Monday, April 07, 2025

Mindful podcast listening

Comic from Poorly Drawn Lines: Podcasts
Poorly Drawn Lines: Podcasts
I have been listening to podcast for a long time. I have blogged about this previously

During that time, I have changed devices and players. I might have started with a classic iPod, then went to a Symbian phone, now on Android, first with BeyondPod and currently Pocket Casts. 

The one constant was the increasing number of podcasts and episodes I had to deal with every week. I do love the variety and coming across weird episodes on "In Our Time", where I learn about topics I would never have known about. 

This all takes time, and at some point more time than I actually have. My backlog sometimes went above a hundred episodes and multiple days in playtime.

So I did, what probably most people do: increase the listening speed, skip silences, and similar tools. Pocket Casts even has a helpful page to show you how much you "saved". 

But recently, I started wondering about what I lost. Can I really ingest all this information at higher speeds? Aren't silences in between human and part of the story?

I decided to follow the advice I give everybody who has too many things to do and not enough time to do them: prioritize and reduce the scope. 

I removed many podcasts I previously subscribed to. First, I deleted the ones with overlapping topics. For example, I do listen to a lot of cycling podcasts, a few of them do cover more or less the same topics.

Furthermore, I also went back to 1x speed and without trimming silences. 

I am still skipping and auto-skipping ads. If I notice that I skip over content, I just skip the whole episode. And once I skip a few episodes of the same podcast, I unsubscribe. 

This entire exercise really helped to make the listening experience much more enjoyable. I really like listening to them at their normal speed and natural flow of pauses and silences.  

And I got rid of my backlog. I now listen to most episodes in the same week they were published. I also have time for many other things, like reading, listening to music, or just being more mindful about the things that I am actually doing and like the comic about says: just being with my thoughts.  

Making room for new favourites

That being said, I also have discovered some new podcasts over the last year that I now also have the time to listen to. 

Strangers on a Bench - Tom chats to random people sitting on benches in London. It is a very relaxing listen that reminds me of my time in London and all the interesting people. 

Tea and Sanctuary - Emma talks about random things, very cosy and calm in our weird times.

The Louis Theroux Podcast - Fun interviews, this is one of the podcasts where I only listen to the guests which interest me. I especially liked the ones with Sean Evans and Jamie Oliver.

Bookoverflow - Tech book reviews every week. The only problem is that this also adds to my very long book backlog.



Friday, March 28, 2025

Friday Links 25-04

Modern building with glass front

Have a listen to Greg Korah-Hartman about the kernel development process. Some good and uplifting topics in urbanism this week too.

Leadership

The Product Engineer - I agree with some of it. Every engineer should be a product engineer, but I still think there is a place for product managers. 

Who gets to do strategy? - everybody. 

Ok. So, You’re Failing - how to receive performance feedback, and probably also how to give it.

Engineering

How Linux is built with Greg Kroah-Hartman [Podcast] - first thing I did after this: google Kernel Newbies. I did wrangle the email contributing system in the past.

Why I'm No Longer Talking to Architects About Microservices - mostly because nobody is talking about the same thing and how it relates to the solution. 

6502.sh - because we needed as 6502 written in busybox ash 

How Long Should Functions Be? - "How long, then? Lots of a short functions. A few long ones. The longest long one will keep getting bigger the more functions there are in the system."

Story: Hatetris - Obsession, Friendship, and World Records [Podcast] - I didn't know about Hatetris, it is super frustrating!

Urbanism 

Paris Votes to Make 500 More Streets Car-Free - nice.

How is Ljubljana connected to its nearby forest without a car?  [YouTube] - Barcelona could learn something from this, instead they made it just about illegal to ride mountain bikes in their hills. 

How is a Bike Tunnel this Freak'n Great!? [YouTube] - it is a great tunnel. Would I spend more time than I need in it? Probably not. Should we have more of these? Yes. 

Assignment: Road wars - cycling in Paris [Podcast] - interviews with locals. 

More than a million people die on roads every year. Meet the man determined to prevent them - "Officials were no longer allowed to design roads for idealised drivers who never became distracted or exceeded the speed limit"

Random Houses

1249. Koh Kitayama (architecture WORKSHOP) /// F³ House /// Yamato, Kanagawa, Japan /// 1994-95 - I love this one!

Growth [Podcast] - starts harmless with pumpkins, then ends up with growing back fingertips, and overpopulation 

Sir John Soane [Podcast] - I usually skip over very local and historical episodes, but this one is great. I have to visit the museum the next time I am in London. 

