Snappish Productions

I just can't help believing, though believing sees me cursed…

'Ver Curves & 'Ver Boy — 20 Years Later

Honestly, I don’t remember exactly when I joined ILX. I think it was likely in either late 2002 or early 2003, when I was living in Chapel Hill, and for some reason I vaguely believe it was due to searching for information on Saturday Looks Good To Me, which is a little odd, as they’re not exactly an ILM or ILX band. Anyway, I loved hanging out in the background1, making a comment here and there, but mostly being a lurker as Poptimism took root there and I rediscovered my younger Smash Hits reading self (heavens above! — Ed.)

What I really wanted to do is meet up with everybody at Club Popular. But…while I had got to the point where I was relatively okay with going to concerts by myself (seriously, the hours spent awkwardly hanging about before the advent of mobile phones), I was absolutely not okay with making the trip from Bicester to London for a club night all by myself. I just couldn’t do it. Still a regret.

By 2006, I was still mostly lurking, but I had made a friend — Forest Pines, or Caitlin. And ILX had a band! Shimura Curves! ‘Ver Curves! Kate ‘Masonic Boom’, Anna, Frances, and Miss AMP! Krautrock and girl group harmonies! Zeitgeist songs like Noyfriend and Keep My Name Out of Your Blog (there isn’t another song that encapsulates the pre-Facebook Web 2.0 era as perfectly as the latter). They had an afternoon gig on a Sunday when I was already going to be going to London to see Johnny Boy. Suddenly, I was invited to a pre-gig pub meet up with Kate and Caitlin.

So I ended up drinking strawberry beer with them for several hours before we decided we’d better actually go to the Notting Hill Arts Club, Kate carrying her guitar through town. By that time, we’d also picked up Ed, another ILX regular. The concert itself is mostly lost to my memory, but I remember groupie cards kissed by individual band members, banter about Brown and Sticky, and the Berlin, 1973 ending of Stronger.

Even just all that would have made for a wonderful day. But I still had the second half. Johnny Boy at The Luminaire in Kilburn. I was, of course, back on my own, and resigned to standing sheepishly in the venue waiting for the band to come on stage. But it wasn’t quite to be. I’ll admit my memory does not give me perfect recall, but the way I remember it is this: I noticed a group of people sitting in a booth. One of whom I was damn sure was Kieron Gillen, who’d I known in an online sort of way since joining the Kenickie Mailing List back in 1997. Eventually, I worked past my shyness enough to go over and say hello. This was about two months before the first issue of Phonogram, so we talked about that, and me seeing Miss AMP earlier in the day. The idea of just randomly bumping into somebody I knew at a concert…it had just never happened to me before. And given how the day had gone so far, I was getting beyond giddy at this point.

Towards the end of the gig itself, I found myself dancing with him and Alex De Campi. The elation I had coming out of the venue and rushing to get the last train from Marylebone to Bicester North was something I hadn’t felt since that house party in Chapel Hill way back in 2003, or that time I went into the Carrboro woods to smash up a piñata for a late birthday celebration. On the journey back, I think I was plotting…or more realistically, fantasising about the potential of moving to London. Maybe every weekend could be like that, I thought, as I went past Haddenham & Thame Parkway.

Anyway, twenty years ago this week. I never did move to London; instead I took a rather different direction which sees me typing this in Cincinnati. Which I have to say has worked out very well for me, as I pause to think about Maeryn demanding I play drop dead again on the way home from daycare (Tammy: “With me, it’s Wheels On The Bus. There’s apparently a different vibe in Daddy’s car). And then this September, I’m going to be back in London again, Saint Etienne will likely play Popular, and I’ll smile, recognising all the names.


  1. Okay, there was one person from the British contingent I took an initial dislike to, and that was before I knew details that really made me glad we never met… ↩︎

straight in at 101

tony cascarino circa 1995

I felt a little attacked on Wednesday morning when my boss jokingly referred to me as “sometimes a little workaholic.” Later, as I was writing messages on Slack as I was literally having an IV attached…yeah okay, I guess I can sometimes see it. Vaguely.

(nothing too much to worry about - an endoscopy to check on my acid reflux. And I did a reasonable job at staying offline from work on Thursday and Friday. So there.)

Anyway, a truncated week, and I feel like I let the opportunity of two days off mostly slip by without filling them properly, although watching Eno yet again (now that a new version is out every month on the Criterion Channel) did get me to start work on The Assembly Machine, of which I will probably talk a little more about in July when it’s slightly more stable.

