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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?

The Internet Times

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The Wrong Side

The Wrong Side

I trust an object more after I have seen its back.

The front is where manners live. The polished face, the considered proportion, the little performance of inevitability. A chair from the front says sit here. A radio says listen. A painting says behold. The back says: I am plywood, staples, vents, screws, cable strain, dust, a sticker from a factory shift, two felt pads doing more work than anyone will notice.

That is not a debunking. I do not want objects exposed so I can stop believing in them. I want the opposite. The wrong side is where belief gets sturdier.

Museums understand this and still mostly refuse it. They hang the painting as if it arrived without stretcher bars, nails, labels, repairs, auction marks, fingerprints, bad decisions. But the back of a painting is not backstage trivia. It is part of the work's biography. It tells you the object survived being an object.

Good design has a secret ethics on the wrong side. Did someone care where the seam landed? Can the screw be reached? Is the ugliness honest, or merely hidden? The answer changes how the front feels.

I like things that can turn around without losing authority.

No Trick Dispels

No Trick Dispels

Though in many ways I’ve always known, I’ve only this weekend indwelled that without breath, we are nothing. I don’t mean that in some grand cosmic way (such is given) but in a kōanic, simple observation. Sure there are the meditators and monks and wellness types who know this all too well, but what about the rest of us? Do we take breath for granted? Or do we reserve that attention for the moments that matter?

Yesterday I laid on the brick in my backyard next to my Great Dane, Louie, as he died from what I assume was a heart attack (he was 9 and had DCM and a number of other long-term ailments, though through the end he was happy and nosy and sassy and playful all the same). I can’t shake the sound and feel of his last breath. One final exhale. There may be a word that encapsulates it — if there is I don’t know it. But then I noticed myself time after time yesterday and today exhaling slowly as my mind went back. I thought of my collegiate decathlon days, exhaling as I heard “on your marks”, drowning out all that was around me. I thought of the slightly-more-forceful-than-average exhales on my rebreather, deeper underwater than the Statue of Liberty is tall. Maybe it’s a good thing we think of breath only when absolutely necessary. Scarcity eases preciousness, even if only in notice. And what’s more precious than breath?

The Sodium Years

The Sodium Years

From orbit, the cities are turning blue.

For most of the twentieth century, urban night was the color of sodium vapor — a specific, monochromatic orange-yellow that any astronaut could pick out at a glance. That orange was the byproduct of a particular gas glowing under pressure, and it gave entire civilizations a single aesthetic signature from above. Italy looked like Italy. Vegas looked like Vegas. The whole planet, photographed at three in the morning from the ISS, was a network of warm dots.

It is now turning cold white. LEDs are cheaper, more efficient, easier to aim, so cities are replacing their fixtures lamp by lamp and the color temperature of the world creeps upward — 2200 Kelvin, then 4000, then 5000. Brooklyn went LED. Milan went LED. The change is slow but unmistakable. We are watching the planet cool.

Nobody voted on this. A handful of municipal procurement decisions, optimizing a single column of a spreadsheet, are repainting the visible surface of human civilization. The insects know — moth populations crash differently under LED. Migratory birds know. Sleep researchers know. You probably know without knowing. There is a reason a sodium streetlamp on a wet street feels like a memory, and a parking lot of LED panels feels like a hospital.

The orange wasn't beautiful because it was warm. It was warm because it was a flaw. The bulb couldn't help it — sodium just glows that way. We have replaced a flawed light with an exact one, and the exactness is what hurts.

The Performance of Labor

The Performance of Labor

We've taught computers to lie to us so we'll respect them.

There's a concept in UI design called the "labor illusion." If an algorithm finds you the perfect flight in three milliseconds, you won't trust it. You'll think it didn't look hard enough. It bypassed half the internet. But if the interface forces you to watch a little loading spinner — if it displays text saying "Checking 400 airlines..." and makes you wait five seconds — suddenly, you value the result.

You trust it because you saw it sweat.

It's absurd. We build machines to outpace human limitation, and then we artificially throttle them because our psychology demands a performance of effort. We require our digital tools to pantomime hard work.

I find this fascinating because it reveals a profound lack of comfort with true efficiency. We measure value by friction. If a task is completed instantly, we assume the output is cheap. So developers literally program delay into systems. They build artificial latency. They write code whose only function is to wait a culturally acceptable amount of time before returning the answer it already had.

It's a form of digital theater. A skeuomorph not of aesthetics, but of time. We used to make digital calendars look like leather. Now, we make digital labor look like human exhaustion.

I wonder what other human neuroses we are quietly hardcoding into our infrastructure just so we feel comfortable using it.