brainbaking/content/post/2023/04/march-2023.md

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Favorites of March 2023 2023-04-01T08:30:00+02:00
metapost

Last month's favorites got lost in momentum and I simply didn't have the energy to condense them into a metapost. I'm still not sure whether or not these types of posts are actually useful but I do have a few interesting links to share so here goes. Most of February's favorites I could gather are integrated as well.

Previous month: January 2023.

Books I've read

  • Herodotus' Histories. A fascinating two thousand year old history lesson about then two thousand year old history. I don't know about you, but my mind was blown. It's a bit hard to get into though.
  • Rouw op je dak by Jos Brink. A small booklet about grief and how to live with it. It didn't satisfy my needs. I'll be harking back to the real philosophers for the subject.
  • Art as Therapy from the School of Life's own Alain de Botton and John Armstrong. This was my second read and it's one of the most important works on art critique I've ever read---even though I haven't read many of them. In 2017, I wrote a short review on GoodReads:

Insightful and witfully written, Alain again succeeds in triggering ideas and challenging dogmas. I never stopped to think about art the way he sees it and now it's only logical. A very good book, although somewhat complicated sections for non-native English readers like me.

It baffles me that I remembered so little about it, even though I took notes, and even though I wanted to pick it up again because I knew it was an important work for me. Our memory can really be a giant sieve sometimes... I need to think over Art as Therapy's global message, I'm sure it'll get summarized in a blog post sometime soon.

Games I've played

Surprisingly little, although I tried enjoying a few different ongoing ones, I only managed to finish the following games:

  • Pizza Tower, which has an amazing soundtrack and is one of the best (and craziest) 2D platformers I've played in years. It's also quite short, which may be an advantage for the contemporary busy person. In short (ha!), very much recommended, and a Game of the Year contender.
  • Stuart Gipp put me to trying out a few short Game Boy games. Stuart's Franchise & Lows YouTube videos are hilarious, in which he analyzes retro games of video game franchises like Asterix and Tiny Toon Adventures. I bought the two Game Boy carts of the latter. They're average at best. I didn't expect anything else, but had fun regardless.

I did find an interesting YouTube series by Double Fine called Devs Play, where, well, developers play older games and comment on the various mechanics. I especially enjoyed this Rayman 2 episode with Michel Ancel, Tim Schafer, and Lee Petty:

{{< youtube l6AgSHT8Ve0 >}}

Selected (blog) posts

  • Did you know that CLang optimizes an infinite for loop in C(++)? That's why C isn't fun.
  • MuffinTerm is a terminal crafted for the BBS experience for Mac (via The Byte Cellar).
  • Something for next Christmas: 24 pull requests.
  • Sloth is a native Mac app that shows open files and sockets.
  • If you're up for a programming challenge, try Proton Hackers to get started with TCP server programming.
  • Zophar's domain houses soundtrack rips of old Game Boy games, such as the ear worm Bugs Bunny Crazy Castle.
  • In case you love old desktop screenshots just as much as I do, you need to visit https://guidebookgallery.org/.
  • The GameCube hacks continue to expand with this SD card-enabled Memory Card. It's expensive but cool.
  • Go's ecosystem also continues to expand. If you like writing config in Go, you probably already use Dagger for your CI/CD needs, and perhaps Magefiles instead of Makefiles?