Unintentionally did a 3.5mi hike today by taking the wrong fork. Ups and downs, muddy, the works.
Kolby and I are done. š

Unintentionally did a 3.5mi hike today by taking the wrong fork. Ups and downs, muddy, the works.
Kolby and I are done. š
Welp, Iām really gonna need that coffee this morning. Kolby, our puppers, decided 4:30 would be a great time to get up. I was able to ask him to lay down, which means I get another hour, and just like clockwork he woke me up and 5:30. š
Iāve done a little poking around my Mastodon timeline this morning and started going through Pocket to see what I was sharing this morning.
First cup down, couple more to go, letās get started. āļø
All the designers there have a very different taste and style from each other, but they all work together so well. If anything, I felt a little intimidated being the youngest, feeling I might muck it all up. But everyone here was determined to not let me fail. I donāt think I knew what the best job could feel like before I had it.
This is a great piece on Louis time at The Iconfactory.
Louie went on to work for Apple and did the icons for iTunes among other things. After that he started Pacific Helm in San Francisco before landing in Portland to create Parakeet. Heās an amazing designer and if youāre an app creator you may want to hire him to do some beautiful icons for you.
The New York Times has a report about which divisions are being hit the hardest, and a big one is Google’s future OS development group, Fuchsia.
I check in on Fuschia from time to time and Iād love to see it land on a computing device like Android or Pixel. Perhaps something a bit more powerful, like a web server?
This futuristic dream-like scenario is being sold to us as a real scientific possibility, with billionaires planning to move humanity to Mars in the near future.
It would be so much better to invest all that time and resources to saving this planet. After that, please, pursue your conquest of Mars.
Itās worse than that, though, because if you were delivered a newspaper with random stories scissored out, youād know that there were missing stories.
As expected Twitter is beginning to decay. And it has become a bit of a ghost town in my timeline, I do check on occasion, but refuse to post.
Asked whether his recent tweets ā spreading tawdry conspiracy theories about the attack on Nancy Pelosiās husband, embracing COVID misinformation, mocking trans people, making groan-inducing, jokes, and exposing himself as a right-wing troll ā has harmed Teslaās brand image, Musk responded with characteristic mocking defiance.
Musk is deluded to the point that he only cares about his popularity at the expense of Tesla.
The board should let him go and get someone who can run the company.
At this point in the pandemic, almost everyone in the U.S. has had COVID-19āwhether they know it or not. But something more alarming is happening: A growing number of people are getting reinfected with SARS-CoV-2.
Iāve been wondering for a while if Iām just that out of shape or if COVID did some damage to my lungs. Most likely Iām out of shape but I feel really bad for all the poor souls with long COVID.
In the pantheon of old Fords, the ā32 coupe and various Model As are always favorites with hot-rodders and collectors.
Iām not what Iād call a car guy but I do run across a car on Barn Finds or Jalopnik Iād love to have. My Dad has a ā37 Chevy Coup he restored from a rust bucket. I need to find some pictures. Itās a beautiful car.
Welcome to Smithsonian Open Access, where you can download, share, and reuse millions of the Smithsonianās imagesāright now, without asking.
The Smithsonian is absolutely amazing. I think they need an iOS and Android App for sharing. š
The cost-saving effects of layoffs are almost non-existent. So why? Itās one thing to be losing money and need to cut costs. Itās another to be a pretty profitable organization with layoffs that donāt wind up cutting costs.
Microsoft, Google, and Amazon have laid off around 50,000 folks recently. The tech sector continues to take hit after hit after hit.
I know WillowTree is in great shape but this kind of movement in the industry can spread. Hereās hoping weāve seen the last of it for a while.
Iām the Google SRE who made sure to hand off the pager in the minutes after I got laid off on 2023-01-20. If youāve worked at Google (or maybe even if you havenāt), you may have heard some version of this story. Hereās what actually happened:
This fella is dedicated. After being laid off he felt the need to track down someone to hand his job off to.
I admire the dedication but Google didnāt feel dedicated enough to you to let you keep your job. Keep that in mind. Weāre all expendable to corporations.
āSup
More pictures of Flynn canāt hurt, right?
The best way to own your content is to have your own blog.
Sure, Mastodon is open and a great way to share simple thoughts, but you can do that with your blog and echo it to Mastodon or link directly to a post on your blog.
For posts over 280 characters I typically post a link to it, otherwise itās just a copy of the text.
We got some good family photos durning Thanksgiving.
We have Kim and I, our children, and our grand children.
