lab notes: research papers

sci-fi computer screens

notebooks

Research Papers - These are mostly intended to be evergreen documents - expect updates. They will include standalone articles but also research for hardware projects, software, and site development.

Blogs - Short form content on various topics.


topics



lab notes: research papers

ultrascience design notes

A post for organizing my thoughts on the inspirations and resources used for this website's design. Hopefully you find it useful as well.

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a site recovery 15 years in the making

On the restoration and updating of a Drupal 4.7 based website recovered from archived backups.

I didn't keep great notes as I worked through this project and I did pretty minimal research - I was inspired to give it a go one day and I just went for it. So I'm doing my best to put a coherent work log together from memory.

Page is under construction, all content subject to change.

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Whitewings

abstract

whitewings box cover


Many years ago (circa 1994, I think) I was gifted a Whitewings paper airplane assembly kit. Sadly, I don't know which volume, and I no longer have any of the planes, but I do recall one thing - they were a blast to fly.

Recently my kids started experimenting with paper airplanes, many folded from the excellent designs published by John Bringhurst in my copy of his work "Planes, Jets, and Helicopters" from 1993. However, most of the designs in that book while fun to fold and fly, don't work well out of doors. I remembered Whitewings planes from my youth and decided to pick up a couple of volumes to play with- they are very much "outdoor" planes.

Sadly, the vast majority of Whitewings designs are long out of print. The only new kits I can find carrying the name are paper and balsa kits designed for educational programs. The original all paper and paper and balsa kits can only be found as used (often partial or incomplete) or new old stock.

And there's the dilemma. Whitewings are made to be flown, not just collected. But cutting up your kits to build and fly paper planes that will inevitably be lost or destroyed in turn destroys your collection that may not be able to be replaced.

So, what to do? A bit of low-level piracy.1 Making high-quality digital copies that can be re-printed, re-cut, and re-flown. That part isn't terribly challenging these days. The true challenge is material selection. The original kits were printed on card stock - but what size? How about weight? Grain direction? Caliper? Finish texture? I suspect when Yasuaki Ninomiya designed the planes that would become Whitewings kits in the 70's there was some thought or care put into the material choice. But even if it was an afterthought, replicating the feel and performance of the original designs would depend on proper modern material replacements.

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Why we are still using 88x31 buttons

introduction

If you surf the modern "small web" to any extent you've encountered 88x31 buttons - a staple of late 90s and early 2000's websites1 undergoing a bit of a revival. The Neocities community especially seems to have truly embraced them. 88x31 buttons have a long history on the web, straddling the worlds of advertising and the personal web. Much like IRL jacket pins and buttons - they're small, colorful, collectible, easy to make and trade, and at a glance can confer just enough information to characterize the website displaying them.

Some examples of sites sharing some thematic elements spanning over 25 years:
Dann's Page
Bill's World
Paintkiller's links page
Solaria's Webspace
Ellie's Magical Website
ByteMoth's Perfectly Cooked Pages

They all feature 88x31 buttons in some capacity and those buttons reflect the website and it's designer in some way.

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