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#calm-technology — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #calm-technology, aggregated by home.social.

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  1. AI 에이전트 코딩 이후, 개발 도구는 어떻게 진화하는가

    에이전트 코딩의 미래를 둘러싼 세 가지 상반된 관점. 새로운 프로그래밍 언어, 조용한 AI 도구, 에이전트가 곧 언어라는 주장을 비교 분석합니다.

    aisparkup.com/posts/9128

  2. Even more calm than a sand timer

    I tell anyone who will listen about using physical sand timers for managing individual sessions of work. They are the perfect example of calm technology. I like to work with about 40 to 45 minutes of sand time.

    Today I took a half an hour to have Claude build me a digital one. Often, I’m not within reach of my favorite sand timer and I’ve wanted to try building a digital one, which behaved exactly like a physical one. A digital one which was exactly as calm as a physical one.

    A sand timer permits a constant flow rate through the neck. I didn’t bother modeling that.

    In my descriptions and prompting I steered Claude to build a trivially simple approximation: The upper “sand pile” is a perfect triangle and it “drains” by having single-pixel rows removed from its top. The lower “sand pile” grows by adding lines to its top. This is NOT how a sand timer (which approximates fluid flow) actually behaves: It means the height drops at a constant rate, not an accelerating one.

    When it was all working, I realized it was actually even more calm than a sand timer.

    When you view a sand timer, the height of the sand changes at an increasing rate. In the beginning the height changes very slowly, and right near the end, the height runs down much more quickly.

    But my digital sand timer is so calm, it even remains unhurried as it nears its end.

    ɕ

    #CalmTechnology #Claude
  3. In the dim

    Why? If I’d asked them, they would probably have said: to reduce distractions and improve focus. Programming a computer is a bit like repairing a very tiny machine with precision tools while looking under a microscope. Quiet and calm help facilitate that process. Programmers may also just prefer the dark.

    ~ Ian Bogost, from We’re All in ‘Dark Mode’ Now

    slip:4utete7.

    Hey look, “quiet and calm” has the literal calm of calm technology. Bright, flashing lights are preceded by trigger warnings for a reason. I’ve been cultivating warm-toned lighting, and earth tones, in my working spaces for a long time. I cut my teeth on the Internet with VT-100 terminals, green type on black, cathode ray tubes and “screen burn-in” was a real hazard. These days a lot of my screens have ‘paper-white’ backgrounds with the black text. It’s been nice to watch the world catch up over the last few decades.

    ɕ

    #CalmTechnology #IanBogost

  4. Notifications make no sense

    When I heard Hayes describe how his phone buzzes in his pocket whenever there is breaking news, I was actually shocked. Do people really allow their devices to interrupt them on a random reinforcement schedule? I mean, no wonder the internet makes people go crazy. I’m not a big believer in BF Skinner, but I think it’s well established that any stimulus that occurs at random intervals is impossible to get used to, and shocks you anew every time it recurs.

    Rather than letting myself get pocket-buzzed by the news, I have an RSS reader. You should use an RSS reader, seriously:

    ~ Cory Doctorow, from Pluralistic: Pluralistic is five (19 Feb 2025) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

    slip:4upugi1.

    Doctorow is pretty polarizing in general. And on this topic, I agree with him entirely. And his point about RSS readers is ONLY even about alerts for news. Forget that RSS point… TURN NOTIFICATIONS OFF ENTIRELY.

    I challenge you to put your phone in a drawer, buried in clothing—just banish it for 24 hours.

    You won’t believe how ridiculously needy your phone is when you get it out of that drawer a day later. And then you’ll start turning off notifications one by one on your way to improving your entire life. And then you’ll want to go learn more about calm technology.

    ɕ

    #CalmTechnology #CoryDoctorow

  5. It’s important we actually think about this: what you’re unaware of controls you here. We can’t talk about continuous improvement if we don’t ask ourselves,  why are we here as a team? What’s our promise to the organisation? Here, I think it’s vital that we embrace the fact that our hurry to get to say number three on a scale of ten is often what blocks us from actually getting to ten.

    ~ Ric Lindberg, from Continuous improvement

    That’s from a July podcast episode of Ric Lindberg’s Results and Relationships which you can find wherever you normally listen. His is currently the only podcast I subscribe to.

