Mostly, I Write
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Storie e pensieri suoi e di altri, raccolti da Antonio Dini http://www.antoniodini.com
Per contatti su Telegram: @antoniodini
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“Eat the Buddha” è un libro sulla vita delle popolazioni tibetane e buddiste in Cina scritto da una giornalista americana che fa quello che fanno i giornalisti americani quando scrivono un libro. Un gran lavoro anche dal punto di vista formale e del metodo.

Money quote: “The chapters on the self-immolations are the heart of “Eat the Buddha” — the terrible climax for which Demick has prepared us through her recounting of more than 60 years of religious repression and human rights abuses. There’s a good deal of exposition, all of it essential, but whenever possible, she presents Ngaba’s brutal history through the stories of individual characters, the technique pioneered by John Hersey in “Hiroshima.” (Hersey took the idea from the Thornton Wilder novel “The Bridge of San Luis Rey,” which he read on his ship en route to Japan.) I occasionally felt I needed an Excel spreadsheet to keep track of all the players, some of whom vanish for long stretches — in one case, for more than 100 pages — before re-entering the narrative. But Demick, who used the same technique to excellent effect in her previous books (“Logavina Street,” about Sarajevo, and “Nothing to Envy,” about North Korea), knows what she’s doing.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/28/books/review/eat-the-buddha-barbara-demick.html
Lo aveva detto e lo ha fatto: Roy Tennant passa il testimone, e in qualche modo finisce un’epoca.

Money quote: “Editor's Note: Current Cites has been published every single month for the last 30 years, without fail. We are the second longest-lived Internet publication in existence (beat out only by TidBITS by a few months). When I started this publication, I would have recoiled at the idea of taking on such a responsibility had I known what would eventually unfold. I'm the only original contributor left, and I've been it's editor longer than anyone (I did not begin as editor, and we've had two other editors).

After two years of retirement, I now am eager to either shutdown or transfer responsibility for my remaining professional responsibilities. This publication is the last of my obligations. Thankfully, I've found a suitable Editor to take over, Edward Lim Junhao. Since the infrastructure I've used for many years to produce the publication has relied on a number of technologies that now seem overly difficult and/or archaic (Perl scripts, XSLT, command line processing, even a step that requires the long-outdated Lynx web browser), it seemed like well past time to move to a different platform.

Edward has therefore found a different way to take Current Cites forward into a new world. I wish him, and our faithful readers, all the best of luck. And speaking of our "faithful readers," thank you for your collective 30 years of attention. We all appreciated it very much. More than you know. Be well and prosper. - Roy Tennant”

http://currentcites.org/2020/cc20.31.7.html
Pronto per il nuovo numero di Mostly Weekly? Esce domani il primo numero della villeggiatura. Iscriviti qui e fai proseliti anche per questo canale. https://tinyletter.com/MostlyIWrite
Le cose che abbiamo sotto gli occhi ma che l'odio non ci fa guardare. Il Guardian racconta la storia di un paesino siciliano, che stava scomparendo, e che si ripopola con i migranti.

Money quote: "In Rosario’s day, the “foreigner” who came to this picturesque Sicilian village was likely to be from Palermo, 100km away, or nearby Agrigento. But Wale, 35, is from Ekiti state in Nigeria, and he reached Sutera four months ago after a trek covering 6,000km. He lives with his wife and a son, like dozens of other African people seeking asylum who have come from another continent with their families to live here.

“The world is changing,” says Rosario, a 65-year-old retired architect who was born, raised and will grow old in this village, as did his ancestors for generations. “And Sutera is a part of that change.”"

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/oct/27/how-refugees-are-breathing-new-life-into-dying-italian-village
È morto a 91 anni Bill English, il braccio (e parte della mente) dietro 'The Mother of All Demos'

Money quote: “English essentially choreographed Engelbart's presentation. Just as important, he made sure there were no technical glitches. That was a challenge, since Engelbart would be in San Francisco demonstrating a system that was being operated 30 miles away in Menlo Park, the two sites connected via a microwave relay. The event went off virtually without a hitch, and a new world was born. "Doug wasn't doing it," recalls Roberta, who had worked as Engelbart's secretary. "It was all Bill." Engelbart died in 2013.”

https://news.slashdot.org/story/20/08/01/023248/william-english-engineer-behind-the-mother-of-all-demos-dies-at-91
Fare un libro di testo per la scuola - o meglio ancora, per l'università - non è opera da poco. Anzi.

Money quote: "We started working on it a little over two years ago, in the fall of 2016. Now it is nearing the end of the fall of 2018 and it is becoming a reality.

What does it take to write a textbook? That's a good question; one that I certainly did not know the answer to going in, and one for which I now need several hours of recollection and introspection to tease out the appropriate response. This blog post is my answer to that question. I hope that it is useful to you, whether it helps understand the scope of the work involved, brings up aspects that hadn't been considered, or points out tools that might help you with your own book."

http://tim.hibal.org/blog/how-we-wrote-a-textbook/
Una trasformazione fondamentale nel mondo contemporaneo è il passaggio (per meglio dire, l'oscillazione del pendolo) da un modello centrato sul prodotto a un modello centrato sul cliente. Le conseguenze sul mondo del lavoro sono incredibili e per niente positive.

