Journal 3232 Links 10819 Articles 87 Notes 8087
Sunday, April 5th, 2026
I used AI. It worked. I hated it.: Taggart Tech
There’s a fundamental problem with these tools beyond the capacity of any deployment strategy to solve: the tool requires expertise to validate, but its use diminishes expertise and stunts its growth. How does one become an expert? There are no shortcuts; there is only continuous hard work and dedication. I was once told of writing, great writers learn how to break the rules in new and ingenious ways by first learning the rules.
But how is a new developer meant to learn the rules if their day-to-day work is nothing but the babysitting of models? How will they gain the hard-won experience that allows a human in the loop to be a useful safeguard?
These models alter cognition in ways deleterious to human prosperity. In other words, for as much output as they provide, they take something important from us.
Saturday, April 4th, 2026
Sound checking Salter Cane
Friday, April 3rd, 2026
Salter Cane is ready to rock and/or roll!
Thursday, April 2nd, 2026
Thursday session
This Saturday night in The Hope And Ruin in Brighton…
Web Day Out - 12 March 2026 — Polytechnic
This was another fantastic conference from the Clearleft team, and one that I hope is repeated next year. It is absolutely incredible what you can do in the browser these days, and even though I thought I was keeping up with the latest developments, it astounded me how far things have come.
Mistrust
Four years ago I wrote about something that has long puzzled me in the world of front-end development. Trust:
The mindset I’ve noticed is that many developers are suspicious of browser features but trusting of third-party libraries.
Developers are more likely to trust, say, Bootstrap than they are to trust CSS grid or custom properties. Developers are more likely to trust React than they are to trust web components.
That post got some thoughtful responses but I never really understood the imbalance of trust and suspicion:
I’m kind of confused by this prevalent mindset of trusting third-party code more than built-in browser features.
But something happened recently that helped me understand that mindset better.
I wrote a while back about how the datalist element on iOS has been completely fucked up. It’s worse than if Safari simply didn’t support it.
Breaking the web like that should be a five-alarm fire, but nobody is in any rush to fix it. I recall a similar lackadaisical attitude when Safari completely broke their implentation of IndexedDB.
I had it in my head that browser features followed a forward path generally. They’d be iterated on and improved on to iron out any glitches, but it was reasonable to expect things to get better with each new version of a browser.
Now I see that’s not necessarily the case.
Had I used an over-engineered JavaScript library instead of the datalist element, I wouldn’t be facing the current situation of having to use browser-sniffing to avoid sending a standard HTML element to any browser on iOS.
Sure, that third-party JavaScript would mean that users are downloading more code, and it probably wouldn’t work well with assistive technology, but as long as I didn’t touch it, it would continue to work. That should be true of web standards—I should be able to use them secure in the knowledge that they won’t suddenly shit the bed.
Perhaps I should be grateful to Apple for dispelling my naïveté. I now have much more empathy and understanding for web developers who are suspicious of web standards and prefer to use third-party libraries instead.
Good job, Apple. Happy anniversary.
ByeDoom — Give a Link → Get a Feed
This looks very handy!
Add any public account from Instagram, Facebook, Threads, X, TikTok or YouTube to quickly get a feed for your favorite reader.
Bonus: Add any website to quickly grab its existing feed as well.
Bruce Lawson’s personal site : Apple at 50: my top five Apple moments
Never forget:
- The time Apple lied to the UK regulator
- The time when Apple told the EU that Safari is 3 different browsers
- When Apple tried to shut the UK investigation down
- When Apple’s VP of Finance got caught lying under oath
- When Apple tried to wreck all EU Web Apps
Wednesday, April 1st, 2026
Wednesday session
People of Brighton, be sure to get your ticket for the Salter Cane gig this Saturday, April 4th featuring Skyscrapers and The Equatorial Group!
CSS or BS?
We show you a CSS property name. You tell us if it’s real or if we made it up. That’s it. It starts easy. It does not stay easy.
Tuesday, March 31st, 2026
Coco’s napping
Monday, March 30th, 2026
Monday session
This Saturday, April 4th, come to The Hope And Ruin in Brighton to see Skyscrapers, Equatorial Group, and Salter Cane:
https://saltercane.com/tickets
Tickets are £8 in advance, £10 on the door.
Saturday, March 28th, 2026
Saturday evening session in Tullamore
Saturday afternoon session in Tullamore
Friday, March 27th, 2026
It’s gettin’ wild in Tullamore tonight!
Friday evening session in Tullamore