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Electrical engineer, musician, out and about on two wheels, read a lot of books, coffee-addict.
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Spreading misinformation on the internet

2026-01-05 08:00:00

The other day I took apart an old smoke detector. I looked at it for a bit until I thought I'd figured out how it works, and then I thought, hey, why not write a quick blog post about it, maybe someone else will find it interesting, too. And so I did and I put the post online.

Small problem though: I completely misunderstood how the thing actually works. Whoops.

Thankfully some folks on Mastodon pointed it out to me, so I did some research, realised what I'd gotten wrong, and corrected my post. Fixed and done, problem solved. But a bit of an uncomfortable feeling remained with me.

At the end of the day this is really no big deal, and arguably I learned more by posting the wrong thing than if I hadn't written about it at all, because now people corrected me and so I was, let's say, encouraged to look into it a bit more, which I probably wouldn't have done if I hadn't written the post because I would have just assumed that I was right. So ultimately this worked out well for me, even though I have to admit I was a pretty embarrassed when I realised my mistake.

This got me thinking though how easy it is to spread misinformation online, unintentionally or otherwise. We live in a world where everything from AI chat bots to Facebook tinfoil-hatters all the way to the richest and most powerful people in the world are spitting out a constant stream of misinformation and straight up lies all day long, and by now the web is absolutely drowning in it. And I hate it with a passion.

So my takeaway is this: In a world that's increasingly fake, filled with slop and misinformation and lies and where you can't be sure anymore about what's real and what isn't, I want to make sure that the things I post to the internet are correct. Even if they're as inconsequential and ultimately meaningless as explaining how a smoke detector works. I feel like I owe this to myself, and I also owe it to you, the reader.

It might not make a difference in the grand scheme of things, but it does make a difference to me.

How does a smoke alarm work?

2026-01-04 08:00:00

Last month I've lived in my current apartment for exactly 10 years, which means it's now time to replace the smoke alarms, which you're supposed to do after 10 years. When I was a kid, I always took everything I could get my hands on apart to see what it looked like on the inside, much to the dismay of my parents at times. Now, several decades later, things haven't really changed all that much. So, before bringing the old smoke alarms in for recycling, I decided to take one apart to see what's inside. 1

Here's what the smoke alarm looks like intact, and after prying it open (and almost losing an eye in the process because a piece of plastic snapped off and shot right past my face - oops!) we can see that there isn't very much in there at all.

(1) is the battery (I already snipped the wires so the thing wouldn't accidentally go off in my face), (2) is the piezoelectric speaker (the thing that goes "beep"), and (3) is the smoke detector itself on a small circuit board. Here's a closer look at the internals:

There's also (3) a button to test the functionality and (4) an LED which blinks in regular intervals to indicate that the device is still working. And there are a few electronic components on the back of the board.

So what's inside the smoke detector?

Surprisingly, almost nothing! In fact, there are only two things in there: (1) an LED, which is a light source (infrared, I assume) and (2) a photo sensor, which is a light detector.

So how does it work?

The photo sensor sees a certain amount of light that the LED emits. Since the chamber is black and largely closed with just a few openings around the sides, almost no ambient light can get inside and the amount of light that the photo sensor registers is always the same, no matter if the smoke alarm is in a bright or dark room.

Except when the chamber fills with smoke. Then the photo sensor will see less light than when the chamber is filled with clear air, and that's when the alarm will go off.

I got that completely backwards! Here's how it actually works: The photo sensor and the LED are misaligned, and the path from the LED to the sensor is blocked, which means the sensor can't see much, if any, light from the LED during normal operation. However, when smoke enters the chamber the smoke particles scatter the light, so the sensor can now detect more light from the LED than before, and this causes the alarm to go off. Damn. I should have checked this before writing the post.

Thanks to Lapo Luchini and ClickyMcTicker on Mastodon for correcting me!

It's such a simple thing, and yet it does exactly what it's supposed to do. I love seeing well-engineered solutions like this!


1

I should mention, there are smoke detectors that are filled with a radioactive material. I double and triple checked to make sure that this wasn't one of those before taking it apart. If you take one apart, make sure you know what you're doing!

Linkdump No 88

2026-01-02 08:00:00

an animated 90s style GIF that has the word Links in green font on black background

Over the last few days I read a lot of end-of-year blog posts around the small web, and I noticed that by reading personal blogs you get the full range of human experiences. Some people are doing really well and are in a good place, and some are unfortunately struggling due to health issues, financial uncertainty or the loss of a loved one. Life is unpredictable, sometimes things are great and sometimes they really aren't. I haven't written a 2025 roundup this year, but there have been some challenges for me as well, mostly regarding my health which hasn't been great these last few months, and it still isn't where I'd like it to be. There are also some changes in my professional life. But these are topics that I might talk about at some other time; suffice it to say that 2026 is going to be a challenging and interesting year for me.
I hope you are doing well, I wish you a happy new year wherever you are and whatever 2026 has in store for us all, we'll deal with it to the best of our abilities.