Stockpile 72 hours of supplies in case of disaster or attack, EU tells citizens - great, back to prepping, at least I am in practice from the pandemic. 

Career advice in 2025. - it is a different world. 

Salad Sandwich (Australia) on Sandwiches of History⁣ [YouTube] - great channel, but this is the first sandwich I now regularly make. 

Nick Cave, singer and writer [Podcast] - desert island discs 

S4 EP7: Sean Evans discusses his upbringing in Chicago, interview techniques, and no-go guests on ‘Hot Ones’ [Podcast] - fun interview with my favourite YouTube host. 

The Life Scientific: Bill Gates [Podcast] - is he one of the good ones now? I can't decide.

Other Links

 

 

 Current Soundtrack:  HOME@mtw#2_ben_klock_25.12.08

Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kinds of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time, you might notice common themes, though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.

Sunday, March 16, 2025

Game of Toiletpaper 2025

Heute habe ich zum ersten Mal beim Game of Toiletpaper teilgenommen. Es ist ein virtueller Alleycat der von Regine während der Pandemie gestartet wurde.  Im Prinzip ist es eine Art Schnipseljagd auf dem Fahrrad, aber ohne einen bestimmten Ort gebunden zu sein. Ich konnte das also praktischerweise von mir zu Hause aus machen. 

Der Tag begann nicht wirklich einladend, mit 4C und angekündigtem Regen. Ich habe die wärmsten Stunden abgepasst und am Ende nur ein paar Tropfen abbekommen. Ich bin eine Strecke gefahren, die ich gut kenne, und habe auch darauf geachtet, dass ich nicht so lange unterwegs bin, weil die Hunde alleine zu Hause waren. 

Hier sind die Checkpoints, die ich befahren habe:


#1 Startpunkt/Frauenstraße 

Bei mir war das die Carrer Maria Aurèlia Capmany. Maria Aurèlia Capmany i Farnés (1918–1991), war eine Schriftstellerin, Feministin und Antifranquistin.

Ich hatte von ihr noch nie vorher gehört, aber das hört sich doch sympathisch an. 

Leider ist es eine sehr kurze Straße, an der sich bis jetzt nicht mal ein Gebäude befindet. Auf OpenStreetMap hatte sie nicht mal einen Namen.

#2 Schlimme Straße

Mit der Aufgabe hatte ich etwas Probleme. Mir ist allerdings aufgefallen, dass die Straße zwischen Borras und Monistrol de Montserrat teilweise nur BP-1121 heißt. 

Ich habe zumindest ein „Carretera de Borras a Monistrol“ erwartet. Da es aber eine wirklich hübsche Straße ist, vielleicht hat sie „Carrertera Vistas a Montserrat i el Llobregat“ (Straße mit Aussicht auf den Berg Montserrat und den Fluss Llobregat) verdient. 

#3 Planungssünden

Bei uns im Dorf gibt es nur eine „Radinfrastruktur“ und die ist schon in die Hose gegangen.

Es ist ein kleiner Radweg, der konstant vom Bürgersteig unterbrochen wird. Es gibt diesen auch nur in einer Richtung, und er ist auch recht schmal. 

Fairerweise muss man aber auch sagen, dass dieser wohl hauptsächlich für Schulkinder ist, welche von einem Teil des Ortes zur Schule fahren. Ich bin mir nicht sicher, was die auf ihrem Rückweg machen. 

#4 Fahrradkurier

Da musste ich passen. 

#5 Historisch/architektonisch interessanter Ort

Das war einfach, da ich das Kloster Montserrat praktisch um die Ecke habe. Es feiert dieses Jahr das 1000-jährige Bestehen. Heute mit Musik und Tänzen. Die Autos standen im Stau für den Parkplatz, aber mit dem Fahrrad kann man direkt vor die Kirche fahren.

In zwei Wochen ist dies auch die Bergankunft der vierten Etappen der Volta a Catalunya. Heute waren auch sehr viele Radler unterwegs. 

#6 Geografischer Punkt

Wo ich schon einmal da war: Montserrat ist auch der höchste Punkt in der Comarca Bages, die Region, in der ich wohne. Es ist vermutlich auch einer der höchsten Punkte in Katalonien, den man legal per Straße befahren kann, höher wird es nur in Richtung der Pyrenäen.  

