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Founded in 1998, one of the 50 most powerful blogs in the world in 2008 named by The Guardian.
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Steve Jobs famously said that computers are a bicycle...

2026-03-04 22:10:15

Steve Jobs famously said that computers are a bicycle for the mind. What does that make LLMs? An e-bike for the mind? A car for the mind? A jet plane for the mind?

LLMs are getting pretty good at unmasking pseudonymous...

2026-03-04 06:03:58

LLMs are getting pretty good at unmasking pseudonymous users — their success rate is “far greater” than humans alone can manage.

“ Imagine what it was like for women in colonial...

2026-03-04 05:12:33

Imagine what it was like for women in colonial North America. Life was different depending on where you lived, your background, and how much money you had.”

HyperCard Changed Everything

2026-03-04 04:05:15

This video traces the history of Apple’s HyperCard from Vannevar Bush’s idea of the Memex to the Mother of All Demos to the Xerox PARC Alto to Bill Atkinson, the inventor of HyperCard, who said:

HyperCard is a software erector set. It lets people put things together without having to know how to solder.

There’s a ton of information about HyperCard at hypercard.org, including this HyperCard simulator that runs in your browser.

Tags: Apple · Bill Atkinson · computing · HyperCard · Vannevar Bush · video

Does Your Country Need Regime Change? A Quiz. “Is...

2026-03-04 03:23:21

Does Your Country Need Regime Change? A Quiz. “Is your country a notorious bad actor in the Middle East? Has your leader deployed the country’s military domestically against civilians who were protesting peacefully?”

Takashi Murakami Remixes Monet

2026-03-04 03:06:40

As part of his show called Hark Back to Ukiyo-e: Tracing Superflat to Japonisme’s Genesis, currently on display in LA, Takashi Murakami painted his own version of Claude Monet’s Woman with a Parasol - Madame Monet and Her Son. The painting is paired with Murakami’s copies of woodblock prints (ukiyo-e) that influenced the work of Monet and other abstract & impressionist artists.

Here Murakami pairs a copy of Monet’s portrait with twelve enlarged versions of ukiyo-e prints by Kikukawa Eizan and his teacher, Utamaro. Through these examples Murakami shapes a narrative of Monet’s encounter with bijinga. They suggest the elements that Monet absorbed in his study of prints: statuesque three-quarter figures; sensual outlines; parasols viewed from below; cloud-like masses of cherry blossoms; windswept skirts. Another selection, Utamaro’s Yamauba and Kintarō, is an example of a bijinga sub-genre in which women are shown with young children.

As noted by Greg Allen, Murakami used an unusual process for his reproductions:

Copying the originals, Murakami had his own intimate encounter with these features, recognizing in the process the meticulous care taken in pursuit of delicate effects. He interprets them in his signature style, composed of layer upon layer of silkscreened acrylic paint, applied with a special squeegee work application method and coated in a glossy finish.

Tags: art · Claude Monet · remix · Takashi Murakami