My new blog is here: https://www.rendall.tv/blog
An old post about my angst over using Blogger is here on Blogger, so this is quite overdue.
Also long overdue: moving my website from an old-style web host to which I paid $35/month. For now, I'm moving to Netlify, but the migration is not yet complete, which means, as of now, I get a 'This site can’t be reached' error. So, not sure if that's a propagation issue or what, or whether I'll give up and go to github.io. But by the time that you read this, days, months or years from now, it's either up and running or I have transcended such mundane concerns for some reason.
The new blog will likely be generated using Hugo, but I'm not sure about that, either.
Wednesday, October 10, 2018
Chrome extension: Twitter 'likes' Hider
TL;DR: I made a Chrome extension to hide Twitter posts that are likely designed to waste my time.
Here it is: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/twitter-likes-hider/dkcgnebncpfljfaaplmedjnfjifffagj
The source code is here:
https://github.com/rendall/twitter-like-hider
The long story:
I wrote a Chrome extension that hides specific tweets from my Twitter newsfeed. Those tweets being headed with 'So-and-so liked this' or 'Thus-and-such follows So-and-so'.
Twitter, the company, really wants us to spend as much time as possible on its site, and so it deploys various tricks to bypass our rational time-management skills (this strategy of distracting folk to keep them spending is as old as casinos and suburban shopping malls). One of those tricks is to sprinkle throughout your newsfeed posts that someone else 'liked', or a post from someone that someone else 'follows'. I would bet a lot that the Twitter 'time-suck' algorithm has somehow identified these as a particular time-suck for your specific demographic.
e.g. Are you a left-leaning, 20-something urban professional living on the East Coast of the US? Take a look at this tweet, that asserts in a spectacular smug and condescending tone that only the Republic party can save the country. And, oh look! Lots of interesting commentary...
And, while you can mute people, or turn off their retweets, you cannot turn off these 'like' and 'follow' tweets. At least, not through Twitter's user interface.
So, I wrote a Chrome extension that does just that, and helps me separate the signal from the noise.
It does not always work reliably, and I think that's a timing issue: sometimes when the extension triggers, Twitter has not yet finished loading those tweets. So, sometimes it will take a whole minute for all 'like' and 'follow' tweets to hide. However, you can push the extension button and trigger it manually. I'm not sure if I will ever spend the 80% time to grind down that 20% to make it shine. Perhaps, if I hear of literally anyone else in the world using it, I will make that effort.
The name that I used on the required screenshot is 'Alexander Stubb'. It was kind of a random choice, but this name is shared by a Finnish politician from the center-right party Kokoomus (who recently started a campaign to be EU President), and I think I should change that, because it's distracting. Those who know who Alexander Stubb is are likely to wonder if I'm making some kind of political statement, and what it could possibly be. But, alas, no, I'm not making a political statement. I think I used the name because at the time it felt like an Easter egg.
I mean, I do vaguely disapprove of Kokoomus, because I hear they want to replicate some of the demonstrably failed policies that have been so divisive in my homeland. But I have not yet heard a steel-manned argument in favor of them, and until then I cannot bring myself to hold a strong opinion about them either way. Finnish politics is a bit beyond my ken, at the moment.
The only remaining question is "Why?" Why, if Twitter is bound and determined to present you with click-baity nonsense, stay on the site? Why not just quit? Why spend the time to write an actual extension? Well, there are some great gems in that garbage. Here are a few!
Ruins: Ancient, Modern & Imaginary
A raid in the Baltic Sea
Finland is made of...
How to find stuff in git
Here it is: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/twitter-likes-hider/dkcgnebncpfljfaaplmedjnfjifffagj
The source code is here:
https://github.com/rendall/twitter-like-hider
The long story:
I wrote a Chrome extension that hides specific tweets from my Twitter newsfeed. Those tweets being headed with 'So-and-so liked this' or 'Thus-and-such follows So-and-so'.
Twitter, the company, really wants us to spend as much time as possible on its site, and so it deploys various tricks to bypass our rational time-management skills (this strategy of distracting folk to keep them spending is as old as casinos and suburban shopping malls). One of those tricks is to sprinkle throughout your newsfeed posts that someone else 'liked', or a post from someone that someone else 'follows'. I would bet a lot that the Twitter 'time-suck' algorithm has somehow identified these as a particular time-suck for your specific demographic.
e.g. Are you a left-leaning, 20-something urban professional living on the East Coast of the US? Take a look at this tweet, that asserts in a spectacular smug and condescending tone that only the Republic party can save the country. And, oh look! Lots of interesting commentary...
And, while you can mute people, or turn off their retweets, you cannot turn off these 'like' and 'follow' tweets. At least, not through Twitter's user interface.
So, I wrote a Chrome extension that does just that, and helps me separate the signal from the noise.
It does not always work reliably, and I think that's a timing issue: sometimes when the extension triggers, Twitter has not yet finished loading those tweets. So, sometimes it will take a whole minute for all 'like' and 'follow' tweets to hide. However, you can push the extension button and trigger it manually. I'm not sure if I will ever spend the 80% time to grind down that 20% to make it shine. Perhaps, if I hear of literally anyone else in the world using it, I will make that effort.
The name that I used on the required screenshot is 'Alexander Stubb'. It was kind of a random choice, but this name is shared by a Finnish politician from the center-right party Kokoomus (who recently started a campaign to be EU President), and I think I should change that, because it's distracting. Those who know who Alexander Stubb is are likely to wonder if I'm making some kind of political statement, and what it could possibly be. But, alas, no, I'm not making a political statement. I think I used the name because at the time it felt like an Easter egg.