Software/Services

  • GitHub - muesli/duf: Disk Usage/Free Utility - a better 'df' alternative
    What it says on the tin - a disk usage utility that outputs a nicely formatted overview of the disk usage of all attached devices, so you can see at a glance when it's time to buy some more hard drives.
  • GitHub - coffe/zenfeed
    Last week Coffe created a RSS feed reader for YouTube channels, which I mentioned in last week's linkdump. This week he developed a CLI feed reader for blog and website RSS feeds. It's in alpha status, but it's already looking really good! No pressure, but I'm looking forward to what's in store for next week ;)
  • OverTheWire: Wargames
    Something for you 1337 H4XØRZ out there. Zack mentioned this in a recent post - these are games that teach you concepts of system security. The process is that you log into a server via ssh and solve a problem that is presented to you, which gives you the login password for the next server where the next (harder) problem waits.

Videos

  • I shrunk down into an M5 chip - YouTube
    I almost didn't watch this, because an MKBHD video about Apple? Well... I'm glad I did end up watching it though, because it's fascinating. The video is an awesome visualisation of just how insanely small the structures inside modern microchips are.
  • The Ridiculous Engineering Of The World's Most Important Machine - YouTube
    Interestingly, Veritasium released a video just a few days later that covers a similar topic - how are modern microchips made? The video goes in depth into the process and the technology that's needed to create structures that are just a few nanometres small, and the amount of engineering that goes into this is insane.
  • So I started cloning the Wii U gamepad... - YouTube
    MattKC dives into the communication protocol between the Wii U and it's controller and sets out to create a working reimplementation of it. I never had a Wii U, but I find it fascinating to learn how things work, so this video was right up my street.

Around the Small Web

Misc

  • Starring the Computer
    "Starring the Computer is a website dedicated to the use of computers in film and television." I you want to know which show or movie your favourite computer appears in, this is the resource for you. (via)
  • Hacker News Book Map
    A map of the 1000 most mentioned books on Hacker News. Lots of great books in there, and probably some stinkers, too (*cough* Ayn Rand)... but it's worth bookmarking if you're ever looking for some new reading material. Came across this via Manuel Moreale's new newsletter Dealgorithmed.
  • CARI | Aesthetics
    "CARI, or Consumer Aesthetics Research Institute, is an online community dedicated to developing a visual lexicon of consumer ephemera from the 1970s until now." In other words, it's a website with tons of images of different visual aesthetic styles over the years. I love browsing stuff like this.

Linkdump No 87

2025-12-26 08:00:00

an animated 90s style GIF that has the word Links in green font on black background

Last Linkdump of 2025! And maybe last post of this year too, I don't know yet. I just checked, and this is the 108th blog post I'm writing this year. I'm too lazy to do it now, but if I stitched them all together I would get at least a small book out of it. Which means I've written a book this year! Granted, a very confusing and disjointed book, but still. I always wondered how people write books, because it takes so long to write anything and a book is a lot of text. Well, this is how. Write consistently over a long period of time. In fact, this is how you do anything worthwhile, isn't it? Do it consistently over a long period of time. Wait, did I just learn a life lesson here?
Anyway, I think this is a good opportunity to say a big thank you to you all for reading my ramblings week after week, and for getting in touch with me via e-mail or Mastodon. Writing this blog has become one of my favourite hobbies, and this is in no small part thanks to the community of fellow bloggers, readers and online friends that has developed around it. Thinking about it, this year I received messages from people in both North and South America, Europe, Asia and Australia/New Zealand, which is absolutely mind-blowing!
I hope you're all having a great holiday season wherever you are in the world, and I'm looking forward to continuing this in 2026.


Articles

Software/Services

  • GitHub - coffe/ytrss2
    Like me, Coffe likes following YouTube channels via their RSS feed, but unlike me he's also good at writing user-friendly software, so he created a command line feed reader for this exact purpose. Here's his post about it on Mastodon.
  • Test Ad Block - Toolz
    This is a service that lets you test the effectiveness of your adblocking solution. I run PiHole in my network and a few adblocking plugins in the browser and I get a 97% block rate, which is pretty good. (via)
  • GitHub - microsoft/edit: We all edit.
    Are you nostalgic for the text editor from MS DOS? I'm not, but if you are then this is the project for you, a reimplementation of the old editor that works on modern systems and adds a few useful features. (via)

Videos

Around the Small Web

  • A false history
    This post raises an important question - if you generate fake family photos now with AI, will you remember that these are not real in a few decades? And will you care?
  • 🔗 Link Stash | 21 December 2025 | zkbro
    Zak's Link Stash keeps growing, and he has a ton of interesting stuff in there, like an online shop where you can order coffee through SSH, which is a fascinating idea.
  • Tools for discovering the IndieWeb – Andrew Doran
    This is a nice collection of tools and services that allow you to browse and discover blogs on the indie web. (Thanks, Matto!)

