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The museum | James' Coffee Blog
The museum | James' Coffee Blog
I spent last Sunday morning in Chicago, after a series of flight delays that caused me to miss a connecting flight to my final destination. I enjoyed exploring the city. Gazing in awe at the tall buildings, the subway system across the city, the underground roads, the landmarks. I had only one morning, so I spent most of my time on foot walking around.
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The museum | James' Coffee Blog
Creating an index for my personal website using NLP | James' Coffee Blog
Creating an index for my personal website using NLP | James' Coffee Blog
At Homebrew Website Club this week, we discussed book indexes (with the Chicago Manual of Style nearby as a reference, of course!). This got me thinking about what a web index may look like for a blog: a page formatted like a book index where you can see articles that mention unique concepts on your blog. Book indexes are useful tools for navigating information. Given a concept, the index tells you where to find out more. I was curious about what this may look like for a blog.
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Creating an index for my personal website using NLP | James' Coffee Blog
Coffee in '90s Sitcoms | James' Coffee Blog
Coffee in '90s Sitcoms | James' Coffee Blog
I've been a fan of '90s sitcoms for years and whenever I am looking for something to watch one of three names comes up: Seinfeld, Cheers, and Frasier. My personal favorite is Frasier but I am presently taking a year-or-so break from watching the show so that, one day, I can go back and watch it and feel like I don't know everything that has already happened. That is my hope.
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Coffee in '90s Sitcoms | James' Coffee Blog
The Familiar Tune | James' Coffee Blog
The Familiar Tune | James' Coffee Blog
I was preparing to make a cup of coffee and I suddenly got the urge to listen to Gloria by The Lumineers. I obliged, opening Spotify to play the track. Gloria was one of those songs that I listened to on repeat. The music, the rhythm, the accompanying Ballad of Cleopatra video together made for engaging musical and dramatic experience.
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The Familiar Tune | James' Coffee Blog
'What is the name of that song?' | James' Coffee Blog
'What is the name of that song?' | James' Coffee Blog
I recently watched the movie 10 Things I Hate About You, as part of my pseudo-marathon of watching high school teen romance movies. I am toward the end of the top recommendations now, contemplating what movie I should watch next. The song I Want You to Want Me by Cheap Trick, and whose version for the movie was sung by Letters for Cleo, was played in the movie. Moments after the song came on, I thought to myself
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'What is the name of that song?' | James' Coffee Blog
Building Relationships at My Local Coffee Shop | James' Coffee Blog
Building Relationships at My Local Coffee Shop | James' Coffee Blog
I have been attracted to coffee shops for a long time. When I was young, I enjoyed going out for a cup of tea with members of my family. I still think back to the days when I was too young to drink tea. I'd drink a carton of apple juice or something similar. I'd think about when I would be able to drink tea. I cannot remember at what age I could finally drink tea. I do know that tea stuck with me for years. I'd drink a few cups a day on most days.
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Building Relationships at My Local Coffee Shop | James' Coffee Blog
Coffee Chat with Barista and Barista Trainer Millie (@thatgirlfromthecafe) | James' Coffee Blog
Coffee Chat with Barista and Barista Trainer Millie (@thatgirlfromthecafe) | James' Coffee Blog
I write this blog to help me learn about specialty coffee. In many of my posts, I share advice, recipes, and techniques from my own learning. This got me thinking about how professionals teach people coffee skills. I decided to reach out to Millie (@thatgirlfromthecafe on Instagram) to ask a few questions about what it is like to train people in basic coffee skills.
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Coffee Chat with Barista and Barista Trainer Millie (@thatgirlfromthecafe) | James' Coffee Blog
Complex and not so complex coffees | James' Coffee Blog
Complex and not so complex coffees | James' Coffee Blog
Catherine Franks, the founder of Steampunk Coffee, recently wrote a blog post about complex and mellow espressos and coffees. The premise was at Steampunk they offer two espresso options and Cath took some time to explain what you could expect by choosing each option and why Steampunk offers two options. Essentially, one coffee on offer is more complex than the other. The coffee that is less complex—mellow—is one that pairs well with milk.