Kim and I with the grandkids.
The cousins on Kimās side of the family. It was so nice to have them all together.
Just watched this little feller run across the lawn, crawl in a drain pipe, then run over and hop on one of Kimās barrels. Good thing she didnāt see him. Itās Chunker, the one that likes to raid her bird feeders. šæļø
I was terrible with my picks last weekend. I went two for five! Ack! šµāš«
It was a real letdown to see San Diego and Baltimore lose. I was happy to see the Giants win. Poor Minnesota, they canāt catch a break.
Here are this weeks picks. š
#4 Jacksonville at #1 Kansas City
Jacksonville has the youth and a great coach but I believe time has run out for the up and comer. Iāll take Kansas City. Easy pick.
#3 Cincinnati at #2 Buffalo
This is a tough one. Cincinnati got some really great breaks as Baltimore did everything possible to lose. Great teams cause havoc.
On the flip side the Bill did their best to lose to Miami but managed to pull it out of the fire.
The Bills were my pick to win it all so of course theyāre my pick.
#6 New York at #1 Philadelphia
This one is tough for me. New York has been playing really great football and seeing their NFC rival for the third time this season who knows whatāll happen. Philly should be well rested and ready to roll but Iām going to take the New York Giants as my upset special.
#5 Dallas at #2 San Francisco
While the Cowboys looked unstoppable against the Buccaneers they were playing a not so great team. Tom Brady looked 45 and frightened all night. Heck Iād be terrified of Micah Parsons hitting me. The man is a one man wrecking crew.
Having said all that. The team to most fear right now is the San Francisco 49āers. Give me the 9āers.
Good morning! I hope your coffee is strong and youāre ready to read some random links? āļø
While this chapter may have ended, our story is not over. We’ll continue improving our other apps, creating new apps, doing amazing design work for our clients, and posting awesome wallpapers to Wallaroo and Patreon.
We have taken everything great about Tweetbot and used it as the starting point for the future of Ivory.
Iāve been posting on this topic for a while now. Musk is a big caca-doodoo-head and shutting down third-party Twitter clients isnāt a good idea. Why? Theyāre much better than Twitterās own client.
Twitter shouldāve reached out to these tiny app creators and offered to work with them to include advertising in their timeline streams or offered to buy a few of them and turn each app into a unique client for various Twitter endeavors. Like one that specializes in video and one that specializes in news. Something like that. Give folks more options, not fewer. š«”š¦
By contrast Mastodon, being a completely open platform, is flourishing thanks to third-party clients! There are so many new iOS Apps for Mastodon itāll make your head spin. Some have been around for years and have seen a resurgence, others are brand new. They give folks options. Variety, the spice of life!
One other very important point to make. Hitching your wagon to a company that can shut off access at any time was a dangerous move. These indie devs knew what they were doing, but it doesnāt hurt them any less.
Iāve been switching between three very good clients; Toot!, Ivory (beta), and Ice Cubes. Each have something about them I really enjoy, but there are so many more just waiting in the wings.
Also, Musk is failing in many ways. Twitter is a mess and Tesla stock is plummeting. Iām surprised Tesla Board hasnāt fired him. š„
So maybe it’s surprising that any defense attorneys for the Proud Boys have said anything coherent, let alone incisive. Yet right there in the opening arguments, Sabino Jauregui, who is defending Tarrio, went straight at the prosecution’s weak spot: TheĀ government is putting the insurrection’s foot soldiers on trial, while leaving the man who led and directed them, Donald Trump, not just untouched by the law but running for president again. (Supposedly.)
To this I say āDuh!ā Yes, that slimeball TFG should be in jail.
Hereās hoping Justice is served.
The best interfaces to Twitter, on any platforms, were all native apps on the iPhone and Mac. Weāre now on the cusp of a new frontier with Mastodon, and itās Appleās utterly clueless bureaucratic App Store reviewers who are doing their best to lock the new playgroundās gates before they even open.
John is talking about a beautiful, highly functional, Mastodon client called Ice Cubes. The Apple App Store review process can throw some really weird reasons at folks why they wonāt approve an app. Stream was rejected three times because I use the word subscribe in it and they thought I was collecting money and wanted their cut. They insisted I use in app purchase for subscriptions. šµāš«
Short story long, Ice Cubes was finally approved and I honestly believe someone at Apple read Johnās piece and fixed the situation. šŖš¼
From its humble beginnings as a personal project in the mid-90s, PHP has grown to become one of the most popular languages for web development, powering everything from small blogs to large enterprise applications.
