses? Why can't I buy masks from the guy who stockpiled masks? See also: https://www.theverge.com/2020/1/14/21065894/google-pointy-acquisition-in-store-products-stock-inventory-shopping GOOGLE: MAKE IT MORE LIKE RIPGREP Google simultaneously knows too much about me and yet can't know enough to give me truly amazing and deep results (scale fail), and it attempts to control what I see (evil). Solution Run searches locally before hitting the network. Most search just me trying to find that one CSS Tricks guide to Flexbox. See also: https://minbrowser.org/ SEAMLESS: MAKE IT MORE LIKE SQUARESPACE Seamless takes a gigantic cut. What are they reallllyy actually offering? So much less than even something like Uber. Solution A protocol you can adhere to for listing things. See also: https://twitter.com/susie_c/status/1255971900599046144 FACEBOOK / YOUTUBE: MAKE IT MORE LIKE WORDPRESS Like Seamless, Facebook starts out by letting you build an audience, and then at some point it pivots and starts to charge you for access to your own audience. Solution Matrix? Mastadon? Jitsi? See also: https://pauljmiller.com/posts/how-to-fix-the-internet.html APPLE: MAKE ME MY COMPUTER CARTRIDGES! Alternatives to Apple: Pi / Pine / Librem / Redox OS / Oxide Computer / System76 I didn't bring this up on the pod but my dream for phones is that when you "retire" one you remove the battery and plug it into your home server setup and it becomes part of the borg that hosts all your local services. UH-OH: BIG PROBLEMS WITH DECENTRALIZATION: Identity (unsolved) Payments (Bitcoin) Decentralization of messaging (Lightning?) Polish and ease of use BIG systems like operating systems and UI frameworks are rare or bad and possibly unwanted in the first place? WRAP-UP THOUGHTS: HOW TO EVALUATE A TECHNOLOGY: Is it actively harming me? Can it be taken away, and how easily?
May 02, 202043:05