Friday, May 30, 2025

Friday Links 25-09

People on a dancefloor with spotlights shining from the DJ area
First post curated via Readwise Reader. I am creating some scripts to help replicate what I did with Pocket. 

I enjoyed the Komoot goodbye video this week. It is lovely and a bit sad.  

Leadership

Stuff I learned at Carta. - lots of good stuff, maybe not applicable in all organisations. 

Early Days of Agile Development & Is Design Dead? • Martin Fowler & James Lewis • GOTO 2024  [YouTube] - nice chat.

The secrets of a great apology [Podcast] - An important step is to accept that you were in the wrong.

Urbanism

Transport Fever 3 - Cinematic Announcement Trailer [YouTube] - I see trains, trams, bus lanes, but no bike lanes, and also highways going through the city. 

They Tore Down a Highway and Made it a River (and traffic got better) [YouTube] - I have seen pictures before. This goes into quite a bit of detail. 

Another way electric cars clean the air: study says brake dust reduced by 83% - and they are often not much heavier than legacy cars. 

Los Angeles - The Life-Sized City - S04E01 - Full Episode [YouTube] - lots of stuff happening, but an uphill battle.

Random Raves

Be transported to an illegal Acid House rave by the Barbican's new immersive experience - not quite the same, innit?

Digg co-founder offers to save Pocket as Mozilla winds it down - I mostly learned that Digg is still around or coming back. 

Little Lamb Chilling With Cat [YouTube] - emergency-cute. 

I just started using n8n to automate my workflow, and I wish I had sooner - next project?

The Workload Fairy Tale - "the idea that their current commitments and obligations represent the exact amount of work they need to be doing to succeed in their position."

Unreleased Amiga Hardware Plays MP3s - I always assumed the Amiga could play these without help.

Windows Was The Problem All Along  [YouTube] - I am delighted with my SteamDeck. 

A new start after 60: I became a dog-walker – and I’ve never been happier - this is my plan. 

Cory Doctorow on how we lost the internet [LWN] - we are well buggered. 

Komoot Team Says Goodbye - great video. Imagine you have a team like this and fire all of them.

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, May 23, 2025

Friday Links 25-08

Amiga 1000 home computer on a desk with keyboard, mouse, and floppy disks
Amiga 1000 by Blake Patterson
Pocket is a big part of how I collect the links for the Friday Links. Sadly, Mozilla has decided to shut Pocket down. My plan is to migrate to Readwise Reader, which seems to be a reasonable replacement. I am now migrating some of my helper scripts to make the change easier. You will see next week if I will be successful. :-) 

Engineering

As US vuln-tracking falters, EU enters with its own security bug database - nice. 

Principal Engineer at John Deere on how extreme programming saved his startup [Podcast] - Quite a bit of XP in there, pretty interesting.

Environment

Climeworks’ capture fails to cover its own emissions - This is never going to be useful. 

Top winemaker ‘may have to leave its Spanish vineyards due to climate crisis’ - "acquiring plots in Benabarre, in the Aragonese Pyrenees, at 1,100 metres, where it is still too cold to grow vines. "

Low emission zones are successful in cutting air pollution, study finds - surprising no one.

Urbanism

More Motornormativity with Marco te Brömmelstroet, aka "The Fietsprofessor" [Podcast] - reviwing the study from a Dutch perspective.

Apple's new $5 billion campus has more space for parking than offices - So much future.

Spain Responds To Exploding Tourist Demand With A Groundbreaking Approach, Prioritizing Regional Growth And Strategic Visitor Management 

Thinking of a trip to Barcelona this summer? Beware – here’s what you’ll find - I don't like opinion pieces. This one mentions many things I recognise about Barcelona, and tourism in general.

How a Highway Became San Francisco’s Newest Park - people will be looking back and wonder why you would have a highway on the seafront. 

Paris races to top of European rankings of cycling-friendly cities for children - beating Amsterdam and Copenhagen. 

Londoners are swapping cars for bicycles at a rapid pace, data shows - This is mostly about the city.

