Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-09-03:/2412311] "The worst possible antitrust outcome"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-09-03:/2412267] "Mis-issued certificates for 1.1.1.1 DNS service pose a threat to the Internet"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-09-02:/2412032] "Judge: Google can keep Chrome, must share search data with “qualified competitors”"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-09-02:/2411957] "This ultra-rare ’90s LaserDisc game console can finally be emulated on a PC"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-09-02:/2411847] "Imgur's community was in revolt"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-09-01:/2411633] "Intel Patents 'Software Defined Supercore'"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-26:/2410252] "Doge uploaded live copy of Social Security database to 'vulnerable' cloud server"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-26:/2410211] "We regret but have to temporary suspend the shipments to USA"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-26:/2410193] "Troubled USB Device? This Tool Can Help"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-26:/2410135] "The size of Adobe Reader installers through the years"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-25:/2409944] "Google will allow only apps from verified developers to be installed on Android"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-24:/2409578] "Picking an Old Operating System"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-22:/2409290] "US government takes 10 percent stake in Intel in exchange for money it was already on the hook for"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-22:/2409328] "Nitro: A tiny but flexible init system and process supervisor"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-21:/2408908] "James Dobson, Influential Leader of the Religious Right, Dies at 89"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-15:/2407469] "HTTP/1.1 must die: the desync endgame"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-15:/2407392] "Open hardware desktop 3D printing is dead – you just don’t know it yet"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-15:/2407386] "What kids told us about how to get them off their phones"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-14:/2407170] ""Privacy preserving age verification" is bullshit"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-12:/2406472] "Firefox’ new “AI” features cause CPU spikes and battery drain"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-11:/2406239] "Reddit will block the Internet Archive"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-11:/2406191] "GitHub is no longer independent at Microsoft after CEO resignation"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-11:/2406033] "Vanishing from Hyundai’s data network"
Diag| Considering item [tag:pappp.net,2025-08-13:/2406677] "QNX: The Incredible 1.44M Demo"
I recently finished Cory Doctrow’s new novel, Makers, which I really didn’t have time to read, but between geek book club and starting it on the plane to portland I was compelled. Like his last novel, Little Brother (which is YA fiction, but everyone should read anyway), I read it as an eBook on my n810, which is a bit of an odd reading experience, but one that is growing on me (No additional mass/volume per book! Searchable! Ever-Present! Until the damn battery runs out or it breaks!)
It is a pretty fun read, but I must say I liked the first two “lighter” sections better than the third. Some observations:
* Kettlewell seems to be largely borrowed, without the transparently symbolic name, from Willam Gibson’s character Hubertus Bigend
* Suzanne Church strikes me as a sort of composite of the notable female Internet-People, particularly Ana Marie Cox but Xeni Jardin also come to mind. I also wonder if the name isn’t a slight homage to Susan Kare, who is responsible for a starting portion of the art for early iconic computer interface elements (this is a stretch, but only a little). A little googling shows there is also a fairly appropriate real Suzanne Church, which must be a little confusing right now.
* The tech in the story is not embarrassingly wrong; its all plausible and sound except for some fanciful detours near the end. This does not normally happen when engineers read fiction, so good job Cory.
* Cory has clever ideas to try, and the hackers are damn well going to implement them. I suspect many of the things that seem clever in the book (RFID tagging all your crap to make it searchable, for example) won’t actually pan out if implemented, but I’m onboard with other things, especially the mechanical-computers-as-art hobby one of the main characters engages in.
Overall, a fun light read, worth the couple hours it takes to get through. Surprisingly, I think someone who isn’t well-versed in the workings of electronics could read the whole thing without missing much, which is remarkable considering how much fun can be had by those of us who are by working out the minutia of how the nifty plot device gadgets would actually work.