I was watching Hell’s Kitchen last night and …

I was watching Hell’s Kitchen last night and something clicked.

Watch how a head chef actually works. Gordon makes the menu, develops the recipes, and directs the kitchen. His sous chefs, his brigade, and his wait staff are the ones doing the physical work. But nobody questions who’s responsible for the experience. The vision, the standards, the taste, the judgment, that’s all Gordon.

It made me think about how I work with AI, both in conversation and in agentic workflows.

The “you just typed a prompt” crowd would look at that kitchen and say the cooks made the food. Which is technically true and completely misses the point.

A prompt isn’t a magic incantation. It’s the visible tip of everything behind it: taste, domain knowledge, the ability to recognise when something is wrong, the vision of what you’re actually trying to make, and the experience to know the difference between good and good enough. Gordon doesn’t pick up a knife much on that show. But the food doesn’t make itself.

What I’ve found working with AI is that it isn’t a mechanical arm. It’s genuinely collaborative. There’s a real back and forth happening. I supply the why behind everything. The AI brings pattern recognition, speed, and tireless iteration. But I’m the one directing the kitchen.

The accountability still sits with me, which is exactly why the creative ownership sits with me too.

Appropriately enough, I’m writing this in a new tool I stumbled on this morning:

my.wordpress.net

, a browser-based WordPress environment that runs entirely in your browser without signing up, setting up a hosting plan, or registering a domain. It’s built on WordPress Playground, and all data stays local and private, never uploaded to any server.

The sites are private by default, not accessible from the public internet. As the official announcement puts it, WordPress becomes a personal environment where ideas can exist before they’re ready to be shared, or where they may never be shared at all.

It comes with an App Catalog out of the box. That includes a Personal CRM, Personal RSS Reader, bookmarking tool, and an AI Workspace. The AI assistant can modify plugins, create new ones, or query data stored in your WordPress, and can even function as a personal knowledge base over time.

Storage starts at around 100MB per device, and each device maintains its own separate installation. So it’s not a replacement for a hosted site, but as a private thinking space, a drafting environment, and a personal knowledge base that never leaves your machine, it fits neatly into how I already work.

A browser-local WordPress. No hosting. No domain. No account. Just a workspace that lives where you do.

Gordon would probably find a way to complain about the storage limit. But the kitchen itself is pretty impressive.

And nothing even blew up!

America’s digital goddess has been around since the beginning of the personal computer revolution. Her she is in 1990s explaining what a computer is. I know, hard to imagine a time without a computer!

By the way America’s digital goddess aka Kim Kamando is still at. She host a radio show about tech. She has some classic lines in this video:

“What happens when you press the wrong button? Does it blow up?”

“That’s how simple DOS is. It’s like house cleaning”

“This is called pointing. There’s also click”

“We’re going to use the clock program now”

“It’s not tough to use a computer. And nothing even blew up!”

Gotta love it.

h/t @gizmodo 

Andoer 360 Panorama Video Camera Unboxing

Ok, so this is my first attempt at an unboxing video. I know it’s a strange ritual to watch someone unbox something they bought.  Usually that kind of thing is only done on Christmas and birthdays.  At least then it makes sense because presumably it’s your family and friends watching you unbox (unwrap) gifts they’ve given you. But to watch a total stranger unbox stuff, well, that’s a whole other thing.  I have to admit, I didn’t used to get it.  However, I watched a few unboxings over the past week and oddly enough I kind of enjoyed them.

One of the things I forgot to mention in the video was the specs of the video camera, which I guess would be something people would want to know.  Here they are for you:

Image Sensor: 8.0 million pixels (CMOS)
Functional mode: video recording and photographing
Lens: F2.0 f=1.1mm
Video resolution: 1920x1440P (30fps) 1440×1080 (30fps)
Photo resolution: 3264×2448, 2592×1944, 2304×1728
File format: video (H.264 MOV) picture: JPG
Storage medium: TF card (max 32GB supported)
USB interface: High-speed USB 2.0 interface
Power source: External lithium battery 1000mAh

Something else I think is worth mentioning, the Andoer 360 Panorama isn’t quite 360, at least not how you might be imagining 360 to be i.e. you can look up, down, and all around the video.  This is more 360 degrees on a fixed plane.  As you’ll see, the video camera only has one lens as oppose to the dual lens like you might find on the Ricoh Theta S Camera.

Alright, let’s get on with the show.  Don’t laugh too hard (or laugh and we’ll call it a comedy sketch)  at my feeble attempt at unboxing.

Here’s the video I made with the Andoer 360 Panorama Video Camera. Warning: there is no sound. The process of uploading 360 videos to Youtube is different than normal. I think I forgot to check the audio button in the conversion software I used to make it possible for Youtube to read the metadata.

Ok, chow for now peeps.

Pssst…what did you think of my unboxing?