The Modern Pizza Box

Wow, just wow. I would love to see my local crappy pizza joint deliver me one of these. Upon receipt I may begin to worship the box’s ingenuity… that may be pushing it too far, but still.

(h/t Designer News)

Frank Chimero’s What Screens Want

I’ve been on a bit of a Frank Chimero binge lately, but seeing this essay pop-up again in my travels across the internet caused me some panic. I have read the piece multiple times on my own but I have also neglected to archive it here.

I wouldn’t dream of taking away from the experience of reading this essay, however, I would like to look into one sentence that caught my eye:

We made it, and now it is making us.

I have thought long and hard about

Frank Chimero’s Homestead

Frank Chimero:

Instead of having fewer sections to attend to distracted and busy individuals, I’ll add more (and hopefully introduce some friction, complexity, and depth) to reward those who want to invest their time. I won’t use analytics—actually, I won’t measure at all. What would I do with that data anyway? In this case, it’s just more noise. The singular thread that runs through everything is only “because I like it.”

I love this outlook.

As the year comes to a close I take a hard look at what I've done with my time, where I've devoted my efforts and how I've conducted myself. I realize only after that the value I get from having a personal site is immense, regardless what I use it for. The more effort I pour in the more enjoyment I receive, a feeling that I am fighting for in other places. Unfortunately, that battle rages onward without an end in sight, so perhaps, I should at least a little more of my time and effort on a sure thing.

December 21, 2013

The Human Connection

Note: this piece has laid dormant in my drafts folder since November 3, 2013 and given recent events, notably the controversy surrounding Ben Brooks’ Why Tech Podcasts Bother Me, I thought now would be a good time to release it rather than bore you with my pedantic take on this whole conversation. While my opinions about podcasting generally have shifted since I wrote this, the thrust of this article remains unchanged for me.


There have been a number of takes on what constitutes a “good” podcast recently. Harry C. Marks argued that professional podcasts take care in how they are crafted, featuring tight editing and a well planned agenda. Myke Hurley wrote a partial response arguing, unlike Mr. Marks, for sanctity of a conversation’s natural flow. Zac Szewczyk follows up with a considered, point-for-point reaction to Mr. Marks’ article; the spirit of Mr. Hurley’s article features quite prominently in his article beyond the direct quotations, of course.

All of the authors above have well reasoned arguments detailing the various ways in which a podcast could be appreciated. The contrast between them does nothing to say that only one opinion should be regarded as the correct one. Podcasting is not the spiritual twin of Jet Li’s The One, there's room enough for everyone, so long as you're not overly concerned about money or listenership.[1]

I mention these articles because conversations like these always have the effect of stimulating the mind. The more voices there are in the ring the greater the opportunity to measure yourself against the world. Questions arise like, Where do I fit? Do one of these arguments capture how I feel about podcasting? Or are my thoughts something altogether different? Somewhere between the dissenting voices we find space to construe our own position, taking bits of each argument that catch our fancy and heaping them together to build something we can call our own.

I don’t have a well laid out theory like those above, but when I was wading through this small storm—I stress the word small—I realized that there was one feature that draws me into a podcast that I hadn’t seen represented well. Although I wouldn’t consider my words worth reading, I found the opportunity to add to the conversation too irresistible to stop myself.

The podcasts that I remember with a soft, rose-coloured glow are always those where the hosts seem to have a real connection between one another.[2] There is just something intangible, yet magnificent about the way to friends speak to one another. The way one voice’s enthusiasm peaks while the others lower and trough, or how one joke can span an hour because it is continually made between people who truly enjoy it.

This isn’t to say that interview-styled shows or monologues cannot be enjoyable or endearing, just that they instead offer a different sort of entertainment. Be it informative, revelatory, or purely theatrical there are many opportunities for one-person shows or rotating guests to break interesting ground. All I know is that despite the many I have heard I always keep my ears open for a great rapport.

Take for instance the characters from You Look Nice Today (of which Adam is most assuredly a cartoon character, I mean gruff and talented? Pah-lease). These outlandish conversations would not have the same effect if not for the black magic swirl that is comprised of their personalities, their friendship and that twangy little banjo. If YLNT was a rotating panel show it might be informative or in other ways entertaining but it wouldn't be YLNT in the way I want to remember it. Their relationship enables wild conversations to ensue. Where else but between friends could three grown men ramble on about the horrors of board games or the intricacies of the "standing-oh"?

*[YLNT]: You Look Nice Today

As another example, take the 5by5 show Bionic and it's evolution over the past few months. Whether you regard it as entertainment or tired drivel (hey, it's your opinion) it would be difficult to deny the fact that Matthew Alexander and Myke Hurley appear their most comfortable when they speak at length about clown strippers. In fact, listening back to past episodes where Myke served more as a shepherd’s crook to reel in Matt’s inventive (colourful? indecent?) sense of humour you can feel an immediate difference. The episodes miss a certain warmth that some of their later rambles have. Is that attributable to the shifting content focus? The difference may be in the gulf between an evil laboratory and talks about Google’s market strategy, but I'm not convinced. I get the sense that whatever the difference it lies, in part, outside of the talking points.