Running Unix V4 from 1974

2025-12-22 08:00:00

A few weeks ago a copy of Unix V4 which was thought to be lost was discovered on a storage tape at the University of Utah. It was then sent to the Home Computer Museum in California, and well, they managed to read it out and put its contents on the Internet Archive.

I haven't seen any news articles about this yet, but fellow Mastodonian Flexion gave it a try and posted about it, which is how I came across this. So I had to try it, too.

Thankfully someone put up a tutorial with the necessary files here. All that's needed is a pdp11 emulator. I'm using the one from the Open SIMH project which I could easily download on Arch Linux from the repos, it's just called simh.

And from there it was just a matter of following the tutorial. I had to get four files:

  • unix_v4.tap
  • disk.rs
  • install.ini
  • boot.ini

I put them all in the same folder and started the pdp11 emulator with the ini script:

$ simh-pdp11 install.ini

Then I followed the tutorial by typing out the following commands:

=mcopy
'p' for rp; 'k' for rk
k
disk offset
0
tape offset
75
count
4000
=uboot
k
unix
mem = 64530

login: root
# sync
# sync
# sync
# ^E        ; end emulation

After Ctrl+E the emulator can be quit with Ctrl+C and then restarted with the boot script:

$ simh-pdp11 boot.ini

After typing k and unix I got the login prompt and could log in as root:

k
unix
mem = 64530

login: root
#

And there we go, Unix V4 from 1974!

So what can we do with that?

Honestly, I have no idea. Not too much probably, but it's really cool to explore and just to see it running. This system is almost a decade older than I am, and it feels kind of alien and still familiar at the same time. It was made at a time when computers were the size of refrigerators and often didn't even have monitors yet but instead printed their output on a piece of paper. And yet It's the ancestor to all modern day Unix systems (including MacOS) and also at least the spiritual ancestor to Linux, and that's exacty what it feels like using it. Like an early version of these systems. Relatively primitive and missing a lot of features that make using the modern systems easy, but definitely familiar.

It's fascinating to see how much it has changed in the last 50 years, but also how much has stayed the same. It's a bit like driving in a car from the 60s or 70s. They are incredibly barebones by today's standards, but still unmistakably just an earlier version of what we have today and if you know how to drive a modern car, you will also be able to drive one from 1974, just like you are able to navigate around a Unix system from 1974 if you're familiar with it's modern descendants.

Linkdump No 86

2025-12-19 08:00:00

an animated 90s style GIF that has the word Links in green font on black background

In 1981, a new TV station dedicated to playing music videos appeared in the US. It famously started its programme by playing The Buggles' Video Killed the Radio Star. In 1987, MTV Europe began its broadcast with an equally fitting video: the Dire Straits song Money for Nothing, which opens with the line "I want my MTV", sung by Sting. I was too young to have been around for this, but I remember watching MTV and its German counterpart VIVA a lot when they were at their peak during my teenage years in the 90s.
I also remember them playing less and less music and more and more "reality TV" shows in the 2000s, which caused me (and everybody else) to lose interest in watching them. Today, VIVA has been dead for years, and now MTV at least over here will stop playing music altogether, which means its spirit is also gone. Nothing lasts forever I guess, and since YouTube appeared on the scene this development was probably inevitable, but it's still kind of sad to see. Today of course you can see any music video you like at any time online, but it's just not the same, is it? Rest In Peace, MTV!


Articles

  • MTV without music videos from January
    From next year on, MTV Germany will stop airing music videos altogether and instead focus on broadcasting US reality shows. Signs of our times I guess... It's not like MTV had any kind of cultural relevance for the past 20 years or so, but this is still sad.
  • Why your early 2000s photos are probably lost forever
    If you have an old digicam, smartphone or old memory cards with pictures on it that you haven't backed up yet, now is probably a good time to do so, because these things don't last forever and once they die, your photos will be gone. (via)

Software/Services

  • PCjs Machines
    I'm not entirely sure how to describe this... it's a collection of emulators for old systems and programs that run right in the browser. The focus is on systems from the 80s and early 90s, so if that's your kind of thing, have a look!
  • BetaWiki
    A wiki dedicated to compiling information about different builds of popular operating systems and other software.

Videos

Around the Small Web

  • Ad Blockers helped kill the open web | Christian Heilmann
    This is an interesting post about how it came to be that the web is drowning in ads these days. I'm not sure I agree with his conclusion that adblockers are to blame for so much of what we're seeing today, I think it would have happened regardless. But it's interesting food for thought, and a nudge towards making sure we pay for the things that bring us value.

Misc