#7 Fahrrad-Menschen

Da musste ich auch passen.

#8 Verkleide dich und schmücke dein Fahrrad

Nur mein Fahrrad wurde verkleidet!






#9 Freundlicher Abriss

Ich habe einen freundlichen und internationalen Emojis-Zettel in die Mitte  unseres Ortes gehängt. 

#10 Nametag 

Ein Ortsschild vom nächsten Ort am Berg hat jetzt einen Aufkleber des englischen „Bike“ Magazins im Design von den 90er mit meiner Unterschrift 😀

Bonus 

Selfie mit Brücke


Die Brücke „Pont Vell de Castellbell i el Vilar“ über den Llobregat von 1452. Heute eine Fuß- und Radbrücke. Der meiste Verkehr geht über eine modernere Brücke, welche erst letztes Jahr verbreitert wurde und einen Fußweg bekommen hat.

 

Selfie mit Tier 

Nachdem das Rudel so brav zu Hause gewartet hat, mussten sie auch auf ein Bild.  

Von links nach rechts: Hoover, Neo, Crash und Baty. 

Katzen nicht im Bild.

Verschönere einen Ort

Ich habe direkt zwei Orte verbessert! Auf OpenStreetMap war der Name der Frauenstrasse nicht eingetragen, und ich habe die Erinnerungstafel für den gefallenen Radler auch eingetragen.


Geisterräder

(Selfie fand ich damit seltsam)
 Zum nächsten Geisterrad, von dem ich wusste, wäre es mir dann doch zu weit. Ich habe stattdessen einen Abstecher zur Erinnerungstafel für Albert Balbis gemacht. Die ist mir einmal beim Vorbeiradeln aufgefallen und ich muss immer wieder dran denken. Die Erinnerungstafel besteht aus der eigentlichen Plakette, mit ein paar kleinen Fahrrädern, und einer Kassette, die auch an dem Felsen befestigt wurde.

Albert war wohl ein aktiver Radler in der lokalen Gemeinschaft, unterwegs auf der Straße und im Gelände. Er wurde Opfer eines Zusammenstoßes mit einem Motorradfahrer, welcher auf der falschen Spur war. 

In den Jahren danach waren wohl regelmäßig Gedenkausfahrten.

Fahrradmusikvideo  

Lieblingsfahrradvideos habe ich nicht, aber diese kommen schon nah dran:

Fazit

Hat Spaß gemacht. Ich hatte Glück mit dem Wetter. Würde ich nächstes Jahr auch noch mal machen, da muss ich mir dann aber wohl neue Orte suchen, um es interessant zu machen.  




Friday, February 28, 2025

Friday Links 25-03

Honda Rune motorcycle in the Gracia district of Barcelona
I have been slacking recently, today you are getting a bigger dose of links. 

If you want to listen to something nice, have a look at the episode about developer productivity and about keeping our food fresh.

Leadership

Is engineering strategy useful? - there is always one, best to make it clear 

Developer productivity with Dr. Nicole Forsgren (creator of DORA, co-creator of SPACE) [Podcast] - I loved this episode. Many good bits.

Engineering

See the code that powered the Pebble smartwatches - nice … most of the code, at least.

How AI generated code compounds technical debt - next AI will help us to reduce it again? 

The evolution of Memcached [LWN] - I remember when it first showed up. It was a little bit too late for our startup.

AI Copilot Code Quality: 2025 Look Back at 12 Months of Data - this is just the summary of the document, you have to register to download the whole thing

Kent Beck Reflects on Tidy First? [Podcast] - another book for my long reading list.

ediMeteo: How a Tiny €4 FreeBSD VPS Became a Global Weather Service for Thousands - constraints are fun.

Environment 

Spain could return to the 1980s with a bottle deposit payment system - this will be interesting to see. Recycling here is really not great. 

Lab-grown meat goes on sale in UK dog food - our pets are our main meat eaters. 

Emerging evidence for the impact of Electric Vehicle sales on childhood asthma: Can ZEV mandates help? [Paper] - "States with ZEV mandates are already experiencing measurable public health benefits."

Brake pad dust can be more toxic than exhaust emissions, study says - I kind of would have expected that anyway.

Urbanism & Transport

Natural Handcrafted Artisanal ... Streets?!  [YouTube] - those are some pleasant tiles. 

