
Multi-story Birdhouse

Cats, good books, AI, and religious walking in the city of Sofia

I have some ideas to share with you, based on my last 24 hours of blogging.
Have you noticed that when you blog a single image, it’s not clickable and stays small? Like this:

It’s a very large and pretty image but nope, can’t click.
And this is clickable (well, at least clickable from the website veselin.blog):

I used the Image block for the first and the Gallery for the second. So if you want your image to be clickable, use the Gallery instead of Image for single images as well.
You can type /gallery in the editor to quickly find the block. It will appear after /ga or /gal.

This only works when you go to the person’s site and post a comment from WordPress, and not the Reader or the comment notification. The Gutenberg Editor for comments supports adding an Image block where you can copy/paste an address pointing to an image. Just select reputable sources for your images or they might go away soon.


The latest version of the Jetpack Mobile app no longer uses the first image from the post on the Mobile Reader and this will likely cause lower engagement with your posts on Mobile if you don’t manually add featured images. The following screenshot shows 2 posts with a featured image, and two without. Despite having a photo on your site, it will only be viewed after a click. Will anyone click a post called “Stesi” with no explanation and no photo? Probably not.

Note that the web Reader is unaffected and will still show your first image as featured without doing this.
It’s very easy to consume all of your space if you don’t resize the photos before uploading them. The default photos that my phone generates are 5-9MB each. Scaling them down to 2000x1500px makes one photo under 1MB and I can upload more than 1000 photos per GB of used space.
Do you have any tips about using images on your blog?
Seeing one cockroach under the sink usually means an infestation. Roaches like to hide. It only showed up because the hiding spots were overcrowded.
I like to apply this generalization to software engineering—especially over beer.
The way I defined this Cocroach Rule matches the definition of a Hasty Generalization. After all, one cockroach—or one bug—is a sample size of one. There’s always a chance that a reported issue is an extreme outlier, something no one else will ever encounter. Maybe a high-energy particle hit a chip somewhere. It happens.
But my long-term experience shows that the Single Cockroach Problem largely holds true. It applies in many areas where the difference between zero and one is significant.
Found this writing prompt on Reddit and liked it more than our daily prompt here. I wrote a list and then filtered it out by removing most superheroes. I personally believe superheroes undermine people’s faith in their own future and are just bad taste. You can rebel, learn how to shoot with a bow, endure a lot but you can’t possibly ever be Wonder Woman, Starlight, or Captain Marvel, so they were disqualified. So here’s the list.
She’s a nightmare coming to reality and one who could make the Alien run in screams. However, being a demigod supervillain and not a positive example gives her the honorary number 16 spot on my chart. One of the few characters with superpowers I considered worthy. Don’t tell her she’s 16th.
Trinity stood up to the agents and helped Neo ascend. She radiated strength in every moment of her presence. Being Neo’s second rather than Neo herself gives us 15th spot.
A relentless detective who stops at nothing to capture the next serial killer, often multiple at a time. Debra Morgan could’ve been on that spot but she’s Dexter’s second. Renee Ballard is independent and has to navigate difficult politics to score her wins.
Brilliant scientist who grows a team of unorthodox wizards around her. Her mind is her weapon and she’s not shy of touching weapons.
Nebula survived Thanos’ parenting. She has mental endurance unmatched in the MCU by anyone other than maybe Loki.
A teenage hacker from a time when we didn’t yet have PCs. She and Zero Cool were an inspiration for my generation. I was torn between Acid Burn and Lara Croft and decided Acid Burn is the more skillful character played by Angelina Jolie.
She volunteered as a tribute to risk her own life for her sister Prim. Deadly with the bow and a symbol of the rebellion.
Granny Weatherwax is the only witch in the known universe who has ever mind controlled a bee hive. She cannot be seen when you don’t expect to see her because the brain refuses to acknowledge her presence. Could’ve easily been number one on the list but loses point due to having magical superpowers. Wednesday Adams, Galadriel from Scholomance, and Yennefer from the Witcher are, IMO, inferior to Esme. If not in power, at least in badassery.
Chaotic and dangerous, Harley with a bat is more than most superheroes can handle.
Livia Lone is tiny but determined. She’s brings down traffickers with brutal efficiency that makes Dexter Morgan look juvenile.
She’s a modern hero with unbreakable optimism and strong work ethics. She would be crushed in a physical fight with any of the others but I believe she deserves a spot, even if not a top one.
Born into wealth but remained in power due to her ruthlessness and skill. She bends the world with the force of her will. Her superpower is similar to Batman’s. She knows how to make money and use them but doesn’t shy away from getting her hands dirty.
Adjunct Tavore is a mortal commander who leads armies against gods, ascendants, and mages. Unbreakable and underrated, she resists the will of gods.
Fighter pilot, rebel, drinker, loudmouth—she kills Cylons and leads the humans to salvation by example. I also consider her a combined character with Bo-Katan, who is a bit less genuine than Starbuck but still very cool.
A fierce quarter-ork-quarter-elf warrior who crawled out of the gladiator pit after massacring her captors with their own weapons to pursue career in science. In an university that forbids the admittance of women.
Facing the Alien and surviving. Who does that? Outwits, outlasts, and takes on the perfect organism with nothing but brains.
I feel like the final 5 can be shuffled and any order would still be fair.
My big kid reached the age when math is no longer easy. His teacher is ambitious and the other parents – even more ambitious. Many of his classmates take private lessons. I’m trying to teach my kid some tricks to help even the score. One of the points I make is that when solving tasks, he should keep the numbers small:
45*37 + 55*37 could be solved by the sum of two large numbers but you can do 37*(45+55), which only deals with small (or at least smaller) numbers.
We already know about X, fractions and so on. Wish us luck.