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arbesman

1,716 karmajoined 18 years ago
https://arbesman.net/

Submissions

Latent Space as a New Medium

kk.org
1 points·by arbesman·17 hours ago·0 comments

Microcosm Industries: simulation toys and software microcosms

microcosm.industries
1 points·by arbesman·4 days ago·0 comments

Factories are just rooms

interconnected.org
280 points·by arbesman·11 days ago·127 comments

Why uranium is depicted as glowing green

hopefulmons.com
4 points·by arbesman·last month·0 comments

Microcosm Industries

microcosm.industries
3 points·by arbesman·2 months ago·2 comments

The Emergent Self Loop

kk.org
5 points·by arbesman·2 months ago·2 comments

Are "Vintage LLMs" the start of a new humanistic field?

resobscura.substack.com
2 points·by arbesman·3 months ago·0 comments

The Ever-changing Art of the Screensaver (2022)

eyeondesign.aiga.org
1 points·by arbesman·3 months ago·0 comments

A Catechism for Robots

kk.org
3 points·by arbesman·3 months ago·0 comments

The Wisdom of the People's Computer Company

arbesman.substack.com
1 points·by arbesman·3 months ago·0 comments

Karl Sims and Alexander Mordvintsev on Merging Technology and Biology (2025)

lerandom.art
2 points·by arbesman·3 months ago·0 comments

Dither Explorer

inkandswitch.com
2 points·by arbesman·4 months ago·0 comments

The Slow Work of Making Sense of History

arbesman.substack.com
3 points·by arbesman·4 months ago·0 comments

The Landscape Architecture of Auroras on Demand

bldgblog.com
1 points·by arbesman·4 months ago·0 comments

Macquarium

en.wikipedia.org
1 points·by arbesman·4 months ago·0 comments

"4B unique (and sometimes memorable) sentences"

unsung.aresluna.org
1 points·by arbesman·4 months ago·0 comments

Maxis Software Toys

arbesman.substack.com
2 points·by arbesman·5 months ago·0 comments

Interview with Susan Kare (2000)

web.stanford.edu
1 points·by arbesman·7 months ago·0 comments

Jonbar Hinge

en.wikipedia.org
3 points·by arbesman·9 months ago·0 comments

Tomoya Ikeda – Macintosh Artist

blog.gingerbeardman.com
4 points·by arbesman·9 months ago·0 comments

comments

arbesman
·2 months ago·discuss
Thanks so much!
arbesman
·12 months ago·discuss
Oh awesome! Glad you enjoyed that.
arbesman
·12 months ago·discuss
Thank you!
arbesman
·12 months ago·discuss
Fantastic recommendation! This is a great book (and the second edition is on my shelf).
arbesman
·12 months ago·discuss
Thanks so much! I hope you enjoy it.
arbesman
·12 months ago·discuss
I really appreciate this! Thanks. I think focusing on wonder might be the way of providing a kind of healthy medium between those extreme utopian and dystopian approaches.
arbesman
·12 months ago·discuss
Thanks so much!
arbesman
·12 months ago·discuss
I want to give people a sense of the breadth of the book, hence the introduction (and I had thought that it might be too confusing, jumping into the middle of things...). But reasonable point.
arbesman
·12 months ago·discuss
Glad you enjoyed the intro! In terms of the meat, there’s only so much that can be provided in an introduction, but I did step through the chapters at the end, explaining a bit of what is to come (though obviously not the meat itself: that’s found in the chapters themselves!).

But in terms of code itself, I do my best to convey how programming (and the world of code) feels. Admittedly, this is hard to do, but I talk about everything from different programming languages and what they are all about (and their vibes) to the unexpected power of global variables.

There is also a ton of computing history to be found in the book, which I think is vital for understanding the tech world (and building whatever comes next). We often see a certain amount of historical ignorance in tech, and that feels like a recipe for missing context, or unnecessary reinvention, or just plain not understanding the path dependence of this world. So I really try to explore that a lot.
arbesman
·12 months ago·discuss
Author here! Happy to answer any questions about the book, the ideas in it, or even book writing more generally!