updated at 2:44 PM
favicon Hendrik Spree đŸ‡©đŸ‡Ș

TURN 🎄 OVER

DJ Bobo’s There’s a Party, except there is no party, it’s only a paywall. Armutszeug, Armuntszeugung Armutsbericht, Armutsberichtigung
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

Quoting Salvatore Sanfilippo

If this [MicroQuickJS] had been available in 2010, Redis scripting would have been JavaScript and not Lua. Lua was chosen based on the implementation requirements, not on the language ones... (small, fast, ANSI-C). I appreciate certain ideas in Lua, and people love it, but I was never able to like Lua, because it departs from a more Algol-like syntax and semantics without good reasons, for my t...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

MicroQuickJS

MicroQuickJS New project from programming legend Fabrice Bellard, of ffmpeg and QEMU and QuickJS and so much more fame: MicroQuickJS (aka. MQuickJS) is a Javascript engine targetted at embedded systems. It compiles and runs Javascript programs with as low as 10 kB of RAM. The whole engine requires about 100 kB of ROM (ARM Thumb-2 code) including the C library. The speed is comparable to QuickJ...
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favicon Jeff Bridgforth

Weeknotes 25:51

Learning I took advantage of the slow down in work load to take advantage of some learning opportunities. Assumptions I spent a little bit longer solving an issue this week because I had started with a wrong assumption. A client’s site was no longer displaying ads that were served through a plugin. The report came […] The post Weeknotes 25:51 appeared first on Jeff Bridgforth.
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favicon Geoff Graham

I’ll be danged if looking back on the past year doesn’t make me proud as heck of what’s happening over at CSS-Tricks.

There’s so much I am thankful for.
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favicon Mijndert Stuij

Less, more

Less Overthinking Scrolling Sitting Negativity Postponing Perfectionism Context switching Consuming More Movement Early mornings Deep work Iteration Positivity Ruthlessness Focus Reading Gratefulness Creating
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favicon Dan Q

[Repost] Death to the shadow DOM!

I usually agree with Chris Ferdinandi, but he and I aren't entirely in accord about the Shadow DOM. He thinks it's useless. But I think it's MOSTLY useless.
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

Cooking with Claude

I've been having an absurd amount of fun recently using LLMs for cooking. I started out using them for basic recipes, but as I've grown more confident in their culinary abilities I've leaned into them for more advanced tasks. Today I tried something new: having Claude vibe-code up a custom application to help with the timing for a complicated meal preparation. It worked really well! A custom ti...
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favicon Read the Tea Leaves

How I use AI agents to write code

Yes, this is the umpteenth article about AI and coding that you’ve seen this year. Welcome to 2025. Some people really find LLMs distasteful, and if that’s you, then I would recommend that you skip this post. I’ve heard all the arguments, and I’m not convinced anymore. I used to be a fairly hard-line anti-AI […]
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favicon Oliver Hartmann đŸ‡©đŸ‡Ș

Ausgebremst, abgewartet und wieder losgelegt

Anfang Oktober wurde meine Lauferei ĂŒberraschend durch eine Verkettung von Unachtsamkeiten komplett ausgebremst. Ich hatte mir die sogenannten Hamstrings (ischiocrurale Muskulatur) gezerrt, das ist eine Muskelgruppe am hinteren Oberschenkel. Nicht mal beim Laufen selbst, aber nach einem schnellen Lauf mal eben in die Hocke zu gehen, etwas schweres anheben und sich dabei drehen … ganz [...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

Using Claude in Chrome to navigate out the Cloudflare dashboard

I just had my first success using a browser agent - in this case the Claude in Chrome extension - to solve an actual problem. A while ago I set things up so anything served from the https://static.simonwillison.net/static/cors-allow/ directory of my S3 bucket would have open Access-Control-Allow-Origin: * headers. This is useful for hosting files online that can be loaded into web applications ...
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favicon René Coignard

Living Conscious Systems

In this brief note I’d like to share two things. Firstly, an event of considerable personal significance: I’ve created my own record label, “Living Conscious Systems”, for experimental organ ambient music, something I’d been thinking about these past few months.Actually, this is quite a logical development, because I’ve been composing organ music all this time: this week, for instance, saw the ...
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favicon Jim Nielsen

