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Electrical engineer, musician, out and about on two wheels, read a lot of books, coffee-addict.
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Linkdump No 81

2025-11-14 08:00:00

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

Today I saw a video of David Coverdale announcing his retirement. Coverdale used to sing for Deep Purple in the 70s before starting his own band Whitesnake, which became hugely successful in the 80s. I'm sure you've heard "Here I Go Again" on the radio a million times. Coverdale is easily one of my favourite singers from back then; his voice has both a lot of soul and a lot of power, which is a rare combination. Something happened to it though and he hasn't sounded all that good anymore for years, if not decades, but still. My favourite music is from the 70s and 80s, and it's quite sad to see all my old musical heroes retiring if not dying in recent years. Thankfully Coverdale seems to be doing well, and he definitely earned his retirement. Time to play some Whitesnake tonight!


Articles

  • Coding Without a Laptop - Two Weeks with AR Glasses and Linux on Android
    This is kind of dorky, but also kind of fascinating that it works... running Linux on a Pixel phone and viewing the screen through AR glasses. I think if you get this setup, you also HAVE to wear a long black leather trenchcoat to look like an authentic 90s hacker. (via)
  • Unix V4: Only known copy may lurk on recently unearthed tape • The Register
    Great news for digital archaeologists and people who like exploring computing history - apparently a full copy of Unix V4 from 1973 which was thought to be lost was discovered and is now in the process of being read out. Hopefully it will be made available to the public, but I'm pretty sure it will be.
  • The algorithm failed music | The Verge
    This article echoes what I've been feeling for a long time... when you listen to algorithmically generated playlists on Spotify, you get the same music served over and over again with very little variety. (via)
  • 2002: Last.fm and Audioscrobbler Herald the Social Web | Cybercultural
    Somewhat related to the link above, Cybercultural has a great post about how algorithmic recommendations for music got their start with LastFM and Audioscrobbler. Anybody remember these?
  • How Facebook Killed Online Chat | Hackaday
    This article explores how online chat has changed with the arrival of "always online" messengers like Facebook chat, Whatsapp etc. where you can't just disconnect and tell your contacts that you're offline. Interestingly I wrote a very similar post two years ago to the day on here. It's nice to see that other people feel the same way.

Software/Services

Around the Small Web

  • Gotta theme them all
    Joel is big into creating his own themes for all his devices, which is awesome. His latest project is the Innioasis Y1 MP3 player which seems to be all the rage right now.
  • Our Xmas movie watch list - Dom Corriveau
    Dom's list of movies he watches over the holidays with his family. I don't think anybody's going to get bored in this household during the holidays :)

Linkdump No 80

2025-11-07 08:00:00

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

Thank god October is over. Usually I really like it - the trees are turning all kinds of beautiful colours, the leaves are falling, the wind is blowing the leaves around etc. But this October was terrible, because I was sick for most of it. A few weeks ago I mentioned that I was excited to go to the Retro Computer Festival. Well, I couldn't make it. There are some chronic issues that have been bothering me for a long time and they flared up again last month, and on top of it I seem to have caught some weird virus last week which knocked me out pretty good. I still haven't recovered from it and I'm spending most of my time on the sofa as a result.
I had some ideas for things I wanted to write on here, but they have to wait until I'm feeling better. Still, I wouldn't want to miss putting together a new Friday linkdump, so here we go! And fingers crossed November will be better.


Articles

Software/Services

Hardware Projects

  • Project Gigapixel - Linear CCD camera | Hackaday.io
    This is A Very Cool Thing™ - this guy reverse engineered the CCD sensor of an old flatbed scanner and built an extremely high resolution camera with it. The amount of work he put into this must have been insane. I get dizzy just thinking about it. Here's a video he made showing the development process and the final result.

Videos

  • Making YouTube Work in a 30 Year Old Web Browser - YouTube
    This guy set out to make a YouTube plugin for old Netscape browsers from the 90s (with a bit of help from yt-dlp). It's an entertaining video and he gets it working in the end, but at least so far he didn't release the sources, so there's no way to try it out yourself.