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Complex and not so complex coffees | James' Coffee Blog
The Early Bird | James' Coffee Blog
The Early Bird | James' Coffee Blog
As a young child, I used to love waking up early in the morning. Catching the early bird, as it were. I think my waking up early was in part fuelled by the seemingly boundless energy that I had as a child. A feeling of excitement about the little things; the butterflies that would precede special occasions weeks in advance.
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The Early Bird | James' Coffee Blog
Using LLM Prompts for Source Attribution | James' Coffee Blog
Using LLM Prompts for Source Attribution | James' Coffee Blog
My LLM chatbot is instructed to only reference sources that are provided in the prompt I send to OpenAI. This is essential because I want answers to reflect what I have written rather than more general facts available to ChatGPT 3.5 Turbo. One of my primary considerations when developing my LLM chatbot was to ensure that, where possible, the sources of claims were cited. I devised two methods that, combined, provide both myself and users with information about sources associated with a question:
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Using LLM Prompts for Source Attribution | James' Coffee Blog
Autumn Moments | James' Coffee Blog
Autumn Moments | James' Coffee Blog
I was walking past a familiar park yesterday when I saw the sun beam on the trees in such a way where the trees appeared almost golden. There were leaves falling down, slowly. On the ground, leaves blew around. I heard the occasional crunch as leaves ran along the concrete of the street on which I was walking. I looked back and admired the trees, in awe of how beautiful the light made them.
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Autumn Moments | James' Coffee Blog
Coffee Chat with Robbie from Canary Girl Coffee Company | James' Coffee Blog
Coffee Chat with Robbie from Canary Girl Coffee Company | James' Coffee Blog
With firm roots in history, Canary Girl Coffee Company is based not only on good coffee but also on promoting the contributions of women who played an important role in roasting coffee. Through the colourful brand, coffees named after women, and the stories of those women featured on the Canary Girl website, this roaster stands out from so many with whom I have spoken.
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Coffee Chat with Robbie from Canary Girl Coffee Company | James' Coffee Blog
Fun with Words: Computer science jargon edition | James' Coffee Blog
Fun with Words: Computer science jargon edition | James' Coffee Blog
Earlier this week, I evaluated whether I should create a Fun with Words series on this blog in which I talk about interesting and amusing words and phrases ^1. I was looking through my open tabs in Firefox on my phone and saw an idea for a Fun with Words theme: jargon in computer science comprised of two words that are not usually next to each other. Specific? Yes indeed. Fun? Yes!
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Fun with Words: Computer science jargon edition | James' Coffee Blog
Stories from the piano | James' Coffee Blog
Stories from the piano | James' Coffee Blog
When I see a piano that is unplayed, I feel jarred. An instrument from which you can make music, quiet. I wonder: there could be music here, but there isn't. There's nobody there to play. At the same time, I feel like the sound of music may cheer people up; surprise them, make them think, give them a little moment of joy. That, and my love of playing piano, is why I like to play music in public, at pianos that you will often find in train stations and airports.
·jamesg.blog·
Stories from the piano | James' Coffee Blog
Advent of Bloggers 2021: Day 21 | James' Coffee Blog
Advent of Bloggers 2021: Day 21 | James' Coffee Blog
I am writing a blog post every day from December 1st to December 24th, 2021, about a blogger whose writing or site I follow. My aim for this series is to help you discover new blogs and to help get the word out about content creators whose blogs I appreciate. You can read more about this series in the inaugural Day 1 post.
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Advent of Bloggers 2021: Day 21 | James' Coffee Blog
Coffee Ratio Calculator Tool | James' Coffee Blog
Coffee Ratio Calculator Tool | James' Coffee Blog
A few days ago, I released a coffee ratio calculator on this blog. The ratio calculator lets you figure out the simplest version of a coffee to water ratio. You can also figure out how much coffee you need to use to brew with a particular ratio and a certain amount of water, or you can figure out how much water you need to brew with a particular ratio and amount of coffee.
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Coffee Ratio Calculator Tool | James' Coffee Blog
How I post notes on my website | James' Coffee Blog
How I post notes on my website | James' Coffee Blog
Over the holidays, I spent some time removing post types from my site in favour of publishing notes. Notes are short posts. So far, I have used notes to share my morning coffee, to ask about movies like The Matrix series, and more. I like being able to publish notes that are unstructured and free flow. Most of my thoughts are not long enough to turn into a blog post, even if they are something I would like to share.