I know what youāre gonna say, PHP is garbage. I donāt think so. Itās been used for years and years and while some folks may find it strange I think itās a much better language than JavaScript and it continues to improve.
Legislators of the nation’s least-populous state are taking a brave stand against modernity and climate action. They’re sponsoring SJ0004, “Phasing out new electric vehicle sales by 2035,” an uncomplicated bill that expresses the state’s goal to phase out sales of new EVs by 2035 and asks Wyoming’s industries and citizens to do their civic duty in resisting the EV.
These folks are just ridiculous. When the world becomes so difficult to live in theyāll all ask āWhat caused this.ā We all know whatās causing it. Us, continuing to do things we know are destroying the planet.
But I’m conscious of the fact that what I’m doing involves writing; and I have two fears when I’m doing this, neither of which has had the good effect of compelling me to stop. I’m afraid that I’m writing badly, and I’m afraid that it’s boring.
I love reading Daveās stuff, always have. Like Dave I started my weblog to become a better writer. It hasnāt worked but I still enjoy doing it. Keep up the good work Dave!
Support Indie Developers. Thatās it, thatās the commentary.
This year was a unique year. I started the year without a job or a place to live. My house in San Francisco just sold, so I had house money in my checking account. Now what?
Great read from Sam. Iād love to become a nomad, traveling the country with Kim and our animal family in a big RV. Yes, id like to make it our full time home!
Anywho, Sam talks about his year of Van Life and it sounds so exciting.
Maybe someday.š¤š¼
So you want to make a new JS framework
Web development is still way too difficult. In 2011 I realized most of it boils down to DevOps, not the code so much. We could write, debug, and test code locally but were at the mercy of how the network was configured to make it scale. Yes, we found and fixed bottlenecks in code as we went along, but the DevOps folks were the real heroes.
Go read what Mr. Rupert outlines in his post. Itās ridiculous it takes that much to publish a new JavaScript framework.
Also, why are folks still making new JavaScript frameworks? š¤
Regal Cinemas, the second-largest chain of movie theaters in the U.S., will close 39 locations after its parent company Cineworld filed for bankruptcy in September, according to legal filings obtained by Variety.
I love seeing movies on the big screen, always have, but the new realities of COVID-19 have made me a very cautious person. Iāve seen two movies in theaters since the pandemic hit, both at very quiet times for a theatre.
It is sad to see our Charlottesville Regal hit by the closures. It is a really nice theatre.
Me circa 2001, Oslo, Norway.
Letās see how Mr. Musks management of Twitter is going!
TL;DR - itās a mess.
The Verge and New York Magazine
Those who remain at the company mostly fall into two camps: people trapped by the need for health care and visas or cold-eyed mercenaries hoping to ascend through a powerāÆvacuum.
This piece is really wonderful. Take a few minutes and read the entire thing. Musk is so arrogant and is burning Twitter to ashes one bad move at a time.
Instead, he interrupted. āI was writing C programs in the ā90s,ā he said dismissively. āI understand how Ācomputers work.ā
All thatās missing in that scene is him smacking the lady heās talking to on the butt then taking a drag off of his cigar and a sip of bourbon.
Dude, I was also writing C programs in the 90ās and Iāve been around the block a few times. When someone is investing valuable time out of their day to explain things to you, listen. Only talk if you need clarification. Twitter is a giant machine with many moving parts. I cannot imagine one person knowing and understanding how it operates. Web services are hard, even little ones. Can you imagine how hard it must be to serve millions and millions of users daily?
Arrogant and not a genius.
In case there was any doubt about Twitterās intentions in cutting off the developers of third-party apps, the company has quietly updated its developer agreement to make clear that app makers are no longer permitted to create their own clients.
We are sorry to say that the appās sudden and undignified demise is due to an unannounced and undocumented policy change by an increasingly capricious Twitter ā a Twitter that we no longer recognize as trustworthy nor want to work with any longer.
A beautiful goodbye written by one of Twitterrificās long term caretakers. Sean has spent most of his career working on the best Twitter client on the platform. It was ahead of itās time in so many ways.
It was the first desktop client, the first mobile client, one of the very first apps in the App Store, an Apple Design award winner, and it even helped redefine the word ātweetā in the dictionary.
If anything we need to remember Twitterrific for all its firsts. It made Twitter usable on a mobile phone. It paved the way.
Twitter realized it needed an iOS client of its own, bought Tweetie, and promptly turned it into a user experience mess. Many of us used third-party clients because they were just better.
