Friday link pack #4
Future Crunch seriously nailed it in this week’s edition. So much good stuff in there, but here are some of their quick links from near the end of the newsletter:
At the beginning of every disaster movie, there’s a scientist being ignored
“I never hear scientists, true scientists, good quality scientists, speak in terms of nationality.” Never before have so many of the world’s researchers focused so urgently on a single topic. Nearly all other research has ground to a halt. — NYTAn open dataset of 47,000 articles on coronavirus has been created by Google and made machine readable, meaning researchers can use AI to generate insights. — Kaggle
Researchers from around the world have set up an online platform for volunteers who want to help them fight the coronavirus. There already over 35,000 volunteers.
There are now 95 treatments and 52 vaccines in development for COVID19 in over 200 clinical trials in the US, China and EU. — Milken Institute
The largest of these is being run by Oxford University. Almost 1,000 patients from 132 different hospitals across the UK with thousands more expected to join. — Harrogate
The Gates Foundation is building seven factories for each of the top seven vaccine candidates. “Even though we’ll end up picking at most two of them, we’re going to fund factories for all seven, so we don’t waste time.” — BI
Over a million people have joined up to create the world’s largest networked supercomputer, and it’s just successfully simulated the opening motion of the SARS-CoV-2 virus spike protein. — Folding@Home
The Stockdale Paradox (H/T Daring Fireball)
Admiral Jim Stockdale was the highest-ranking military officer in the Hanoi Hilton. He was there for, I think, seven years, from 1968 to 1974. He was tortured over twenty times. And by his own account, Stockdale came out of the prison camp even stronger than he went in.
In preparation for a day I got to spend with Jim Stockdale, I read his book In Love and War. As I read this book, I found myself getting depressed because it seemed like his systemic constraints were so severe, and there was never going to be any end to it. His captors could come in any day and torture him. He had no sense of whether, or if, he would ever get out of the prison camp. Absolutely depressing situation. It’s like we can all survive anything as long as we know it will come to an end, we know when, and we have a sense of control. He had none of that.
A deeper look at Apple’s latest changes and how the affect PWAs, via Ionic.
TL;DR: if it's a home screen app the 7 day counter will never be hit, and if you’re using Capacitor/Cordova there is no counter as they use WKWebview.
Criterion announce “War Of The Worlds” Blu-ray
Really hoping this gets a UK release, that film is incredible.
Just caught the first episode of DEVS. Yup, I’m hooked.
Seriously great edition from Future Crunch in the inbox today. If you haven’t heard of them "We are a group of scientists, artists, researchers and designers who believe that science and technology are the most powerful drivers of human progress. We’re determined to share that story. Our expertise ranges from political economy, genetics, urban planning and zoology, to music, painting and philosophy. We use our diverse skills and knowledge to provide unexpected perspectives on the state of the world in 2020."
Done some work, time for a film or two. “Reign Of Fire” is first up 🎥
Totally missed that season 2 of Cosmos started on National Geographic UK last Sunday. Catch up TV is an amazing thing 📺
Friday link pack #3
Location data of phones on a Florida beach during Spring Break
via The Loop
Life size pizza table and meatball pizza
via Under Consideration
Quarantined photographer executes fantastic FaceTime fashion shoot
via Cult Of Mac
‘RoboCop 2’: The crazy story of how Cain got his CG puppeteered head
"What’s ironic about that is – the stop-motion that Tippett Studio did in RoboCop 2 is astounding. In my opinion, Cain is the pinnacle of stop motion as a realistic VFX technique. It had never been done better, and now probably never will be. Because built right into Cain, in its earliest, crudest form, was the technology that would effectively end stop-motion as a VFX tool just a couple of years later. Nobody knew it at the time, but RoboCop 2 was a turning point in VFX, with its past and its future combined into a single character."
Friday link pack #3
Location data of phones on a Florida beach during Spring Break
via The Loop
Life size pizza table and meatball pizza
via Under Consideration
Quarantined photographer executes fantastic FaceTime fashion shoot
via Cult Of Mac
‘RoboCop 2’: The crazy story of how Cain got his CG puppeteered head
"What’s ironic about that is – the stop-motion that Tippett Studio did in RoboCop 2 is astounding. In my opinion, Cain is the pinnacle of stop motion as a realistic VFX technique. It had never been done better, and now probably never will be. Because built right into Cain, in its earliest, crudest form, was the technology that would effectively end stop-motion as a VFX tool just a couple of years later. Nobody knew it at the time, but RoboCop 2 was a turning point in VFX, with its past and its future combined into a single character."
Just finished the last episode of Picard. Damn that was good 🚀📺
First film of the day - Tomorrowland 🍿
Trying to decide between watching “The Thing” or the 70s version of “Invasion Of The Body Snatchers” 🤔🎥
Time for a bit of Doom Eternal 🎮
Thinking about my phone, one thing I’d really like is if the layout changed over the day - “you’re done with work for the day, let’s shuffle those apps out of thumb reach until tomorrow” 🤔
Friday link pack #2
Nintendo Customer Support Goes Above And Beyond For 95-Year-Old Grandma's Busted Game Boy
Nine Inch Nails make Ghosts V-VI available for free
Astronaut Chris Hadfield Reviews Space Movies, from 'Gravity' to 'Interstellar' | Vanity Fair
Flight 008 first podcast episodes are now online
"Eleven of the biggest writers in science fiction, through eleven unique stories, follow one single thread: a non-stop flight from Tokyo to San Francisco that passes through a wrinkle in spacetime and lands in the year 2040."
I haven’t linked directly to Apple Podcasts etc because personally I use Overcast and I prefer to be easily offered the choice of player.
Friday link pack #2
Nintendo Customer Support Goes Above And Beyond For 95-Year-Old Grandma's Busted Game Boy
Nine Inch Nails make Ghosts V-VI available for free
Astronaut Chris Hadfield Reviews Space Movies, from 'Gravity' to 'Interstellar' | Vanity Fair
Flight 008 first podcast episodes are now online
"Eleven of the biggest writers in science fiction, through eleven unique stories, follow one single thread: a non-stop flight from Tokyo to San Francisco that passes through a wrinkle in spacetime and lands in the year 2040."
I haven’t linked directly to Apple Podcasts etc because personally I use Overcast and I prefer to be easily offered the choice of player.
Starting the morning with some pre-work Disney+ action. Time for The Phantom Menace 📽
Starting the day off with Europe “Out Of This World” 🎵
Watching “The Imagineering Story” 📺
Mockoon - run mock APIs locally
I’ve been working through “Building Forms with Vue.js” by Marina Mosti, and a tool she mentioned to use was an open source free API simulator called Mockoon:
“Mockoon is the easiest and quickest way to run mock APIs locally. No remote deployment, no account required, open source."
Seriously, this app is brilliant. I think I’ll get a lot of use out of it 😄
H/T to Enjoy The Vue podcast, episode 6.
Mockoon - run mock APIs locally
I’ve been working through “Building Forms with Vue.js” by Marina Mosti, and a tool she mentioned to use was an open source free API simulator called Mockoon:
“Mockoon is the easiest and quickest way to run mock APIs locally. No remote deployment, no account required, open source."
Seriously, this app is brilliant. I think I’ll get a lot of use out of it 😄
H/T to Enjoy The Vue podcast, episode 6.
Outside one of the local pubs (seen while dog walking).