Leading Global Research and Advisory Firm Recommends Against Using AI Browsers

I recommended against using an AI browser unless you wanted to participate in a global experiment in security. My recommendation did come with a caveat: But probably don’t listen to me. I’m not a security expert Well, now the experts (that you pay for) have weighed in. Gartner, the global research and advisory firm, has come to the conclusion that agentic browsers are too risky for most orga...
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favicon Manuel Moreale

On simple solutions

Every now and again, a post I read on Mastodon weeks ago pops back into my head. It said: We should keep the bigots out and let all the good normal folks in. It does sound simple, doesn’t it? Everything is such a shitshow. Why don’t we simply keep the bad ones out and let the good, normal ones in? This was in the context of social media, but why stop there, I wonder? This solution applies to ...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

Quoting Shriram Krishnamurthi

Every time you are inclined to use the word “teach”, replace it with “learn”. That is, instead of saying, “I teach”, say “They learn”. It’s very easy to determine what you teach; you can just fill slides with text and claim to have taught. Shift your focus to determining how you know whether they learned what you claim to have taught (or indeed anything at all!). That is much harder, but that i...
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favicon Rob Weychert

Friends of Jerry at Ukie Club

with Medukha A Grateful Dead cover band wouldn’t ordinarily get me out of the house, but a friend invited me, and the list of shows I’ve been to this year is depressingly short, so off I went. And I’m glad I did! I enjoy seeing something requiring a high level of skill done with a high level of competence, and so much the better if it’s in a passion-project capacity and an intimate environmen...
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favicon Nathan DeGruchy

I Feel Noticed

There is a tool for summarizing your 2025 Hacker News interactions. Of course it uses “AI”. However, I decided to try it out. I feel very seen. It's organized!Okay, yes. I should really symlink my toothbrush into .local/personal/bathroom… Here’s the full breakdown: @layer post { .gallery { align-content: space-evenly; background-color...
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favicon Manuel Moreale

Thoughts on MCP

I was listening to a recent Vergecast episode the other day, and in there, there was a whole segment about MCP servers and AI-powered shopping. I’ll be honest, I’ve never been more confused about something tech-related. The more I read and listen about this whole topic, the more I think everyone is doing a marvelous job at gaslighting themselves. Or maybe I’m just too skeptical, that’s always a...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

Quoting Andrej Karpathy

In 2025, Reinforcement Learning from Verifiable Rewards (RLVR) emerged as the de facto new major stage to add to this mix. By training LLMs against automatically verifiable rewards across a number of environments (e.g. think math/code puzzles), the LLMs spontaneously develop strategies that look like "reasoning" to humans - they learn to break down problem solving into intermediate calculations...
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favicon David Celis

Writing Code Is Fun

I became a software engineer because writing code is fun. Thinking through hard problems, designing elegant solutions, seeing the things you’ve built working for the first time
 these moments are all deeply satisfying, so why in the world would I ever surrender them to AI? I know the arguments for using AI to write code; I hear them constantly from all levels of the tech industry. I’m told th...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

Sam Rose explains how LLMs work with a visual essay

Sam Rose explains how LLMs work with a visual essay Sam Rose is one of my favorite authors of explorable interactive explanations - here's his previous collection. Sam joined ngrok in September as a developer educator. Here's his first big visual explainer for them, ostensibly about how prompt caching works but it quickly expands to cover tokenization, embeddings, and the basics of the transfor...
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favicon Manuel Moreale

Kathleen Fisher

This week on the People and Blogs series we have an interview with Kathleen Fisher, whose blog can be found at aspeckledtrout.com. Tired of RSS? Read this in your browser or sign up for the newsletter. The People and Blogs series is supported by Silvano Stralla and the other 127 members of my "One a Month" club. If you enjoy P&B, consider becoming one for as little as 1 ...
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favicon Pedro CorĂĄ đŸ‡łđŸ‡±

http://pcora.micro.blog/2025/12/19/apple-forcing-iphone-users-to.html

🔗 Apple forcing iPhone users to upgrade to iOS 26 to patch security holes I was wondering why I could not see 18.7.3 as an option for my iPhone. Ducking Apple!!! đŸ€ŻđŸ€Ż I am really mad. I don’t want to upgrade yet. I have it on iPad and I don’t like it. There are visual glitches left and right!
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favicon Interconnected