Around the Small Web

  • Masto-mailo-inator
    Michał wrote a Mastodon to Email bridge, which allows him to read toots in his email client. I don't currently have a use case for this, but I'm keeping my eye on it.

Linkdump No 79

2025-10-31 08:00:00

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

Hey everyone, it's Halloween! Except it's not, because I live in Germany and we don't have Halloween, even though the media has relentlessly and with some success tried to introduce it over here as well in recent years. When I was a kid, Halloween wasn't a thing at all. We had a different tradition though in the area where I grew up which is Swabia, basically the South West of Germany. It went like this:
In the fall we would collect (in other words, steal) sugar beets from the fields, hollow them out, carve a scary face in them, put a candle inside and then walk with them from house to house, set them down in front of the door, ring the doorbell and hide and then say a small rhyme when the people opened the door. Then we'd usually get sweets. These hollowed out beets are called "Rübengeister" (Root Ghosts). This article has a picture of what the ghosts look like. Sounds familiar?
I always wondered if Halloween had some of our tradition mixed in that was brought over to America by German emigrants. Except they chose pumpkins instead of beets, because that's what grows over there. Pumpkins are also much easier to hollow out; roots are hard as hell and it was always a pain to carve into them, we hacked away at them with spoons and knifes and screwdrivers for hours. Still a ton of fun though. So, happy Rübengeister, everyone!


Articles

Software/Services

  • GitHub - rolflobker/recall-for-linux: Bring Microsoft Recall to Linux!
    Good news everyone! You can now have your privacy invaded on Linux as well! This is a joke project, I highly recommend checking it out for some giggles. The *.exe is really a bash script, but from what I can tell it really does what it advertises... constantly takes screenshots of everything you do.
  • GitHub - JHRobotics/softgpu: SW and HW accelerated GPU driver for Windows 9x Virtual Machines
    This is a video driver for Windows 9x to give you hardware acceleration when it's running inside a virtual machine. The installation is a bit cumbersome, you have to run the installer, let the PC reboot, run the installer again, let the PC reboot again and then do the same a third time. But then... I tried it on a Windows 98 installation inside Virtualbox, and it worked, I could run games with 3D acceleration. That's really neat.

Around the Small Web

  • SailfishOS vs Ubuntu Touch – October 2025 Notes |
    Nick takes a look at Ubuntu Touch on an old Google Pixel 3, and it seems like it's actually working relatively well.
  • More thoughts on alternative phone OSes
    Along the same lines, here are some thoughts on sustainability and using alternative OSs on our phones... "Open source enthusiasts holding on longer to their favourite phones could go a long way to a more sustainable use of smartphones. The problem here is that the speed in which phones currently age in the market means that even communities lose interest in these phones before they become unusable by wear and tear."
  • 50 Reasons to Build a Website – Frontend Masters Blog
    Kind of tongue in cheek, but also kind of not. 50 reasons to build a website. Number 14 is my favourite. I'm not kidding, if you like music, check it out.

Goodbye Nuclear Power Plant

2025-10-25 08:00:00

You might think that that's a really weird headline, and you would not be wrong. Let me explain.

In the 1960s the Atomic Age arrived in rural South Germany with the construction of the Gundremmingen Nuclear Power Plant at the Danube River, near the village of Gundremmingen, Bavaria. The power plant started producing electricity in 1967 and was expanded over the following years with two more reactor blocks and two massive, 160m tall cooling towers.

(Image from here)

Wikipedia has a great article about the power plant. This is my favourite part:

"A protest group [...] was silenced using monies specifically set aside for the purpose."

Well great.

Anyway, fast forwarding a bit, in the early 1980s a young couple got married and decided to build a house in another Bavarian village, about 20km from Gundremmingen. In 1982 the young family's first child was born, and I think you can guess who that child was. The room I got was the one under the roof with the window facing east, towards Gundremmingen. And because of their massive size, the cooling towers were clearly visible from that window of our house.