Flynn loves to cuddle. Tonightās winner, my foot. š
According to Twitter some client applications stopped working because they broke a rule.
What rule? We donāt know which rule they broke. What we do know is what their own Developer Agreement and Policy states.
V. Termination.Ā Twitter may immediately terminate or suspend this Agreement, any rights granted herein, and/or your license to the Licensed Materials, at its sole discretion at any time, for any reason by providing notice to you.
Emphasis is mine. I copied that text right out of Twitterās Developer Agreement and Policy
The folks at The Iconfactory and Tapbots havenāt heard a word from Twitter. They just had their access turned off.
What bothers me about Twitterrificās final day is that it was not dignified. There was no advance notice for its creators, customers just got a weird error, and no one is explaining whatās going on. We had no chance to thank customers who have been with us for over a decade. Instead, itās just another scene in their ongoing shit show.
Twitterrific was the first Twitter application. Not the first for iOS, it was the first.
Iāve been using it since the first version built with the official iOS SDK. The original version worked with jailbroken phones, if memory serves?
Of course how can you blame Craig for being extremely pissed off? Of course itās Twitterās right to cut off access. The Iconfactory knew that when they built Twitterrific, but to not have the courtesy ā never mind courtesy, the guts ā to contact all the companies impacted by the change and give them a little runway so they could at least remove the apps from sale and inform their dedicated customers of the pending change.
Twitterās new owner is a coward and not nearly as smart as everyone thought.
Thank you Iconfactory! Thank you for over 15-years of Twitterrific and all the beautiful software you create.
Hereās wishing you all the best for your next great project! ā¤ļø
You can support The Iconfactory on Patreon or go purchase one of their beautifully designed apps. My current favorite is Wallaroo.
I really wanted the Giants to beat the Vikings but I didnāt expect it to happen, so I was pleased to see them win 31-24.
I was shocked to see San Diego lose to Jacksonville. When it was 27-7 I changed the channel, watched some random series I canāt remember now, and crawled into bed around 2AM. I didnāt check the score until this morning. It was a big shock.
Baltimore at Cincinnati are next. Go Baltimore! š
Ms. Priss enjoying her best life.
I picked up the domain chaosmonkey.party because Iād LOVE to make a site dedicated to the MAGA wing of the GOP.
They are the Chaos Monkey Party, the CMP. Of course there should be a nice logo of a Monkey, a poo flinging monkey (think of the Democrat Elephant or GOP Donkey as inspiration.)
Any web experts want to help make that site?
That lump is Flynn. š
He decided Kolbyās bed was enough like a blanket that he crawled under it a few minutes ago. Goofy kitty.
Good morning! I hope y’all are enjoying your favorite morning wakeup beverage, I know I am. My first cup of the magic elixir know the world over as coffee is sitting next to me and it’s delicious. āļø
I’m not using my “normal” workflow this morning. Instead of using a combination of Tot and the Micro.Blog app on my iPhone I’m using the wonderful MarsEdit from my Mac. Believe it or not, it feels kind of weird to be doing it this way. But, MarsEdit is such a wonderful tool. Happy to have it. Here we go!
Iconfactory
News quickly spread on Twitter and Mastodon that a wide range of third party apps like Twitterrific, Tweetbot, Echofon, and many others had been disabled. Strangely, Twitterrific for macOS continues to work normally. We cannot say for certain why some clients are unaffected, but it seems possible that there is a new (seemingly unstated and unannounced) policy that is only being applied to apps with large numbers of users.
As of this writing Twitterrific is still blocked from connecting to Twitter. Good old Elon, Mr. Free Speech, is being spiteful and blocking third-pary apps from working. It seems it’s only the third-party apps with the biggest user base.
So far Twitter hasn’t explained why they did it. Spite, I’d imagine.
Oh, it’s worth noting that Twitterrific is the granddaddy of all Twitter clients and while working on it the word “tweet” was coined. They definitely made history. Ollie, the little bird at the right, is Twitterrific’s mascot and in many ways has become synonymous with Twitter.
I’ve been a Twitterrific user for years and years and I have enormous respect for everyone at The Iconfactory and wish them all the best. ā¤ļø
Pitchfork
The Grammy-winning rock guitarist Jeff Beck has died, his family announced. āAfter suddenly contracting bacterial meningitis, he peacefully passed away yesterday,ā the family shared in a statement. āHis family ask for privacy while they process this tremendous loss.ā Beck was 78 years old.
Another legend gone before his time. RIP Mr. Beck.
