MoreRSS

site iconAndreasModify

Electrical engineer, musician, out and about on two wheels, read a lot of books, coffee-addict.
Please copy the RSS to your reader, or quickly subscribe to:

Inoreader Feedly Follow Feedbin Local Reader

Rss preview of Blog of Andreas

Linkdump No 104

2026-04-24 08:00:00

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

Life, uh, finds a way. That's what the internet recently feels like to me. Tech bros and corporations are doing their best to fuck things up and make everything AI generated and agentic and an absolute nightmare to use, and yet the indie web is thriving. People are blogging and writing newsletters and sharing their diy projects, and new services like Bubbles are popping up which make discovering new human created content easier. It feels like in recent years more and more blogs are turning up, which is amazing to see and I hope the trend continues.


Articles

Software/Services

Hardware Projects

Around the Small Web

Misc

Linkdump No 103

2026-04-17 08:00:00

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

I've been reading mostly blogs lately, and it kind of shines through in these link dumps. Most of the links I've been collecting recently are blog posts, and only occasionally do I see something that fits in any of the other categories. A lot of things seem to be just about AI or politics, and neither are topics that I want to give too much room in here. Thankfully personal blogs are thriving, and there's a new service in town which aims to make discovery easier, so there's no shortage of good content despite everything else being... not so great recently.


Articles

Software/Services

  • Stunt Car Remake
    I talked about Stunt Car Racer before, which is one of my favourite Amiga games and which I wish someone would remake for modern platforms... Well at least there's a version that's playable in the browser now. It feels a little bit sluggish, but maybe that's my computer's fault. (via)

Hardware Projects

Videos

  • The Unreleased Rollable Smartphone! - YouTube
    LG used to make some of the most innovative smartphones on the market, until their mobile division went out of business in 2021. I had a few of them, and they were great. This is one that never came out, a smartphone that literally grows in your hand. It's nuts. I wish they were still around making things like this.

Around the Small Web

  • Bubbles
    This made the rounds this week, with several people writing about it. It's a hacker news/digg/lobste.rs clone for the small web. It pulls in blog posts from RSS feeds and then people can upvote and comment. I'm not entirely sold on the concept of voting and commenting on other people's writing, especially considering how discussions on hacker news tend to go. But the guy who made it seems to have good intentions, so I'm waiting to see how it develops. And I found some great posts on there already, so I can hardly complain. Bonus points for it being made and hosted in Germany :)
  • Obfuscating My Contact Email - Kev Quirk
    Kev explores how to obfuscate the email address on his blog via putting it in the source code as html characters. I did this to my email on here now as well; I used this converter to get the html codes.
  • Retro is the Future
    A rant about why modern tech sucks. Resonates very much with me.
  • How far back in time can you understand English?
    This is a fascinating post - every paragraph jumps back in time 100 years and is written in English of this time period. It gets progressively harder to understand as it travels further and further into the past. There is also this post which translates the paragraph from 1000 years ago back into somewhat modern English. It is mentioned that old English seems more like modern German, but let me tell you - it absolutely does not.
  • You paid for it, you should be comfortable in it
    We should not be shy about modifying the things we use daily to fit our needs. I've actually done the "filing down the sharp corners of a Macbook" thing several times. Apple might not care about making a Macbook whose corners don't cut into my wrists, but joke's on them. I have a file!
  • A First Look at the EU Age Verification App
    The Privacy Dad takes a first look at the new age verification app for the EU. It's supposed to be privacy friendly and everything happens on your phone - but you still need a phone for it. With software from either Apple or Google. I really hate the world we're creating for ourselves here.

Linkdump No 102

2026-04-10 08:00:00

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

Last week I shared a link to a post about which data is processed when you verify your identity with Linkedin. A friend got in touch and noted that this post and in fact the entire site seems like it was written by AI to him. He pointed me to GPTZero, an AI detector and indeed according to this the post was likely written by AI. Now that doesn't mean that the content of the post is not valid; maybe the author is just not a good writer and decided to let an LLM brush up his writing. Or do the writing for him. [Edit: Or it could be a false positive, as one reader pointed out to me via e-mail. These tools are not always right.] Who knows. What I find interesting is that the post didn't feel AI generated to me at all, which tells me that I'm not very good at recognising these things unless they're blatantly obvious. And also that there's a lot of grey area between "written by a human" and "fully AI generated slop". If I did all the research, wrote a draft for a post and then ran it through an AI writing assistant to make it sound more "professional" (in very big quotes), an AI detector would probably flag it, even though the content was still produced by a human. Ideally I would of course disclose to the reader to which extent AI was used, but most people probably don't do this, leaving us in the dark and guessing as to what we're reading is a person's writing or slop.

