Daily Shaarli

All links of one day in a single page.

September 17, 2025

Tudor Girba - Moldable Development - Glamorous Toolkit
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Tudor Girba
Moldable dévelopment
Optimize for reading code
Smalltalk

Create a Phishy URL

Want to piss off your IT department? Are your links not malicious looking enough?

This tool is guaranteed to help with that!

What is this and what does it do?

This is a tool that takes any link and makes it look malicious. It works on the idea of a redirect. Much like https://tinyurl.com/ for example. Where tinyurl makes an url shorter, this site makes it look malicious.

Place any link in the below input, press the button and get back a fishy(phishy, heh...get, it?) looking link. The fishy link doesn't actually do anything, it will just redirect you to the original link you provided.

Test coverage pertinence and code hotspots
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Adam Tornhill

Many teams investing in unit tests also track code coverage. Coverage typically tells you how much of your code is executed via developer tests. (And no: it doesn't tell you if those "tests" are any… |

Alan Kay's tribute to Ted Nelson at "Intertwingled" Festival
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Alan Kay
Smalltalk
Demo
Xerox Parc
Software conservation
Ted Nelson
Computer Lib / Dream Machine
Tribute

Screen readers do not need to be saved by AI - craigabbott.co.uk
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Imagine listening to your favourite podcast. You rewind it to go over something you missed, but each time you replay it, it’s somehow different.

This sounds frustrating, right? But, it’s likely this is what would happen if we just stuffed large language models into screen readers, in a lazy attempt to avoid having to publish accessible content.

I’ve had this debate a few times on LinkedIn, but it came up again recently, after the awesome Access: Given conference, where Helen Dutson and Holly Tuke shared an example of emoji misuse. It was an RNIB post with clapping hands inserted between every word to highlight a common problem.