    Ric is usually showing up to lead others in the context of professional organizations… but not entirely. There’s plenty in his work that applies to us as individual creatives. Every episode, I find myself thinking: “Right! I already knew that,” and “thanks, Ric, for making me think about this!”

    Showing up to lead is enough. You don’t have to break new ground for your work to be helpful.

    Right! I already knew that. Thanks, Ric, for making me think about this!

    ɕ

    PS: About my subscriptions, there are many podcasts whose RSS feeds I follow in my feed reader app (along with hundreds of other things.) My podcast player is quiet; No new episodes appear creating that fear-of-missing-out. Instead, only when I open my feed reader app, do I see all the new episodes from the many podcast shows I follow. And just like everything else, I simply skim through, and I can add a podcast episode if I wish. This is an example of calm technology.

    https://constantine.name/2024/11/06/thanks-for-making-me-think-ric/

    #CalmTechnology #Podcasting #RicLindberg

  6. Sabbath

    Seriously? A whole day each week without work? Sitting in the orientation that day, I could not imagine pulling it off. I had spent a decade of my professional life running from event to event, fighting for the time to read and write and reflect.

    ~ Brenton Dickieson, from sabbath unplugged

    slip:4uaisa1.

    Therein lies much wisdom. Go readeth thou shall.

    I’d like to suggest a layer of nuance be added: One can only achieve a certain “width” of change for that one day each week. You cannot have a completely relaxed day if the other six are maximally frenetic. If you live with the chaos and noise turned up to 11, you cannot turn it down to 2 on a particular day. By “width” I mean you can really only turn it down somewhat; If you’re normally living at an 11, you can only expect to get down to, perhaps, a 7 on your sabbath. If you really want to have a relaxing day of rest, that’s probably down around like a zero on the chaos and noise knob.

    So, Sabbath? Certainly. And work regularly—every day—to turn that chaos and noise knob. Live life at 2, and then your day off can be a sublime zero of rest and recovery.

    ɕ

    #BrentonDickieson #CalmTechnology

  7. You can’t say that it’s a question of national peculiarities or even entirely political peculiarities. I mean, I think when the technological and applied scientific means are developed they just tend to be used. I mean, I think one can say that the whole history of recent times […] shows that if you plant the seed […] it grows and it tends to grow according to the law of its own being, and the laws of its being are not necessarily the same as the laws of our being.

    ~ Aldous Huxley, from 1961: Aldous Huxley on the power of TECHNOLOGY!

    It’s interesting to hear an author speak about his own ideas. I’ve read Brave New World and a selection of his essays (Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow). That short video—I’m linking to YouTube, I hope I don’t regret that in another decade ¯\_(ツ)_/¯—contains a few questions; Huxley presents more questions than answers. And they’re just as relevant more than half a century later.

    ɕ

    https://constantine.name/2024/09/01/good-questions/

    #AldousHuxley #Technology #CalmTechnology

  8. Calm companies provide meaningful work, healthy interactions, and flexibility for people’s lives. If your kid is home sick, you can set work aside and take care of them. If it’s a beautiful day, you can go for a run on the beach.

    ~ Justin Jackson, from We need more calm companies

    slip:4ujuca1.

    It was only a little over a year ago (as noted in my Calm Technology post) that first heard of calm tech.

    Calm technology is designed to be unobtrusive and blend in with daily life. The opposite is technology that is distracting and disruptive, creating agitation and stress.

    And of course, what would one—hopefully—build using calm tech?

    ɕ

    https://constantine.name/2024/07/23/calm-companies/

    #CalmTechnology #JustinJackson

  9. Calm

    Calm technology. Slow thought. Peace.

    We need a philosophy of Slow Thought to ease thinking into a more playful and porous dialogue about what it means to live.

    ~ Vincenzo Di Nicola from, Take your time: the seven pillars of a Slow Thought manifesto | Aeon Essays

    slip:4uaeea7.

    We can each do some things, and not everything. Choose wisely.

    ɕ

    #7ForSunday #CalmTechnology #VincenzoDiNicola

  10. Hard work

    Work ethic. The value in labor is not that it’s hard. The combination of our minds and our might, our values and our ideals, is what raises labor from simply effort expended, to purposes transcendent.

    What people don’t realize is that if you’re buried in your email inbox instead of doing your most important work, you are just as distracted as if you went on Facebook or Instagram or whatever. Anything that is not what you planned to do is by definition a distraction.

