Alright, locked in with three F1 fantasy teams in our family league. I tend to suck at remembering to make changes and updates over the course of the season, but we shall see if I remember this time around!
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"text": "Alright, locked in with three F1 fantasy teams in our family league. I tend to suck at remembering to make changes and updates over the course of the season, but we shall see if I remember this time around!",
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I'm setting up a temporary laptop for my next trip and it's shocking how much faster the cross-device passkey flow is compared to looking up and hand typing my long 1Password passwords
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"text": "I'm setting up a temporary laptop for my next trip and it's shocking how much faster the cross-device passkey flow is compared to looking up and hand typing my long 1Password passwords"
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#Typewriters#action figures#collectibles#Sesame Street#Typewriter Guy
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"published": "2026-03-04T13:31:29-08:00",
"summary": "This is coming out next week on the 11th, and totally unrelated: my birthday is coming up…\u00a0\u00a0 h/t to Joe Crawwford (#)",
"url": "https://boffosocko.com/2026/03/04/typewriter-guy-sesame-street-reaction-figures/",
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"text": "This is coming out next week on the 11th, and totally unrelated: my birthday is coming up...\u00a0\u00a0\n\nh/t to Joe Crawwford (#)",
"html": "This is coming out next week on the 11th, and totally unrelated: my birthday is coming up...\u00a0\u00a0\n\nh/t to <a class=\"h-card u-category\" href=\"https://artlung.com/\">Joe Crawwford</a> (<a href=\"https://xoxo.zone/@artlung/116149175380641264\">#</a>)"
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Om Malik opines on the MacBook Neo, Apple's new budget laptop with a mobile phone chip inside, and all of the premium Apple vibe on the outside. But, what is the logic for releasing such a product, as Apple generally hasn't been interested in competing in the lower end of the market? Malik takes a defensible position: its a Trojan Horse.
Apple needs to convince millions of people to buy this low-end laptop, and steal users away from Chromebook and Windows ecosystems. And hope that these switchers could eventually buy more things from Apple, especially those high-margin services.
But, will that strategy be effective? A $599 laptop is certainly "cheap" for a Mac, its not all that competitive with even cheaper Chromebooks, which dominate in education. I am sure that Apple will pursue that market, and high-volume purchasers like schools will get an even lower price point, but I have a hard time being convinced that they'll unseat Chromebooks as the dominant computer by volume in education, but I wouldn't be surprised if they earn a significant revenue share.
That said, there is some market context that Malik explores:
The timing for the launch of the new Neo computer is fortuitous. Microsoft’s ham-fisted approach to grafting Artificial Intelligence (AI) into Windows 11 has been an unmitigated disaster. Whether it was privacy-invading Recall, barely good Copilot or invasive advertising, Windows 11 has left many long-time Windows users searching for alternatives including Linux.
This is where it gets interesting to me. Spendy MacBook Pros are a common choice for businesses, in spite of their high price point. Personal computers are a different story, and the mid-market is flooded with popular laptops with similar pricing to the Neo. I'd wager that a home computer buyer is much more likely to choose a MacBook Neo, which is a premium product compared to the cheap plastic alternatives running an increasingly crap Windows experience. Malik's Trojan Horse thesis makes more sense to me in this specific market, where iPhones hold a very strong market share, and the services drag is sky high. I'll be interested to see how it unfolds!
