🔗 Our interfaces have lost their senses.
Our interfaces have lost their sensesAll day, we poke, swipe, and scroll through flat, silent screens. But we’re more than just eyes and a pointer finger. We think with our hands, our ears, our bodies.The future of computing is being designed right now. Can we build something richer—something that moves with us, speaks our language, and molds to our bodies?
Original post: gurupanguji.com
🔗 Hypocrisy is the feature
Linked artifact: https://mastodon.social/@JuliusGoat/109551955251655267
Original post: gurupanguji.com
🔗 my.wordpress.net - a persistent, private wordpress running privately in your browser
With my.WordPress.net, WordPress runs entirely and persistently in your browser. There’s no sign-up, no hosting plan, and no domain decision standing between you and getting started. Built on WordPress Playground, my.WordPress.net takes the same technology that powers instant WordPress demos and turns it into something permanent and personal. This isn’t a temporary environment meant to be discarded. It’s a WordPress that stays with you.
Original post: gurupanguji.com
🔗 The Bertone redux looks so good
Bertone is calling this a ‘neo-retro’ rebirth of the Autobianchi A112 Runabout by Bertone, a concept car for the 1969 Turin motor show. Styled by Marcello Gandini, it was inspired by contemporary - wait for it - speedboats. The 2026 version comes as either a permanently open barchetta or more practical targa, and is a proper production car you can drive on actual roads, albeit severely limited in numbers, with only 25 slated for production. None of them float, just to be clear.
Original post: gurupanguji.com
🔗 Why leaders often disappoint us
There’s an old saying about not meeting your heroes. In practice, leaders tend to confirm this over time. This is true across domains, and it’s rarely a single gaffe that does it. The interesting question is why the disappointment usually takes the same shape. Disappointment does not always show up in the form of a bad conversation. Often there isn’t any conversation at all, at least not in the way people imagine one. As space disappears, interaction collapses into reaction. Responses come faster, positions are stated rather than tested, and dialogue gives way to declaration. At a certain distance, leadership becomes parasocial by default, taking the form of broadcast. There is nothing to push back on, only things to react to. By the time the gaffe happens, the system has already collapsed.
Original post: gurupanguji.com
