The Early Years of Digital Cinema, From Some of the People Who Made It

Samuel Wigley of the British Film Institute: An HD cam filming driver-passenger conversations from the dashboard – an impossible space to fit one of your old-school movie cameras (Abbas Kiarostami’s 10). An unbroken 90-minute take gliding through St Petersburg’s Hermitage Museum … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Tesla Rolls Out ‘Full Self Driving’ Beta to All U.S. And Canadian Owners Who Specced It

Rebecca Bellan, TechCrunch: Despite concerns, any driver who has already paid the steep price for Tesla’s FSD will be able to access the software in North America. Tesla had previously extended FSD access to 160,000 owners in the U.S. and Canada in September, and today’s widespre … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Facebook’s Widely Viewed Content Report No Longer Looks Like the Worst of the Web

Earlier this week, Facebook released its most recent Widely Viewed Content Report, for which it still does not create unique permalinks. There is a copy on the Internet Archive for, you know, archival purposes. The Widely Viewed Links section of the report is notable for being fu … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

The Smartphone Continues to Prove Its Form Factor Perfection

David Pierce, the Verge: Smartphones may be boring now, but that’s only because they’ve been so good for so long. As they’ve become so entrenched and ubiquitous in our lives, they’ve become even harder to disrupt. How do you beat the device that can do everything and is always wi … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Amazon Is Gutting Alexa

Eugene Kim, Insider: Insider spoke with over a dozen current and former employees on the company’s hardware team to get a better picture of its current condition. They described a division in crisis. While Alexa was once one of the company’s most rapidly growing projects, the mou … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Last.fm Turns Twenty

Last.fm on Twitter: It’s our 20th birthday today . A huge thank you to everyone who supported us and scrobbled with us throughout that time. You make http://Last.fm possible. Bring on the next 20. Via Jacob Kastrenakes at the Verge: I was a little surprised to see that Last.fm wa … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

⌥ Oh, the Places Your Apple ID Will Go

Here is a short and curious Twitter thread from app developers and security researchers Tommy Mysk and Talal Haj Bakry: Apple’s analytics data include an ID called “dsId”. We were able to verify that “dsId” is the “Directory Services Identifier”, an ID that uniquely identifies an … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

The Rapid Security Response for iOS 16.2 Beta Was Just a Test

Jeff Butts, the Mac Observer: Beginning in iOS 16, Apple has added the ability to push out security fixes without requiring a full iOS update. This can be much faster to install, since the patches are generally much smaller. Wednesday, Apple released one of these updates, called … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

The Twitter Train Chugs Along

Elizabeth Lopatto, writing at the Verge in April: Now, if Musk buys Twitter, I feel like we all have a vague idea of how this goes. First, a lot of Twitter employees quit because Musk’s companies are notoriously miserable places to work. Second, Musk tweets about a bunch of shit … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Younger Generations Have a More Complex Relationship With Data Privacy

I looked between the couch cushions and found some news for you that is not related to Twitter. A pre-emptive caveat that fixed generational boundaries are not my favourite way of grouping people, but I thought the results of this survey were interesting enough to share. Jordan M … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Sponsor: Due — Annoying, Indispensable, Game-Changing

My thanks to Due for sponsoring Pixel Envy this week. Due’s developer asked me to remind you of what makes the app different. “Annoying” is probably not a word a developer would like his app to be associated with. I certainly don’t mind. Thankfully, users have also thought of my … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Two Questions For Twitter’s Future

Max Read: […] Put another way, the rest of Twitter will go like the whole verification episode did: it’ll be stupid and annoying for a while, then chaotic, then pretty funny, and then, at the end of the process, basically the same as before, but slightly worse. Or, that’s how it … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

In 2018, Five Times as Many Shaw Employees Accepted Buyouts as the Company Expected

Christine Dobby, writing for the Globe and Mail in 2018: Less than three weeks ago, Shaw gave 6,500 non-unionized employees the option to take voluntary severance packages, but said it expected just 10 per cent, or 650 people, to accept the buyouts; on Thursday, it said 3,300 emp … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Fred Brooks Has Died

Steven M. Bellovin on Twitter: Sad news from @unccs — Fred P. Brooks, the founder and long-time chair of the department (and a major influence on my professional outlook) passed away a few hours ago. Brooks, of course, was responsible for Brooks’ Law as described in the Mythical … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

The Buzzfeed Era Has Passed

Mia Sato, the Verge: NewsWhip data shows that BuzzFeed’s footprint on Facebook has withered away for years as a result of these changes. In 2016, BuzzFeed stories posted on the platform had 329 million engagements; by 2018, that number had fallen to less than half. Last year, Buz … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

New York Times Runs Bizarre Softball Article on FTX’s Sam Bankman-Fried

Matt Novak, Gizmodo: FTX filed for bankruptcy on Friday, leaving reasonable people to wonder how a cryptocurrency platform founded in 2019, which reached a valuation of $32 billion in 2021, could plummet to zero in such a short time. There’s a new piece in the New York Times whic … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