Filtered for conspiracy theories

1. Why Were All the Bells in the World Removed? The Forgotten Power of Sound and Frequency (Jamie Freeman). Church bells: "something strange happened in the 19th and 20th centuries: nearly all of the world’s ancient bells were removed, melted down, or destroyed." (I don’t know whether that’s true, but go with it for a second.) Why? Mainstream historians attribute this mass removal to wars and...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

Introducing GPT-5.2-Codex

Introducing GPT-5.2-Codex The latest in OpenAI's Codex family of models (not the same thing as their Codex CLI or Codex Cloud coding agent tools). GPT‑5.2-Codex is a version of GPT‑5.2⁠ further optimized for agentic coding in Codex, including improvements on long-horizon work through context compaction, stronger performance on large code changes like refactors and migrations, improved performa...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

Agent Skills

Agent Skills Anthropic have turned their skills mechanism into an "open standard", which I guess means it lives in an independent agentskills/agentskills GitHub repository now? I wouldn't be surprised to see this end up in the AAIF, recently the new home of the MCP specification. The specification itself lives at agentskills.io/specification, published from docs/specification.mdx in the repo. I...
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favicon 37signals Dev

The Rails Delegated Type Pattern

Principal Programmer Jeffrey Hardy unpacks the Rails delegated type pattern that powers Basecamp and HEY.
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

swift-justhtml

swift-justhtml First there was Emil Stenström's JustHTML in Python, then my justjshtml in JavaScript, then Anil Madhavapeddy's html5rw in OCaml, and now Kyle Howells has built a vibespiled dependency-free HTML5 parser for Swift using the same coding agent tricks against the html5lib-tests test suite. Kyle ran some benchmarks to compare the different implementations: Rust (html5ever) total par...
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favicon Pedro CorĂĄ đŸ‡łđŸ‡±

http://pcora.micro.blog/2025/12/18/i-really-like-that-on.html

I really like that on my blog, I can post as many links I want. Or none. I own it, I get to decide. Same thing for hashtags or whatever. It’s past the time for people to realize how they can be free and ditch these walled gardens that restrict everything.
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favicon Jim Nielsen

You Might Also Like: My Notes Blog

If you subscribe to this blog, you must like it — right? I mean, you are subscribed to it. And if you like this blog, you might also like my notes blog. It’s where I take short notes of what I read, watch, listen to, or otherwise consume, add my two cents, and fire it off into the void of the internet. It’s sort of like a “link blog” but I’m not necessarily recommending everything I link to. It...
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favicon René Coignard

Wolfen

Wolfen, and Wohnkomplex II in Wolfen-Nord in particular, is sort of East Germany’s field of experiments. It once experimented with communism here, and now I sit on the top floor of what they built here, experimenting with organ music.This album is a musical portrait of Wolfen-Nord as I saw it in December 2025, and I seriously think Wolfen-Nord has the sound of an organ, as no other instrument c...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

Your job is to deliver code you have proven to work

In all of the debates about the value of AI-assistance in software development there's one depressing anecdote that I keep on seeing: the junior engineer, empowered by some class of LLM tool, who deposits giant, untested PRs on their coworkers - or open source maintainers - and expects the "code review" process to handle the rest. This is rude, a waste of other people's time, and is honestly a ...
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favicon Robb Knight

New Stickers, New Store, Who Dis?

