Skip to Content

2026

71 posts
Previous Posts

A Website To End All Websites | Henry From Online

2026ReadingWriting
You’re not crazy. The internet does feel genuinely so awful right now, and for about a thousand and one reasons. But the path back to feeling like you have some control is to un-spin yourself from the Five Apps of the Apocalypse and reclaim the Internet as a set of tools you use to build something you can own & be proud of — or in most of our cases, be deeply ashamed of.

A truly beautiful essay proposing a return to independent publishing.

Happy Public Domain Day 2026!

2026ReadingBooks
For these three systems, newly entering the public domain today are: works by people who died in 1955, for countries with a copyright term of “life plus 70 years” (relevant in UK, most of the EU, and South America); works by people who died in 1975, for countries with a term of “life plus 50 years” (relevant to most of Africa and Asia); films and books (incl. artworks featured) published in 1929 (relevant solely to the United States).

Public Domain Review article highlights works entering the public domain in 2026, including books by William Faulkner, Langston Hughes, and Hermann Hesse.

About that viral Reddit delivery app post…

2026ReadingWorking
Then, as restaurants started to publicly decry the hefty commissions these apps collected, some diners rebelled. This was the “delete your apps” era. We did not delete our apps. In fact, we’re more hooked now. Data from the National Restaurant Association suggests demand for restaurant delivery is growing.

Expedite article analyzing **that** viral Reddit post about food delivery app algorithms.

Why did renewables become so cheap so fast?

2026Reading
The first price point for usable solar technology that I can find is from the year 1956. At that time, the cost of just one watt of solar photovoltaic capacity was $1,865 (adjusted for inflation and in 2019 prices).10 One watt isn’t much. Today, one single solar panel of the type homeowners put on their roofs produces around 320 watts of power.11 This means that at the price of 1956, one of today’s solar modules would cost $596,800.12

Our World In Data explaining why renewable energy prices have dropped dramatically, showing how solar and wind technologies have become cheaper than fossil fuels within just 15 years.

Membership

Weekly Roundup — Get a curated digest of the best links, ideas, and insights delivered to your inbox every week.

$2/month $19/year (save 20%)

Free

Subscribe to Newsletter — Stay up to date with email notifications of new posts.