New Apple Store Opening in Vancouver This Friday

Remarkably, for a country that is as large and as loyal to Apple’s ecosystems as Canada,1 this new Vancouver store is only the third location in the country which is not a boring indoor mall store. Apple’s longstanding spot on Rue Sainte-Catherine is its only true “flagship” stor … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

As More Apple Retail Workers Push for Unionization, Some Reflect on the Changing Culture at the Stores

Josh Eidelson, Bloomberg: Workers say that whereas the focus of an Apple Genius used to be to impress customers with a high level of service, they and other employees are now increasingly pressured to upsell. They’re pushed to prioritize “ownership opportunities,” the company’s e … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

The Bleak Cycle

David Roth, Defector: It’s a cycle. People create something, together, that reflects their energy and weird work; that thing becomes compelling as a result, and that makes it valuable, and at some point someone puts a price on it and someone else pays that price. It is at that mo … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Coverage Continues of the Amazon’s Storefront Sliding Into an Pay-to-Play Scheme of Dubious Products

Jason Del Rey, Recode: The sponsor-ification of the Amazon shopping experience is just the latest twist. If you’re looking closely enough, a quick search on Amazon for, say, “iPhone screen protector” or “youth soccer socks” will only turn up paid product listings carrying a “Spon … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Sponsor: Due — Annoying, Indispensable, Game-Changing

“Annoying” is probably not a word a developer would like his app to be associated with. I certainly don’t mind. Thankfully, users have also thought of my app as “indispensable” and a “game changer”. It has helped people living with ADHD and early dementia. It has saved marriages. … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Checking in on Semafor’s Separation of Factual Information and Analysis

The awkwardly named “semaform” article format that is the main gimmick of Semafor is supposed to ensure information and analysis remain in separate buckets. So, how is that working out for them? Here is an article from Friday by Diego Mendoza, which carries the following headline … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Advertisers Flocked to TikTok as It Became the Most Popular App on the Planet, Because of Course They Did

The absence of clear understanding of App Tracking Transparency’s material effect has produced a cottage industry of writers explaining how it is responsible for all kinds of trends in advertising. Some of those theories are more believable than others; here is an example of the … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Ian’s Tweet Museum

Twitter is obviously not dead, but this feels like a collection of artifacts of a different time on Twitter. Good for a chuckle or, if you are weird like me, a lot of wheezy laughter. “Stay fresh cheese bags” gets me every time. ⌥ Permalink⌥ Permalink | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

‘Using the Quest Pro Just Feels Like Work’

Adi Robertson, reviewed Meta’s Quest Pro at the Verge: But, again, the current use is limited. Meta has one confirmed app that uses foveated rendering, the game Red Matter 2, which renders at a high resolution in the Quest Pro — but is still held back by that fundamental grainine … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Today at Twitter

Mike Masnick, Techdirt: As for the background on all this, some of you youngsters might not remember this, but back in 2011 Twitter signed a consent decree with the FTC over its failure to safeguard user info. Now, almost every big tech company these days has a consent decree wit … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

The Homer

Alexander George, Wired: Feeling his engineers have lost touch with the common folk, Herb employs Homer because he is, Powell says, “an average schmo.” Homer is given free rein to design his dream car, a futuristic creation filled with conveniences that make driving easy and plea … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Why Is Rosetta 2 So Fast?

Dougall Johnson dove deep into the nitty-gritty of Apple’s Rosetta 2 x86 emulator for its ARM-based Macs, and I cannot comprehend almost any of it. But the conclusion? That is something even I can understand: Engineering is about making the right tradeoffs, and I’d say Rosetta 2 … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Comedy Is Now Legal on Twitter

Taylor Hatmaker, TechCrunch: Now when tweets appear in Twitter’s timeline it’s impossible to visually distinguish the two categories of blue check accounts from one another. Doing so would require clicking through to examine a user’s follower count, which isn’t necessarily a reli … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

iOS Updates Add Timeout for Receiving AirDrops From Everyone, but Only in China

Wang Boyuan of PingWest on Twitter: In the recently released iOS 16.2 beta2, AirDrop to everyone feature is found to last for 10 minutes instead of forever. However, this change only appears in iPhone’s China models. […] Well, it turns out to be also a “hot fix” in today’s iOS 16 … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Verified Accounts on Twitter, Previously Indicated by a Blue Badge, Will Now Sport a Text Label on Profile Pages

Esther Crawford, project manager at Twitter: A lot of folks have asked about how you’ll be able to distinguish between @TwitterBlue subscribers with blue checkmarks and accounts that are verified as official, which is why we’re introducing the “Official” label to select accounts … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Diplomacy in China Has Allowed Apple to Skirt or Delay Legal Obligations

