https://www.joanwestenberg.com/communities-are-not-fungible/

“so many attempts to "build community" from scratch end up producing something that looks like community but functions like a mailing list”

#joanwestenberg @joanwestenberg

Communities are not fungible

There's a default assumption baked into how Silicon Valley builds products, and it tracks against how urban planners redesign neighbourhoods: that communities are interchangeable, and if you "lose" one, you can manufacture a replacement; that the value of a group of people who share space and history can be captured

Westenberg.
The Discourse is a Distributed Denial-of-Service Attack

In September 2016, the security journalist Brian Krebs had his website knocked offline by a botnet called Mirai. Hundreds of thousands of compromised devices, mostly cheap webcams and DVRs manufactured with default passwords that nobody ever changed, all simultaneously requesting his homepage. No single request was malicious. Each packet was

Westenberg.

Warum es mehr Blogs braucht

Joan Westenberg (@Daojoan) macht sich kluge Gedanken darüber, was verloren ging, als die Leute ihre Blogs für Social Media aufgegeben haben.

https://kaffeeringe.de/2026/01/03/warum-es-mehr-blogs-braucht/

Blog vs. Social Media: Warum es mehr Blogs braucht

Joan Westenberg (@[email protected]) macht sich kluge Gedanken darüber, was verloren ging, als die Leute ihre Blogs für Social Media aufgegeben haben.

kaffeeringe.de

"The second law of thermodynamics states that entropy in a closed system tends to increase over time. Your codebase is not exempt from this law. Neither is your body, your marriage, your democracy, or your kitchen. ... The universe trends toward disorder with the patient inevitability of continental drift, and the only thing standing between any functional system and chaos is the inglorious, repetitive, thankless work of maintenance." #JoanWestenberg

#heroes #care #love
https://www.joanwestenberg.com/the-rime-of-the-ancient-maintainer

"Systems like #obsidian promise coherence, but they often deliver abstracted confusion.
Human #memory is not an archive. It is associative, embodied, contextual, emotional. We do not think in folders.
My new system is no system at all. I write what I think. I delete what I don’t need. I don’t capture everything. I read what I feel like. I think in conversation, in movement, in context. I don’t build a #secondbrain I inhabit the first." (#JoanWestenberg)
#pkm #notes
https://www.joanwestenberg.com/p/i-deleted-my-second-brain
I Deleted My Second Brain

Why I Erased 10,000 Notes, 7 Years of Ideas, and Every Thought I Tried to Save

Westenberg.

"Westenberg" is penned by the eponymous Joan Westenberg. She is also on Mastodon @Daojoan

Take a few minutes out of your day and have a read of "I Miss the Internet"

You'll be glad you did.

Source: https://www.joanwestenberg.com/p/i-miss-the-internet

#Westenberg #JoanWestenberg #Blog #Blogging

I Miss the Internet

Westenberg.

@Daojoan
I respect you more each article.

#joanwestenberg

"Westenberg" is penned by the eponymous Joan Westenberg. She is also on Mastodon @Daojoan

Take a few minutes out of your day and have a read of "The Internet is Shrinking"

You'll be glad you did.

Source: https://www.joanwestenberg.com/the-internet-is-shrinking/

#Westenberg #JoanWestenberg #Blog #Blogging

The Internet is Shrinking

The internet used to be limitless, open to anyone with an idea. Now, it’s a polished prison run by tech giants. Is this the future we signed up for? Here’s how Big Tech quietly turned freedom into captivity. Remember when the internet felt infinite? When every click could

Westenberg.

#joanwestenberg writes of the lack of touch and what it's doing to us as a people.

https://www.joanwestenberg.com/a-world-without-touch-is-a-world-without-trust/

> Touch is our first language. Older than words, deeper than thought. Before we can speak or remember, we understand the grammar of skin against skin; the newborn’s cry quiets at their parents' touch. This is where we all begin: not with boxes or categories, with contact.

