I spent a little time updating and cleaning up the iOS Dev Directory this week and it reminded me that Iāve not talked about it here in a while.
The changes I made are relatively minor, but they include a design and wording refresh across the whole site, dark mode support, many more options for showing what social media or profile you attach to your name¹, and improved instructions on how to add a site. I also moved it to its own GitHub organisation and open sourced the website itself, something which was private until now.
The directory has never been a flashy project, but I still think itās really important that it exists.
Getting people to know about a new blog is hard, especially if you donāt have a large social media following. Having somewhere to list your site is important, and even more so if you include your RSS feed. My personal RSS process immediately subscribes me to any new sites added to the directory, and I know others also have it set up this way. There are also aggregator sites that pull content from the directoryās OPML files.
I started the site in 2018, almost 8 years ago with the intention of broadening the set of people who I subscribed to when reading posts for this newsletter, and itās certainly been successful at that. There are now almost 1,000 sites listed, and the data file repository has had almost 1,300 pull requests. That said, because itās not a ādestinationā site, it always needs an occasional push here to remind people it exists.
So, with that in mind, if your blog isnāt listed then please add it, but letās take it one step further. If you know of anyone who blogs but isnāt in the directory, or if you found an interesting site recently that isnāt included, add those too! Iād love to push that number of sites over 1,000 in the next week.
I do have another reason to write about the iOS Dev Directory. You might have noticed Iāve missed publishing a few issues of this newsletter recently, and itās because I have rather a lot going on. Iād love some help with iOS Dev Directory from anyone who thinks a site like this is important. Either reply to the email if youāre subscribed that way or itās dave at this domain if youāre reading on the web. Drop me a mail and weāll chat. Thanks!
– Dave Verwer
¹ You can now add social profile links for Bluesky, Mastodon, Threads, LinkedIn, GitHub, Micro.blog, Weibo, and Twitter/X.
I noticed something at the end of this monthās āHello Developerā post from Apple that I hadnāt noticed before, and which Iāve been wishing for for years! Scroll right down to the bottom and thereās a āNew Docsā section! I still wish there was a better portal or way to find out about all new and updated documentation, but this is a really good start to highlight some significant changes throughout the month. Looking at the back issues, it seems itās been there for a while, too! Shame on me for not noticing.
I havenāt used Appleās Network Link Conditioner in quite a few years now, so I was surprised when Ash Hood let me know about his new throttling tool. Turns out the official link conditioner hasnāt had as much love as it maybe needed over the years, and a tool like this might come as a welcome surprise if youāve been struggling with it. š
I really loved this post from Steve Troughton Smith. He wasnāt new to using LLMs for coding tasks, but he admits that he had been āsleeping on the shift that is already well underway in our industryā. What I love most about what he wrote is that itās all experiments. Writing a Windows app, creating data to fit a specific (and niche) file format, and more. Itās a great post.
When I read the title of Daniel Devesa Derksen-Staatsās latest post, I expected it to be filled with little side-stories about how other games get accessibility wrong. Instead, I enjoyed reading an entirely positive post about how to do it right. Bravo, Daniel, thatās exactly how to do it!
I was so excited for Passkeys when they first got announced. What a wonderful idea, but I hate the experience of using them once they reached the real world. I think part of my issue is that I have multiple apps and also the operating system all trying desperately to make me create a passkey, and it always happens when Iām logging into something and just want to get something done. I actively avoid them now, so the constant nagging is just irritating. I also canāt imagine how a ānormalā person copes with them if they baffle me. š¬ Is it just me that feels this way?
Aaaaannnyway, apologies for the rant! If you decide to, or are asked to implement them, then Natascha Fadeeva has exactly the article for you. The article is great, despite my thoughts on the underlying tech.
Have you ever tried to explain what you do?? I really like this. ā¤ļø
Ranjan Roy from Margins is back for our weekly discussion of the latest tech news. We cover: 1) Backlash against AI & specifically Sam Altman's comments about AI as a utility 2) Is this because people are worried about AI taking their jobs? 3) NBC poll shows AI is one of the least popular things in the U.S. 4) YouGov poll shows broadly negative feelings toward AI 5) Pew finds datacenters are very unpopular 6) Consequences of AI's unpopularity 7) Nvidia GTC preview: A rallying cry for AI 8) Could Jensen Huang be the guy that turns this around? 9) Amazon's AI code is messing things up 10) McKinsey's AI tool hacked 11) Meta can't get its act together with Avocado delayed 12) Should Meta's AI use Google's Gemini tech
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Welcome to IoT Coffee Talk, where hype comes to die a terrible death. We have a fireside chat about all things #IoT over a cup of coffee or two with some of the industry's leading business minds, thought leaders and technologists in a totally unscripted, organic format.
This week Rob, Alistair, Bill, Dimitri, and Leonard jump on Web3 for a discussion about:
š¶ šļø BAD KARAOKE! šø š„ "Jump", Van Halen
š£ What is that MacBook Neo play for @Apple?
š£ What can go wrong allowing OpenClawD access through your CLI?
š£ What happens when we stop exercising our brains?
š£ Is it cool that our younger generation question learning math?
š£ How cut-in-paste plagiarism was the first cognitive convenience before ChatGPT.
š£ Agentic AI-augmented synthetic engagement and the slop of the fake economy.
š£ Are people and industries going to make the digital twin mistake AGAIN?
š£ The sovereignty agenda that will supplant digital leadership globally.
š£ The creeping death that is AI for the enterprise and the fallacy of AI guardrails.
š£ Did we go to the Moon?
š£ Will a new generation of AI Luddites be the only hope for humanity and society?
š£ My AI is better than yours. My data is better than yours. Competitive advantage.
š£ What happens when humanoid robots molest people? It has happened.
š£ Why do revolutionary AI use cases look like Rob's IoT use cases from 2012?
It's a great episode. Grab an extraordinarily expensive latte at your local coffee shop and check out the whole thing. You will get all you need to survive another week in the world of IoT and greater tech!
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