“blobjects”


worm-blossom.org archives!
The front page was starting to get pretty big, with nearly twenty weekly updates on a single page. But no longer! The front page now only shows the eight most recent weekly updates, but there's also a page with the full archive of all updates in chronologically ascending order!
Not just that, but in addition to a page with all music, there is also a page collecting all of the comics into one place.

Back at last. And I owe the faithful readers of worm-blossom.org not one… but two editorials, as these last two weeks I was busy attending two very different events: p2p-basel and FOSDEM. The former is intimate and deep, the latter huge and sprawling. And I had a great time at both. Let’s start with Basel.
p2p-basel invites researchers and p2p practicioners to a weekend of lectures and talks at the University of Basel. This year there were only approximately 16 participants, and that creates a very intimate atmosphere for discussion. For example, the catering of the event is also peer-to-peer, with attendees participating in cooking and cleaning. Those moments where you stand shoulder to shoulder with someone while peeling carrots present wonderful opportunities for deep discussion.

There are prepared presentations and a time dedicated to spontaneous unconference discussions, of which I moderated two this year.
The first was on ‘delay tolerant UIs', anticipating user confusion stemming from systems where authored data may only reach other users a week later. This might mean the arrival of a message divorced from its original context, or worse, placed into a new context which changes its meaning (e.g. a thumbs up emoji arriving during the discussion of something sad). Clearly we cannot simply lift the UIs of applications which presume near-instant data delivery and expect them to work.

The second was on ‘zero / low identity systems’, and I was really happy that so many others were also interested in this topic. Digital identity is often used to link different pieces of data together through a ‘digital double’ which can often be linked to a real person. The risk here speaks for itself, and I had a half-baked idea on how to reduce or eliminate identity in networks: random IDs for all data, with the option for the ‘owner’ of a random ID to derive a new one which everyone else can then verify is provably linked to the original ID. This forms a kind of ‘identity on demand’, or as someone else put it much more eloquently, ‘lazy identity’. It was pointed out that this is not conceptually unlike image board tripcodes (though I’ve since learnt these are apparently quite crackable). Maybe there’s something here, though? It would be interesting to plug such a system into Willow.
Huge thanks to p2p-basel’s organiser Erick, who has relentlessly improved the event year after year.
(CONTINUED BELOW)~sammy
We're listening to...

While working late into the night I kept myself going by listening to the unreal jungle soundtrack of Ape Escape by Soichi Terada. No sooner had I mentioned this to our discord I was linked to this album by the same artist, which is just as jungle, just as fine, but a lot more chill and a lot less monkey. Thanks to rory k. for the recommendation!

Weekly updates and depressive episodes are not a good match.
I'm trying to take good care of myself, as much as I am able to. Even if that means taking a break in the exact week where FOSDEM has hopefully pulled a lot of fresh eyes toward us.
I often feel like Willow is coming into being too slowly. But even then, we are still doing meaningful and creative work, and putting it out for everyone to interact with. And that is something I can draw strength from, even when I am too off-balance to meaningfully act on that strength.
~Aljoscha
links of the week
- I Don't Want To Be This Kind Of Animal Anymore | Disco Elysium Analysis - A nice reminder that Disco Elysium is about as deeply human as a computer-native artifact can get.
- The Mortimiser - Today, I shall be known as Natasha Scurvy.
- ungual.digital - “if you ever want to make a personnal website that feels alive, i think you have to accept that it's like a room: iterating between moments of cosy messiness, and moment of cleaning and sorting that are also good for the soul. the more you will force everything into a pre-fixed structure, the less it will feel like a space where someone's living.”
- Celeste's Drive - A little website to sit down with: poems, posts, a page counter. I was personally given the hand-written URL of this blog by a cute girl, which is my preferred method of linking.

A handful of days after returning from Basel, I departed again for FOSDEM in Brussels. This was my first time attending, and I was a little overwhelmed by the size of the event. So many buildings, people, and cat ears. And for some reason I chose to wear heels the whole weekend.
Luckily I was met by friends of worm-blossom (FoWB) Miaourt and danmw, and we spent Saturday discussing blobjects, fictional Willow companion hardware / tamagotchis, radio-friendly Willow, and Miaourt bearing a seemingly inexhaustible bag of waffles. We had a lovely worm-blossom.org dinner that evening, and although I did not say it at the time because I wanted to appear cool and not overly sappy, I thought to myself that if these were the kinds of people worm-blossom is interesting to, then surely we are doing something right.
I spent Sunday in the Local-first, CRDTs and Sync Engines devroom. My favourite talk was from Modal Collective, in which they detailed their motivation for building a new secure, iPhone-quality OS with p2p at its heart. It shared a lot of themes with my own presentation and I was excited that this line of thinking is turning into action. It’s always lovely to see adz of p2panda, and lovely to meet Tobias Bernard of GNOME too.
Then it was my turn to present. I’ve been working on my talk since the start of the year, and it had been through several incarnations before reaching its current one, leaving me a week and a half to produce approximately fifty drawings. Fortunately I embraced the scrappy spirit of worm-blossom.org, and put together possibly the only talk of FOSDEM with an opening cutscene (music provided by Aljoscha, naturally):
(There is also a live recording if you’d like to experience the live vibes and Q&A portion).
Readers, four days later I am still glowing from the reception to my talk. I’m so, so grateful for all the kind things people said to me afterwards, and the lovely conversations it afforded later that evening.
As I took the train home, I thought about how the p2p community has grown over the years, and how the connections between us have matured alongside the theory and implementations. Perhaps we can do something really wonderful together?
~sammy

The music for the intro of the FOSDEM presentation is a beepbox piece, of course:
~Aljoscha