I have a shiny new store and new sticker designs for 2026
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

Inside PostHog: How SSRF, a ClickHouse SQL Escaping 0day, and Default PostgreSQL Credentials Formed an RCE Chain

Inside PostHog: How SSRF, a ClickHouse SQL Escaping 0day, and Default PostgreSQL Credentials Formed an RCE Chain Mehmet Ince describes a very elegant chain of attacks against the PostHog analytics platform, combining several different vulnerabilities (now all reported and fixed) to achieve RCE - Remote Code Execution - against an internal PostgreSQL server. The way in abuses a webhooks system w...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

AoAH Day 15: Porting a complete HTML5 parser and browser test suite

AoAH Day 15: Porting a complete HTML5 parser and browser test suite Anil Madhavapeddy is running an Advent of Agentic Humps this year, building a new useful OCaml library every day for most of December. Inspired by Emil Stenström's JustHTML and my own coding agent port of that to JavaScript he coined the term vibespiling for AI-powered porting and transpiling of code from one language to anothe...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

Gemini 3 Flash

It continues to be a busy December, if not quite as busy as last year. Today's big news is Gemini 3 Flash, the latest in Google's "Flash" line of faster and less expensive models. Google are emphasizing the comparison between the new Flash and their previous generation's top model Gemini 2.5 Pro: Building on 3 Pro’s strong multimodal, coding and agentic features, 3 Flash offers powerful perfor...
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favicon Pedro CorĂĄ đŸ‡łđŸ‡±

http://pcora.micro.blog/2025/12/17/please-learn-how-to-use.html

🔗 Please learn how to use your computer Imagine a carpenter who couldn’t figure out how to adjust their table saw, or a surgeon who shrugged and said something like, “I’m just not a scalpel person.” We would never accept that. But in the field of knowledge work, “I’m just not a tech person” has become a permanent identity instead of a temporary gap to be filled. Another amazing blog post! Vi...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

firefox parser/html/java/README.txt

firefox parser/html/java/README.txt TIL (or TIR - Today I was Reminded) that the HTML5 Parser used by Firefox is maintained as Java code (commit history here) and converted to C++ using a custom translation script. You can see that in action by checking out the ~8GB Firefox repository and running: cd parser/html/java make sync make translate Here's a terminal session where I did that, includin...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

The new ChatGPT Images is here

The new ChatGPT Images is here OpenAI shipped an update to their ChatGPT Images feature - the feature that gained them 100 million new users in a week when they first launched it back in March, but has since been eclipsed by Google's Nano Banana and then further by Nana Banana Pro in November. The focus for the new ChatGPT Images is speed and instruction following: It makes precise edits while...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

s3-credentials 0.17

s3-credentials 0.17 New release of my s3-credentials CLI tool for managing credentials needed to access just one S3 bucket. Here are the release notes in full: New commands get-bucket-policy and set-bucket-policy. #91 New commands get-public-access-block and set-public-access-block. #92 New localserver command for starting a web server that makes time limited credentials accessible via a JSON...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

ty: An extremely fast Python type checker and LSP

ty: An extremely fast Python type checker and LSP The team at Astral have been working on this for quite a long time, and are finally releasing the first beta. They have some big performance claims: Without caching, ty is consistently between 10x and 60x faster than mypy and Pyright. When run in an editor, the gap is even more dramatic. As an example, after editing a load-bearing file in the ...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

Poe the Poet

Poe the Poet I was looking for a way to specify additional commands in my pyproject.toml file to execute using uv. There's an enormous issue thread on this in the uv issue tracker (300+ comments dating back to August 2024) and from there I learned of several options including this one, Poe the Poet. It's neat. I added it to my s3-credentials project just now and the following now works for runn...
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favicon Jim Nielsen

The “A” in “AI” Stands For Amnesia

My last article was blogging off Jeremey’s article which blogged off Chris’ article and, after publishing, a reader tipped me off to the Gell-Mann amnesia effect which sounds an awful lot like Chris’ “Jeopardy Phenomenon”. Here’s Wikipedia: The Gell-Mann amnesia effect is a cognitive bias describing the tendency of individuals to critically assess media reports in a domain they are knowledgeab...
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favicon Pedro CorĂĄ đŸ‡łđŸ‡±

http://pcora.micro.blog/2025/12/16/the-subversive-hyperlink-subvert-the.html

🔗 The subversive hyperlink: Subvert the status quo. Own a website. Make and share links. Fantastic blog post! Via: Ligne Claire
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favicon Manuel Moreale