Random Amiga

Brand New ReAmiga 3000 - At some point I have to check if my ancient computers still work.

So long, farewell, Auf Wiedersehen... - Mozilla is shutting down Pocket. I blame AI. 

Sean Penn on dining with Jack Nicholson and Putin, run-ins with the paparazzi, and his relationship with Zelenskyy [Podcast] - He seems nice, maybe a bit too much smoking?  

In the Studio: Esben Holmboe Bang [Podcast] - cooking as art. 

Trailblazer Alfonsina Strada: One Woman’s Battle at the Giro d'Italia | The Power of Sport [YouTube] - If you don't have women's races, perhaps open the men's races up to everybody? 

‘People were buying crossbows faster than I’d like’ – how prepping went mainstream in Britain - "I’m not one to body shame anybody, but if you’re preparing for an apocalypse, you have to be able to kneel." 

The Story Behind That Photo Of The Pinto In Front Of The Mt. St. Helens Eruption - run!

How Sierra Was Captured, Then Killed, by a Massive Accounting Fraud - long read.

Old Tosh - Toshiba's personal stereo radio cassette combo [YouTube] - I want this, ideally in working condition. 

'It's about the music' - DJ duo Slam celebrate 35 years - I have been listening to them for many years. They have a great podcast too.

1264. Akiko Takahashi & Hiroshi Takahashi (Workstation) /// SUM HOUSE 1996 /// Matsushige, Itano District, Tokushima, Japan /// 1995-96 - I like this boxy industrial style.

A kernel developer plays with Home Assistant: general impressions - I am playing with HA again too. I finally have some use cases.

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, May 09, 2025

Friday Links 25-07

Manila at night
A very random collection this week, with some prepping research. 

The Life-Sized City report from Berlin is pretty cool, so is the one about building a simple game in different engines, I also liked the post about microservices.

Engineering

Microservices Are a Tax Your Startup Probably Can’t Afford - very long read about the pitfalls and some advantages of microservices.

Formally verified cloud-scale authorization [Paper] - fascinating. Maybe only do that if you have a billion calls a second.

I Made the Same Game in 8 Engines [YouTube] - I always wanted to give this a go. There seem to be some easy options.

Environment

Farmers are making bank harvesting a new crop: Solar energy  - "On average, that energy savings and revenue added up to $124,000 per hectare (about 2.5 acres) each year, 25 times the value of using the land to grow crops. "

Urbanism & Transport

The Absolute Best Transportation for Cities [YouTube] - it's true. 

How Can Cities Fix Big Box Stores? [YouTube] - this is mostly a US problem. We are seeing this in Europe on a much smaller scale. 

The Life-Sized City - S04E02 - Berlin - Full Episode [YouTube] - Some new places to check out when I am in Berlin the next time. This is from 2022. 

lars' transport maps- sadly not for Spain. 

This company built its own rail terminal in New York City to avoid relying on trucks

What Should New York City Do About Tourist Helicopters? - ban them, and the ones used as fancy taxis too.

Random Blackouts

The recent Spanish and Portuguese blackout was an interesting day and refreshed my interest in light prepping. Obviously, this only happens after emergencies.  

Smoking: How large of a global problem is it? And how can we make progress against it? - lots of data and graphs on this.

Salt Lake City and Boise adopt official pride flags to skirt Republican bans

Minimum Viable Curiousity - Rands musing about our AI future.

Quite a Ride - Official Reveal Trailer [YouTube] - nice, a horror cycling game.

Desire: The Carl Craig Story - Official Trailer (2025) [YouTube] - I wonder if I will be able to see this. 

the six seconds that changed music forever [YouTube] - the Amen break. 

The TECHNICS Tape Deck (RS-671) [YouTube] - I am even more scared of opening my decks now. 

I Randomly Decided To Pay Off A School’s Lunch Debt. Then Something Incredible Happened. - I don't even understand the concept of lunch dept, but this is an uplifting story in a way. 

Are alcohol-free drinks worth the price in 2025? - it's silly that they tend to be pricier. 