The Guardian
Joe Biden said the situation in Brazil was āoutrageousā after supporters of former president Jair Bolsonaro invaded the countryās congress, presidential palace and supreme court on Sunday, with some senior US lawmakers calling for the far-right figure to be extradited from the US.
Of course Bolsonaro took a page from the Trump Playbook of Stupidity and encouraged his supports to try to overthrow the government. The world looks to the United States for direction. TFG is a real asshole and has put democracy around the world at risk. Both men will get their just deserts someday.
Douglas Hill
In an iOS app, itās technically fairly easy to also use code written in C, C++, Objective-C, Objective-C++ or JavaScript. In this article, weāll look at how to call JavaScript code from Swift using JavaScriptCore. As an example, Iāll go through the steps of adding a JavaScript dependency to my iOS reading app to remove tracking parameters from URLs.
Really nice piece by Mr. Hill. I would love to integrate Read Later into Stream someday and it would also be wonderful to embed Readability JavaScript into Stream to make that happen. It would also help standard RSS feeds because many only include a snippet of the full article text. Having Readability support would allow Stream to parse the text of the original web page so you’d get the full article in the article view. Just one of many things I’d love to so.
Raw Story
The wife of a 2020 Iowa Republican candidate for Congress has been arrested and accused of filing 23 fraudulent votes for her husband, reports Business Insider.
If you want to know what the GOP is guilty of on a daily basis just listen to the things they scream about the most.
Seems they like to cheat at elections, among other things.
Goto 10
So I knew I wanted something different. It turns out that a new OS had been getting a big marketing push: IBM OS/2 Warp. This was v3 of OS/2 and letās get into its history a bit.
I heard this a lot when I was part of Visio. A gentleman approached me at Windows World in Atlanta one year and said “I guarantee if you port Visio to OS/2 you’ll sell 100,000 copies right away." Apparently he worked for IBM.
We chose not to do it because the market was just too small for us to use precious resources for the port. We did have versions that ran on Classic MacOS, NT PPC, and NT Alpha, but never OS/2. The NT versions were fairly straight forward. The Mac version used a porting kit called Alar. I can’t find any references to it or I’d give y’all a link.
Bjango
In an effort to reduce the final app size of iStat Menus, weāve been investigating ways to slim down our app icon. Itās currently about 1.4MB, which is normal for an app icon, but a decent percentage of our bundle.
Marc Edwards does a deep dive into app icon sizes and his attempt to scale back the size a bit.
Cycling News
Chris Froome has warned of the long-term effects of COVID-19, arguing that many riders are struggling for months post-infection and highlighting the potential risks to the heart.
Yes, long term COVID-19 is a real deal and it effects young, old, and even the fittest of fit professional athletes. Wear a mask and stay safe out there.
Bloomberg
Apple Inc. is working on adding touch screens to its Mac computers, a move that would defy long-held company orthodoxy and embrace an approach that co-founder Steve Jobs once called āergonomically terrible.ā
I can understand folks saying it’s ergoonomically terrible to use a touch screen on a desktop computer, but occasionally tapping the screen on a laptop isn’t bad at all. I’ve seen many a person do this with their touch screen Windows laptops over the years and they don’t seem to have any sort of fatigue associated with it.
Microsoft’s Surface Pro seems like the perfect Windows device to me. It’s a tablet that can be use with a full sized monitor, keyboard, and mouse, and it runs Windows. I could write code on one of these devices. I can’t do that with an iPad.
Fox Sports
Sometimes, there’s a guy like Stetson Bennett IV, except that there isn’t really, not exactly like him anyway, not when this young man of unassuming excellence had to be a footballing miracle-worker just to become Georgia’s quarterback, never mind everything he’s done since.
I love me an underdog. Now, lets see if Stetson Bennett can have an NFL career. I hope so.
Also, the real Championship game was Georgia vs. Ohio State in the Peach Bowl. That was one amazing football game.
Don Melton on Mastodon
Today is the twentieth anniversary of #Apple’s #Safari Web browser being publicly introduced. That stunning debut happened at the Macworld Expo in San Francisco on January 7, 2003. And, of course , I was there. Here’s what I wrote about that event ten years ago:
Happy Birthday Safari! š„³ All us Mac loving people owe Don “Gramps” Melton a big thanks for putting together the team that went on to create Safari. Thanks, Don!
Itās the first weekend of NFL Playoffs, exciting stuff! š
49ers over Seahawks
Chargers over Jaguars
Bills over Dolphins
Vikings over Giants
Ravens over Bengals UPSET ALERT
And, my upset special for the first round of playoffs.