People Who Cycle to Work Take Fewer Sick Days. But Why? - I am just going to pretend that it is because it makes you happy. 

Huge Tactical Urbanism Project in Kyiv - Kontraktova Square - maybe you can help? (UA subs) [YouTube] - Mikael still doing good in Ukraine. 

Vueling cancels Barcelona-Madrid route - high-speed trains work.

The big impact of workplace commuting on Irish towns and villages - suburbisation

Random Motorbikes

Just Why is the Honda Rune Such a Classic? - I would love to have one of these pointless bikes. Maybe they could make it electric?

Simple Sabotage Field Manual by United States. Office of Strategic Services - apropos nothing. 

After 44 Years, Someone Beat the Donkey Kong Kill Screen [YouTube] - I don't agree with the slo-mo playing.

WikiTok - endless Wikipedia browsing … knowledge-scrolling 

Scientists crack what they say is the perfect way to boil an egg - this seems to be too much work

What if you never come down? The 90s clubbers who wouldn’t let the night end – a picture essay - I am not in those pictures. 

Wayback Machine extension - for Firefox

blocksalat - fun in-browser modular synth 

ISBN Visualization - fun book browsing!

What happened at The Pro's Closet? [Podcast] - more insights into the bike business, it applies to other startups too

The Battle of Valmy [Podcast] - I usually skip the history episodes. This one is good. 

Forever Fresh [Podcast] - how we keep our food fresh 

S4 EP3: Jamie Oliver on public feuds, chopping his finger off on live TV, and his controversial jerk rice [Podcast] - He is a bit weird nowadays, but he did bring me back to cooking when he first showed up on telly. 

Brewing tea removes heavy metals from water, study finds - let's ignore that we are probably adding microplastics. 

The Complete Guide to Sweater Detectives - my favourite genre 

Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kinds of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time, you might notice common themes, though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.

Friday, January 24, 2025

Friday Links 25-02

A cup of coffee and a brownie in a coffee shop, with view on the street.
This week, I recommend the blog posts in engineering. Some nice toys to play with.

Engineering

Building Bauble - language to create shaded graphics and animations. You can modify the code in the blog post to play with it.

The Visible Zorker - looking at the inner workings of Zork. 

Building a tiny Linux from scratch - pretty cool, I haven't even built my own kernel for a long time.

Environment 

BBC Trending: Were Valencia's floods engineered weather? [Podcast] - this was a new conspiracy theory for me.

Urbanism

How can urban transport work in extreme winter conditions? [YouTube] - By prioritizing public transport, walking, and cycling. 

142. Congestion Pricing Is Finally Here [Podcast] - The War on Cars interviews people affected by the congestion charge in NYC.

Meet the brothers who built NYC’s favorite congestion pricing tracking tool - "Unsurprisingly, depending on the route and time of day, the new tolling scheme seems to be working — perhaps even better than expected."

Still on track: Barcelona’s metro celebrates its centenary [Podcast] - 100 years!

Random Coffee

From the archive: The invisible addiction: is it time to give up caffeine? [Podcast] - I have given up for a long time. There might be some benefits that I am not getting.

How Quitting Alcohol Transformed My Cycling  [YouTube] - I mainly enjoy the relaxed weekend mornings.

Sites without sound: Oslo leads in quiet, low-emission electric construction - I noticed some electric construction vehicles when I was in Oslo.

PANTHER electric test drive on the race track - Rosenbauer - I like fire engines!

‘I like to break the rules’: Björk on comedy, darkness and the most flamboyant tour of her career - I really like when artists change over time, leaving some fans behind, even if this includes myself.

New Spanish law to "protect" cyclists proposes drivers must slow 20km/h below speed limit before overtaking bike riders - We have the nicest drivers already, let's see if this improves it even more. 

1235. Waro Kishi /// House in Shimogamo /// Sakyo Ward, Kyoto, Japan /// 1992-94 - I have been following this blog for a while. There are many houses I don't like, but this one is nice.

Revisited: just how bad is alcohol for us? [Podcast] - still bad. 

Five years of Covid: Part one and Part two [Podcast] - a review, mostly of the science. 





Friday Links Disclaimer
Inclusion of links does not imply that I agree with the content of linked articles or podcasts. I am just interested in all kinds of perspectives. If you follow the link posts over time, you might notice common themes, though.
More about the links in a separate post: About Friday Links.