20 random bookmarks
post-growth, sustainability, computing & kin.
post-growth, sustainability, computing & kin.
This website lives on a Raspberry Pi placed in a garden shed and powered using a solar panel and batteries.
Becoming Hypertext is a workshop on poetic and experimental ways of creating and reading the site, browser, and the desktop.
We are investigating alternative hardware from locally sourced materials, so-called ethical hardware, to develop and speculate upon renewable practices for the benefit of both nature and humans.
The digital world we live in is full of excesses. We have come to expect fast speeds, 100% up-time, high resolution and always accessible digital media. The primary version of this website reluctlantly aims to meet those expectations, while highlighting some these issues.
The main version of this site is accessible at all times of the day, but is housed on a self-hosted server, made from recycled, consumer-grade computer parts, on a domestic internet connection, and domestic electricity connection.
The remote website is most precarious, relying on solar power and cellular network, the main version of the website is slightly less precarious.
a manually curated collection of neat indie websites :)
Aphorisms on failure, resilience and safety
Being a Short Treatise on the Nature of Failure; How Failure is Evaluated; How Failure is Attributed to Proximate Cause; and the Resulting New Understanding of Patient Safety
This aesthetic screenshot of an old windows app has been in my inspiration space for ~5 years. Until recently, I assumed that it was just a nostalgia bait concept.
The calm, serene life associated with gardening pairs suspiciously well with rose-tinted wistfulness for a simpler time in computing. I’m happy to be wrong though, because software doesn’t get more real than PlantStudio.
A blog post by https://kopiti.am/@nondescryptid detailing how they set up postmarketOS on their own phone:
I’ve got a Samsung Galaxy S II (i9100) lying around, and decided to try seeing if I can repurpose it and get it to host a blog. I was inspired by compost.party – a very cool server running off a Xiaomi Poco F1 using postmarketOS and a solar panel for charging.
The physical nature of computing is usually not a concern, as things are sufficiently abstracted for me to not have to care too much about it. But trying to revive this phone from 2011 was a reminder that when we talk about compute, we are ultimately dealing with physical resources – tiny towns with blocks of silicon, lithium, etc etc.
It’s always safe to assume JavaScript will not be available, so here’s a quick list of very realistic reasons it won’t be.
HTML energy is all around us and in this very website.
Building websites has become complex,
but the energy of HTML persists.
What makes HTML special is its simplicity.
HTML isn’t a vast language, yet you can do a lot with it.
Anyone who wants to publish on the web can write HTML.
This accessibility and ease of use is where its energy resides.
Who’s writing HTML today?
The internet has become an extractive and fragile monoculture. But we can revitalize it using lessons learned by ecologists.
This talk is called An Approach to Computing and Sustainability Inspired From Permaculture. Sustainability is an awful word, that doesn't really mean much anymore. What I mean by this is being able to do something for a sustained amount of time. Permaculture is also an equally vague concept, when I say this, I mean that it is something that has a strengthening effect on the ecosystem.
I'm interested in computers as a way to do more than consume, as a tool of creation. For that reason I won't consider services, or apps. This talk is about open specs and on building knowledge to write your own software.
I'm going to present technologies, but I won't give you their names, because my goal is that you will develop your own systems. I'm not selling you on any one technology.
The plastics industry has heralded a type of chemical recycling it claims could replace new shopping bags and candy wrappers with old ones — but not much is being recycled at all, and this method won’t curb the crisis.
Aiming for a 10 year life-cycle for smartphones
This website is solar-powered and self-hosted. It has been designed to radically reduce the energy use associated with accessing our content.
Billions of phones will be hoarded in drawers and cupboards or thrown away rather than recycled, studies suggest.
A naturally intelligent network programmed by the sun.
A game jam that focuses on creating energy-efficient games
How Tech Companies are Helping Big Oil Profit from Climate Destruction
The world's biggest cloud providers and the world's biggest oil and gas companies are deeply interwoven, and machine learning algorithms and computational resources are accelerating extractivist capitalism.