    ~ Seliria from, Stop Trying to Make Hard Work Easy

    slip:4usupo2.

    Distraction and business are available everywhere and at all times. Fortunately, there are always other choices too.

    ɕ

    #7ForSunday #CalmTechnology #Seliria

  11. Festina lente

    Festina lenta is a phrase I once used as my touchstone for a year. It means, to make haste s l o w l y. It’s inherently ridiculous, but also points to the very old and very excellent point about taking one’s time. It’s an antidote to the venoms busy and hurry. “These days” things are not simply faster, they are glossed over. The super-power I need to cultivate more is discrimination: What experiences are valuable? What pursuits are valuable? There’s [almost] always a faster way… but which is the better way?

    In that spirit, consider the two paradigms that follow, not as you would two spirited debaters but rather two paintings hanging at opposite ends of a gallery. You are in the middle, bathed in natural light, forced by history to judge their color and attraction.

    ~ Mark Helprin from, http://ayjay.org/helprin.html

    slip:4uayhe1.

    “You are a director of a firm that supplies algorithms…” Egads, no.

    “In the two days it has taken to reach your destination…” You have my attention.

    ɕ

    #7ForSunday #CalmTechnology #FestinaLente #MarkHelprin #YearlyTouchPhrases

  12. RDF site summaries

    …more commonly, Really Simple Syndication (RSS). If you don’t yet know what RSS is: RSS is a calm technology.

    Introducing a quarter-century-old technology as if it were novel might seem a little strange. But despite the syndication format’s cult following, most internet users have never heard of it. That’s unfortunate, because RSS provides everyday internet users with an easy way to organize all of their online-content consumption—news media, blogs, YouTube channels, even search results for favorite terms—in one place, curated by the user, not an algorithm. The answer to our relatively recent social-media woes has been sitting there all along.

    ~ Yair Rosenberg from, It’s time to take back control of what we read on the internet – The Atlantic

    slip:4uteie11.

    Of course, the real problem is that we’ve all had the idea that “newer is better” broadcast at us for years. The Amish don’t eschew all technology; rather, they’re very particular and intentional about what technology they adopt. The Luddites didn’t want to smash and rollback all technology; they were technically skilled workers who thrived via technology, but who had a specific bone to pick about a new technology.

    In recent decades we’ve been fire-hose, continuously fed the idea of techno-optimism… except without the really critical part: one can’t simply hew to, “technology is good.” Technology is nothing more than a tool. There are excellent tools, poor tools, and all tools can be used for good or evil. It’s the consideration we put into our decision to adopt or eschew a technology that matters most.

    ɕ

    #7ForSunday #CalmTechnology #RSS #SocialNetworks #YairRosenberg

  13. Meh

    In March of 2022 I returned to tracking my activity. For me, what gets tracked gets optimized. I created the simplest tracking worksheet that did what I wanted and I set about keeping track. There are things I loath about my current FitBit; I can’t quite entirely disable the notifications. And touch screens don’t work with sweaty fingers, which leads to frustration just when I’m exhausted. I’ve never had an Apple Watch, but maybe it was time?

    When I bought the phone last year, I went all out. I got the 1 terabyte model (a ridiculous amount of storage space, in hindsight), because I expected to have the thing for a while. But I’ve come to resent this phone.

    ~ Chris Bailey from, Smartphones should not be this nice – Chris Bailey

    slip:4ucisa1.

    I went to the Apple Store to arrange for a battery replacement for my iPhone, and I intended to spend my waiting time examining watches. I spent an hour exploring and testing, and picked one out. I bought it, booted it up, synced it to my Apple ecosystem, and strapped it on. I went on my way with a new phone battery and $700 in conspicuous consumption on my wrist. Intending to lean into wearing and using the watch as much as possible.

    And for the next two days I wanted to rip it off my wrist and smash it with a hammer. I spent endless hours trying to disable this, silence that, adjust this feature, avoid setting up that other feature… All because I wanted the Watch’s better GPS tracking of distance covered, and better biometric measurements. I struggled with trying to sleep with a digital screen strapped to my wrist—there is no digital screen that will ever exist, which is permitted in my sleep space. Alas, the Watch is the antithesis of calm technology and it was clear I was never going to change its DNA.

    On the third day, I carefully put it all back in its packaging as best I could. I drove all the way back to the Apple Store. I knew Apple had a 7-day, no questions asked, full money back guarantee. I handed it back to a rep. They of course asked, “Was there a problem? Or something you didn’t like?” My reply—

    “Meh.” And then I left.

