![]() My (hopefully back in use soon!) travel kit includes a Hyper 100W charger and battery pack, a Roost laptop stand, and an Apple Magic Keyboard and Magic Mouse. (Turns out my college friend Phil designed the Atreus! Small world.) Today, I am definitely a sucker for unusual keyboards, and I often use a Kinesis Advantage 2, a Keyboardio Atreus 2, or my hand-built prototype Atreus 2. For another, I fully replaced the keyboard in my Mac laptop with a FingerWorks MacNTouch touch surface until that became physically impossible. (Somehow, Dvorak completely resolved my crippling RSI from computering for 16 hours a day). For one, I’ve been using the Dvorak keyboard layout since around 2003. I’m pretty sure I have a keyboard problem. For less miserable video calls, I’ve also added a boom-mounted RØDE VideoMic NTG, a FujiFilm X-T30 made into a webcam via Genki ShadowCast, and an Elgato Ring Light. My desk setup has an OWC Thunderbolt 3 Dock, which hosts an LG UltraFine 5K display (discontinued □), Audessey Lower East Side speakers (discontinued □), and Keyboardio Model01 (discontinued □). The AirPods Pro ability to switch between transparency or noise cancellation, with quick connection when I change devices, makes them my favorite headphones of all time. ![]() Today’s phones are absolutely the culmination of everything I could imagine while using a Handspring Visor Deluxe and a Creative NOMAD Jukebox in 2000. Each one of those devices feels right on the the edge of magic to me. When I’m out and about, I use a pacific blue iPhone 12 Pro, an Apple Watch Series 6, and AirPods Pro. Okay, now it’s starting to feel like a theme, but… it’s kind of complicated. I also curated n, a collection of single-serving websites attempting to fight against the misogyny rampant in tech: the seminal, followed by, , and. It’s also the subject of my favorite blog post and conference talk, ”How to calculate the phase of the moon very, very badly!”. There’s a set of stories from each of those places, but you’ll have to ask me about them at a conference or on the internet so this interview can stay a manageable length.īack on the personal side of things, and for once including no web development, I built a lunar calendar for witches and werewolves with my partner It’s written in Swift, and lives on the iPhone App Store. Cloud City is an agency, and I spend my work days helping clients (who are mostly tech companies, and mostly in SF) develop their own web applications. Professionally, I’ve also had a bit of a roller-coaster, working for a software defense contractor, a personal finance startup, a web application hosting startup, a personal media streaming startup, and then Cloud City Development since 2013. founding the non-profit Ruby Together, a 501(c)(6) trade association that funds open source development work to benefit all Ruby developers. ![]()
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