Happy New Year! While 2026 is looking to be just as, if not more, chaotic than 2025, personally I have a lot to look forward to. First, I have had way more success building a site with 11ty than I expected, so I expect to migrate off of WordPress sooner rather than later. Shooting for migrating in the next couple weeks. 🤞

I’m liking the vibes of my new website. Feel free to visit it at preprod.glaittli.net.
I want to maintain editorial momentum so I will continue to post on my old, crappy site. This backend context matters, though, because this specific example, of leaving WordPress, demonstrates how difficult it is to fight enshittification and seize the means of publication from the dominant platforms.
I am currently writing a series of posts about how the Web can be architected for both human agents and digital agents (I’m currently grouping these articles with the tag semantic web). But I also have other article topics, many of which are better for short form or quicker posts while the longer posts develop. With that in mind, I want to debut a series I’m calling Good Work. In my post, Emerging from Despair I said,
I want to find the people, organizations, and papers that are cointinuing to do good work out there. And by good work I mean work that is making search, AI or any information experience on the Internet more Trustworthy.
In a world of self-reinforcing filter bubbles and deepfakes, I want to gather and write about work that makes the Internet a safer, more enriching place for its users. Much of this is work is incredibly important and (I believe) is not getting the attention it deserves. For whatever reason, my “talent” in life, as best as I can understand it, is to passionately distill the human drama of seemingly arcane technical issues. If I have this talent, which it looks like I do, I want to use it to highlight amazing work that may be toiling in obscurity or otherwise ignored. I also want to bring up the work of those before us, but whose work is still remarkably precient.
Some examples of good work I am looking to cover:
For my next post, I want to review a book that sits prominently on my bookshelf, Computer Lib/Dream Machines. For years, I’ve admired the work and passion of Ted Nelson in trying to get the public thinking critically about computers since the 1970’s.
What’s striking when reading this book, given how playful and irreverent the tone of the work is, is how well it anticipates much of the issues we are facing today. Here are some snippets. (Please enjoy the typefaces and handdrawn illlustrations as much as I do).

Ted Nelson anticipated the hoarding of information and resources well before the generative AI data center construction gold rush of our present era.

An early, and more wholesome term for “enshittification.”

Yes, we are in the Mysterious & Sexy Unknown (& Unlikely) terra ingonita. 😶🌫️
But he also highlights ways to combat these challenges and they are still precient!
Later, I want to have a follow-up articles where I review his work on Project Xanadu and what we can learn from it and other work as people work to rebuild the Web in 2026.
As ever, constructive feedback is appreciated. If there is anything I’m ommitting, please let me know gently. Thank you for reading this far. See you soon.
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