    ɕ

    #7ForSunday #Apple #CalmTechnology #ChrisBailey #Intention

  14. What to do with twenty minutes

    I recently realized I’ve wasted 23 years. Way back in 1990 a good friend gave me a CD of MCMXC A.D. by Enigma. It was mind bending, and remains so; to this day, I use it when I really need to zone out and not quite sleep, but rest. It’s an album which I have never once listened to a single track separately. I’ve only ever started at the front and gone straight through.

    The other day, I thought: I should see what else Enigma (the brain child of Michael Cretu) may have done since 1990. Followed by my ordering all of the other seven albums. I buy the CDs used, and that means they tend to trickle to my doorstop over a few weeks. Oh. I’ve turned into a lunatic, listening to music far too loud in the house. I’ve recently done this with other artists and suddenly I’m up to my eyeballs in great (in my opinion) music.

    So, why 23 years wasted? The Screen Behind the Mirror was released in 2000. I’ve therefore wasted 23 years worth of opportunities to play it.

    Basically I had just aged myself by twenty minutes. Two virtual cigarettes, and not even a fading buzz to show for it. I learned nothing, gained nothing, made no friends, impacted the world not at all, did not improve my mood or my capacity to do anything useful. It was marginally enjoyable on some reptile-brain level, sure, but its ultimate result was only to bring me nearer to death. Using my phone like that was pure loss of life — like smoking, except without the benefits.

    ~ David Cain from, Most Phone Use is a Tragic Loss of Life

    slip:4uramo1.

    I’ve no idea if you like Enigma. (You can thank me later if you just discovered Enigma and do like it.) But there simply must be some music that you do like! …find which music it is, buy a copy of it in whatever medium you prefer, and spend that twenty minutes—and the next 23 years, if you’re lucky—leaning into that stuff.

    ɕ

    #7ForSunday #CalmTechnology #DavidCain #Enigma #MichaelCretu #Music

  15. Calmness is needed

    There is a time and place for maximum effort—yes, that’s a Deadpool reference—and there’s a time and place for stillness and calm. I’m fascinated by the relationship and interaction between physicality (as movement versus stillness) and mentality (as agitation versus calmness.) I’ve had transformational experiences at both extremes of physicality, with mental calmness. I do get mentally agitated. But I fear that too many people experience calmness far too rarely, possibly never.

    This often means working more thoughtfully, and maybe even more slowly. Slow work is not unproductive work. What we lose in speed we more than make up for in deliberateness—as well as in undistracted attention, a critical factor of productivity.

    ~ Chris Bailey from, The productivity payoffs of a calm mind – Chris Bailey

    slip:4ucite2.

    Sometimes people ask me about Stoicism, and I suck at explaining it. Thinking and writing about calmness today, I’m struck that I should probably mention eudaimonia (eu̯-dai̯-mon-ía). Eudaimonia is a key value Stoicism advocates striving for.

    […] is a state of being and consciousness that is consistent with the active, effective activity of ideal agency and in general is characterized by the calm (equanimity; tranquility) that comes from the absence of further moral struggle and the absence of retrospective regret or prospective alarm about things outside one’s control, together with the confidence that comes from the effortless persistence of moral purpose.

    ~ Lawrence Becker from, A New Stoicism p91

    2.5 millenia later… calmness, equanimity, tranquility?

    ɕ

    #7ForSunday #Apogee #Books #CalmTechnology #ChrisBailey #LawrenceBecker #Stoicism

  16. Master of none

    The idea of a changeable-bits, screw driver is brilliant. There were dozens of different screw-driving tools that varied only in the shape of their pointy end; their handles and other properties were identical. This was the perfect opportunity to create one tool to perform many functions.

    You might wonder whether life is really simpler this way. Wouldn’t it be far more convenient to use a single device to accomplish all of these tasks?

    Technically, yes. Psychologically, no.

    While there’s an undeniable ease-of-use factor to housing a phone, internet browser, entertainment center, camera, and GPS in a lightweight rectangle that fits inside my pocket, the proximity of each of these tasks to one another leads, inevitably, to constant distraction. If you’ve ever tried to find the perfect angle for a photo while your Instagram post is blowing up, or answer a work email while your mom is calling you, you know what I mean.

