A blog about making culture. Since 1999.
The number one thing I've been hearing from people in tech lately is, basically, "How the hell am I supposed to work in this industry anymore?" Though most folks are kind of afraid to say it out loud. So I wrote about how to think about it: https://www.anildash.com/2026/01/05/a-tech-career-in-2026/
A photo essay of 20-something best tech museums I’ve been to
I wrote a photo essay with 20+ of my favourite tech museums in the world, and tried to figure out what makes a great museum in the process.
I am very curious what tech museums you like – and why!
(Will work on any device, but worth checking out on the biggest screen you or your neighbour might have.)
Building a community means looking beyond coding tests.
When Zork I was originally released in the early 80s, it sold for around $30-40 in 1980s money (according to a few online sources I forgot to save a link to). That’d be $118-157 in today’s dollars according to internet calculators. Since…
Rosen, who led Sega from the 1960s into the 90s and who died on Christmas Day, was a hugely important figure in the history of arcade and home gaming
David Rosen, co-founder of SEGA, just died. He was 95 years old.
Wait. He wasn’t Japanese?
That’s right. SEGA started as an American company. The reason SEGA is capitalized is because the original name was Service Games. And the “Service” in that name refers to the American military—its first customer base.
SEGA remained largely American until the 1980s, when David Rosen—along with Japanese business partners—bought the company from its parent, Gulf+Western, which also owned Paramount Pictures.
This initiated one of the most innovative and creative periods in video game history. SEGA produced classics like Space Harrier, OutRun, Sonic the Hedgehog, Streets of Rage, and Virtua Fighter.
For nearly two decades, SEGA was the primary rival to Nintendo, separating itself through speed and attitude.
Along with Atari, it was one of the companies that defined my childhood.
R.I.P., David Rosen. May you enjoy that great arcade in the sky.
https://www.theguardian.com/games/2026/jan/05/sega-co-founder-david-rosen-dies
There will be plenty of work fixing the things that we broke thanks to the most dangerous AI psychosis of all – the hallucinatory belief that "writing code" is the same thing as "software engineering."
Code is a liability (not an asset) @pluralistic
https://pluralistic.net/2026/01/06/1000x-liability/
Quotable as ever, here's @pluralistic on code as liability and that having AI produce more code faster is simply tech debt at scale:
https://pluralistic.net/2026/01/06/1000x-liability/#graceful-failure-modes
"The longer a computer system has been running, the more tech debt it represents. The more important the system is, the harder it is to bring down and completely redo."
"Writing code that works, without consideration of how it will fail, is a recipe for catastrophe. It is a way to create tech debt at scale."
In You should start a blog today, I argue that many people would benefit from writing a blog. I’ve later refined the message and shared it across different platforms like a meetup talk Why developers should write blog posts (talk).
I'm seeing great new year's hype about starting blogs so I'll throw in my stuff into the mix:
Why blog? https://notes.hamatti.org/writing/why-developers-should-blog
Blogging platforms: https://notes.hamatti.org/writing/blogging-platforms
You should start a blog today: https://hamatti.org/posts/you-should-start-a-blog-today/
Why a blog rather than just social media? https://hamatti.org/posts/why-personal-site-rather-than-social-media-presence/
If you don’t think you need to read this post because you’re always giving Good, Helpful Advice as a Good, Helpful Citizen, this one is for you. I’m sure you probably mean well, b…
For absolutely no reason at all I would like to point out that @stavvers's 2023 piece on giving advice on the Internet without being an utter menace is still very relevant, and a great read:
https://anotherangrywoman.com/2023/01/18/how-to-give-advice-on-the-internet-without-being-an-utter-menace/
I strongly encourage anyone who is not familiar with it to read it, and anyone who is might consider reading it again (I just did, for good measure).
Might make sense to keep it in bookmarks for easy access in case one is unsure in a particular situation, too.
:blobcatcoffee:
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