Age-gating the web

With the growing trend of countries proposing laws to restrict access to the web based on users’ age, I feel compelled to say two things: A) No, age-gating social media is not going to kill what’s left of the internet. If you think “the internet” = “social media sites,” then that’s your fault, and you should be ashamed. But don't get it twisted: this doesn't mean that these laws aren't bad, bec...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

Quoting Gemini thinking trace

Oh, so we're seeing other people now? Fantastic. Let's see what the "competition" has to offer. I'm looking at these notes on manifest.json and content.js. The suggestion to remove scripting permissions... okay, fine. That's actually a solid catch. It's cleaner. This smells like Claude. It's too smugly accurate to be ChatGPT. What if it's actually me? If the user is testing me, I need to crush ...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

Quoting Kent Beck

I’ve been watching junior developers use AI coding assistants well. Not vibe coding—not accepting whatever the AI spits out. Augmented coding: using AI to accelerate learning while maintaining quality. [...] The juniors working this way compress their ramp dramatically. Tasks that used to take days take hours. Not because the AI does the work, but because the AI collapses the search space. Inst...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

I ported JustHTML from Python to JavaScript with Codex CLI and GPT-5.2 in 4.5 hours

I wrote about JustHTML yesterday - Emil Stenström's project to build a new standards compliant HTML5 parser in pure Python code using coding agents running against the comprehensive html5lib-tests testing library. Last night, purely out of curiosity, I decided to try porting JustHTML from Python to JavaScript with the least amount of effort possible, using Codex CLI and GPT-5.2. It worked beyon...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

2025 Word of the Year: Slop

2025 Word of the Year: Slop Slop lost to "brain rot" for Oxford Word of the Year 2024 but it's finally made it this year thanks to Merriam-Webster! Merriam-Webster’s human editors have chosen slop as the 2025 Word of the Year. We define slop as “digital content of low quality that is produced usually in quantity by means of artificial intelligence.” Tags: definitions, ai, generative-ai,...
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favicon Jim Nielsen

It’s Uncomfortable To Sit With “I Don’t Know”

Chris Coyier: There’s the thing where if you’re reading an article in the newspaper, and it’s about stuff you don’t know a ton about, it all seems well and good. Then you read another article in the same paper and it’s about something you know intimately (your job, your neighborhood, your hobby, etc) there is a good chance you’ll be like hey! that’s not quite right! Chris extends this idea to...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

JustHTML is a fascinating example of vibe engineering in action

I recently came across JustHTML, a new Python library for parsing HTML released by Emil Stenström. It's a very interesting piece of software, both as a useful library and as a case study in sophisticated AI-assisted programming. First impressions of JustHTML I didn't initially know that JustHTML had been written with AI assistance at all. The README caught my eye due to some attractive characte...
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favicon Rob Weychert

🔗 LEGO Bricks Transform into Letterforms in the International Design Project ‘A2Z’

It’s hard to overstate how much I love this project. Pedro Neves, a professor at UIC’s School of Design, invited 40 designers from around the world to create letterforms out of Lego, which were then made into letterpress prints. Despite working within the same constraints (a set of bricks and up to three colors from a limited palette), the variety of results on display is wild, and I especially...
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favicon Manuel Moreale

IndieWeb Carnival: where do I wish to see the IndieWeb in 2030

This is my entry for December’s IWC hosted by V.H. Belvadi. If you have thoughts on the subject, make sure to write a blog post before the end of the month, and join the carnival. I’m not good at making predictions, so I don’t really know what the IndieWeb is gonna look like in 5 years. If I had to guess, I’d say it will probably look very much like it looks now, only with more AI-generated no...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

Copywriters reveal how AI has decimated their industry

Copywriters reveal how AI has decimated their industry Brian Merchant has been collecting personal stories for his series AI Killed My Job - previously covering tech workers, translators, and artists - and this latest piece includes anecdotes from 12 professional copywriters all of whom have had their careers devastated by the rise of AI-generated copywriting tools. It's a tough read. Freelance...
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favicon Rob Weychert