Now I eventually moved into a different room at 14 and then moved out altogether at 21, but throughout my entire life whenever I looked out the window of this room of my parents' house, I saw the cooling towers of Gundremmingen steaming away in the distance. I remember that I was always fascinated by the sight of these towers, even though they appeared to be only about the size of my thumb when seen from our house. I think for a while I thought that that was how clouds were made - the steam coming out of the towers rises up and forms clouds in the sky. And I remember that I couldn't believe how incredibly huge they were when my parents took me there to see them up close for the first time as a little kid.

A few weeks ago I visited my parents, and as always the towers were there, visible in the distance. But that was the last time I saw them. Following the final shutdown of the power plant nearly four years ago, the cooling towers were demolished today at noon in a controlled detonation.

Unfortunately I wasn't there; it would have been interesting to watch, but it's a 2.5hr drive and the weather was pretty bad today so the towers were probably not visible from my parents house anyway. A lot of people went there to watch of course. Here's a nice video of the demolition on YouTube and my mum also sent me a few videos from people who witnessed the event firsthand.

So the next time I'm visiting my parents, probably on Christmas, the two cooling towers of Gundremmingen which are part of my earliest memories and which I've seen for my entire life won't be there anymore when I look out the window of my old room. Like a childhood friend of mine said (hi Markus!), the horizon will now look very different without these two massive towers in the distance. Indeed.

Linkdump No 78

2025-10-24 08:00:00

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

This week I tried an experiment. I booked a small apartment somewhere in the countryside and went there for three days without bringing any devices with me that could go online. The only things I brought were a dumb phone, formerly known as, you know, a phone (so I could be reached in case of an emergency), an iPod for listening to music and an old laptop without wifi for writing. I went completely off the grid for several days for the first time in at least 15 years. And you won't believe what happened next! Actually, you probably will. It was nice and relaxing and calming. I think I'll write a bit more in a separate post, but tl;dr: it's great, I recommend it.
Because of this I don't have too many links today because well, I wasn't online too much, but I have a few. Enjoy, and treat yourself to some time offline after reading. It's nice.


Articles

Around the Small Web

  • My Dad – Brandon’s Journal
    Missing an Old Friend – Brandon’s Journal
    Brandon writes from the heart, and I found these two posts about his strained relationship with his dad and how he's coming to terms with it, and about an old friend who is no longer there very moving and very honest, so I wanted to share them here.
  • My self-hosted music streaming solution
    STFN talks about something many of us are familiar with - how he started listening to music from cassettes as a kid, then came CDs, then mp3s from filesharing services, then streaming and now that streaming is terrible he's rolling out his own streaming solution and goes back to listening to music that he owns.
  • AI bookmarks
    Armin is curating a list of bookmarks to posts that have a more sceptical take on AI.
  • NoSurf: Stop Wasting Life On The Net
    This post resonates a lot with me, see the intro above - how to stop wasting so much time being online. It's a gopher blog, to access it through a modern browser click here (thanks Matto!)
  • Patent Pending - Waiter Rant
    This is a brutally honest post about what it means to be diagnosed with prostate cancer. I'm not sure if I'm more or less scared now of getting it, but I highly recommend reading this. (via)

Misc

Linkdump No 77

2025-10-17 08:00:00

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

I hope this week you all did The Right Thing™ and threw away your old Windows 10 computers. If you haven't yet, what are you waiting for? These things are now a hazard to your and everybody's health and safety! If your computer is not on The List then I'm sorry, but it has to go. Bring it in for recycling, send it to landfill, set it on fire in your backyard if you have to. But it can't be used anymore. It's impossible. Nobody is more heartbroken about this than Satya Nadella, but what can he do? Microsoft spent at least tens of dollars on research and they concluded that there is absolutely no way to keep using these old computers. It can't be done. They have to be discarded, and new ones have to be bought. And who are we to argue with Microsoft. They would never lie to us out of sheer corporate greed, right? ...right?


Articles

Software/Services

  • Old Blue Workbench
    Speaking of Amiga, someone wrote an updated version of the old blue Amiga Workbench OS that runs on Amigas with Kickstart 1.3, though it looks like it can't boot from a floppy and needs to be installed on a harddrive, unlike the original Workbench. Still, pretty cool project!

Videos

Around the Small Web

Misc