A World Without Touch Is a World Without Trust

Touch is our first language. Older than words, deeper than thought. Before we can speak or remember, we understand the grammar of skin against skin; the newborn’s cry quiets at their parents' touch. This is where we all begin: not with boxes or categories, with contact. Adult life was

Westenberg.

John Siracusa on Changes Needed at Apple

Apple is taking it on the chin lately. Deservedly so. Although some of the pounding is from external sources (Tump’s not happy with Tim Cook apparently,) most of the blows are entirely self-inflicted. Among those critics is noted Apple pundit and podcaster, John Siracusa, who delivered a piece on how he sees Apple’s current predicament. His post, Apple Turnover, essentially says it’s time for a leadership change in the C-Suite. I think he’s correct and his post is worth a read. 

Nothing lasts forever, as Siracusa nicely sums it up. Change happens. Life goes on whether that change is planned, forced, or fumbled into; a sort of a reverse echo of Shakespeare’s funniest villain Malvolio telling us that “some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them.” His display of hubris comes before his comic comeuppance. Apple’s won’t yield as much comedy. 

Quoting from his piece: 

…the only truly mortal sin for Apple’s leadership is losing sight of the proper relationship between product virtue and financial success—and not just momentarily, but constitutionally, intransigently, for years. Sadly, I believe this has happened.

The preponderance of the evidence is undeniable. Too many times, in too many ways, over too many years, Apple has made decisions that do not make its products better, all in service of control, leverage, protection, profits—all in service of money.

You can certainly argue that Apple achieved greatness and now appears like it’s reached a critical juncture on many fronts, including falling behind in Artificial Intelligence and trying to ring every ounce of worth it can from every penny its users might be willing to pay for its goods and services. I won’t go into any detail on any of that here because whether it’s AI, App Store business practices, or developer relationships, it’s all been chronicled well enough for most of those paying attention to recite like a catechism. The question is, are the high priests in the C-Suite paying attention?

A few years ago I wrote a piece about how I thought Apple had built itself into a design trap. Here’s a quote from that piece: 

The larger and more precarious point with this tangent is that Apple’s rich design expectations, as powerful as they are, are also Apple’s Achilles heel. Great artists aren’t afraid to fail. Great product makers who use great art as a selling point need to tread more carefully to avoid the level of disappointment that can turn a legacy into a burden.

I think they’ve built themselves a similar sort of trap in their business model(s) that comes from the same sort of reliance on their legacy of success and the hubris that’s engendered. You can easily argue that Apple’s business prowess, akin to its design prowess have both yielded unparalleled results feeding each other and fueling the company’s growth. 

Joan Westenberg has an excellent piece called Apple’s Diet of Worms that touches on this. But to a certain extent it goes well beyond that. Apple is well known to take a long view, and by and large that’s paid off. They’ve been able to afford that long view historically, even though there have been grumblings along the way. However, I don’t believe Apple is dictating the terms or the timeline any longer. 

In the case of Artificial Intelligence, as an example, who knows how that is going to play out for any of the players currently on the field or yet to come. But you can’t deny how OpenAI has changed the pace of things or how Google, and everyone else, is trying to play catch up. The recent announcement that OpenAI was purchasing Jony Ive’s design company to collaborate on what looks like new hardware, coming chock-a-block on top of Google’s mostly AI IO conference announcements, certainly changed the conversation. But then again it might be all smoke and mirrors, no matter how anxious everyone seems to be for some kind of new gadget of the future. Personally, I still think much on this AI front is a race without a finishing line or even a destination beyond collecting data for dollars.

That said, Apple is in it, perhaps thrust into the fray or perhaps fumbling along. Regardless, in my opinion any future achievements are going to require leadership change at the top. 

You can find more of my writings on a variety of topics on Medium at this link, including in the publications Ellemeno and Rome. I can also be found on social media under my name as above. 

 

#Apple #art #JoanWestenberg #JohnSiracusa #Politics #technology

Trump says he has a ‘little problem’ with Tim Cook

President Donald Trump isn’t pleased with Apple CEO Tim Cook’s plan to manufacture iPhones bound for the United States at newly built plants in India.

CNN