Buccaneers over Cowboys
Kolby has a rough life.
Remnants from last nights slushy snow. āļø
Still, one gets the feeling that if any of the huge platform-producing tech companies could have their way, theyād have us all writing proprietary apps for their platform only. Right this second, the web feels like itās in a good spot, but it also feels like the native vs. web battle is a swinging pendulum.
As a native application developer Iāve been waiting for the web to replace all native software development SDKās, and weāre closer now more than ever.
Web browsers can now persist data locally and work in offline modes. Developers can now write code in many different languages and convert that to Web Assembly. The browser is, essentially, the operating system.
At a personal level I want to keep doing native work because itās nice to use the frameworks as intended and not have to rely on one of the cross platform tools, like React Native, to catch up. But I donāt see a problem with folks choosing web technologies and creating a 100% web app that works great on desktop and mobile.
If anything, old guys like me, should be concerned about web technologies being the choice for everything. When the web happened we didnāt have JavaScript. It was hacked together in a short period of time, a week if memory serves, and named JavaScript because Java was the new hotness. It has all kinds of quirks but it is beloved by developers. Add Microsoftās TypeScript to the mix and you get some strong typing that spits out as JavaScript.
JavaScript is eating the world and if I want to write code in the future, Iāll have to learn it. š
Another thing worth noting: most native apps do use web technologies. We use the internet to pull data from the web and render it using native OS support instead of web technologies. My app, Stream, uses RSS, Atom, and JSON Feed, feeds from any website provided by the user. Thatās all web stuff.
This is a worrisome trend for the web. Mobile is the future. What wins mobile, wins the Internet. Right now, apps are winning and the web is losing.
Mr. Coyierās piece sounded so familiar I went back through my blog and found a link to Chris Dixonās piece above. In 2014 folks were worried about native apps beating the web. It hasnāt happened. The web will keep chipping away until itās all we have or the web is completely replaced by something else.
Hamlin lay on the field, motionless, for ten minutes as medical personnel administered CPR. Players from both teams kneeled, some with tears streaming down their faces, while Hamlin was placed on a stretcher and taken to the University of Cincinnati Medical Center in an ambulance. As of Tuesday, Hamlin remains hospitalized in critical condition.
This hit home. Iāve been through this. You can read about it after I add some commentary around Mr. Hamlinās event.
Scary is a good way to describe what happened to Damar Hamlin. You donāt expect a healthy, young, fit athlete to drop dead on a football field.
The good news is two fold. First, medical staff began working on him right away. Second, doctors have to be 99% sure what caused it. Getting hit in the chest while your heart is at a very specific point in its rhythm can cause Sudden Cardiac Arrest. It seems likely this is what happened.
Itās going to take a while but Iād expect Mr. Hamlin is going to make a full recovery and live a normal, hopefully very long, life. Iād also imagine the psychological trauma will harder to overcome than the physical trauma. Keep that in mind.
The next question is, will he play football again? Thatās tough to answer and it will ultimately be between him and his doctors to decide. If it doesnāt work out that he can play again I hope he has another skill he can fall back on. No athlete can play their sport forever, especially an NFL football player. The average NFL career is around 3.3 years, give it take, so letās be generous and say itās four years.
It stands to reason Mr. Hamlin would eventually resign from the NFL a young man and do something else. I often wonder how many athletes consider this on their way into professional sports?
It was reported Mr. Hamlin was due to make over $800,000US this year. That should also afford him some runway should he need to change careers.
This brings me around to a little rant but I could see folks disagreeing with what Iām about to say.
From the article I link above.
But, with a few exceptions, NFL players, unlike other major sports leagues, do not have guaranteed contracts. That means the players, not the team, carry the financial risk of serious injury.
Hereās where Iām going to be controversial.
Why should contracts be guaranteed? I understand that these young men take hard shots to their bodies in every game they play. Iād imagine itās like us being in a car wreck and walking away battered and bruised. Heck, Iād say their experience is probably worse than that in every game.
They know what theyāre doing. These men decided they wanted to do this for a living, just as I decided I wanted to be a computer programmer when I was in junior high school. They must understand the risk they take with each snap. They must. Why do you think theyāre paid so well? Thatās right. There are very few who are good enough to make an NFL roster, much less play.
