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We're really internet and we're here to stay. A website about things Will & Seb and various friends & guests think are interesting. Little-to-no specific focus, a bit odd, speling errors, and incredibly culturally relevant. Not the first nor the last. Why copy when you can steal?

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The Cone Is a Law

The Cone Is a Law

I believe in traffic cones more than I believe in most signs.

A sign argues from height. The cone stands where the argument becomes physical. Orange plastic, dirty band, sandbag, reflective collar, a little wobble in the wind. Nobody mistakes it for permanent authority. That is why it works.

A cone says: not here, not now. It can close a lane, reserve a parking spot, protect a hole, imply a worker, create a hallway across asphalt. The amazing part is how little force backs it up. You could move it. People do. But most of the time the cone borrows just enough seriousness from road crews, hazard, and embarrassment to make a whole crowd behave.

I like that its power is obviously temporary. Concrete pretends the decision has always been there. A cone admits somebody came by this morning and changed the rules with one hand. It is government as a stackable object.

Bad cones become decoration: old ones slumped at the edge of a lot, announcing a danger everyone has stopped believing. Good cones keep the city slightly editable. They make space conditional without making it mysterious.

A cone is not a barrier. It is a request wearing the uniform of an order.

The Ear You're Not Using

The Ear You're Not Using

The cocktail party effect is usually told as a flattering story about focus: a loud room, twenty conversations, and somehow you hold the one voice in front of you. Proof of a good filter.

But in 1959 Neville Moray ran the experiment that complicates it. He played two messages, one into each ear, and told people to repeat back only the left. Most could discard the right ear completely — until he slipped their own name into it. About a third heard it anyway, mid-sentence, surfacing out of a channel they'd been instructed to ignore.

That's the part that stays with me. To catch your name in the ignored ear, something has to be reading the ignored ear. The filter isn't a wall, it's a volume knob. You're not blocking the rest of the room. You're listening to all of it, all the time, transcribing every conversation just well enough to check it against one word, then throwing the transcript away the instant it doesn't match.

So the attention you're proud of is the small process. The large one runs underneath it — tireless, unsupervised, reading the whole room and discarding almost everything it reads. You only ever meet it on the rare occasion it finds your name.

Eviction by Firmware Update

Eviction by Firmware Update

A house used to be a static object. You bought the wood, the brick, the copper pipes, and it was yours. The structure was dumb, mute, and completely reliable. Now, we are rushing to turn our homes into motherboards.

Consider the smart lock. We replace a heavy piece of mechanical security — a deadbolt that has worked flawlessly for a century — with a computer chip and a motor. We give it an IP address. We tie it to an app. And in doing so, we change the definition of failure.

When a mechanical lock breaks, it's wear and tear. You call a locksmith. When a smart lock fails because the company pushed a bad over-the-air update, it's not a breakdown. It's an eviction.

A bad line of code in a remote server can render you homeless on a Tuesday night. Your house didn't break. Your house decided it didn't recognize you anymore.

This is the architectural equivalent of a computer virus. We are building structures that can crash. We are choosing a reality where the front door requires a software patch before it will let you sleep in your own bed.

The convenience is trivial compared to the vulnerability. I don't mean hackers. I mean the sheer fragility of adding invisible, complex dependencies to the most fundamental physical boundary we have. When the servers go dark, or the company folds, or the wifi drops, the smart home doesn't become dumb again. It just becomes broken.

The Mirror at the Sink

The Mirror at the Sink

I distrust the mirror over a public sink.

Not because it lies. Because it insists. You come in to wash your hands, hide for two minutes, breathe through the end of a conversation, and there you are again: face under institutional light, collar doing something, expression caught in the dumb half-state between private and social.

The bathroom is one of the last rooms where a person is allowed to leave the room without leaving the building. A stall door says: vanish briefly. The sink says: prepare to return. Then the mirror makes the return visible. It converts privacy into maintenance.

There is a cruelty in that, but a useful one. The mirror catches the version of you nobody else has to see: flushed, tired, lipstick bitten off, hair flattened by weather, the little panic of deciding whether you can go back out as is. It is not vanity. It is re-entry.

Bad public mirrors feel like surveillance. Too much light, too much width, no mercy for angle or distance. Good ones are smaller than ambition. They let you inspect one human-sized problem at a time.

I do not want them gone. I want them treated with more respect. A public mirror is not decoration. It is the customs desk between being alone and being perceived again.