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Manuel Moreale. Freelance developer and designer since late 2011. Born and raised in Italy since 1989.
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Two quick news items

2025-09-12 23:25:00

Sometimes I post not because I have something to get out of my system, but because I have something I want to share. This is one of those occasions.

First, Cody has a new pop-up newsletter going called “Trespassing Through Montana”. I’m a big fan of what he does, and I also enjoy helping people connect with each other online, so I’m not gonna pass on this opportunity to suggest you to sign up for his newsletter.

The second is that the Internet Phone Book is back in stock. I mentioned this lovely object in an old post of mine, and I’m so glad I managed to grab my copy when it came out. I’m also happy to be in it and very pleased to have Luke as my neighbour.

That’s it, that’s all I have to say. Buy the book, sign up for the newsletter, and enjoy the weekend.


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P&B: Jack Baty

2025-09-12 19:00:00

This is the 107th edition of People and Blogs, the series where I ask interesting people to talk about themselves and their blogs. Today we have Jack Baty and his blog, baty.net

To follow this series subscribe to the newsletter. A new interview will land in your inbox every Friday. Not a fan of newsletters? No problem! You can read the interviews here on the blog or you can subscribe to the RSS feed.

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Let's start from the basics: can you introduce yourself?

Hello, I'm Jack. I was born, raised, and live in west Michigan, US. I live in a quiet (aka "boring") suburb with my lovely wife, our dog, a few tropical fish, and a sea urchin named Lurch.

I was a paperboy, fast food worker, and ditch digger long before I started creating software for a living. My first programming project was a Laboratory Information Management System (L.I.M.S.) for a local environmental testing lab. This was in 1992. I was learning as I went, using a Macintosh RDBMS environment called 4th Dimension. I continued as a solo software developer for a couple of years.

In 1995, I cofounded the web design firm "Fusionary Media" with my two partners. Fusionary grew to a team of around 15 people. We built some very nice websites, software, and mobile apps for companies like MLB, GM, Steelcase, etc. This went on for 25 years, until we sold the company in 2020. I've been "retired" since then, but I miss working on things with people, so we'll see.

These days I spend most of my time with photography, blogging, and reading.

I enjoy tinkering with tech of all kinds and exploring what different software tools can do. This often means completely upending my workflow in order to shoehorn some cool new toy into it. I call this a "hobby".

What's the story behind your blog?

Which one? 😂

In the late 1990s, when the internet was still new and exciting, I wanted to tell everyone about everything. I was learning to create websites, so starting a blog was a great opportunity to do both. I created a couple of proto-blogs in 1998 and 1999, but those have been lost to time. My current blog at baty.net began in August 2000, 25 years ago this month. Everything before 2021 is archived at archive.baty.net. I don't delete old posts, although I probably should.

My early posts were mostly Gruber-style link posts. It's sad that so many of those original links are dead now. Eventually I started sharing more details about what I was doing and thinking about, rather than just linking to other things. This continues today.

I sporadically maintain several other sites/blogs. Other than Baty.net, there's also a "Daily Notes" blog at daily.baty.net, but lately I've just been rolling that into baty.net. I recently started a photo blog using Ghost at baty.photo. Ghost makes posting images easy, but I haven't decided if I'll continue.

I keep a wiki using TiddlyWiki (since 2018) (rudimentarylathe.org). I don't even know what it's for, honestly, but I keep putting stuff there when I don't know where else it should go.

My dream is to have only One True Blog, but that's been elusive.

What does your creative process look like when it comes to blogging?

Honestly, I don't really have a creative process. Nothing deliberate, anyway. My posts are mostly journal entries about whatever's on my mind. What usually happens is that I'll read someone's blog post or I'll try some new tool, and share my thoughts on it.

I used to write (bad) poetry and would love to compose longer, thoughtful essays, but that never happens.

More often than not I publish things long before they're ready. It's as if I'd never heard of proofreading. I just fix things later. If I had to make everything perfect first, I'd never post anything.

I write my posts in whatever text editor I'm infatuated with at the moment. 90% of the time, that means Emacs, the nerdiest possible option.

Do you have an ideal creative environment? Also do you believe the physical space influences your creativity?