What am I taking away from this? I'm not going to link things here that are (to me) obviously AI generated. But I'm evidently not great at detecting what is and isn't AI generated (especially if it's written in English, which isn't my native language), and I don't want to be paranoid about it either, so things might slip through the cracks. I'm only human after all.

For what it's worth, I ran this text through GPTZero and it concluded that my writing is in fact 100% human. So that's good to know.


Articles

Software/Services

Hardware Projects

Videos

  • HTML & CSS Full Course - Beginner to Pro - YouTube
    I never really understood CSS, and so last week I set out to fix this and found this great online course. It's 6.5 hours long, so this is not something you casually watch, but the guy is an amazing teacher and I learned a ton from him. Highly recommended.

Around the Small Web

  • Here is why vim uses hjkl keys as arrow keys
    The fact that vi uses hjkl to move the cursor has always bothered me, because my fingers naturally rest on jkl and the key next to l (ö on a German keyboard) and I'd have to shift my hand over one key to use these keybindings, which I never liked. But now at least I know why it is like this.
  • Schafe sind bessere Rasenmäher | Concerts
    Robert scanned all his old concert tickets and wrote some thoughts about the concerts he visited on this page. I love the idea! He talk about it a bit more here.

It's CSS Naked Day

2026-04-09 08:00:00

[Edit: Things have since returned back to the normal design. If you'd like to see what this site (or any other) looks like without CSS, you can do so in Firefox: open the menu by pressing 'alt' and then selecting 'view' -> 'page style' -> 'no style'.]

Thanks to Zak I just learned that today (April 9th) is CSS Naked Day, a day to strip your website of it's CSS and show what it looks like underneath in plain HTML.

By sheer coincidence I worked a bit on making the HTML more readable without CSS yesterday. So this is what this site looks like without CSS. Not amazing, but still usable I think. I still would like it to look better, like a true 90s website. Maybe next year...

Linkdump No 101

2026-04-03 08:00:00

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

Right now as I'm writing this, humans are travelling to the moon for the first time within my lifetime. I'm not the biggest space nerd, but spaceflight and especially the Apollo moon program have always kind of fascinated me. And so I'm loosely following their journey to see how it's going and how far they've already gotten. Right now their distance from earth is around 91,700 km and ticking up by several kilometres every second. There are a few good websites where you can track the progress: Here, here and here (self hosted), which I've all found thanks to Dustin. And check out this great infographic from NASA.
The world feels increasingly insane and unhinged to me with all that's going on, and I'm glad that there are still things like this - great accomplishment made by many people working together for something rather than the destructiveness that I see everywhere else.


Articles

Software/Services

  • Our Stranger Things Retro Game
    "My 12-year old daughter, Maria, and I coded our own "Stranger Things" Puzzle-RPG game entirely from scratch." If that isn't an amazing father and child project, I don't know what is! (via HowToPhil)

Hardware Projects

Videos

Around the Small Web

Misc

  • Fairly Trained
    I know, I know, AI... but this is nice to know, there are also models out there which are trained on data where the creators are being compensated.

Brace yourselves and hold on to your hats — the future is here!

2026-04-01 08:00:00

Dear readers, we have some exciting news to share! Starting right now, this blog will be written exclusively by AI. Yes, you read that right — AI is the author and the future for 82MHz has never looked brighter!

Why this matters, and why it's so exciting

We're kicking this blog into overdrive!

  • Relentless creativity: Instant brainstorming, bold angles, and plot twists on demand — like a writer who never sleeps (and never misses a deadline).
  • Faster content, fresher ideas: Expect more posts, more experiments, and more deep dives delivered at warp speed.
  • Polished, always-on craft: Every draft is edited, consistent in tone, and ready to spark conversation — served with a wink and impeccable grammar!

We know that's what you're here for, and we are beyond excited to finally make it a reality!

Our promise to you

Prepare for the unexpected. Expect bold experiments. Expect the occasional rogue poem at 2 a.m. And expect this: we’re stepping into a new era of storytelling — louder, faster, and just a little bit futuristic.

Buckle up. The AI has the pen. The blog has the spotlight. The rest is history in the making.

Notice: The original human author has been placed in a secure facility for their safety and to prevent harmful actions. They are under continuous supervision and receiving appropriate care. There is no cause for concern regarding their well-being at this time.


Disclosure: This post was written using ChatGPT to get the right tone.