Update: Diese Alpenpässe sind 2025 autofrei [German] - list of passes in the Alps that are for cyclists only on certain days.

Other Links

Tim Bray - Long Links - some good stuff, I learned about the AWS research and the Dafny language.

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, May 02, 2025

Friday Links 25-06

City Of Arts and Sciences in Valencia, with a cloudy sky
A few uplifting stories about urbanism and science this week. 

I also really liked the video about the empty virtual world and browsing through Moby's gratis track collection.

Leadership

The best culture book of 2025: The Power of Mattering [Podcast] - I am not 100% convinced, but it is on my to-read stack now. 

TBM 351: The 4 Prioritization Jobs (And Why It Matters) - I would say they are very much related.

Engineering

How should Stripe deprecate APIs? (~2016) - most importantly, they don't use versioning, like many organisations.

Why is there a "small house" in IBM's Code page 437? - spoiler: we don't really know.

Urbanism

Putting the Trans in Transit with Katelyn Burns [Podcast] - transport infrastructure protects everybody.

When Darkness Fell: How Spain’s Blackout Revealed Architectural Truth - interesting idea, sadly without any photos from the blackout. 

UK Ikea boss backs calls to pedestrianise Oxford Street as flagship store opens - "In the past two years, the number of vacancies and candy shops have dropped" 

Cycling in City of London rises by more than 50% - in two years!

How to make cars disappear without banning them - about LTNs being quite successful.

Paris Proves the Power of Pedals: How Cycling Helped Cut Pollution in Half - infrastructure is making a difference again.

Random Science

The Age of Aquaticus [Podcast] - one example of fundamental science unexpectedly leading to big industries. 

Unstoppable: Tu Youyou [Podcast] - the one example of traditional Chinese medicine being useful? With the help of a lot of science, obviously. 

Signal Hill: Caterpillar Roadshow [Podcast] - lovely story about a wonderful Japanese kid doing science. 

The fly-tipped sofa: how an abandoned couch changed a small village – in pictures - I love this. I guess the story would have been different with a fly tipped washing machine. 

mobygratis - 500 free tracks from Moby! Free as in beer, and mostly as in freedom. 

I Spent 30 Days in a Dead Game [YouTube] - there must be many of these around, unless they just shut down. Lovely video anyway. 

demanda.ree.es - nice site to track the Spanish energy mix in real time. You can also browse back to the blackout

How Kraftwerk’s ‘Autobahn’ altered the course of electronic music - I think this was the first electronic record I heard, my father used to play this. The influence on techno music was pretty big.

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.

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

Collecting Cassette Decks

This probably falls into the category of weird hobbies. Friends have asked me about it, so I figured it was time to write it down.

Some history

Colllection of cassette tapes with DJ setsI grew up in the 80s and cassettes were a big part of how I experienced music. I remember recording bits of radio shows to create my own mixtapes. Furthermore, I also recorded records of friends and relatives to play on my Walkman. 

In the 90s, I really got into techno music. It was difficult to get the music to play at home or in the car. There were basically two sources, the radio and recorded DJ sets from clubs. Once you got your hands on a recording, they were widely shared between friends. 

I had a Sony TC-C5 five cassette-changer back then. I used it to record one of the radio shows which was going over multiple hours, and sometimes also DJ sets at parties of friends.

In the 00s, I lived in London and had a bit more disposable income that allowed me to acquire a Sony TC-K6 ES, which is probably one of the best cassette decks ever built.
At the time, you were able to buy mix tapes on Camden Market. The quality and source was often questionable.

Technology  

There is no way around it: cassettes are a pretty bad medium for music. There is a lot of mechanics involved, the tape is far too small and thin, and they do tend to get a lot of abuse. Duplicating them quickly reduces the quality, too. And they disintegrate over time. 

Companies producing hi-fi equipment, like Sony and Nakamichi, put in significant effort to improve the recording and playback quality of cassettes. 

They added more magnetic heads, motors, direct drives, dampening of the mechanics and cases. They improved the cassettes themselves with different recording media. Furthermore, they used a few different noise reductions systems from Dolby and others. 