I prefer a tidy, pleasant environment. Usually, though, I sit at my desktop computer (an M4 MacBook Air and Studio Display) in my messy basement office. I just start writing whenever I have something to say. My wife thinks I have some form of auditory processing disorder, so I rarely listen to music while writing. It only muddles my thoughts (even more than they already are).

I do find that things come easier for me when I'm surrounded by books. They inspire me.

Once in a while, I'll draft posts longhand with a nice fountain pen or on a manual typewriter, but I'm lazy, so that's pretty rare.

If I had my way, there'd be a giant window in my home office, maybe overlooking water. Currently I stare at a bare wall, which is probably not ideal for creative inspiration.

A question for the techie readers: can you run us through your tech stack?

I change platforms so often that it'll probably be different by the time anyone reads this, but I'm currently using Hugo to render a static website.

My static sites are hosted on a small VPS running FreeBSD with Caddy as the web server. I use Porkbun for domain registration and management.

For creating new posts in Hugo, I have Emacs configured to create properly formatted Markdown files in the correct location. I write the posts in Emacs. When finished, I run a little shell script that builds the site and uploads it to the server. I don't use any fancy Github deployment actions or anything. I just render the site locally and use rsync to push changes.

I've used nearly every blogging platform ever created. I've even written several of my own. Each platform has something I love about it, and when I start to miss whatever that thing is, I'll switch back to it. And so on. Sometimes moving to a new blogging platform gets the writing juices flowing. Sometimes it's just something to do when I'm bored and don't have anything to say.

Given your experience, if you were to start a blog today, would you do anything differently?

I would love to be the type of person who started a WordPress (or whatever) blog in the noughts and never changed anything. So many of my posts have bad links or missing images due to moving from platform to platform. It's frustrating for both me and my readers.

I suppose what I'd do differently is pick a process and stick with it. Maybe focus on writing instead of tinkering with themes and platforms and such. Blogs are simple things, really, and overthinking everything has caused me nothing but trouble.

Financial question since the Web is obsessed with money: how much does it cost to run your blog? Is it just a cost, or does it generate some revenue? And what's your position on people monetising personal blogs?

I'm running my static sites on a small, $5/month (plus $1 for backups) VPS at Vultr, so it costs very little. I pay another $5/month for Tinylytics to watch traffic/views. So I'm in for around $11/month.

The Ghost blog costs $15/month at MagicPages.

One other cost is domain registrations, which adds up to maybe $50/year.

I have no interested in trying to make money from blogging, even if it were feasible.

Time for some recommendations: any blog you think is worth checking out? And also, who do you think I should be interviewing next?

I hesitate to recommend specific blogs, since that means leaving out so many others. I'll just pick a few at random from my RSS reader. Most of the blogs I follow are by people writing about their lives and interests. I'm less inclined to follow Capital-B Bloggers or industry-specific blogs these days. I'm interested in people, not companies.

Final question: is there anything you want to share with us?

May I just suggest to anyone reading this, if you're even remotely interested in starting a blog, do it! 😁


This was the 107th edition of People and Blogs. Hope you enjoyed this interview with Jack. Make sure to follow his blog (RSS) and get in touch with him if you have any questions.

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On em dashes

2025-09-11 00:35:00

Stumbled on this post a moment ago—on a lovely colourful blog, I might add—and I have thoughts on the subject:

I'm low-key mad about this! So we just can't use em dashes anymore? We let the machines take them from us?? And we didn't even put up a fight or anything???

Although I'm frustrated, I promise from now on to no longer use em dashes and keep my heavy italics usage to a minimum as well. I don't want anyone to think I use AI. (I mean, I do use AI to research stuff, but not to write.) It just sucks because I feel like from now on there will always be this bubbling paranoia over writing that no writer will ever be able to avoid. I'm genuinely a pro-technology, "embrace the future but let's make it better"-type of person, but I'm wary of the "new normal" this precedent sends.

But whatever. You win, AI. You can have your stupid em dashes.

No you can't have them. Yes, we can still use em dashes. And no, I’m not going to stop using them because fucking chatgpt is abusing them. What if they tweak the instructions next week and tell it to use more full stops or commas? What are we gonna do then? Stop using those as well? Hell no. I’ll keep writing however I want, and if someone decides to stop reading what I write because they suspect it’s AI-generated because I use too many em dashes, or parentheses, or any other punctuation or word or whatever, well, good riddance. I’m not gonna miss you.