    ~ Talia Barnes from, The Case For Digital Minimalism – by Talia Barnes

    slip:4upepe1.

    I agree with Barnes, and her point about proximity is one I’d not seen clearly expressed. And there’s a more obvious argument for digital minimalism: It actually works.

    The multi-bit screw driver works exactly as well as the dozens of tools it replaces. But my “smart” phone is a less capable phone, a less capable camera, a less capable correspondence tool, etc. Yes, clearly, it’s more convenient. But “the best camera is the one you have with you” is only true if your definition of “best” is: I captured the photo. “The jack of all trades is master of none.” holds true. If instead your definition of “best” is: I did the thing well. Well, then, you need the right tool. And the right tools—the right technology, is calm technology.

    ɕ

    #7ForSunday #CalmTechnology #InternetTech #TaliaBarnes

  17. Mind your attention

    I’m sold on the idea that mindfulness is the key which unlocks everything else. I get chuffed when something grabs my attention. I’m fine with noticing; It’s good that I notice emergency vehicles. But realizing I’ve blown the last 5 minutes doom-scrolling in Instagram? Not cool.

    There’s a reason for this. Our experiences in the digital realm are usually very novel—and this novelty leads to the release of dopamine in our brain. Dopamine doesn’t lead us to feel happy and satisfied in and of itself—it leads us to feel as though pleasure is right around the corner, so it keeps us wanting more. The more novel an app, the more we get hooked—we feel a constant rush and keep using the app until we remember to stop. (Here’s looking at you, TikTok.)

    ~ Chris Bailey from, 5 lessons I learned switching to a flip phone for a month – Chris Bailey

    slip:4ucile1.

    This is a longer than usual article from Bailey and it’s stuffed full of insight. One item of note is he frequently gets very intentional about testing things to their logical conclusion. This article comes from him trying to live his life without a smart phone. His conclusion (and I agree) is that smart phones are awesome. Unfortunately, there’s some bad opportunities mixed in too. (Ocean and surfing, yay! Sharks, not so much.) Want to see how addicted you are to your phone? Try this.

    ɕ

    #7ForSunday #CalmTechnology #ChrisBailey #Dopamine #Mindfulness

  18. @DenverComicGuy @slackerlabs

    My point was directed at "smart" screens like Google Nest Home, Echo Show, and also smartphone apps, and how #calmtechnology is desired by more people these days.

    Many products have one form of screen or another in order to display key information - your microwave has a liquid crystal display, your ebook is a screen, and an alarm clock has a screen, but we don't feel annoyed by a microwave just because there is a screen. The proliferation and misuse is the issue.

  19. @robz

    And @Goldfish (so far) is a copy of TikTok, Or YouTube Shorts...

    Do agree that the #Fediverse needs to think bigger and better and OTHER than current mainstream apps.

    I also think they can be LESS than some of those: LESS intrusive, LESS addictive, LESS noisy, LESS about hyper-sharing, etc. LESS rewarding of incendiary content...

    More #CalmTechnology, more about healthy communities, more about privacy, more about information....

  20. I'm making a small, local-first groceries app:

    aglio.app

    I've made so many improvements to the underlying storage and sync systems in the last month, but not too many changes to the app itself.

    Still, I don't know if it's just that work I put in behind the scenes or what, but it is feeling really good lately, and I'm proud of it!

    My goal is to build the tools that make small but featureful web apps like this easy. So I can make more!

    #LocalFirst #CalmTechnology

  21. @charlesroper Nice! Am a big fan of Pinafore. It does implement many ideas of #CalmTechnology 👍

  22. Social platforms are BY DESIGN are the opposite of "calm technology."
    I think the Fediverse has the chance to change that.

    "Humans are not made to spend their entire life wrapped up in devices and systems, they are meant to be human. Calm Tech is technology that doesn’t scream for a users attention, it’s created with care and a lot of thought. #CalmTechnology allows people to achieve their goals with a low mental cost."

    medium.com/@monsemaell/what-is

  23. As I add another 100 users to this instance several times a day, I see the "why do you want to join" question we require.

    It strikes me at how many note this Instance's focus on #calmtechnology as a key part, along with #OpenWeb, #IndieWeb, and #fediverse

    In setting this instance up every option, I could set to use #CalmTech principals in place I did. Suspect there might be more. Will think on that.

    Wonder who else has thought about that and #Mastodon

    #Admin

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calm_tec