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  • Claude, Teach Me Something
    Oct 25, 2025Hugo Tunius

    I’ve been experimenting with a new Claude workflow as an alternative to doom scrolling. It leverages what LLMs do best: non-determinism and text. I call it “Teach me something”. The idea is: if I’m bored, instead of going on Reddit, I can ask Claude to teach me something. This might not be the most efficient learning method, but it beats scrolling Reddit. In Claude I’ve set this up as a project wi

  • What Every Argument About Sideloading Gets Wrong
    Aug 30, 2025Hugo Tunius

    Sideloading has been a hot topic for the last decade. Most recently, Google has announced further restrictions on the practice in Android. Many hundreds of comment threads have discussed these changes over the years. One point in particular is always made: “I should be able to run whatever code I want on hardware I own”. I agree entirely with this point, but within the context of this discussion i

  • On Async Rust
    Mar 08, 2024Hugo Tunius

    I started using Rust in 2017, before the stabilisation of async/await. When it was stabilised I managed to avoid it for a few more years before it was time to grapple with it. It’s fair to say that async Rust is one of the hairiest parts of the language, not because the async model is poorly designed, but because of the inherent complexity of it in combination with Rust’s goals. There have been ma

  • Stop Using (only) GitHub Releases
    Jan 20, 2024Hugo Tunius

    The other day at work I, accidentally, roped myself into upgrading some dependencies in our Rust services. These were breaking changes, so not just a case of running cargo update. I had to understand the changes and make the appropriate modifications to our code. Adopting breaking changes can be frustrating in the best of times, but it was particularly annoying this time because none of these proj

  • The Great Pendulum
    Jul 08, 2023Hugo Tunius

    17 odd years ago when I stared programming, PHP was all the rage. Javascript was steadily gaining traction. Django and Ruby on Rails were in their infancy, but promised greatly increased productivity. A few years later, inspired by Ruby’s fame, Coffeescript became a mainstay in the Javascript ecosystem. Statically compiled, typed languages, used to build monolithic web applications, were rapidly f

  • NFTs, How Do They Work?
    Jan 16, 2022Hugo Tunius

    Freaking magnets NFTs, how do they work? In this post I’ll try to explain NFTs in a way that’s mostly accurate, but requires minimal technical understanding. I’m going to assume the reader is familiar with excel style software and Google Sheets in particular. At its core every NFT project is like a single Google Sheet. It has a creator who has some special permission to modify the sheet. An NFT w

  • They Are Just Links
    Jan 13, 2022Hugo Tunius

    NFTs exploded into mainstream popularity in the latter half of 2021 and if you follow me on Twitter you’ll know I’m not a fan. In “crypto”-speak I’m NGMI(not gonna make it). But what are NFTs anyway? The common meme is that NFTs are kind of like receipts or, more charitably, certificates of ownership. The ugly monkey you buy is actually a piece of state maintained in a smart contract on a Blockcha

  • How to Delete All your Tweets
    Apr 04, 2021Hugo Tunius

    A while back I had to re-activate my deactivated Facebook account to participate in a Messenger group chat. I wasn’t exactly happy about this, but being an absolutist about these things is not worthwhile either. After re-activating my account I decided it would make me slightly happier about the situation if I wiped all the content from my account. A digital detox if you will. Ever since then I’ve

  • The Apps That Are Listening to You
    Jan 10, 2021Hugo Tunius

    An oft discussed hypothesis is that certain apps, usually Facebook, listens to and analyses your surroundings for ad targeting purposes. It has never been conclusively proven that Facebook does this, but there are plenty of people on the internet with anecdotal stories of ads appearing for products they’ve only discussed IRL. In iOS 14 Apple added indicators to highlight when an app is using the d

  • An Analysis of Privacy on the App Store
    Jan 03, 2021Hugo Tunius

    In iOS 14.3, Apple added their new app privacy details to App Store listings. App privacy details, which are sometimes compared to the nutritional labels on foodstuff, are details about the data an app collects and the purposes and use of such data. What can we learn by analysing this data? From the 14th of December 2020, all new apps and app updates have to provide information on the data the app