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How I post notes on my website | James' Coffee Blog
Scottish Coffee Roasters I Have Tried | James' Coffee Blog
Scottish Coffee Roasters I Have Tried | James' Coffee Blog
Over the last few months, I have spent quite a bit of time learning about the Scottish coffee industry. I know many cafes and roasteries in Scotland and I have even interviewed many people who own coffee businesses in Scotland. Alongside my learning about the Scottish coffee industry, I have ordered from various roasters as I have needed coffee. I like to explore new roasters as I often find interesting coffees sold by roasters from whom I do not regularly order.
·jamesg.blog·
Scottish Coffee Roasters I Have Tried | James' Coffee Blog
Sounds of the cafe | James' Coffee Blog
Sounds of the cafe | James' Coffee Blog
What do you hear when you go into a coffee shop? This question came to mind earlier today as I sat in my local coffee shop. I have entertained this question before after discussing how the sensory experience of coffee is much greater than just taste. Making coffee involves all of your senses, from touch to sight. Consuming coffee involves sight, hearing, smelling, and of course tasting. There's even more to the experience of coffee than just the basic senses but I digress.
·jamesg.blog·
Sounds of the cafe | James' Coffee Blog
Adding dark mode to my static Jekyll site | James' Coffee Blog
Adding dark mode to my static Jekyll site | James' Coffee Blog
I use dark mode extensively across the web and indeed across my computer. The editor in which I am writing this blog post, Typora, is set up with a dark mode theme. My Ubuntu desktop has a dark mode theme. When I see the option to enable dark mode, I like to enable it. Anecdotally, I find dark mode easier on the eyes than bright modes.
·jamesg.blog·
Adding dark mode to my static Jekyll site | James' Coffee Blog
Advent of Bloggers 2021: Day 18 | James' Coffee Blog
Advent of Bloggers 2021: Day 18 | James' Coffee Blog
I am writing a blog post every day from December 1st to December 24th, 2021, about a blogger whose writing or site I follow. My aim for this series is to help you discover new blogs and to help get the word out about content creators whose blogs I appreciate. You can read more about this series in the inaugural Day 1 post.
·jamesg.blog·
Advent of Bloggers 2021: Day 18 | James' Coffee Blog
Fixing a line width issue on this blog | James' Coffee Blog
Fixing a line width issue on this blog | James' Coffee Blog
A member of the IndieWeb community, jeremycherfas.net, informed me that the text on my blog posts was hard to read. This was interesting because I pay a lot of attention to making sure content on my site is readable. Jeremy made me aware of something that I had not considered in the design of my blog post pages: the line width.
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Fixing a line width issue on this blog | James' Coffee Blog
The printed blog | James' Coffee Blog
The printed blog | James' Coffee Blog
For the first time in months, I attended the London / Europe IndieWeb Homebrew Website Club. I have enjoyed attending these events in the past because they bring together people who are doing interesting things with the web to varying extents. In the last meeting, we covered everything from digital music quality to digital copyright to printing one's blog. The topic of printing one's blog is one I would like to dive into further.
·jamesg.blog·
The printed blog | James' Coffee Blog
TIL: Create HTML boilerplate code in Visual Studio Code | James' Coffee Blog
TIL: Create HTML boilerplate code in Visual Studio Code | James' Coffee Blog
My front-end web projects start as a HTML file, gradually expanding into JavaScript and CSS files as required. A few months ago, I found there was a way to auto-populate the boilerplate HTML code that gives the basic structure for a page in Visual Studio Code: the html, head, body tags, as well as some accompanying meta information in the head tag. When I first saw this feature, I was excited. I could save some time by using this! But, I could not recall how I triggered the code expansion.
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TIL: Create HTML boilerplate code in Visual Studio Code | James' Coffee Blog
Announcing commandk.js, a search dialog web component | James' Coffee Blog
Announcing commandk.js, a search dialog web component | James' Coffee Blog
Every so often, I am reminded of the Command + K (Control + K on Windows) design pattern. Command + K usually triggers a search dialog in which a user can enter a query. I have seen it in email clients, as a standalone application, and in web sites. Most recently, I saw Supabase had added a Command + K search to their documentation.
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Announcing commandk.js, a search dialog web component | James' Coffee Blog