Peter Eckersley, may his memory be a blessing
I'm devastated to report that Peter Eckersley (@pde), one of the original founders of Let's Encrypt, died earlier this evening at CPMC Davies Hospital in San Francisco.
Peter was the leader of EFF's contributions to Let's Encrypt and ACME over the course of several years during which these technologies turned from a wild idea into an important part of Internet infrastructure. He also took a lot of initiative in coalescing the EFF, Mozilla, and University of Michigan teams into a single team and a single project. He later served on the initial board of directors of the Internet Security Research Group.
https://community.letsencrypt.org/t/peter-eckersley-may-his-memory-be-a-blessing/183854
If You Use Let's Encrypt (https sites in general), Certbot, Privacy Badger, Thank Peter Eckersley.
🔒 🔑
Sadly, news came out he passed suddenly today. 😢
He really made his mark helping encrypt today's web.
#Certbot #LetsEncrypt #https #Web #Internet #Encryption #crypto #EFF #PeterEckersley
never heard of Peter before, but I've definitely heard of and benefitted from his work with the #EFF . sad to learn about him this way
https://twitter.com/bcrypt/status/1565867388741898240?s=20&t=j_dso0kBndKw5WywEW3N5g
@izaya apparently. only way i catch a launch is i wake up early and I'm like "oh yeah, isn't that today". i never actually know the launch time
@readsteven i got the joke
@soup_reviews it's a wasteland of fuckboys, flakes, and scammers. there are some nice ppl, but it's a chore to filter down to them on free tiers
@readsteven idk . like, a hookup app for legislators? they don't generally do it with each other right? or they just have standing invite only sex parties apparently
It's funny. If someone had asked me, seven years ago, "what is the key principle of teaching Physics," I would never have said "mystery." Now it would be at least a top-3 idea.
The only way I know how to teach is this:
1) Students summarize their understanding.
2) We poke the universe with some experiment or activity.
3) Students admit that this makes no sense.
4) We name the mystery.
5) We use logic, more experiments, graphs, etc. to solve the mystery.
6) Students summarize their (new) understanding four ways, naming this their "current model."
7) We poke the universe again, and the cycle of confusion-->named mystery-->model begins again.
@maltimore I think the premise is flawed: people are affected more, just maybe not where you are
Principles of UI, A Thread:
1. natural mapping
2. visibility of system state
3. discoverability
4. constraints and affordances
5. habits and spatial memory
6. locus of attention
7. no modes
8. fast feedback
9. do not cause harm to a user's data or through inaction allow user data to come to harm
10. prefer undo to confirmation boxes. For actions that can't be undone, force a "cooling off" period of at least 30 seconds.
11. measure using Fitt's, Hick's, GOMS, etc. but always test with real users.
65.
IF YOU PROGRAM A "NO" BUTTON TO SAY "MAYBE LATER" YOU HAVE FAILED AT BOTH INTERFACE DESIGN AND BASIC CONSENT
via @HTHR
@readsteven yeah, there is something in that. the living and the dead sleeping next to each other
@readsteven lower in terms of elevation?
Examples in the link.
"Andy Saunders has an obsession. It's Project Apollo, one of the defining events in our species' history.
But he's also got a deep frustration. And that's the pictures that record those remarkable space missions in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
[...]
The result is a gloriously sumptuous new book called Apollo Remastered. Four hundred pictures that detail humanity's first foray to another world."
re: the expanse
@izaya you must be really patient 😁 maybe I'll stick it out to see what they do with Drummer.
A capable software engineer and aspirating (sic) cook. Also posting about space stuff (mostly NASA) occasionally
pronouns: he, him