Neocities.org

Mike Grindle's Webpage

mikegrindle.com

833,460 views
147 followers
3,191 updates
0 tips
Thank you for the follow. Reading your writing has been really exciting!
2 likes
New post - Blogs as Modern Commonplace Books: https://mikegrindle.com/posts/commonplace-book
6 likes
intorpor 1 year ago

Great post! And I completely agree, I created my website with the exact same idea in mind.

2 likes
1 like
swiftred 1 year ago

Oh!! I’m excited to read this

1 like
mikegrindle 1 year ago

hope you enjoyed the read, swiftred

swiftred 1 year ago

I truly did!

1 like
New post about OS's built for the end times. But really it's all just good fun (hopefully): https://mikegrindle.com/posts/collapse-os
4 likes
kaa 1 year ago

Good eye. Dusk OS has been under heavy development for the past few months. The mailing list is very active. Virgil Dupras has recently put in a lot of effort in improving the emulation layer. The makefile in the root directory now works with no frills. Regardless of any theories of impending catastrophe, I think Dusk OS in particular is a marvelous project. It's the first real shot at a Forth Operating System.

1 like
mikegrindle 1 year ago

Thanks! I noticed there was a lot of sensationalized stuff out there on these systems. Articles either made the developer look like a loon or made-out that the system was built for nuclear apocalypse. So I wanted to offer a more no-frills, down-to-earth analysis. Happy to see the project is still moving forward.

8 likes
sorbier 1 year ago

!!! i just posted an essay about writing to think. william zinsser also has a whole book about writing to learn

2 likes
sorbier 1 year ago

also, relatedly, i came across this verbalisation recently, which has stayed with me “Paper is like a mirror: it lets you hear the very voice of your soul, and it forces you to confront that.” (https://bikobatanari.art/posts/2021/magic-journaling)

2 likes
mikegrindle 1 year ago

It's basically been my writing philosophy for the last year or so and I think it has served me pretty well. I love that quote. Thanks for the link and will be sure to check out your new piece on the subject!

2 likes
Loved your blog, specially the permacomputing text.
1 like
mikegrindle 1 year ago

Thank you!

Fixing up some site code which, as always, means there's a slight chance I break everything
5 likes
lwgrs 1 year ago

This is the way.

1 like
Just realized I've been running my little site for over a year now. Do I get my 'Web Master' badge yet?
6 likes
nohappynonsense 1 year ago

it's actually a certificate, not a badge

4 likes
6 likes
mikegrindle 1 year ago

Haha, amazing! Cheers Mike, this has actually made my day

3 likes
mikegrindle 1 year ago

The little vine of leafs really adds a professional touch

2 likes
nohappynonsense 1 year ago

"Whatever you do, Just Do It™" - Mark Twain

2 likes
>https://mikegrindle.com/posts/permacomputing Thanks for writing on this. I argue that we have been wasteful *because* of the advancements of computing hardware. The focus is on speed before efficiency or durability. Likewise, popular software has grown to suit the convenience. Should computer hardware stop increasing in speed, developers may stop upping their hardware expectations,
5 likes
kaa 1 year ago

and then people who value their time can afford to keep a computer for a decade instead of 3 years.

2 likes
kaa 1 year ago

I own and occasionally use a 12 year-old laptop. The keyboard on it is great, and the touchpad is much better than the modern ones. Opening three heavy web sites at the same time causes disk swapping.

1 like
mikegrindle 1 year ago

Thanks, appreciate you reading. Unfortunately, I don't see any such slowdown becoming the norm, but we can still strive for better. They really don't make keyboards like they used to, right? I always work my tech into the ground but I don't think I've hit the 12-year mark before. My current laptop is about 6-7 years old and doing okay (with a lightweight Linux).

2 likes
nohappynonsense 1 year ago

mike what's your go-to lightweight linux

2 likes
mikegrindle 1 year ago

Currently using Peppermint OS with Awesome WM. Linux Mint Xfce is brilliant if your hardware isn't too old. AntiX is a good choice if its ancient.

3 likes
nohappynonsense 1 year ago

will look at AntiX, then. thank ye sir

2 likes
owlroost 1 year ago

To add more lightweight options: quite a few people I know swear by Alpine as a lightweight choice. Void is popular if you prefer rolling release. Debian can be light if you set it up that way and has the added perk of very slow updates.

4 likes
nohappynonsense 1 year ago

thanks owl, i'll look into alpine as well. i use ubuntu on my regular set up cuz i'm a normie, but i do want to revive some ancient chromebooks with something very light

1 like
kaa 1 year ago

Alpine is great. It uses musl libc https://musl.libc.org/, which uses much less memory than GNU libc https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/. My 12-year old laptop boots it in 30 seconds, and I've only beaten that metric using a purpose-compiled kernel on a source-based distribution https://kisslinux.org/. It requires some technical know-how, however documentation is readily available https://wiki.alpinelinux.org/wiki.

2 likes
1 like
4 likes
owlroost 1 year ago

It really is interesting to see who jumps on new technology and who holds back. I have family who've incorporated smart devices into every facet of their lives, and I have other family who wouldn't touch it with a ten-foot pole (I'm in the latter group for privacy and security reasons; no one updates a smart lightbulb even though they really should). It's strange that we're in an era where fridges send spam emails.

2 likes
mikegrindle 1 year ago

Most of the tech-savvy people I know seem to fall into that latter group. Also, there's those of us who just hate spending money on new things if we ca n get the job done on something cheaper/older. Or maybe that's just me..

2 likes
owlroost 1 year ago

Not just you, I'm with you on that. Older devices tend to hold up better from what I've noticed, too. And they've been around long enough that repair methods are pretty well-documented by folks.

2 likes
So like, did we get hacked by anonymous? What's up with the mask?
3 likes
punkwasp 1 year ago

It's for Halloween! If you inspect the alt text it says it's a Halloween mask

1 like
mikegrindle 1 year ago

Yeah I found that too. Bit of a random choice for halloween haha

Website Stats

Last updated 1 day ago
CreatedNov 3, 2022
Site Traffic Stats

Tags

writing blogging technology links essays