Looks like I’m not the only one feeling this way.


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Blogs don’t need to be so lonely

2025-09-06 14:35:00

While clicking through my RSS feeds, I found my way to Jay’s post titled “Do blogs need to be so lonely?”. It’s an interesting post, especially interesting for me since I love blogs. Betteridge's law of headlines tells us that the answer to the question Jay is posing is “no”, but I think it’s worth expanding on why I think that’s not the case.

Do blogs, like this one I’m writing in now, need to be so lonely? Not always, but sometimes, I feel like I’m shouting into the void. I’m picturing something relatively simple. Something like a group blog, or a blog co-op. A group of internet friends posting together, without too much oversight or coordination between them.

So, I don’t have anything against the idea of group blogging or a blog co-op, but I don’t think that will address the initial problem Jay’s flagging, that sensation of shouting into a void. I guess shouting into a void with a few friends is better than doing it by yourself, but the end result is still the same. And unless by group blog he means writing posts together and not just posting them on the same site, then I don’t think the situation would change much.

The second part of that quote is the one I find the most interesting and the one I can’t stop smiling at every time I think about it.

A group of internet friends posting together, without too much oversight or coordination between them.

I can’t stop smiling because we already have this. It’s what people used to call the blogosphere. There are already potentially millions of people out there, posting together, without much oversight or coordination between them. I have interviewed one hundred and six of them for People and Blogs (which, btw, is a collaborative blogging project) and there are almost a thousand collected on the blogroll.

A lot of them I consider internet friends. I follow what they’re up to thanks to their blogs, and I occasionally send them emails, precisely to address the “shouting into the void” nature of blogging. And it’s working wonderfully.

I think we have all the tools we need to address the issue Jay’s flagging in his post. Now we just need to actually do it. I think it comes down to linking more to what other people are writing, posting more replies to other people’s posts, and putting some effort into connecting directly with the author when we stumble on a piece of writing that resonates with us.


So why not collaborative blogging? Why not groups of people coming together to create personal blogs? Something less formal than a journalist collective, but more communal than a personal blog. Blogging collectively opens us up to a new kind of content, one in which members of the blog are in conversation with one another in a way that’s comfortable and unique.

This is already happening; it doesn’t need to be invented. In his piece, Jay quoted Leon’s post. I have now mentioned and linked to both of them in mine. They’ll be free to respond on their blogs if they want to keep the conversation going, and anybody else is welcome to join.

Your blog doesn’t have to be lonely. But at the same time, you can’t expect it not to be that way without effort. So if you care, then put some effort into this. Trust me, it’s worth it.


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I guess they did not, in fact, make it

2025-09-05 22:50:00

Back in March 2024, The Browser Company—a name I still find hilarious, all these years later—published a website called “We Might Not Make It”. They described it as:

A limited series that breaks down the top 5 reasons our company might not make it to next year. (And why we think we can.)

The plan was to release a 5-part video series. Quite ironically, considering the name, they stopped at video number two and the whole project was quickly abandoned. The three remaining videos that were planned were:

  • We ruin the internet
  • We listen to our members
  • We can’t make money

The first one is not even worth talking about. This was a company that was so small to the point of being insignificant in the context of the whole web, so there was no risk of them ruining anything. The other two points, though, those are quite funny to look at in retrospect. Many people loved Arc, but it was quickly abandoned when everyone and their moms pivoted to AI. A move that surprised literally nobody. And it was also not surprising to read the news that The Browser Company got acquired because they couldn’t, in fact, make money, and so the only two options were either shut everything down or get acquired. This is a story we’ve all seen a million times in the tech world: someone makes a nice product using VC money, a product that has zero chance of being commercially viable because it has no business model. They promise the moon, only to then turn their back on their user base and sell everything as soon as someone makes a decent offer.

And, like literally every other company that gets acquired, they promised that they “will operate independently”. If you believe that, I have a bridge to sell you. I honestly doubt the whole team will still exist in 12 months. I guess we’ll see.

