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Terence Eden. He has a beard and is smiling.

Terence Eden’s Blog

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Book Review: A Geography of Time by Robert V. Levine

· 400 words


Book cover featuring distorted clocks hovering over the Earth.

This book doesn't know what it wants to be. Is it a sociology textbook, travel guide, history book, or guide to the mysteries of the world? Subtitled "the temporal misadventures of a social psychologist" it veers between hard data and well-worn anecdotes until it becomes a sort of self-help book for the time-poor 1990s American executive. Despite being well-caveated against the "dangers in…

How close are we to a vision for 2010?

· 2 comments · 3,150 words · Viewed ~5,446 times


Cover page of the report.

Twenty five years ago today, the EU's IST advisory group published a paper about the future of "Ambient Intelligence". Way before the world got distracted with cryptoscams and AI slop, we genuinely thought that computers would be so pervasive and well-integrated that the dream of "Ubiquitous Computing" would become a reality. The ISTAG published an optimistic paper called "Scenarios for ambient…

OpenBenches at FOSDEM

· 100 words


Me standing on stage.

At the recent FOSDEM, I did a very quick lightning talk about our OpenBenches project. Sadly, despite the best efforts of the AV team, the video had a missing section. I took my own audio recording and zipkid took some photos, so I was able to recreate it using the Flowblade video editor. Enjoy! Many thanks to Edward Betts for running the dev room and providing the display laptop. …

Book Review: Families And How To Survive Them by John Cleese and Robin Skynner

· 2 comments · 650 words


Book cover.

This is a curious and mostly charming book about therapy. It is presented as a (somewhat contrived) Socratic dialogue between Skynner the teacher and Cleese the pupil. Skynner lectures on while Cleese interjects with "that's too clever to be convincing" and other witty remarks. It is fun to have a somewhat sceptical interlocutor but it does get a little wearisome after a while. The basic of…

AI is a NAND Maximiser

· 3 comments · 1,000 words · Viewed ~418 times


A stick of computer memory. Several computer chips on a PCB.

PC Gamer is reporting that the current demand by AI companies for computer chips is having a disastrous effect on the rest of the industry. In an interview, the CEO of Phison said: If NVIDIA Vera Rubin ships tens of millions of units, each requiring 20+TB SSDs, it will consume approximately 20% of last year's global NAND production capacity 駿HaYaO NAND is a type of microchip. Rather than b…

Book Review: All Systems Red - The Murderbot Diaries by Martha Wells

· 13 comments · 150 words · Viewed ~208 times


Book cover featuring the severed head of a cyborg.

Everyone raves about this series, so I thought I'd grab the first book. It's basically fine, I guess. It is moderately amusing having the Muderbot be an awkward teenage boy who just wants to watch videos and cringes when people stare at him. But it is a bit one-note. Similarly, evil corporations hiding details from exo-planet surveyors is a trope which has been a thousand times before. This…

Gadget Review: Epomaker Split 70 Mechanical Keyboard

· 1 comment · 700 words · Viewed ~651 times


A keyboard split in two.

The good folks at Epomaker know that I love an ergonomic keyboard, so they've sent me their new "Split 70" model to review. This isn't your traditional ergonomic keyboard. Essentially, this is two separate halves joined by a USB-C cable; so you can position it however you like. Here's a quick video showing it in action: https://shkspr.mobi/blog/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/split-new.mp4 It is …

Book Review: This Is How They Tell Me the World Ends - Nicole Perlroth

· 3 comments · 750 words · Viewed ~218 times


Book cover.

This cybersecurity book is badly written, contains multiple offensive stereotypes, is technically inaccurate, and spends more time focussing on the author's love affair with the New York Times than almost anything else. Seriously, if you take a drink every time the book mentions the NYT, you'll spend most of the chapters drunk. Which, to be fair, is probably the best way to experience it. The…

Social Media Payments and Perverse Incentives

· 6 comments · 450 words · Viewed ~357 times


Mock up of a Mastodon post. There's a a £ button next to boost. It offers the options to tip the suggested amount £0.15, or to tip a custom amount.

At the recent "Protocols for Publishers" event, a group of us were talking about news paywalls, social media promotion, and the embarrassment of having to ask for money. What if, we said, you could tip a journalist directly on social media? Or reward your favourite creator without leaving the platform? Or just say thanks by buying someone a pint? Here's a trivial mock-up: Of course, this…

Book Review: 20 Goto 10 - 10101001 facts about retro computers by Steven Goodwin

· 200 words · Viewed ~233 times


Book Cover

This is an excellent "dipping" book. There are nearly 200 articles ranging from short anecdotes, multi-page synopses of complex topics, and quirky little asides. Rather than a linear history of computing, each short chapter ends with a multiple-choice "GOTO". From there, you take a meandering wander throughout retro-computing lore. Some paths lead to dead-ends (a delightful little Game-Over…

Gadget Review: Topdon TS004 Thermal Monocular

· 3 comments · 1,100 words · Viewed ~394 times


Photo of a dark green tube with various buttons on it. It fits snugly in the hand.

I love thermal imaging cameras. They're great for spotting leaking pipes, inefficient appliances, and showing how full a septic tank is. The good folks at Topdon have sent me their latest thermal camera to review - it is specifically designed for spotting wildlife. This is the TS004 Thermal Monocular: Let's put it through its paces! Hardware This is a chunky bit of kit and fits nicely in…

Book Review: On the Calculation of Volume - Solvej Balle

· 250 words


Book cover.

I had the most intense time reading this book. Do you ever see the date of a famous event and notice that it is also the date of your birthday? When I do, my brain gets a fun jolt of recognition. This book is set perennially on the 18th of November - my birthday. My poor little brain was exhausted and satiated from the repeated mentions. A most curious experience. It would be easy to dismiss…