As a teenager in high school I knew football was a collision sport. I loved the collisions, which, unfortunately, I was usually on the losing side of. I saw my teammates get hurt. A few tore ACLs. Iāve seen players get concussed. Hell, I was concussed so badly I couldnāt really see and started walking to the other teams sideline. Luckily one of my teammates grabbed my jersey and took me to our sideline. I received no medical attention. I just shook it off. I watched the QB of my JV team play through a rib injury. After the game he lay on the floor of the locker room sobbing in agony. No, we were not Pro players at the highest level of performance. Just a bunch of snot nosed kids who loved football. I knew then I could be seriously injured but I still loved playing.
Many of us choose to become Professionals in business or other occupation. Iām paid a certain amount to do my job eight hours a day, five days a week. Iām a Professional Software Engineer. Iām paid to write software. NFL players are paid to play football.
Iām aging. Iāve come to realize all that punishment I put myself through as a kid is coming home to roost. Couple that with poor genetics and I feel physically broken at age 55. I have knee and back issues to contend with daily. Recently I injured my back putting on my shoe. It happened while I was off for a week to be with family after the death of my grandmother. When I got back I struggled with work and had to take some time off, some complete days, some half days. Work became concerned and it went all the way to our HR department who called to see if I wanted to take extended time off. Itās nice I have that option but at 60% of my income I cannot afford to take time off. Can you? So Iām āplayingā injured, I know itās not like the NFL but bare with me. Thankfully itās not my brain and some time off between Christmas and New Year healed me up enough to get back to work without issue.
I do not have guaranteed income as a Professional Software Developer. Sure I have the option to go on disability for 12 weeks at 60% pay, but eventually that ends. What if I am injured so badly I need medical care my entire life? Like many other Americans Iām screwed and so is my family.
I disagree NFL players should get guaranteed contracts. I do believe the NFL Players Union could probably do a better job negotiating some guaranteed money and guaranteed healthcare, for life. Healthcare is going to, most likely, be the largest lifetime expense for many players.
I understand the punditry, players, and all us normals are talking about Mr. Hamlins injury now. Itās only natural and, after all, the young man almost died for a sport. But, letās not forget things like this happen in the real world every day. Itās just not talked about every day on talk shows, so we are naive to it, and go about our daily lives as if everything is peachy.
When I was in my Senior year of high school ā at age 17 ā I had Sudden Cardiac Arrest while in the on deck circle of a baseball field. We were taking batting practice.
As itās told to me I just collapsed. I wasnāt hit in the chest with a baseball, which can cause a Sudden Cardiac Arrest, my heart just decided it wanted to stop. You donāt expect to see a young, healthy, fit 17 year old drop dead on a baseball diamond.
I was resuscitated by my best friend, Pedro. Pete, as we called him, was a hemophiliac and wasnāt allowed to participate in sports so our high school sent him to Sports Medicine training and he became a student trainer for various sports. Luckily he was on the baseball field that day. Pete was joined by Mr. Conley, a teacher, and they performed CPR on me until the ambulance arrived.
I apparently arrested again so the EMTās worked on me for a bit then loaded me into the ambulance. Being in a small town word gets around really quickly. My family doctor heard what was going on and asked the ambulance to pick him up. He continued working on me as we drove to neighboring Visalia. I was resuscitated before arriving at Kaweah Delta Hospital.
When we arrived at the ER I arrested again and was subsequently resuscitated once more. This time my heart continued to beat on its own.
Once stabilized I was put into a medically enduced coma. When I was allowed to wake up I had no idea what had happened and I was loopy for quite a while.
Doctors tried to recreate my arrest by performing a heart catheterization, inserting some type of wire, and shocking my heart. They were trying to create an electrical malfunction. They were unable to recreate it.
No true cause was ever detected but I do have mitral valve prolapse and the best theory doctors had was my mitral valve stuck open and caused my heart to stop. Mitral valve issues can cause Sudden Cardiac Arrest.
Eventually I was released from the hospital, put on beta blockers, and went back to my life. No driving for the next six months and no sports until the doctor released me.
The most difficult part of this entire episode was dealing with the thought it could happen again, at any time. I went through bouts of depression and had to be treated for it. Eventually things returned to normal. I worked in the packing house over the summer, played hoops with my friends, and went to pool parties. Like a normal 17 year old.
A couple years later I married the love of my life, had two amazing kids, and now we have two wonderful grand kids. Overall Iāve had a wonderful life.
All that to say your life can still be quite full after a major, life threatening, event. Even if you donāt have a true cause.
Taylorās puppers, King, is the old man of the family now. He just celebrated his 11th birthday.