Patrick McGee and Ryan McMorrow, Financial Times: Yet when it comes to selling its devices to Chinese consumers, business has boomed. Operating profits in greater China — which includes Hong Kong, Macau, Taiwan and mainland China — have shot up 104 per cent over 24 months to $31. … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

iMessage for Android

Last month, Apple’s Craig Federighi and Greg Joswiak were interviewed by Joanna Stern at the Wall Street Journal’s Tech Live event. Stern asked some pretty good questions; Federighi and Joz are too media trained to answer as comprehensively as any of us would like. But there was … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

YouTube Is Launching Shorts Videos for Your TV

If you think you hate video shot in vertical orientation now, just wait until you see the screenshot in this article. Then imagine that space packed with ads, and you have a pretty good idea of what the future of television looks like. ⌥ Permalink⌥ Permalink | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Modern MacOS Upgrades Require Significant Free Disk Space

Charles Edge (via Michael Tsai): The net result is that when doing the last few upgrades, they have required 12+GB for the installer itself (which can be run from a USB drive) and up to 44GB for the installer to do the work it needs to do, so a total of up to about 56GB. […]⌥ Per … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Five Meta Myths

Ben Thompson, Stratechery: Meta, née Facebook, is now, incredibly enough, worth 42% less than it was when I wrote Facebook Lenses, hitting levels not seen since January 2016. It seems the company’s many critics are finally right: Facebook is dying, for real this time. The problem … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Mimi Parker Dies Aged 55

Safi Bugel, the Guardian: Mimi Parker, drummer, vocalist and songwriter for the Minnesota indie band Low, has died, her husband and bandmate Alan Sparhawk has said. Parker was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in December 2020. She was 55 years old, the band’s management confirmed. A … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

As Elon Musk Begins Overhauling Twitter, Mass Layoffs Have Begun

Mike Isaac and Ryan Mac, New York Times: This week, Mr. Musk moved to make money from Twitter’s “blue check” verification program, a method of making sure users are who they say they are. The billionaire announced that the program, which is currently free, will be rolled into the … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

‘If Books Could Kill’

Michael Hobbes, of the excellent “Maintenance Phase”, and Peter Shamshiri, who you might know from the “5–4 Podcast”, have launched a new show called “If Books Could Kill”, where they deconstruct crappy airport non-fiction and reflect on, as Hobbes puts it, the TED Talk-ification … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

⌥ Two Great Things in MacOS Ventura

I have been using MacOS Ventura for a little over a week now and, while I still have not gotten used to phrases like “Preferences” and “Desktop Picture” getting replaced with the dreary words “Settings” and “Wallpaper”, respectively, I do think there are two legitimately great th … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

ProPublica Scrambles to Check Translation in COVID Origin Story

Speaking of ProPublica, it appears the publication is struggling with its own trustworthiness problems after fallout from a scandalous story claiming a “research-related incident” was responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic. Max Tani, Semafor: The ProPublica/Vanity Fair article rel … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

DHS Has Pulled Back on Tracking Election Disinformation

Andrea Bernstein and Ilya Marritz, ProPublica: In early 2022, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, or CISA, which is part of DHS, was in talks to deploy a federally funded nonprofit to protect election workers from harassment and violence. The effort would have a … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

The Intercept’s Story About Government Policing Disinformation Is ‘Journalistic Malpractice’

Mike Masnick, Techdirt: Do not believe everything you read. Even if it comes from more “respectable” publications. The Intercept had a big story this week that is making the rounds, suggesting that “leaked” documents prove the DHS has been coordinating with tech companies to supp … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Hundreds of Drones to Swarm New York Skyline for Candy Crush Advertisement

Jake Offenhartz, Gothamist: At least 500 drones will depart the shores of New Jersey on Thursday evening, flickering over the horizon in a choreographed dance meant to evoke the experience of swiping colorful treats on a phone screen. Promising a “surreal takeover of New York Cit … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Uber Tests Push Notification Slots for Third-Party Advertisers

Rebecca Bellan, TechCrunch: Uber recently launched its new advertising division and in-app ads. Apparently, those ads aren’t staying within the app. Instead, ads from other companies are being sent out as push notifications, much to the chagrin of some Uber users. Over the weeken … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

An In-Depth Look at the iPhone 14 Pro’s Many Cameras

Sebastiaan de With: I shoot a lot of iPhone photos. In the last five years, I’ve taken a bit over 120,000 photos — averaging at least 10,000 RAW shots per iPhone model. I like to take some time — a few weeks, at least — to review a new iPhone camera and go beyond a […]⌥ Permalink | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

Code Poetry

Daniel Holden and Chris Kerr: This website displays a collection of twelve code poems, each written in the source code of a different programming language. Every poem is also a valid program which produces a visual representation of itself when compiled and run. What a beautiful … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago

U.S. Department of Homeland Security Appears to Work With U.S. Tech Companies to Flag Possible Misinformation

Ken Klippenstein and Lee Fang, the Intercept: The Department of Homeland Security is quietly broadening its efforts to curb speech it considers dangerous, an investigation by The Intercept has found. Years of internal DHS memos, emails, and documents — obtained via leaks and an o … | Continue reading


@pxlnv.com | 1 year ago