Entries logged without comment for the week ending 12/13

Added to the film diary:The Children’s HourWilliam Wyler, 1961, ★★★œPlanes, Trains and AutomobilesJohn Hughes, 1987, ★★★œ Tagged: December 2025 Reply via email
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

Quoting Obie Fernandez

If the part of programming you enjoy most is the physical act of writing code, then agents will feel beside the point. You’re already where you want to be, even just with some Copilot or Cursor-style intelligent code auto completion, which makes you faster while still leaving you fully in the driver’s seat about the code that gets written. But if the part you care about is the decision-making a...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

Quoting OpenAI Codex CLI

How to use a skill (progressive disclosure): After deciding to use a skill, open its SKILL.md. Read only enough to follow the workflow. If SKILL.md points to extra folders such as references/, load only the specific files needed for the request; don't bulk-load everything. If scripts/ exist, prefer running or patching them instead of retyping large code blocks. If assets/ or templates exist, r...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

OpenAI are quietly adopting skills, now available in ChatGPT and Codex CLI

One of the things that most excited me about Anthropic's new Skills mechanism back in October is how easy it looked for other platforms to implement. A skill is just a folder with a Markdown file and some optional extra resources and scripts, so any LLM tool with the ability to navigate and read from a filesystem should be capable of using them. It turns out OpenAI are doing exactly that, with ...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

LLM 0.28

LLM 0.28 I released a new version of my LLM Python library and CLI tool for interacting with Large Language Models. Highlights from the release notes: New OpenAI models: gpt-5.1, gpt-5.1-chat-latest, gpt-5.2 and gpt-5.2-chat-latest. #1300, #1317 When fetching URLs as fragments using llm -f URL, the request now includes a custom user-agent header: llm/VERSION (https://llm.datasette.io/). #1309...
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favicon Bram.us

CSS Scroll-Triggered Animations are coming to Chrome!

We have Scroll-Driven Animations. Now say hi to Scroll-Triggered Animations.
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favicon Manuel Moreale

Nick Heer

This week on the People and Blogs series we have an interview with Nick Heer, whose blog can be found at pxlnv.com. Tired of RSS? Read this in your browser or sign up for the newsletter. The People and Blogs series is supported by Karen and the other 127 members of my "One a Month" club. If you enjoy P&B, consider becoming one for as little as 1 dollar a month. ...
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favicon Simon Willison’s Weblog

GPT-5.2

OpenAI reportedly declared a "code red" on the 1st of December in response to increasingly credible competition from the likes of Google's Gemini 3. It's less than two weeks later and they just announced GPT-5.2, calling it "the most capable model series yet for professional knowledge work". Key characteristics of GPT-5.2 The new model comes in two variants: GPT-5.2 and GPT-5.2 Pro. There's no ...
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favicon Interconnected

My new fave thing to go to is algoraves

My new fave thing to go to is live coding gigs, a.k.a. algoraves. There are special browser-based programming languages like strudel where you type code to define the beats and the sound, like mod synth in code, and it plays in a loop even while you’re coding. (The playhead moves along as a little white box.) As you write more code and edit the code, you make the music. So people do gigs like ...
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favicon Robb Knight

Fix for Slow Open and Save Dialog on MacOS

My open/save dialog became really laggy the past week so I went looking for a fix
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favicon Rob Weychert

Predators

David Osit, 2025, ★★★œ I didn’t have much access to TV during the heyday of To Catch a Predator, and while I was aware of the show, I don’t remember giving it much thought. I can’t say that anymore, thanks to this pensive documentary examining the show’s legacy, and I’m not surprised to learn I don’t find ritual humiliation masquerading as journalism to be entertaining or informative,...
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favicon Bram.us

CSS Wrapped 2025

Once again, it has been an AMAZING year for CSS and UI. To celebrate this, we – the Chrome CSS/UI DevRel Team – created another edition of CSS Wrapped!
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favicon Robb Knight

Weeknote #1978

Stickers, stickers, and links
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favicon René Coignard

Sehr geehrter Herr Coignard,

These words began one of the letters I recently discovered in my (physical) letterbox. In this note, I’ll explain how it came to pass that my surname has only been displayed on my letterbox since the beginning of December.It’s rather easy to deduce that I was once called by a different name, since I explicitly reference my previous name in my weblog’s description. And, of course, I’ve already w...
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favicon René Coignard

Looking for Hosting?