It is Father’s Day, and I have the greatest Father’s Day present ever — the best LC! tour t-shirt ever made, and a Lego cement mixer to go along with it, as every Lego city needs the means of production so the city can grow and grow, right? I’m fairly sure that’s correct.

Oh, and I got complimented at the playground today for a t-shirt that is, perhaps, over 25 years old?

definitely fine with my work life balance

A Post-Google World?

This article by Drew Magary gets at the heart of the craziness behind Google’s recent decision to go all in on AI and essentially declare war on its own historical business model. I’m not really sure how that’s going to work out for them, but I also have some thoughts — thoughts that I imagine would be incredibly unpopular across parts of the internet and Bluesky: which is that the World Wide Web is not the only model for the information superhighway, and I think we possibly forget that. Google’s search/ad dominance led to the world of SEO, ragebait, and our current international nightmare…maybe its interaction with the web just wasn’t healthy at any point.

Back in the ’90s, things like William Gibson’s Neuromancer, David Brin’s Earth, and the Knowledge Navigator video from Apple — which is one of my secret origin stories — presented a different world, a world that was not taken. You can also see it in the documentary on General Magic, where their initial vision was very much ‘agentic’ before the Web came and killed them stone dead. You can catch glimpses of another world in The Net, which had indepth segments on anonymous FTP servers and USENET.

But whilst I agree with Drew that Google declaring war essentially on the rest of the web is a terrible idea, I’m also wondering: is it possible that the web itself is something that might need to go away? This is one of those things I keep toying with in the back of my head; I do not particularly want to live in a world where everybody lives in Sam Altman’s walled gardens.

The new frontier models are powerful and amazing, and everybody should have them. I remember arguing on the web a few years back that all I wanted was an army of trans cat girls with a lava lamp in their basement doing crazy things locally on Llama models. I still believe that (although I’ve moved on to Qwen models in 2026). I think democratizing these things to the extent that they run in everywhere is potentially as revolutionary a change as having a computer in every home.

But I’m starting to think: can we take that a bit further? Like: “No, son, we have Google at home.” What would it take ti give everybody had their own search engine at home? Could we put something akin to 2000-era Google on your PC / Mac / Laptop? What would that look like? Is it feasible? How does it update? Sure, it doesn’t solve the money problem, but it might help keep the open web alive.

Obviously a lot of this comes from the fact that I’m completely obsessed with search. If Google isn’t going to be the only search engine around any more, then maybe we have to look back to the situation that existed in the mid-to-late ’90s. Infoseek, AltaVista, Ask Jeeves, MetaCrawler, HotBot — all the different search engines that were the way we interacted with the web; each engine had its pluses and minuses and required a bit of knowledge (or research) to work out which one to use for what scenario.

What I envision is a three tier local system. Tier 0 is your emails and documents. Tier 1 is the main search engine, where something like 100m documents from the web can be searched locally. This engine is updated on a monthly basis based on a user’s explicit wishes and implicit signals from what they’re searching, drawing on the monthly Common Crawl dump to stay current. And then there’s Tier 2, which is the connection to the outside world. Paid API sources like Kagi, Bing, and anything else that you’d like to plug in. There would be a program on top of this1 that would do routing for search queries, working out when a queries need to go to the outside world, or if they can be answered locally and delegating appropriately (balancing API costs and whatnot, obviously).

But who would build such a thing. Well…I have the local search engine prototyped already…


  1. okay, I’ll call it an agent if you force me… ↩︎

googlesearchcrazy ideas going bump in the night

New Yorker Unbound

Okay, so last week I promised a longer diatribe, and I swear that I haven’t forgotten about it; it needs to be edited down a bit, but it does exist, and I’ve also actually written a bunch of code to prove that my idea is at least viable. But…well, something happened this weekend that means it’s been bumped, probably until mid-week.

Almost twenty years ago, I bought a copy of The Complete New Yorker. This was a very interesting collection of DVDs that contained every copy of The New Yorker from 1925 until 2005. Spread across 8 DVDs, it had a proprietary viewing system locked down with DRM, but it was still quite a fun thing to have. The main problem was that the Mac version of the software was compiled for 68k Macs. This suddenly became a big issue when Apple switched off 68k Rosetta support; instead of 8 DVDs filled with decades of print, the collection ended up being a brick. Even the Windows software eventually bitrotted, and the collection has just been hanging out on my bookshelves waiting for the DVDs to fail.