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"text": "On my Om\n With Neo, Apple Goes After Windows 11 \u2013 On my Om\n \n It has been a long time since I used the words \"cute\" and \"want\" about a computer. Last time, I probably did when...\n \n \n \n \n \nOm Malik opines on the MacBook Neo, Apple's new budget laptop with a mobile phone chip inside, and all of the premium Apple vibe on the outside. But, what is the logic for releasing such a product, as Apple generally hasn't been interested in competing in the lower end of the market? Malik takes a defensible position: its a Trojan Horse.\n\nApple needs to convince millions of people to buy this low-end laptop, and steal users away from Chromebook and Windows ecosystems. And hope that these switchers could eventually buy more things from Apple, especially those high-margin services.\n\nBut, will that strategy be effective? A $599 laptop is certainly \"cheap\" for a Mac, its not all that competitive with even cheaper Chromebooks, which dominate in education. I am sure that Apple will pursue that market, and high-volume purchasers like schools will get an even lower price point, but I have a hard time being convinced that they'll unseat Chromebooks as the dominant computer by volume in education, but I wouldn't be surprised if they earn a significant revenue share.\nThat said, there is some market context that Malik explores:\n\nThe timing for the launch of the new Neo computer is fortuitous. Microsoft\u2019s ham-fisted approach to grafting Artificial Intelligence (AI) into Windows 11 has been an unmitigated disaster. Whether it was privacy-invading Recall, barely good Copilot or invasive advertising, Windows 11 has left many long-time Windows users searching for alternatives including Linux.\n\nThis is where it gets interesting to me. Spendy MacBook Pros are a common choice for businesses, in spite of their high price point. Personal computers are a different story, and the mid-market is flooded with popular laptops with similar pricing to the Neo. I'd wager that a home computer buyer is much more likely to choose a MacBook Neo, which is a premium product compared to the cheap plastic alternatives running an increasingly crap Windows experience. Malik's Trojan Horse thesis makes more sense to me in this specific market, where iPhones hold a very strong market share, and the services drag is sky high. I'll be interested to see how it unfolds!",
"html": "<a href=\"https://om.co/2026/03/04/apple-goes-after-window-11-with-neo/\">\n \n \n <img src=\"https://om.co/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Apple-MacBook-Neo-hero-260304-scaled.jpg\" alt=\"\" />\n \n \n <span>On my Om</span>\n <span>With Neo, Apple Goes After Windows 11 \u2013 On my Om</span>\n \n <span>It has been a long time since I used the words \"cute\" and \"want\" about a computer. Last time, I probably did when...</span>\n \n \n </a>\n \n \n<p>Om Malik opines on the MacBook Neo, Apple's new budget laptop with a mobile phone chip inside, and all of the premium Apple vibe on the outside. But, what is the logic for releasing such a product, as Apple generally hasn't been interested in competing in the lower end of the market? Malik takes a defensible position: its a Trojan Horse.</p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>Apple needs to convince millions of people to buy this low-end laptop, and steal users away from Chromebook and Windows ecosystems. And hope that these switchers could eventually buy more things from Apple, especially those high-margin services.</p>\n</blockquote>\n<p>But, will that strategy be effective? A $599 laptop is certainly \"cheap\" for a Mac, its not all that competitive with even cheaper Chromebooks, which dominate in education. I am sure that Apple will pursue that market, and high-volume purchasers like schools will get an even lower price point, but I have a hard time being convinced that they'll unseat Chromebooks as the dominant computer by <em>volume</em> in education, but I wouldn't be surprised if they earn a significant <em>revenue</em> share.</p>\n<p>That said, there is some market context that Malik explores:</p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>The timing for the launch of the new Neo computer is fortuitous. Microsoft\u2019s ham-fisted approach to grafting Artificial Intelligence (AI) into Windows 11 has been an unmitigated disaster. Whether it was privacy-invading Recall, barely good Copilot or invasive advertising, Windows 11 has left many long-time Windows users searching for alternatives including Linux.</p>\n</blockquote>\n<p>This is where it gets interesting to me. Spendy MacBook Pros are a common choice for businesses, in spite of their high price point. <em>Personal computers</em> are a different story, and the mid-market is flooded with popular laptops with similar pricing to the Neo. I'd wager that a home computer buyer is much more likely to choose a MacBook Neo, which is a premium product compared to the cheap plastic alternatives running an increasingly crap Windows experience. Malik's Trojan Horse thesis makes more sense to me in this specific market, where iPhones hold a very strong market share, and the services drag is sky high. I'll be interested to see how it unfolds!</p>"
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I am sure reasonable people can disagree with me, but I’m happy that at least one of the AI giants is willing to stand its ground in the face of authoritarian pressure.
