Weekly Notes: May 25–31, 2026

  • Monday was Memorial Day, which we spent here at home, relaxing after our Portland jaunt of the prior few days.

  • ♿️ Work continues to be busy with end-of-the quarter business. The big thing for us this week was Wednesday evening, when Highline’s Legacy Awards recognized student leaders on campus, including some students from Access Services and some whom my wife had nominated. It’s always nice to see the students have their accomplishments celebrated.

  • 🌏 Saturday morning we went to Kent’s International Festival. We try to stop by every year, and it’s fun to see the various communities in our city highlight their cultures through music, dance, and other performances. Plus, the food truck selection is always really good.

  • 🦇 Saturday night I headed out to the Mercury for some gothclubbing with friends. This weekend was the club’s 27th birthday celebration, plus a friend’s birthday kicked in at midnight, and it was a really good night all around. Lots of good music, dancing, and socializing. I’m always tired the next day, but it’s always worth it.

📸 Photos

Me lit all in reds and purples, wearing a black shirt with a lot of straight white lines across it, with text above and below that says, 'Dammit I ironed my Joy Division shirt'.
I just got this shirt, and it got a lot of laughs and compliments during the evening, both at the Mercury and from people I passed while wandering around Capitol Hill before the club opened. Amusing side note: I now have six or seven (I think) shirts parodying or playing off of the classic Joy Division shirt…but don’t have the actual Joy Division shirt. Maybe I should pick that up one of these days….
On a dark table surrounded by drinks and water bottles, a small LED centerpiece with fiber optic strands glowing in green, slightly blurred as the fiber optic strands move slightly.One of the table centerpieces from Norwescon got brought along and used for our table.

📚 Reading

One more book on my Hugo Best Novel reading progress completed, with Vernor Vinge’s Rainbows End.

📺 Watching

We had a bit of a movie binge this weekend:

🔗 Linking

  • Olivia Rosane at Common Dreams: ‘The Creep State Is Watching’: Guerilla Art Project Takes on Big Tech’s Power Grab​: “The Creep State is an anonymous guerilla art and protest project that debuted in Austin, Texas during South by Southwest earlier this year. It is designed to draw people’s attention to the threat posed by Big Tech billionaires and their increasing influence over both the US government and the daily lives of everyone who interacts with their products.” Some background info on some posters I spotted around Seattle at the last No Kings protests (one poster, another one).

  • David Smith at The Guardian: How Garry Trudeau’s Doonesbury cartoons captured America: ‘One of our nation’s greatest journalists’: “‘If you want to understand Victorian England, reading a handful of Dickens novels can get you there,’ said Joshua Kendall, author of the first major biography of Trudeau. ‘In the same way about the late 20th and early 21st century, Trudeau has got all these different characters and they’re growing and changing. If you want to see how America evolved from 1970 to 2026 you could do worse than just go through a few Doonesbury collections.'”

  • Ed Zitron: Revenge of The Business Idiot: “We will win, long term. What they are doing is not working. The future will not be without pain, nor will it be easy, or pleasant, or something I relish in. But in the long term I think this is a moment where the greater Business Idiot incursion faces a reckoning with a reality it believed it could change through sheer force of will.”

  • Iris: “Iris is the native Mac photo library that helps you find, explore, and rediscover the people, places, and moments you love — privately, on your own computer, with the smarts of a cloud service and none of the cost.”

  • Sarah Perez at TechCrunch: Meta launches Instagram, Facebook, and WhatsApp subscriptions, with more to come, including AI plans: “Meta is doubling down on its subscription offerings. On Wednesday, the social networking giant announced it’s now rolling out its consumer subscription plans globally for its flagship apps, Instagram, Facebook, and WhatsApp, and beginning tests of new subscriptions for businesses, creators, and Meta AI users.”

  • Is AI Profitable Yet?: No.

  • Science Daily: Forget LASIK: Safer, cheaper vision correction without lasers or surgery: “Researchers are developing a futuristic alternative to LASIK that reshapes the eye without lasers or incisions. Using mild electrical pulses and platinum contact lenses, they temporarily soften the cornea so it can be molded into a new shape. Early tests on rabbit eyes successfully corrected nearsightedness in about a minute while preserving the eye’s structure.”

  • Hanna at Tuta: Discord planned to introduce age verification worldwide – and it’s about to go live.: “According to Discord, starting in June users wanting to switch their account to adult status will have to choose between a facial scan for age estimation or uploading an ID document. In addition, an AI model will automatically assess in the background whether the user is an adult; based on existing account age, device, and activity data.”

  • Jason Kottke: The Backward Index: “How do dictionary makers keep track of similarly suffixed words, like those ending in -ism, -graphy, -ness, or -ology? With a computer, it’s simple, but how did they do it before the computing age? Starting in the 1950s, lexicographers at Merriam-Webster typed all of the words in the dictionary out backwards and organized them alphabetically into a collection called the Backward Index.”

  • Brian Phillips at The Ringer: The 40 Most Rage-Inducing Problems in Tech: “I say this with all due respect to the leader of the world’s largest religious organization: He missed some stuff. To truly teach big tech to put humanity first, it is necessary to catalog all the ways that big tech is currently putting humanity last. And because we are living in a time of historically unprecedented exasperation—a time in which many of us go through the day filled with a sort of half-repressed and unacknowledged fury that threatens to burst out every time the app we’re trying to use sends us to a website to log in, but the website won’t allow us to paste the password from our password manager, and clicking “forgot password” sends us back to the app, which immediately crashes—any account of tech’s antihuman tendencies must necessarily include a detailed breakdown of how its products are truly just a colossal goddamn pain in the ass.”

  • Max Rego at The Hill: ‘No Kings’ movement planning nationwide event on Trump 80th birthday: “A 90-minute concert in New York City has been planned to headline the event. The “Rise Up, Sing Out” concert is set to take place at The Town Hall in midtown Manhattan and is scheduled to feature performances and appearances by singers Sasha Allen, Bette Midler, Patti Smith and Rufus Wainwright, along with actor Jane Fonda and liberal commentator Joy Reid.”

  • Jody Amable at KQED: A Preteen Punk Band From Mill Valley Takes on AI: “Knights of Molino are a new punk band composed of middle schoolers Erik and Tommy Birmingham, 11 and 13, and Rowan Campbell, 12. They recently reached moderate viral fame for another track in which they didn’t shy away from speaking their minds. In October, their scathing takedown of generative AI, ‘Take Back Control,’ went spinning across Bay Area and punk-rock TikTok. It’s currently at 240,000 views and 2,500 comments: definitely not Mr. Beast numbers, but pretty impressive when you consider none of them even are allowed on TikTok yet.”

  • John Gruber at Daring Fireball: What Is a Dickover?: “dickovern. : a modal panel, popover, or curtain presented by a website or app, deliberately obscuring its own content to frustrate the user with an unwanted, unnecessary, mandatory interaction; e.g. asking the user to accept “cookies”, subscribe to a newsletter, install the website’s mobile app, agree to terms of service, or anything else that the user couldn’t give two shits about.”

  • Rebecca Watson at Skepchick: Is Your Phone Spying on Your Conversations? No.: “Because I do so much work debunking conspiracy theories, people often ask me if there are any unproven conspiracy theories that I truly believe. It’s a tough question for me because there are some things, like Bigfoot, that I absolutely LOVE but do not sincerely believe. And there are others that I don’t believe per se but I find them plausible, in that I can’t dismiss them out of hand and I wouldn’t be very surprised if they turned out to be true. One of those is the extremely common belief that companies are using our cell phones to listen to us and serve us advertising or otherwise benefitting from our data.”

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