Mention some blog posts that you still remember for what it served to you.
One example may be this Mechanical Watch description: https://ciechanow.ski/mechanical-watch/
CW: gore in header image, about one page long. PgDn gets it out of view on a 1080p screen
Posted on HN a while back. It's slightly bleak in outlook but it was what finally pushed me to take serious steps to reduce my presence online. Got rid of all my apps that weren't strictly for comms and deleted most of my socials accounts. I already feel better for the change.
Security researcher finds the Australian prime minister’s personal info. Very much a love it or hate it writing style, but as someone who’s lived in Australia for a while I found it hilarious.
"My favorite Erlang program" by Joe Armstrong — https://joearms.github.io/published/2013-11-21-My-favorite-e...
https://x.st/visual-sum-of-cubes/ - nice visualizations
https://dukope.com/devlogs/papers-please/mobile/ - amazing presentation of porting desktop game to phone
A meditation on immigration and the opposite, "why someone would leave a good job for no other reason than to be close to family". This is a rich piece that I've always gone back to over the past decade. The rest of the blog is equally as brilliant.
A book review winner outlining "land value tax". Once you read it it's scary how many things you start to notice that it would solve, and how many inefficient policies are put in place but not required if you solve this ultimate underlying issue.
What made the post interesting was how he drily cited multiple official sources to show that none were in agreement. Something like "The new trunk line will stretch 74 km." [link 1] "It cover 89 km end to end." [link 2] "All told, the line will add 107 km of new track." [link 3] etc. etc.
So basically it functioned both as an account of his research and a tacit commentary on the problems that arise from dealing with unreliable official sources. If that rings a bell for anyone, I'd be very grateful for a link!
A beautifully narrated real story about hacking the economy of Minecraft.
https://charity.wtf/2017/05/11/the-engineer-manager-pendulum...
https://charity.wtf/2019/01/04/engineering-management-the-pe...
https://charity.wtf/2020/09/06/if-management-isnt-a-promotio...
https://www.joelonsoftware.com/2002/06/12/strategy-letter-v/
An inspirational anecdote that demonstrates the life-changing value of keeping information accessible to everyone.
>Midori was a research/incubation project to explore ways of innovating throughout Microsoft’s software stack. This spanned all aspects, including the programming language, compilers, OS, its services, applications, and the overall programming models. We had a heavy bias towards cloud, concurrency, and safety. The project included novel “cultural” approaches too, being 100% developers and very code-focused, looking more like the Microsoft of today and hopefully tomorrow, than it did the Microsoft of 8 years ago when the project began.
The various techniques for negotiating NAT: https://tailscale.com/blog/how-nat-traversal-works/
How DNS works and why it sometimes doesn't: https://tailscale.com/blog/magicdns-why-name
https://www.kalzumeus.com/2011/10/28/dont-call-yourself-a-pr... - Essential advice for anyone starting their career
Also I've learned recently about https://androidarts.com/ and still browsing through it - such a great inspiration source!
You're just reinventing HN on HN here...
Is a classic for the combination of eloquent writing and inspecting how the world works.
https://slatestarcodex.com/2014/06/07/archipelago-and-atomic...
is underrated for its playful insight on governance.
I found this to be an excellent overview of cellular rejuvenation/longevity. Does a good job of explaining the current state of the field.
Like what I'm reading.
Highly recommend the Thinking About Things newsletter which sends me individually interesting blog posts. https://www.thinking-about-things.com
Perennial classic.