Jay Hoffmann

@Jayhoffmann
358 Followers
196 Following
269 Posts
Director of Web Development, Reaktiv. But really I’m a web history geek @ http://thehistoryoftheweb.com
Web History Newsletterhttps://thehistoryoftheweb.com
One site I found from researching the book a bit is https://www.ulyssesguide.com/. It's of the web in all the right ways. Well organized and incredibly thorough, but also idiomatic in ways that obviously reflect the personality of the site's creator. Really useful too.
UlyssesGuide.com

A guide for readers of James Joyce's novel Ulysses, including background info, individual episode guides, photographs, maps, and other helpful resources.

UlyssesGuide.com

I'm reading Ulysses, and take note of a few things as I go. Finding it very rich and rewarding so far, about a quarter of the way through.

https://jayhoffmann.com/tackling-ulysses/

Tackling Ulysses - Jay Hoffmann

In which I tackle James Joyce and find plenty to connect to within.

Jay Hoffmann

Jay Hoffmann @Jayhoffmann on the origins of permalinks for blog posts. Decades later some sites with blog or news items still don't provide permalinks.

https://thehistoryoftheweb.com/did-you-want-that-link-to-be-permanent

#blogging #web #retrocomputing

A History of the Permalink

Permalinks are commonplace on the web. But it took the rise of blogging to codify them, and bring them out into the world. And it all started with a single exchange of blogs.

The History of the Web

Nearly started crying at how meaningful the first two sentences of this letter is.

“Every kid should grow up knowing they are loved.
Everything else is pretty close to a rounding error.”

https://buttondown.com/monteiro/archive/how-to-raise-children/

How to raise children

A wee little painting (11×14”, sans stick) I made last week. This one got auctioned off on Bluesky to help folks in Minnesota. I’m making more. This week’s...

Mike Monteiro’s Good News

“In Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, Roy Bland captures a cynical, post-ideological, corrupt English society: “You scratch my conscience; I’ll drive your Jag.” You could say the same of today’s Silicon Valley. It used to believe it could change the world. Now it just hopes the world won’t change its stock price.

Think Different? Not anymore.”

https://om.co/2026/01/27/a-ceo-captured/

A CEO, Captured. 

I keep thinking about a line Lawrence Sanders wrote: a character asks whether money makes the world go round. The reply: “I do not believe it is money itself. After all, t…

On my Om

@sturobson may have solved the problem of refactoring legacy CSS. Though I have to be honest, the web history buff in me just wants to use this to do some genuine digital archaeology on some long-running codebases.

Look how cool this is.
https://www.alwaystwisted.com/articles/introducing-relicss-a-tool-for-front-end-archaeology

Introducing ReliCSS: A Tool for Front-End Archaeology

Introducing ReliCSS: a tool that helps you identify browser hacks and CSS artifacts in legacy codebases. Understand the 'why' behind old code and prioritise refactoring efforts.

Always Twisted

Anil Dash paints the parallel construction of the web happening right alongside the centralized and commoditized one. The open and free and accessible web that's always been there. Markdown helps tell that story.

https://www.anildash.com/2026/01/09/how-markdown-took-over-the-world/

How Markdown took over the world

A blog about making culture. Since 1999.

Anil Dash

A history of web design, from the grey web pages of 1993 to the colorful, mobile-centric web designs of 2012. A celebration of the peak years of personal websites and blogs. By Richard MacManus.

https://cybercultural.com/p/history-of-web-design/

The history of web design, 1993–2012: season 5 launch

Introducing Cybercultural's history of web design, from the grey web pages of 1993 to the colorful, mobile-centric web designs of 2012. A celebration of the peak years of personal websites and blogs.

Cybercultural

TIL lobsters aren't immortal, but they are weirdly close to it. If they live to be a certain size, they reach the top of the food chain. At that point, they continue shedding their exoskeleton until it takes too much energy to do so, at which point they more or less die of exhaustion. Jellyfish really are immortal though.

https://www.nhm.ac.uk/discover/are-lobsters-immortal.html

“I never want to hear any moral grandstanding from these boys ever again. The next time Tim Cook says “privacy is a human right,” the only possible response is to laugh in his face.”

https://www.theverge.com/policy/859902/apple-google-run-by-cowards

Tim Cook and Sundar Pichai are cowards

Apple and Google have left X in their app stores, despite its AI-generated images that violate their own rules. There are no principles left in Silicon Valley.

The Verge