I was never an Arc user, and you won’t be surprised to know I couldn’t give less of a fuck about Dia because the last thing I want is to spend time chatting with my browser. But, if you were an Arc user, maybe give Zen Browser a try? I heard it’s quite good.

And, since we’re talking browsers here, I won’t miss the chance to mention the Ladybird project since they’re actually making a new browser, which is so awesome to see in 2025.


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P&B: Louie Mantia

2025-09-05 19:00:00

This is the 106th edition of People and Blogs, the series where I ask interesting people to talk about themselves and their blogs. Today we have Louie Mantia and his blog, lmnt.me

To follow this series subscribe to the newsletter. A new interview will land in your inbox every Friday. Not a fan of newsletters? No problem! You can read the interviews here on the blog or you can subscribe to the RSS feed.

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Let's start from the basics: can you introduce yourself?

My name is Louie Mantia. I grew up in St. Louis Missouri, and have lived in California, North Carolina, and Oregon, before moving to Japan a couple years ago. I started using the Internet in the late nineties (when I was about 9 or 10 years old), chatting with AOL Instant Messenger and learning about what my computer can do. Stemming from a desire to customize the appearance of my PC—and later, my Mac—I frequented forums and communities like DeviantArt, AquaSoft, and MacThemes.

As a result of that interest and influence, I’m an artist and designer who primarily makes icons for software. For fun, I design fonts, create playing cards, and write for my blog.

What's the story behind your blog?

I published my first website and blog on April 16, 2004. I was fifteen years old. I was proud to have it run “on PHP” though I barely knew what that meant. I kinda still don’t. But I could post somewhere that was entirely my own rather than just to forums.

At some point in 2005, I started using Wordpress (1.5). At this time, due to my age, the topics on my blog were fairly juvenile. But the more art I made, the more I shifted the focus of my website to be a more of a gallery and less of a blog.

However, in October 2008, I moved my website to mantia.me and began “seriously” blogging about icons, Apple, and early iPhone app design conundrums.

With new social media like Twitter taking attention away from blogs, I moved my artwork to a new website called Louieland in 2015, and hosted one-off blog posts seldomly, without an RSS feed. For entirely novel purposes, I changed the website again to LouieWorld in 2020, though it admittedly didn’t have a blog at all, because starting in 2016 I had been posting to Medium.

In late 2022, I had been frustrated with what the web had become. I lamented posting so much to websites I did not control like Twitter and Medium. In November that year, I made an RSS feed with a single HTML page (no CSS!) for the only post I wrote: The Teenage Web. There was no index page. It was all hosted on a domain I had owned for a very long time, as a personal short-URL, lmnt.me. I directed people to the feed, wrote a few more posts, and started creating index pages and CSS.

Since November 2022, I have written over 300 new blog posts on LMNT. I have also rescued most of my old blog posts from previous iterations of my blog, from Medium, and even salvaged some text from Twitter threads, integrating all of them into my blog.

I have made it somewhat of a personal mission to ensure everything I post publicly is done on my website first, and moving as much as I can from third-party sites to my own.

What does your creative process look like when it comes to blogging?

Rather embarrassingly, most of my blog posts start when I fire up Mastodon to type out a banger. When I manage to catch myself doing it, I cut the contents of the post and paste them into note file, and continue writing. If I don’t catch myself until I’ve written a thread, I might copy out all the posts into a note file and delete the posts, the continue writing if necessary. Old habits die hard.

Other times, I’m walking around and text myself a one-liner about something I know I want to write about. Or I record a quick voice memo. Sometimes those end up as long, thoughtful posts. They could end up as nothing.

I do have a little graveyard of posts that didn’t quite make it in my notes. Perhaps if one of those themes comes up again, I’ll have something to start with.

Do you have an ideal creative environment? Also do you believe the physical space influences your creativity?

For blogging, the local café is my most productive environment. It doesn’t just provide the right mix of “café noise” that facilitates the writing, but it also directly inspires things I write about. It was also partially responsible in introducing a chat-format to some blog posts.

In my life, I’ve gone back and forth between being a one-computer and two-computer person. But now I’m living a laptop-only life, really embracing the portability, writing at the café. I’m doing it now!

A question for the techie readers: can you run us through your tech stack?