Over the past decade, I have probably searched once or twice a year to see if anybody has cracked the DRM encryption. The closest I’ve ever got was this user over on GitHub, who cracked equivalent versions for Rolling Stone and Playboy. Hints were dropped that the New Yorker collection would soon follow, but that was two years ago, and things have been silent. But it did suggest there was some hope.

Enter Claude.

Claude Opus spent an afternoon this Saturday with the NSA’s Ghirda reverse engineering framework and comprehensively cracked the DRM. NewYorkerUnbound hosts little more than a simple Python script (with in-line dependencies, even!) that will take any file from the DVD set and produce an uncracked DJVU file, with an optional PDF export if you have the right support on your Linux box.

After almost 15 years of them sitting idle, I have 80 years of the New Yorker available again. Hurrah!

(I was so very excited that I didn’t do anything that I had actually planned to do this Saturday, which was probably a mistake…)

death to drmclaude dark magic

Goodbye Sava

Well, I can finally talk about the thing I couldn’t talk about. Last Friday was Sava’s last day at Lucidworks after almost ten years. We’ve been together for thick and thin, even during the year where I wasn’t even at Lucidworks. That there won’t be an early morning rant waiting for me in my Slack DMs tomorrow is hitting me like a body blow. But it is not the end. We’re already making plans to meet up this September when I’m in town for the last Saint Etienne tour1.

Next week: something longer…and perhaps a little more controversial, providing I can finish my Friday night thoughts on the future of the web, and the past of the information superhighway…


  1. I also don’t normally plan these things to this level of detail, but I also think I have my outfit for said concert worked out? Normally, I wouldn’t put much thought into it, but it feels appropriate to be a little fancy for the last time of seeing them… ↩︎

TEN YEARS!

That Memorial Weekend Feeling

Normally after my family leaves, there are a few days where everything seems a lot quieter. Less hustle and bustle in the house, less to do, etc. Well, with a three year old, we don’t get that luxury; she starts at 6:30am whether or not family is visiting, and she would quite like the Ms. Rachel episode with the baby dolls in, thank you very much (at this point, I retire to make tea, as I need something to cut against Ms. Rachel’s voice first thing; she’s a lovely person. But still…).

We have a brief interregnum of a week before the house is full again, this time with some of Tammy‘s high school friends, which means I have to clean the house to a slightly higher standard than when family comes (this mostly means: ‘probably do something with the IKEA circus tent and clear off all the DVDs waiting for encoding in the back bedroom). Otherwise, not a huge amount going on at the moment. We are doing Memorial Weekend DIY things, I have downloaded all of A Very Peculiar Practice for my pre-2000 TV viewing requirements, and this week at work is the end of an era as one of my close coworkers will be leaving this Friday which I am quite sad about. But he did get me this watch!1


  1. Also, it appears that May / June is my time for buying new Swatch watches. I have finished my ‘spite buying because it looks like I have an expensive roof situation coming up’ spree, with three new Swatches winging their way to me as I type… ↩︎

cleaning all the chocolate moldsempty-ish house

Slippers And Leaf Blowers

It is perhaps the most American middle class thing to be outside on your deck on a Sunday morning cooking breakfast on a Blackstone griddle. I was literally wearing a LL Bean dressing gown and slippers.1

The family is visiting right now (hence the above; it’s not a regular Sunday thing, I promise), which means that Maeryn runs all over the house shouting ‘grandad!’ and has more people to pick her up than usual. We are also now doing a comedy turn pretending to be a cat and an extended performance act piece entitled “I Will Sleep On This Hard Table But Don’t Move Me Anywhere In The Direction Of My Actual Bed”. Definitely enjoying herself, and we’re visiting yet more of the area’s bizarrely fantastic playgrounds.

A few days left of the family visit, and it seems just a few days left of May too. Lots of new things coming in June…


  1. Today, I also had my first go on my own leafblower. Electric, of course, but surprising, a lot of fun… ↩︎

all the cooking

On The Road

A link blog entry? In 2026???

An interesting article about indie record labels, which definitely undercuts a few popular narratives (though I say that as somebody who in the year 2026 still doesn’t have a streaming subscription)

The insanity of making NHPTV work

Sometimes, I get nostalgic for things that were just background radiation. We were and are not a Radio 4 household. The Shipping Forecast existed only as gags in comedy shows. But oh, I covet this poster. Sure, it may be sold out. But I have ways.

