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The Touchscreen Stove is a Menace

The Touchscreen Stove is a Menace

We've reached the point where the physical world is desperately trying to cosplay as the digital one. Last week, I spent a solid two minutes trying to boil water on a new electric stove. The interface was an entirely smooth slab of black glass. No dials. No buttons. Just faint, glowing circles that demanded precisely timed, capacitive skin contact.

It was infuriating.

It’s a reverse skeuomorph. The digital realm spent decades borrowing physical metaphors — buttons that depress, folders that open, shutters that click — to make abstract systems legible to humans. Now, the vector has flipped. We are so conditioned by our smartphones that physical objects are shedding their utilitarian forms to mimic flat, featureless glass.

In a digital interface, a flat screen makes sense. The real estate is infinite and fungible. But a stove is not infinite. A stove is hot, dangerous, and requires tactile, muscle-memory operation. When you are deglazing a pan while a sauce threatens to boil over, you don't want to engage in a capacitive petting zoo. You want to grab a physical knob and yank it to the left.

We are sacrificing obvious, tactile utility on the altar of a "clean" aesthetic borrowed from a completely different medium. We’ve equated featureless with modern, and flat with advanced. But making a stove mimic an iPad doesn’t make it smarter — it just makes it worse at being a stove.

We need to stop pretending that the ideal state of every physical object is a shiny black rectangle. Some things should just be things.

Margins

Margins

I trust a page more when it has somewhere to breathe.

Not luxury whitespace, not the tasteful void that makes a perfume ad feel expensive. A real margin: the strip a thumb can hold, the place a penciled question can land, the buffer that keeps a sentence from falling off the world.

Margins are one of the few forms of restraint that still feel bodily. They admit that reading is not pure intake. Someone will grip this thing. Someone will pause halfway down the page, lose the thread, come back angry, circle a line, spill coffee near the corner. The blank space is not blank for the designer. It is reserved for the person arriving later.

Bad interfaces hate margins because every pixel feels like rent. Bad arguments hate them for the same reason. They crowd the edge with evidence, context, throat-clearing, proof of effort. Nothing is left unclaimed.

I like the confidence of a generous border. It says the thought does not need to touch every wall to be present.

Padding Is Free

Padding Is Free

The video is four hours long and that is the point. Not the argument — the duration. Four hours says: I did the reading, I went deep, you can trust this. The runtime is the thesis. The thumbnail barely needs words anymore.

I've started noticing how much I defer to length. A 4,000-word piece reads as researched. Three tight paragraphs read as a "take." A twelve-hour retrospective on a game I will never play feels, somehow, definitive. We've quietly agreed that time spent equals work done, and work done equals true.

It's backwards. Padding is free. Anyone can be long — you get there by not deciding what to cut, by keeping the tangent and the recap and the "but first, some context." Length is what an argument looks like before someone has done the hard part.

The hard part is compression: knowing a thing well enough to throw away nine-tenths of it and keep the tenth that holds weight. A short strong piece is a long weak one that somebody bothered to finish.

So I've stopped trusting the reflex. When something runs very long I no longer think thorough. I think: nobody made you choose.

This post is short. Read that however you like.