Blog

  • Lichess Patron Icon

    Lichess Patron Icon

    I probably am on lichess.org more than any other single website, mostly losing chess games. It’s an absolutely perfect example of the best open-source software can be.

    As an open-source project, the developers do not charge for membership. It’s totally free. There’s something extraordinarily humane and selfless about open-source, especially when it rises to the usage levels that Lichess and others (Linux, Blender, WordPress, e.g.,) have achieved.

    Alternatively, closed-source projects usually offer a free membership, but include motetization strategies such as ads that only go away, or features that can only be accessed if you purchase a membership.

    That’s not to say they don’t need money, but almost all of the revenue open-source make comes from donations.

    One of the interesting ways Lichess monetizes is via the “patron” badge. If you donate at least $5, you get a little wingy icon next to your username:

    That’s it–instead of a boring little circle, now you have a bit of “flair” that distinguishes you as someone who supports the hard work it takes to make an open-source project great. It’s a brilliant strategy to encourage donations. But I have to wonder, is it a feature? In other words, does paying for Lichess actually improve your chess skills and help you win more often? Does it help your rating improve?

    I think this would be a great study. Lichess has a monumental open data set. One could conceivably analyse the data and determine that become a member does, in fact, make you a stronger player. At the very least, it would make you a stronger player on Lichess.

    Symbolism and iconography have a powerful effect on us. They form our communication methodology and influence our decisions. When you play someone with a wingy badge, you may feel empathy toward them, and thus not play with your typical competitive drive. Or you may feel intimidation, or some other form of distraction that might throw you off your game, even if it’s just the tiniest bit. Placing the Lichess dataset under a microscope might reveal patterns that show that patreons are not only being supportive, they’re being tactical.

    Here’s my hypothesis: becoming a Lichess patron makes you a better player. Time to get the abstract written.

  • Life in 2024 so far

    Teaching has shifted to administration

    The huge migration is nearly done

    My wife and kids are beautiful

  • The extra icons

    The extra icons

    I did a ton of icons for the project icon contest, here’s a chart of ones that didn’t make the cut:

    the losers
    the losers

  • On WordPress as a career skill

    WordPress is quickly becoming an essential skill for people in a wide variety of industries. Therefore, it’s imperative that educational institutions prepare graduates to manage, maintain, develop and design WordPress powered sites, blogs and apps. Soon we’ll see WP listed as a requirement on as many job listings as MS-Office, and students should confidently be including WordPress on their resumes.

  • Game idea

    This is so simple, and doable

    • You control a node
    • You can move that node around in a fixed 2d space
    • If you collide with another node, you fight by clicking as fast as you can
    • If you click faster than that node, you grow
    • Clickrate is modified by your size
    • The bigger you are, the slower you have to click to win the fight
    • goal: destroy/absorb every other node
  • The mccondo

    I’m at the ft Erie town meeting and 2 hours into it were hearing the same pro-condo heads go on and on. Were all in agreement on this point- the town needs more people, more business.
    The people you’re gonna get are not what you want. You want people to fix the cottages and build new ones. Most are gonna be summer residents. Sorry, anyone who thinks CB is gonna turn into year round destination is nuts. We need to maximize what we have.

  • Chubby design

    You heard it here first, folks. The next big thing in cutting-edge design is hereby being dubbed “chubby” design.
    What is chubby?
    Bursting at the seams
    Easy/inviting to touch/rub
    The opposite of all this hyperthin helvetica apple rolled out with ios 7
    Get the first unapologetic chubby design today – the chubbies icon font: https://github.com/field2/chubbies