I suspect this will either be the most- or least-satisfying answer, depending on the reader. I don’t use a CMS of any kind. I create new pages manually, update indexes manually, upload files via FTP …all manually. I edit the XML for my RSS feed manually. At times, it can be rather unforgiving. The downside is that I’m the only person to blame when something goes wrong. The upside is that my website is ultra portable.

These were all deliberate choices, to avoid dependence on any service. I don’t have to rely on much else besides the FTP connection to a server.

The site is made with only HTML and CSS that I write myself, so when I need to change something like the header or footer, I find-and-replace across hundreds of files. To me, this is much easier than wrangling with services and dependencies I do not control, which could be deprecated at any time, or could change direction, politics, or price.

When a new post reaches some undefined level of merit, I duplicate a template HTML file for the category it belongs in, move the text into that file, and finish writing and formatting the post in HTML, manually wrapping paragraphs and links.

Given your experience, if you were to start a blog today, would you do anything differently?

The current version of my blog started in 2022, and my mindset hasn’t changed too much since then. I like the name. I like the structure. It’s proven to work beyond just LMNT too. The same structure and style is used on grafera.zone and my side-blog, nandakke.jp.

I made a couple painful changes early on that would’ve been nice to avoid. I changed the blog directory from /post/ to /blog/. I also changed the UIDs in the RSS feed from URLs to proper UID strings, realizing that while URLs can change, but UIDs should not.

Understanding everything about the scope of my blog today, I still don’t think I would use a CMS to manage it all. It might have to be self-built to meet the expectations I have, but I doubt I’d have the patience to do it.

Financial question since the Web is obsessed with money: how much does it cost to run your blog? Is it just a cost, or does it generate some revenue? And what's your position on people monetising personal blogs?

It costs $30 every month to host my blog. That includes hosting for all of my websites, including Parakeet, Junior, Crown, Kadomaru, Mantia.me, Nandakke, and Luka’s site, GraferaZone. Thirty dollars a month is such a reasonable price to pay for this kind of publishing power.

I don’t post to my blog for the purpose of generating income. I post because—innately—I have to. However, I do accept donations, which I interpret as appreciation for what I’ve posted as well as encouragement to continue posting. The donations I receive usually pay for the hosting cost. I don’t want to charge for things I’m able to provide at no cost, though I do sell playing cards, fonts, and t-shirts, due the costs to produce those things.

Forming a reliance on income from a blog could potentially alter the authenticity of it. At least, I fear it would for me. I’d be scared that the money would influence too much of what I post or how often I post. I can’t hold it against anyone who wants to try to make money where they can. But for me, it’s squarely a hobby.

Generally speaking, the blogs I follow are ones that aren’t trying to actively monetize, and might not even accept donations. They don’t have paywalls. If they make and sell something, I may buy those things. But the best blogs for me are the ones that do it for the love of it, not because it’s a way for them to make money.

Time for some recommendations: any blog you think is worth checking out? And also, who do you think I should be interviewing next?

Some of my favorite blogs are Deja View from Andreas Deja, Waxy from Andy Baio, and the Ohno Blog from James Edmonson and friends.

Andreas is a former Disney animator responsible for some top-tier characters: King Triton, Jafar, Scar, and Hercules. I don’t just admire his own work, but I love that he uses his blog primarily to gush about other artists.

Andy has been writing his blog since 2002. He’s one of the earliest linkbloggers, which is crazy to think about. He manages to discover the very best of the web before anyone else. He’s really attuned to what’s happening across the Internet.

James is an independent type designer who writes in-depth process posts about each of his foundry’s fonts, hosts a podcast with other type designers, and teaches us all how to draw each letter of the alphabet.

What I love about all three of these people is that they use their blogs to highlight other people doing cool things. Accomplished in their own right, they use their blogging time to appreciate the world around them and bring what they love to everyone else’s attention.

Final question: is there anything you want to share with us?

If there’s just one thing of my own to share, it’s Make a Damn Website. I believe anyone who doesn’t have a website should try making the simplest one they can. It’s not that tough.

Links to my own things:

A few links to other websites and tools I love:

  • Guidebook, an incredible resource for historical UI design
  • Tofu, a CJK character comparison tool
  • kenichi27.com, an extremely fun website from my friend Kenichi
  • Michael Tsai’s blog, with great industry commentary about Apple operating systems

This was the 106th edition of People and Blogs. Hope you enjoyed this interview with Louie. Make sure to follow his blog (RSS) and get in touch with him if you have any questions.