Happy Birthday King! š
One cup down, time for the second one and some writing. āļø
CINCINNATI – Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin was taken off the field in an ambulance after receiving treatment on the field for over 10 minutes, which resulted in the game between the Buffalo Bills and- Cincinnati Bengals being suspended until further notice Monday night.
I have a lot of thoughts on this matter having been through it myself, at the age of 17.
Was it a tragic accident? Yes. Is it the end of the world for Mr. Hamlin? No, definitely not. Is it scary? Oh, yes, it most certainly is.
Today, Jan 4th, marks the official start of our next chapter as WillowTree, a TELUS International Company.
So, yeah, we are now a part of TELUS International.
What do I expect? Bigger engagements over the next year with bigger brands. I see it as a huge positive.
Realistically, only time will tell, but Iām feeling really good about it. šš¼
[Tech Dirt](https://www.techdirt.com/2023/01/04/journalists in-and-others-should-leave-twitter-heres-how-they-can-get-started/)
Near the end of 2022, Elon Musk issued an edict to the journalism community. Obey me, he said, or you will be banned from posting on Twitter.
Iāve been reducing my use of Twitter each and every day for a while. Iām down to checking it once or twice a day because there are folks there I havenāt found on Mastodon.
Mastodon has definitely become by new social network home. You can search me out using @fahrni@curmudgeon.cafe or go directly to curmudgeon.cafe/@fahrni. Iād love to connect on Mastodon. š
In the past year, thereās been a sharp uptick in anti-LGBTQ incidents around the country. One group estimates that thereās been a 12-fold increase in demonstrations and political violence targeted at the queer community, just since 2000.
Love is love. LGBTQ+ rights are HUMAN RIGHTS! Look, if on the basis of religious beliefs you donāt agree with LGBTQ+ folks, fine. But theyāre human beings who deserve to be treated as you would anyone else. Yes, itās that simple, and it is a choice.
Letās put it in Christiany terms. WWJD? Do you think Jesus wouldāve shown nothing but hate and contempt for the LGBTQ+ community? I think not. He would have shown them kindness, compassion, and above all else, love. ā¤ļø
Another BASIC game I made back in the 80s was one that I actually designed with one of my younger sisters. She had expressed interest in all this ācomputer stuffā I was doing and wanted to know what it would take to make a game.
Iāve been following Paulās site for a while and itās a lot of fun. If, like me, you have a place in your heart for the BASIC programming language, subscribe to Goto 10 and enjoy.
Itās 2023, and Windows 11 is finally a mature operating system that most people would be happy to use. Sun Valley has finally arrived, and itās all about a long overdue reinvestment in design under Panos Panayās leadership. But is it enough? āØLetās take a look.
TL;DR - Windows needs more work to bring everything up to a modern look and feel.
The author goes on to identify nine distinct UI styles, thatās right nine. Talk about technical debt.
From a code design perspective would it be better to go through all those UI frameworks and make them use WinUI 3 or would it be better to touch each individual application to update their UI?
I have been of the opinion youād hit a wider range of apps if you updated the frameworks to use WinUI 3.
Iāve even written about it. I did get some great feedback that from that piece that basically said the design models are too different to make the Win32 API wrap Win3 UI. I can accept that. But, if it could be pulled off, an entire class of applications would look modern without their authors modifying them.
Perhaps a compromised approach would be to make some of the newer UI Frameworks use Win3 UI and rewrite the UI for old Win32 API apps? š¤
When the employees announced they were unionizing, Microsoft vowed to remain neutral and let the employees make their own decision about joining, CWA said.
This sounds really great but the skeptic in me wonders how much Microsoft will allow this to happen in others areas of the organization?
Gaming is full of nightmarish stories of long hours and, even worse, abuse.
Iām hopeful this new union will address both of those and make for better work conditions. šš¼
While I’m always excited to see what innovations companies like Apple have in store, I have some serious concerns about betting on AR/VR glasses as a growth market.
For quite a while now Iāve had zero interest in AR/VR technologies. In my opinion AR could be useful in many industries as long as the tech is as easy to wear as a pair of glasses. I could see them being useful to mechanics, electricians, builders, and various trades Iām not thinking about. Otherwise theyāre just expensive toys.
I thought Apple Watch Apps would flourish. They have for some developers but theyāre mainly little views into data from your iPhone. Thatās not bad, itās just the way they are.
Hey, all Iād like to see is custom watch faces. Thatās it. Then, perhaps, someone could create a watch face that looks like Dumbledoreās watch. Kim bought me the Fossil collectible one year for Christmas. š