If you can read this, then a) the remote uploading process did in fact work, but more importantly, b) I made it to Atlanta. I was planning on writing things during the trip, but after I went into Buc-ee’s and experienced the madness, I just wanted to get out and on the road again. Besides, they didn’t have anywhere to sit? Which is just madness. You know what I like? A service station that knows what it’s there for and has seats for days.

Foxton Services

Accept no substitutes. Even they come bearing an entire wall of jerky and the promise of petrol pumps that stretch over the horizon.

Anyway, it was a pretty uneventful trip, which I think is the best kind for an 8 hour drive. The hotel is pretty close to the Atlanta bypass, so I was able to avoid most of Atlanta itself (except for a short stop in Marietta for Cookout, because you have to). I am currently typing this in the courtyard of a very fancy shopping mall, decked out with a Balencigna, Valentin Statin, and Alexander McQueen. Basically, like Bicester Village except there’s no discounts and no Pret. s you can imagine, terribly lifeless, but it does have very sturdy marble benches (my knees remember that from January). Strangely, everything is shut. Like I know it’s 18:00 on a Sunday, and my ingrained feeling is to have a sausage roll and watch Time Team, but even the food hall is weirdly shut. You are an emblem of American excess and capitalism! Why aren’t you open? Oh, yeah, that’s probably right.

Okay, I am now of to find some Diet Coke to get me through the evening. This is in addition to the Diet Coke I brought in the car to get me through the week.

link blog link blog link blogdriving south

Early Morning Car To Georgia

There is A Lot That I Can’t Talk About this week, so instead, a preview of next week. In seven days, I will wake up, get dressed and showered, and then get into my car for a seven hour drive to Atlanta. I could fly. Work will absolutely pay for that, I swear. But last time I flew to Atlanta, I got so sick that I spent all week in the hotel room (when I wasn’t throwing up in Target) and then got stuck overnight in Charlotte. I am not going through all that again, so the fewer people I meet on the trip down, the better. And also, there’s Cook Out. This cannot be understated - there’s one just off I-75 as I get into the outskirts of Atlanta, and so I must go.

When I’ve told people of this plan, there’s a certain split. Americans cock their head at the drive time and then say “ah, that’s not that bad.” British people look at me as if I have completely lost my mind, given that it’s a longer trip than London to Edinburgh. But don’t worry! I will be bringing snacks. Of course, I normally load my iPad up with a host of British television the 1970s and 1980s for the plane ride…and while I can do that again, it’s probably not the best idea to try and watch any of it during the trip1. So…podcasts? But I’m not really a podcast person. Seven hours of “Ian’s old ‘walk to Activision’ playlist from 2011”? That is somewhat more likely.

(I did look into going via train as well. Obviously, that just sent me into a spiral of “look at all the train lines China has built in the past 30 years!!” after seeing the Amtrak schedule)

I will also try and test my all-new remote posting set up next weekend, allowing me for the first time in over 10 years to post without out my personal laptop. Less exciting for all of you to be getting updates from Buc’ees, mind you…


  1. It is going to be all-interstate, though, and I’ve discovered this weekend that my car is actually smarter than I thought (it can parallel park by itself???). Don’t worry, I’m not crazy enough to even think about turning the iPad on until I get to the hotel. ↩︎

driving driving driving

Neighbours and Heavy Plant

One thing I continue to find amusing, almost eight years to the day that I moved to Cincinnati, is that I can be in the middle of Kroger and get a call from the Mayor. Admittedly, a former mayor (though seemingly a popular one!), and he’s only phoning me because he’s my next-door neighbour and one of our visitors has left their tailgate down, but it’s definitely somewhat unique to where I’m living now.

(Other neighbour interaction of the week — the one who came around, invited us to her church, and then politely asked if we were running a daycare. It’s the Melissa and Doug grocery shop that’s visible from our windows, isn’t it? That and the massive adventure playground in the back garden, I guess…)

And then the other big thing of the weekend. Tammy is amazing. She’s the person that sees the retaining wall go up with a small digger and thinks “that would be really useful to have to level out the back garden and clear the hill.” And then the next day: “Oh, they’ll be dropping it off on Thursday.” From never having even touched one of them before, in the matter of a week, she’s got a hard hat on and tearing the hill down. There’s now straw down, grass growing, an adventure playground moved into a brand-new and perfect position, and the sense of a garden coming together. I’ve already told Maeryn I’ll be teaching her French Cricket soon enough.

sure, it may look like a daycaredig dig dig