Awesome supporters

You can support this series on Ko-Fi and all supporters will be listed here as well as on the official site of the newsletter.

Jamie Thingelstad (RSS) — Piet Terheyden — Eleonora — Carl Barenbrug (RSS) — Steve Ledlow (RSS) — Paolo Ruggeri (RSS) — Nicolas Magand (RSS) — Rob HopeChris Hannah (RSS) — Pedro Corá (RSS) — Sixian Lim (RSS) — Matt Stein (RSS) — Winnie Lim (RSS) — Flamed (RSS) — C Jackdaw (RSS) — Kevin Humdrum (RSS) — Fabricio Teixeira (RSS) — Rosalind CroadMike Walsh (RSS) — Markus Heurung (RSS) — Michael Warren (RSS) — Chuck Grimmett (RSS) — Bryan Maniotakis (RSS) — Barry Hess (RSS) — Ivan MorealeBen Werdmuller (RSS) — Cory GibbonsLuke Harris (RSS) — Lars-Christian Simonsen (RSS) — Cody SchultzBrad Barrish (RSS) — Nikita Galaiko — Erik Blankvoort — Jaga SantagostinoAndrew ZuckermanMattia Compagnucci (RSS) — Thord D. Hedengren (RSS) — Fabien Sauser (RSS) — Maxwell OmdalNumeric Citizen (RSS) — Jarrod Blundy (RSS) — Andrea Contino (RSS) — Sebastian De Deyne (RSS) — Nicola Losito (RSS) — Lou Plummer (RSS) — Leon Mika (RSS) — Neil Gorman (RSS) — Reaper (RSS) — Matt Rutherford (RSS) — Aleem Ali (RSS) — Nikkin (RSS) — Hans (RSS) — Matt Katz (RSS) — Ilja PanićEmmanuel OdongoPeter Rukavina (RSS) — James (RSS) — Adam Keys (RSS) — Alexey Staroselets (RSS) — John LMinsuk Kang (RSS) — Naz Hamid (RSS) — Ken Zinser (RSS) — Jan — Grey Vugrin (RSS) — Luigi Mozzillo (RSS) — Alex Hyett (RSS) — Andy PiperHrvoje Šimić (RSS) — Travis SchmeisserDoug JonesVincent Ritter (RSS) — ShenFabian Holzer (RSS) — Courtney (RSS) — Dan Ritz (RSS) — İsmail Şevik (RSS) — Jeremy Bassetti (RSS) — Luke Dorny (RSS) — Thomas EricksonHerman Martinus (RSS) — Benny (RSS) — Annie Mueller (RSS) — SekhmetDesignGui (RSS) — Jamie (RSS) — Juha Liikala (RSS) — Ray (RSS) — Chad Moore (RSS) — Benjamin Wittorf (RSS) — Radek Kozieł (RSS) — Marcus RichardsonEmily Moran Barwick (RSS) — Gosha (RSS) — Manton Reece (RSS) — Silvano Stralla (RSS) — Benjamin Chait (RSS) — Cai WingfieldPete (RSS) — Pete Millspaugh (RSS) — Martin Matanovic (RSS) — Coinciding Narratives (RSS) — Arun Venkatesan (RSS) — fourohfour.net (RSS) — Jonathan KemperBookofjoe (RSS) — Marius Masalar (RSS) — Jim Mitchell (RSS) — Simon Howard (RSS) — Frederick Vanbrabant (RSS) — Thibault Malfoy (RSS) — Beradadisini (RSS) — x-way (RSS) — Vincent GeoffrayTAONAW (RSS) — Sebastián Monía (RSS) — grubz (RSS) — Sal (RSS) — BomburacheEric Gregorich (RSS)

Want to support P&B?

If you like this series and want to help it grow, you can:

  1. support on Ko-Fi;
  2. post about it on your own blog and let your readers know about its existence;
  3. email me comments and feedback on the series;
  4. suggest a person to interview next. I'm especially interested in people and blogs outside the tech/web bubble.

Thank you for keeping RSS alive. You're awesome.

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