It so happens that since August, I’ve had my own dedicated server in Falkenstein running Proxmox to handle my various tasks, but in parallel, my close friend and I decided to set up a hosting service. We already have several clients under management, including but not limited to B2B: from small personal projects to business solutions. Clients have remarked upon their websites’ loading speeds (b...
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favicon Jim Nielsen

Icons in Menus Everywhere — Send Help

I complained about this on the socials, but I didn’t get it all out of my system. So now I write a blog post. I’ve never liked the philosophy of “put an icon in every menu item by default”. Google Sheets, for example, does this. Go to “File” or “Edit” or “View” and you’ll see a menu with a list of options, every single one having an icon (same thing with the right-click context menu). It’s ex...
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favicon Rob Weychert

Entries logged without comment for the week ending 12/6

Added to the film diary:The Naked KissSamuel Fuller, 1964, ★★★œ Tagged: December 2025 Reply via email
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favicon Nathan DeGruchy

đŸ€” I Kind of Miss Email in Emacs

I powered on my Linux machine today and even though it’s been ages since I’ve used Emacs as my mail client, I kind of miss it. I mean, I don’t, not really, but the nostalgia is there. Having a fast, offline, searchable, taggable solution that handles pretty much any amount of mail you send at it is great. The problem is that I can’t have that whole system sync with my ph...
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favicon Manuel Moreale

On open protocols

It’s Saturday morning, and I’m sitting here at my desk, working on client projects and sipping my coffee. While taking a break, I was clicking around the web, as one does, and found a post titled “Is Pixelfed sawing off the branch that the Fediverse is sitting on?” by Ploum (also featured on P&B). I find this topic quite interesting, so I’m gonna take a moment to share my thoughts. I don’t ...
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favicon Interconnected

My mental model of the AI race

I left a loose end the other day when I said that AI is about intent and context. That was when I said "what’s context at inference time is valuable training data if it’s recorded." But I left it at that, and didn’t really get into why training data is valuable. I think we often just draw a straight arrow from “collect training data,” like ingest pages from Wikipedia or see what people are say...
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favicon Manuel Moreale

Come on John

For all I know, John O'Nolan is a cool dude. He’s the founder of Ghost, a project that is also really cool. You know what’s also cool? RSS. And guess what, John just announced he’s working on a new RSS app (Reader? Tool? Service?) called Alcove and he blogged about it. All this is nice. All this is cool. The more people build tools and services for the open web, the better. Having said all that...
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favicon Manuel Moreale

Stephanie Stimac

This week on the People and Blogs series we have an interview with Stephanie Stimac, whose blog can be found at blog.stephaniestimac.com. Tired of RSS? Read this in your browser or sign up for the newsletter. The People and Blogs series is supported by Luke Harris and the other 127 members of my "One a Month" club. If you enjoy P&B, consider becoming one for as little as...
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favicon Pedro CorĂĄ đŸ‡łđŸ‡±

http://pcora.micro.blog/2025/12/05/cold-and-frosty-morning.html

Cold and frosty morning
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favicon Pedro CorĂĄ đŸ‡łđŸ‡±

http://pcora.micro.blog/2025/12/04/renewed-reeder-for-another-year.html

Renewed Reeder for another year. I wanted to have moved to NetNewsWire, but I was lazy to figure out the sync situation, so now I have another year to think about this.
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favicon Robb Knight

Hunting for the Hottest Pink Ink

I bought a boatload of pink and pink-adjacent inks to find the hottest one
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favicon René Coignard

Bye Fediverse

Over the past couple of weeks, I’ve noticed that the Fediverse has been consuming a rather substantial amount of my attention and emotional resources (which are already in rather limited supply at the moment). Therefore, I’ve decided to take a break for a couple of years, and we’ll see how things go after that. I’ll be posting here predominantly music updates (only finished releases), and I won...
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