Wah

If you’re wondering why I have not continued whining like a little baby about MacOS font rendering, it’s because I figured out that Apple had to be lying about removing subpixel anti-aliasing from the OS. And they absolutely were.

The reason I suspected this is that removing a core OS feature that had been part of the system for over 20 years is not something one can just up and do trivially. They, of course, did not remove it because that is nearly impossible. So being the nosy-ass IT guy I am, I found the hidden settings and managed to re-enable it.

This is on MacOS Catalina 10.15.2 (very latest version) and I still have sub-pixel anti-aliasing (magnified greatly so you can see this):

Screen Shot 2019 12 31 at 10 40 14 PM

Since I did many things to achieve this result, it will take me a while to guaranteed reproduce and write it up. I should’ve kept better documentation but I was just experimenting. But I did it so it’ll be easy to do again.

Dact

I agree. Nearly all the skills I’ve mastered over the years it’s because I’ve thought, I wonder what happens if I do this and then just done it. Mostly, this has been in the field of enterprise IT infrastructure because that is my career, but is true in many other areas as well.

Someone once asked me how I got so good at so many areas of IT, and I told them, “It’s because I’ve broken literally anything that can be broken and then had to fix it.” Being curious leads to poking things until they break. Fixing them leads to knowledge and mastery.

OKBKB

“OK Boomer,” though it certainly debuted late, is my favorite phrase of the departing decade* because it captures and reacts to both the disregard that those of older generations treat their own progeny and in a meta way the evolution of language and discourse over that time.

Its disdainful dismissiveness and grammatical indecorum is a perfect encapsulation of the antipathy that many Boomers in fact heartily deserve.

*I do not give a single fuck that there was no year 0, therefore the new decade doesn’t “really” start until 2021. We decide when decades start, not math formalism.