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"text": "Apple\n President Trump bans Anthropic from use in government systems\n \n Trump called the AI lab a \"RADICAL LEFT, WOKE COMPANY\" in a social media post. The Pentagon also ordered all...\n \n \n \n \n I am sure reasonable people can disagree with me, but I\u2019m happy that at least one of the AI giants is willing to stand its ground in the face of authoritarian pressure.",
"html": "<a href=\"https://apple.news/APQfXGZeWTK-Eypb6CWpNNA\">\n \n \n <img src=\"https://c.apple.news/AgEXQVBRZlhHWmVXVEstRXlwYjZDV3BOTkEAMA\" alt=\"\" />\n \n \n <span>Apple</span>\n <span>President Trump bans Anthropic from use in government systems</span>\n \n <span>Trump called the AI lab a \"RADICAL LEFT, WOKE COMPANY\" in a social media post. The Pentagon also ordered all...</span>\n \n \n </a>\n \n <p>I am sure reasonable people can disagree with me, but I\u2019m happy that at least one of the AI giants is willing to stand its ground in the face of authoritarian pressure.</p>"
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2026-03-04T11:25:42-0500",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/2026/03/04/machine-knitting-a-chattie-of-ones-own/",
"category": [
"machine-knitting",
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"name": "Machine Knitting: a Chattie of one's own",
"content": {
"text": "After a somewhat fraught Chattie hat commission\u00a0I decided to go ahead and make one for myself!\n\n \n\nI think it came out ... fine!\nLessons learned:\nTransfers: I'm still having a hard time using my transfer carriage to move ribbing stitches from the front ribber bed to the back main bed. This time I bent a needle on each bed! \ud83d\ude31 I also discovered that this transfer process is where some of my dropped stitches came from in the previous hat. I ended up recovering most of these before seaming, which saved a lot of fixing up time later! \ud83d\ude05\nJoining / seaming: somehow, for the second time, I have set out with the intention of joining the hat body to the brim with the seam on the knit side of the hat body, where it will be hidden by the folded brim, but ended up with it on the purl side, against the head. I'm also still getting the feel for seaming things on the machine. I decided to hang the hat body on directly to the needles with the finished brim and do a transfer-tool bind-off, but found the hung-on stitches really got in the way. After dropping a stitch (and some f-bombs) and losing the yarn tail, I backed things up and did a crochet-style bind-off with the latch tool, instead. I\u00a0still\u00a0managed to drop four or so stitches along the way. I manually repaired these later.\nGrafting: I had a better time seaming up the side of the hat using Kitchener stitch. After my last go at it, I found a video tutorial on Kitchener for machine knitting from Diana Sullivan\u00a0that made a lot more sense. This time I only screwed up one thing about it. Unfortunately that thing makes the resulting seam pretty obvious! A Kitchener stitch graft is supposed to look invisible, because you're basically creating new knit stitches by hand. However, if you create those new stitches\u00a0from the wrong side, what you get is a row of purl stitches on the knit side of the garment!\nSEAMDespite the issues, it wears just fine!\nI'm happy to wear a hat that I made for myself! I was proud to wear it on outings yesterday and this morning. Possibly the last cold days of the season! \ud83d\ude02\nWhat's next? I think I'd like to make another thing for myself. Probably a vest, using these beauties:\nThanks for reading! See you next time.",
"html": "<p>After a <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2026/02/26/161722/\">somewhat fraught Chattie hat commission</a>\u00a0I decided to go ahead and make one for myself!</p>\n<p>\n <br /></p>\n<p>I think it came out ... fine!</p>\n<p>Lessons learned:</p>\n<p><b>Transfers</b>: I'm still having a hard time using my transfer carriage to move ribbing stitches from the front ribber bed to the back main bed. This time I bent a needle on each bed! \ud83d\ude31 I also discovered that this transfer process is where some of my dropped stitches came from in the previous hat. I ended up recovering most of these before seaming, which saved a lot of fixing up time later! \ud83d\ude05</p>\n<p><b>Joining</b> / seaming: somehow, for the second time, I have set out with the intention of joining the hat body to the brim with the seam on the knit side of the hat body, where it will be hidden by the folded brim, but ended up with it on the purl side, against the head. I'm also still getting the feel for seaming things on the machine. I decided to hang the hat body on directly to the needles with the finished brim and do a transfer-tool bind-off, but found the hung-on stitches really got in the way. After dropping a stitch (and some f-bombs) and losing the yarn tail, I backed things up and did a crochet-style bind-off with the latch tool, instead. I\u00a0<i>still</i>\u00a0managed to drop four or so stitches along the way. I manually repaired these later.</p>\n<p><b>Grafting</b>: I had a better time seaming up the side of the hat using Kitchener stitch. After my last go at it, I found a <a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9DxHy6NGek8\">video tutorial on Kitchener for machine knitting from Diana Sullivan</a>\u00a0that made a lot more sense. This time I only screwed up one thing about it. Unfortunately that thing makes the resulting seam pretty obvious! A Kitchener stitch graft is supposed to look invisible, because you're basically creating new knit stitches by hand. However, if you create those new stitches\u00a0<i>from the wrong side</i>, what you get is a row of purl stitches on the knit side of the garment!</p>\n<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/5c/2c/e5/8f/28be5767e483985737dc7a41f303473d1f621f735adee419b8b7256a.\" alt=\"\" />SEAM<p>Despite the issues, it wears just fine!</p>\n<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/16/50/a1/67/1d54e04ec7cfa16d8f98051a6ad447dd832d5b05006fa207c0d80d67.\" alt=\"\" /><img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/80/dc/75/39/d2e7cbf7fc31b8ab1e1aba5004a3798b958db968674924350c7ea60a.\" alt=\"\" /><p>I'm happy to wear a hat that I made for myself! I was proud to wear it on outings yesterday and this morning. Possibly the last cold days of the season! \ud83d\ude02</p>\n<p>What's next? I think I'd like to make another thing for myself. Probably a vest, using these beauties:</p>\n<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/6f/c8/eb/5e/768aec4960d6d053f5849b838a0ce2ef957f34aa30e78061b17d90ee.\" alt=\"\" /><p>Thanks for reading! See you next time.</p>"
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Excellent post from Ben Werdmuller about the dramatic shift that has impacted the calculus for startups and founders.