Though I couldn’t possibly describe what are the marks of an enjoyable friendship—in a voyeuristic sense—I do contend that the difference is audible. A technical discussion can be interesting but adding in that small spark of familiarity between the speakers can easily push the discussion beyond mere interest into captivation. Technical acumen is important, perhaps even the most important ingredient in a coherent conversation, yet I yearn for human connections even while I listen to a podcast, say, on the bus home. Even if I only listen to drowned out my surroundings and not to learn specifically, I appreciate the ability to unconsciously discern a friendly conversation rather than a series of noises or shouting in the public square. Otherwise I might as well listen to myself as I crazily gab aloud on the back seat of a bus, terrifying nearby teenagers.


  1. I hate that I feel the need to qualify sentences like this one, but I digress. If the aim is to have a reasonably sized audience (not to mention the distinction between audience and community, which I will not attempt to suss out here) your efforts are naturally limited by the time in a day, the amount of people who listen to podcasts, how many other similar podcasts exist, etc. (It should come as no surprise also, that the calculus that drives the monetization of podcasts is based entirely upon your listener base and your ability to leverage that base.) If, however, your concern is mainly about producing a podcast, then you are only limited by your imagination because surely, if you are reading about podcasting, you have the means to produce one. The bar to entry, especially for those interested in technology, is rather low. ↩︎

  2. My preference may be motivated by the fact that I have heard so many podcasts that feature two co-hosts speaking weekly that I unconsciously compare them rather than look for other signifiers. ↩︎

Too: Oi, Guvna!

I've been terrible (again, I know) at posting our latest episodes of Too. This one was pretty special. I talked with twice-guest-host Andrew J. Clark[1] of The Menu Bar fame. I don’t believe things got too out of hand, however, I did have a lot of fun recording this episode.


  1. The ‘J’ stands for ‘Juan’, or ‘amazing’. It’s always hard to remember. ↩︎

Too: Lifting the Lid on the Magic Box

To commemorate our 40th episode we spoke at length about what is our favourite version of a computer. What I had hoped to get more into was how that affected our view of what computing is and should be. I don't think it was entirely successful, that said, it was a fun talk.

October 17, 2013

Building a Cheap Standing Desk

I have had a pretty long love affair with the idea of working at a standing desk but up to this point I have only ever been spectator. (My reasons for wanting a standing desk are beside the point, perhaps I'll write those up later but I doubt any reader would care, so no promises for now.) When I moved recently, I had the opportunity to get a new desk and decided to capitalize on my dream. While there are plenty of options for a prebuilt solution (see Geekdesk, Tinkering Monkey, or Wirecutter [LINKS and NAMES]) they were far outside my price range.

I set a budget of $150 CAD and set off across the internet looking for solutions. This price alone curtailed my options to hacking Ikea furniture or building something myself. The other determining factor has been my height. Being a fairly tall lizard-person (roughly 6' 4") the desk surface would need to sit at roughly 43–44" off the ground to be used comfortably. Needless to say that this limited my options even further.

If you browse the multitude of Ikea standing desk hacks, you will probably see a bunch of nice options for people who are either a) much shorter than I, or b) have more funds than I. Thus it was looking like a custom build was the only option available, which has its own set of difficulties because that requires I go to a friends house to perform the build (I live in an apartment complex). That was, until I stumbled across an Ikea standing desk hack by Kristian Lawrence on Lifehacker Australia. Needless to say, I shamelessly ripped off his build and couldn't be happier with the results.

The Build

Parts:

  • 1 x Ikea Billy Bookcase (White; $49 CAD)
  • 1 x Ikea Lack Tabletop (White; $9 CAD)
  • 1 x Ikea Shelf (White; $6 CAD)
  • 2 x Ikea Shelf Brackets (White; $5 CAD each)
  • 1 x Bottle of Construction Adhesive ($5 CAD)
  • 4 x Wood Screws (1 1/4" long; Free?)

Total cost: $80 CAD

I wasn't totally sold on the colour but for whatever reason white happened to be significantly cheaper than all of the other varieties; therefore, I am the proud owner of a white Ikea standing desk.

Assembly:

HTC One Max…

I like HTC, or at least I believe I do, but the combination of a 5.9 inch screen and a finger print scanner located in the centre of the phone’s back just aren’t adding up for me. Unless the HTC One Max (great name by the way) was designed specifically NBA players, in which case congratulations HTC. You nailed it.

What is this Place?

This is the weblog of the strangely disembodied TRST. Here it attempts to write somewhat intelligibly on, well, anything really. Overall, it may be less than enticing.