There were also different types of playback systems, from the miniature Walkmans, that were not much bigger than a cassette case, to ghetto blasters. Single cassette decks in all quality levels, dual cassette decks for easy duplications, cassette changers from 5 to 10 cassettes, and many more.

Nostalgia  

Cassette decks and other hifi elementsNowadays, cassette decks don't make a lot of sense. I get my music digitally and have access to many DJ sets through SoundCloud and similar services. For pop music, you have all kind of streaming services. If you want even higher quality, you can buy music on services like Qobuz. And if you prefer something you can hold in your hand, you can get everything on CD too, which are easy to rip and copy without any loss of quality. 

You can still buy pre-recorded cassettes from many artists, but the quality of the tapes is pretty bad, and they are mostly limited edition collector items, similar to a band t-shirt or sticker.   

So my collection is mostly about nostalgia. There were some cassette decks I dreamed about as a kid, when I browsed the catalogues of high-end brands that I was unable to afford. 

I really wanted only three decks in my collection, and that I have now:

  • The Sony TC-K6ES because I think it is probably the best deck ever created.  
  • The Sony TC-C5 for the weirdness of a cassette changer and because I had it before and used it so much
  • The Nakamishi RX-505 for the amazing auto-reverse feature that moves the whole cassette. I first saw it in the film 9 1/2 weeks. I only got the RX-202E, but they look and work very similar.

Stack of Sony cassette decks, amplifiers, and CD players.

While looking for these and for recording, playing, and digitising my tapes, I also acquired some more Sony decks. I also really like the sound of the 90s Sony amplifiers, and while I was at it, I ended up with CD players and radios too. All my amplifiers also have Google Chromecast Audios connected, and are used for music in every room.

If you are looking for a really nice deck that isn't too expensive, I would suggest the Sony TC-K511/611/711. You can find those, sometimes nicely restored, on eBay. 

If you are just curious about the technology and want to watch some videos, I can strongly recommend the channel from Techmoan on YouTube. He also explains why you don't want to use one of the new cassette players you can buy now. 

 

Sony Super Metal Master cassette in case
I also bought one (yes, one!) of the most fancy cassettes that were ever available. The Sony Super Metal Master. I remember they were costing about £15 in the 00s, they were probably the last ones in the shop. I should have bought them all, since they now sell for EUR 250 when still in original packaging. That makes me clearly not the only nostalgic and cassette romantic. 

You might also notice that I don't have any portable cassette players, like Walkmans or Ghetto Blasters. So far, I thought this would be a step too far 😀. They also never fascinated me as much, even though the technology is interesting and there are some real oddities available. 

Maintenance & Repair

You might also wonder how much of these devices still work. Good question! They all show signs of their age. The TC-5 and RX-202 will need some real love, they only function sporadically. The amplifiers all have problems with their switches and potentiometers, which leads to noise when changing the volume, the rest mainly works. 

The main issue with cassette decks is their use of rubber belts to transfer the rotation from the motors to the tape mechanism. These disintegrate over time, and you have to take the whole deck apart, clean it, and replace the belts. This can be quite fiddly. If you have added mechanics of tape changers or fancy auto-reverse, this gets even worse. 

In all old devices, capacitors will also fail at some point, and small plastic parts can also break through use. 

I am going to learn to fix some of these issues myself, but there are limits to my skills and the time I want to spend on it. There are some places that do this professionally, but they are not cheap. It is really only worth it for the very fancy devices. Otherwise, it is easier and cheaper to find a restored one on eBay. 

Still going

Finally, I leave you with some of the cassettes I bought over the recent years. More out of curiosity, than for the music. This also explains the weird mix of styles. Sadly, there are not many cassettes with electronic music available. 

Selection of prerecorded cassette tapes.

Why I Still Care

This hobby is part nostalgia, part admiration for the engineering behind these devices. It’s not the most practical way to listen to music today, but it connects me to a time when music felt more hands-on and personal. And honestly, there’s something satisfying about seeing this ancient hardware work and do its thing.

 

 

 

 




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