Enter AI. Almost without warning, AI-enabled tools dramatically expanded what a resource-strapped team can create. It’s a genuine sea change. The more founders and senior engineers I speak to who are actively using these tools, the more stories I hear about accelerated development. People are building smaller tools that would have taken many sprints in less than a day; founders are building entire startups that might have taken six months in less than one.
Ben does point out that there is more to consider than the up-front investment of time and energy required to make an idea a sustainable and successful product. There’s a critical human factor: giving a shit about what you create.
In a world where AI and modern tooling make it dangerously easy to spin up new software, our ultimate constraint is no longer our ability to type code. It’s our capacity to care for the things we bring into the world. Saying "no" to a project with a massive, hidden maintenance burden isn't a failure of imagination; it is how you protect your team’s time so they can focus on the journalism, the community, or the core mission that actually makes your organization special.
You don’t just need to build the dog, you also need to walk it, feed it, and give it the attention it deserves.
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"text": "Ben Werdmuller\n Can we build the dog?\n \n What resource-constrained teams need to ask before writing a line of code\n \n \n \n \n \nExcellent post from Ben Werdmuller about the dramatic shift that has impacted the calculus for startups and founders.\n\nEnter AI. Almost without warning, AI-enabled tools dramatically expanded what a resource-strapped team can create. It\u2019s a genuine sea change. The more founders and senior engineers I speak to who are actively using these tools, the more stories I hear about accelerated development. People are building smaller tools that would have taken many sprints in less than a day; founders are building entire startups that might have taken six months in less than one.\n\nBen does point out that there is more to consider than the up-front investment of time and energy required to make an idea a sustainable and successful product. There\u2019s a critical human factor: giving a shit about what you create.\n\nIn a world where AI and modern tooling make it dangerously easy to spin up new software, our ultimate constraint is no longer our ability to type code. It\u2019s our capacity to care for the things we bring into the world. Saying \"no\" to a project with a massive, hidden maintenance burden isn't a failure of imagination; it is how you protect your team\u2019s time so they can focus on the journalism, the community, or the core mission that actually makes your organization special.\n\nYou don\u2019t just need to build the dog, you also need to walk it, feed it, and give it the attention it deserves.",
"html": "<a href=\"https://werd.io/can-we-build-the-dog/\">\n \n \n <img src=\"https://werd.io/content/images/size/w256h256/format/png/2025/06/thumb.webp\" alt=\"\" />\n \n \n <span>Ben Werdmuller</span>\n <span>Can we build the dog?</span>\n \n <span>What resource-constrained teams need to ask before writing a line of code</span>\n \n \n </a>\n \n \n<p>Excellent post from Ben Werdmuller about the dramatic shift that has impacted the calculus for startups and founders.</p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>Enter AI. Almost without warning, AI-enabled tools dramatically expanded what a resource-strapped team can create. It\u2019s a genuine sea change. The more founders and senior engineers I speak to who are actively using these tools, the more stories I hear about accelerated development. People are building smaller tools that would have taken many sprints in less than a day; founders are building entire startups that might have taken six months in less than one.</p>\n</blockquote>\n<p>Ben does point out that there is more to consider than the up-front investment of time and energy required to make an idea a sustainable and successful product. There\u2019s a critical human factor: giving a shit about what you create.</p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>In a world where AI and modern tooling make it dangerously easy to spin up new software, our ultimate constraint is no longer our ability to type code. It\u2019s our capacity to care for the things we bring into the world. Saying \"no\" to a project with a massive, hidden maintenance burden isn't a failure of imagination; it is how you protect your team\u2019s time so they can focus on the journalism, the community, or the core mission that actually makes your organization special.</p>\n</blockquote>\n<p>You don\u2019t just need to build the dog, you also need to walk it, feed it, and give it the attention it deserves.</p>"
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