Feeling of Computing

Making Your Own Tools: Devine Lu Linvega


Listen Later

We live in a world that is gradually becoming more closed off, more controlled, more regional. Our relationship with technology is now primarily one of consumption, buying new hardware on a regular cycle, using software conceptualized to meet a market need and fulfill promises made to venture capitalists. It's common to hear people talk about both computing hardware and software as though they were appliances, not meant to be user-serviced, not meant to be modified. The tools we use are being designed for the 80% who live in a city, use grid electricity, want to keep up with the industry, and have an unacknowledged learned helplessness about the limitations of their tools.

Devine Lu Linvega and his partner Rekka live on a sailboat. He makes art, music, software, and other cultural artifacts. When Photoshop's DRM required that he maintain a connection to the internet, he wrote his own creative suite. When his MacBook died in the middle of the ocean, he switched to Linux with hardware he could service. His electricity comes from solar panels, and every joule counts — so that's out with Chrome and Electron and in with Scheme, C, assembly, and maybe someday Forth.

I wanted to interview Devine with a main focus on just one of the dozens of tools he's created over the past few years — Orca, a spatial programming environment for generating synchronized realtime events. It's ostensibly a tool for music, but has been applied to all sorts of other disciplines in wildly creative ways. Devine and I ended up talking for over three hours, and after editing out everything superfluous there was still too much matter for just one episode. So we're going to take this in two pieces. Today, you'll hear the bits of our conversation that covered everything other than Orca — Devine's philosophy, the stories of his other tools, the ways in which boat life have forced certain technology choices on him. On the next episode we'll have the rest — a deep dive into Orca, covering the thinking and story behind the design of the tool, the community that has picked it up and run with it in all sorts of wild directions, and lots of little nooks and crannies in the space around this fascinating project.

My hope is that the topics discussed today will let you see from Devine's perspective, so that when we look at Orca in detail you can appreciate exactly why it is the way it is, and take away valuable lessons for your own projects.

Given that his most recent explorations have been making art and programming tools that run on the NES, the best quote of the show has to be: "I never want to have a stronger computer than the one I have today."

Links

Devine Lu Linvega is our guest. He and his partner Rekka funnel their lives and creativity into Hundred Rabbits. Devine has created countless tools, but Orca, Ronin, Left, Dotgrid, the 1-bit drawing tool Noodle and it's 3D scene layout tool Poodle are particularly fascinating. His website is like a wiki, a time tracking tool, and an alternate universe.

Devine released a series of beautiful illustrations for Inktober.

Repl.it is our Sponsor. Email [email protected] if you'd like to work on the future of coding.

Folks interested in energy-efficient spatial programming should watch this Strange Loop talk by Chuck Moore about the Forth programming language.

Potentially similar projects include Inferno and ChrysaLisp.

The resilient, living systems of Dave Ackley are also fascinating.

The transcript for this episode was sponsored by Repl.it and can be found at https://futureofcoding.org/episodes/044#full-transcript

Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/feelingofcomputing

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Feeling of ComputingBy Ivan Reese, Jimmy Miller, and Lu Wilson

  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9

4.9

27 ratings


More shows like Feeling of Computing

View all
99% Invisible by Roman Mars

99% Invisible

26,214 Listeners

Marketplace by Marketplace

Marketplace

8,763 Listeners

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source by Changelog Media

The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source

289 Listeners

EconTalk by Russ Roberts

EconTalk

4,264 Listeners

Accidental Tech Podcast by Marco Arment, Casey Liss, John Siracusa

Accidental Tech Podcast

2,139 Listeners

LINUX Unplugged by Jupiter Broadcasting

LINUX Unplugged

268 Listeners

Talk Python To Me by Michael Kennedy

Talk Python To Me

585 Listeners

Darknet Diaries by Jack Rhysider

Darknet Diaries

8,047 Listeners

The Indicator from Planet Money by NPR

The Indicator from Planet Money

9,527 Listeners

CoRecursive: Coding Stories by Adam Gordon Bell - Software Developer

CoRecursive: Coding Stories

190 Listeners

Dwarkesh Podcast by Dwarkesh Patel

Dwarkesh Podcast

503 Listeners

The Rest Is History by Goalhanger

The Rest Is History

15,258 Listeners

Software Unscripted by Richard Feldman

Software Unscripted

29 Listeners

Search Engine by PJ Vogt

Search Engine

4,549 Listeners

Oxide and Friends by Oxide Computer Company

Oxide and Friends

62 Listeners