I mean, I do vaguely disapprove of Kokoomus, because I hear they want to replicate some of the demonstrably failed policies that have been so divisive in my homeland. But I have not yet heard a steel-manned argument in favor of them, and until then I cannot bring myself to hold a strong opinion about them either way. Finnish politics is a bit beyond my ken, at the moment.
The only remaining question is "Why?" Why, if Twitter is bound and determined to present you with click-baity nonsense, stay on the site? Why not just quit? Why spend the time to write an actual extension? Well, there are some great gems in that garbage. Here are a few!
Ruins: Ancient, Modern & Imaginary
A raid in the Baltic Sea
Finland is made of...
How to find stuff in git
Wednesday, May 16, 2018
Ethereum thoughts
1) A smart contract to force/encourage/cajole/blackmail yourself to do something. You place money in an account, and it is released to you if certain conditions are met, or else it goes into another account and is given away according to the terms of that account.
2) An account that, when it receives money, disburses it to a random one of a set of charities.
3) Conditions met: well, maybe for me to become better at Finnish, I can add a significant amount of money into an account that will release the money only if I show a specific, measurable improvement at Finnish at some specific time. Otherwise it goes to a charities' account as above.
4) This evaluation of this 'improvement' would be determined according to some happening, perhaps on the internet. Perhaps a committee of some kind votes via some kind of secret ballot.
5) Offering a bet on some event that could be independently verified (say, by AI, or by frequency of mention on the internet or whatever), two bets could create a prediction market. A prestige prediction market could be created by secretly approaching experts, and having them create accounts. We let those who sign up know who else is in the prediction market
6) Or perhaps! Anyone can sign up, but their ability to predict is tracked. They achieve score and ranking (still anonymous). q.v. Ray Dalio's algorithmic decision making.
7) If two anonymous accounts want to agree, they can share their real information with each other.
8) Someone wanting to check the results of the prediction market can see the prediction score of any individual, and use it to increase the accuracy of their target predicition, by only including those who score highest in a particular topic.
2) An account that, when it receives money, disburses it to a random one of a set of charities.
3) Conditions met: well, maybe for me to become better at Finnish, I can add a significant amount of money into an account that will release the money only if I show a specific, measurable improvement at Finnish at some specific time. Otherwise it goes to a charities' account as above.
4) This evaluation of this 'improvement' would be determined according to some happening, perhaps on the internet. Perhaps a committee of some kind votes via some kind of secret ballot.
5) Offering a bet on some event that could be independently verified (say, by AI, or by frequency of mention on the internet or whatever), two bets could create a prediction market. A prestige prediction market could be created by secretly approaching experts, and having them create accounts. We let those who sign up know who else is in the prediction market
6) Or perhaps! Anyone can sign up, but their ability to predict is tracked. They achieve score and ranking (still anonymous). q.v. Ray Dalio's algorithmic decision making.
7) If two anonymous accounts want to agree, they can share their real information with each other.
8) Someone wanting to check the results of the prediction market can see the prediction score of any individual, and use it to increase the accuracy of their target predicition, by only including those who score highest in a particular topic.
Tuesday, January 16, 2018
Monday, January 15, 2018
Friday, January 5, 2018
An American's Guide to Washing Dishes in a Finnish Home
When you're in a Finnish home, don't shove every dirty dish into the dishwasher and switch it on. Apparently, many Finnish homes have old dishes, and many old dishes have glazes that will be removed by heat and chemical reaction with dishwasher soap. If there is one phrase you never want to hear, that phrase would be "Oh no! This was my great-grandmother's plate, and now it's ruined!" You will lose friendships over this.
Full disclosure, I did not ruin anyone's great-grandmother's plate. I did, however, remove the polish from someone's decades-old ice-cream scoop. But there have been great-grandmother's plates rescued from my dishwasher.
I have tried to ban in my household the use of dishes that cannot be washed in the dishwasher. They are to be used only on special occasions, like when we have completely run out of other clean dishes.
What we have here, I believe, is an example of culture clash, and in broad strokes, I'm tempted to claim that Americans appreciate old things only to the extent that they are convenient. Old, inconvenient things will be banished to the attic or a museum. This is not necessarily a bad thing, or a criticism, just an observations. Finns seem to, generally speaking, not only appreciate old things, but use them in every-day life.
At least, in my circles.
Update: 10.10.2018
After some consultation, I have discovered that there are many Americans who keep and use old things, and many Finns who do not. I have not really yet discerned a specific difference between who does what and why. While many American Southerners do keep and use old things, others do not. While many urban people of either Finnish or American nationality do not, many do.
Anyway, be careful when washing unknown dishes! You could lose a friend!
Full disclosure, I did not ruin anyone's great-grandmother's plate. I did, however, remove the polish from someone's decades-old ice-cream scoop. But there have been great-grandmother's plates rescued from my dishwasher.
I have tried to ban in my household the use of dishes that cannot be washed in the dishwasher. They are to be used only on special occasions, like when we have completely run out of other clean dishes.
What we have here, I believe, is an example of culture clash, and in broad strokes, I'm tempted to claim that Americans appreciate old things only to the extent that they are convenient. Old, inconvenient things will be banished to the attic or a museum. This is not necessarily a bad thing, or a criticism, just an observations. Finns seem to, generally speaking, not only appreciate old things, but use them in every-day life.
At least, in my circles.
Update: 10.10.2018
After some consultation, I have discovered that there are many Americans who keep and use old things, and many Finns who do not. I have not really yet discerned a specific difference between who does what and why. While many American Southerners do keep and use old things, others do not. While many urban people of either Finnish or American nationality do not, many do.
Anyway, be careful when washing unknown dishes! You could lose a friend!
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