Money quote: "In part, this change reflects a rolling back of labour laws and with them the sense of solidarity among workers. It also follows the shift to an economic model that relies on workers to be more accommodating each year in their role as business and consumer service providers.

The irony is that when the consumer is made king, workers are forced to become even more flexible, providing services on a 24-hour cycle, usually to the detriment of their own health and wellbeing."


https://www.theguardian.com/business/2018/oct/27/work-once-way-to-better-life-not-any-more-property-pensions
“No, Trump can’t delay the election. First, because the law won't allow it. Second, because restraint and delayed gratification has never been his strong suit (Cit.)
Cadaveri nello spazio. Ma per un buon motivo.

Money quote: "No human has ever flown closer to Pluto than Clyde Tombaugh did in 2015, 18 years after his death. That’s fitting, because he was also the first person to lay eyes on it."

https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/grave-farthest-from-earth
La fine di un’epoca: Phil Schiller lascia la carica di senior vice president per il marketing mondiale, al suo posto Greg Joswiak (Congratulations!).

Money quote: “Today Phil Schiller, Senior Vice President of Worldwide Product Marketing, has officially stepped down after serving the company for close to 33 years. Schiller stated for the press release that "It has been a dream come true for me to work at Apple, on so many products I love, with all of these great friends — Steve, Tim, and so many more. I first started at Apple when I was 27, this year I turned 60 and it is time for some planned changes in my life."”

https://www.patentlyapple.com/patently-apple/2020/08/apples-phil-schiller-steps-down-as-svp-worldwide-marketing-as-greg-joswiak-is-promoted-to-fill-that-role.html

 
Il mio uso di git è poco più che ricreativo (non mi serve per il codice, ma per il testo) e decisamente non collaborativo (scrivo da solo). Però trovo git utile e molto efficace. Basta allontanarsi un giorno dalla riga di comando e ti giochi quasi tutta la memoria delle opzioni anche solo di base.

La cosa speciale è che questo libro sintetico e potente è fatto dalla ottima Julia Evans in collaborazione con Katie Sylor-Miller, una vera esperta. Non lo regalano (12 dollari) ma li vale tutti.

Money quote: "If you find git confusing, don't worry! You're not alone.

People who've been using it every day for years still make mistakes and aren't sure how to fix them. A lot of git commands are confusingly named (why do you create new branches with git checkout?) and there are 20 million different ways to do everything.

This zine explains git fundamentals (what's a SHA?) and how to fix a lot of common git mistakes (I committed to the wrong branch!!)."

https://gumroad.com/l/dangit-git
Ne ho scritto anche io nel mio piccolo: la Ue ha multato Google che adesso ha deciso di mettere a pagamento le sue app e servizi Android per i produttori di smartphone che vendano in Europa (finora era tutto gratuito). La cosa più probabile è che succeda come in Cina: fioriranno un mare di nuovi negozi.

Money quote: "In China, each app store has a different rating system and a different community of users reviewing an app. Different stores also present apps in a different order, with their own ways of prioritizing which apps to highlight or show in search results. For example, Tencent’s Myapp and the 360 Mobile Assistant contain sections that list the most popular apps among men and women. The immense fragmentation of Android in China, which varies across different smartphone makers, means that the average Chinese user uses nearly 40 apps on their phone a month and about 11 a day, according to App Annie. These numbers are slightly higher than ones for users in the US and Europe. They’re also more likely to have 100 apps on their phones in total.

In 2013, 25 percent of Chinese users said that the most important feature on a smartphone was that it had a wide variety of apps, reports Nielsen. The need for more apps has even driven Chinese smartphone companies to be among the first to offer a whopping 1TB of storage."

https://www.theverge.com/2018/10/17/17984976/android-europe-future-china-play-store-european-commission-antitrust
E questo invece è il gioco social dell’estate...
Forwarded from Fumettologica
Uno dei manga più emozionanti di sempre. Oggi è il giorno giusto per ricordare (e rileggere) Gen di Hiroshima, che racconta a fumetti la bomba atomica sganciata su Hiroshima il 6 agosto del 1945.

https://www.fumettologica.it/2015/08/hiroshima-gen/
La trasformazione dall’analogico al digitale non è un processo “1/0”. Ci sono fasi intermedie. Uno è il passaggio dal digitale tradizionale al cloud. Quando i prodotti diventano servizi a cui ci si abbona: la musica, ad esempio. Ecco cosa succede quando un servizio di musica in streaming fallisce e viene chiuso (in questo caso si tratta di Google Music). Soprattutto, cosa succede ai file di musica che avete caricato voi nel cloud e che sono altrimenti introvabili.

Money quote: “A copy of your files isn't hard to get, either. The Google Music Manager is a Windows and Mac application that can upload music or download your entire music collection with a few clicks, but like Google said, it will stop working soon. The other option is Google Takeout, which will wrap your entire music collection in a zip file and send you a download link. The processing for this can take hours. Whichever option you choose, make sure you do something before December because, after that, there will be no way to recover your music.”

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2020/08/google-music-shutdown-starts-this-month-music-deleted-in-december/