Kniterate Notes

soup.agnescameron.info

43 points

surprisetalk

5 days ago


10 comments

mtVessel 3 hours ago

I applaud their restraint. Me, I would've been compelled to title it, "Kniterate Knotes".

  • freedomben 3 hours ago

    I used to live near a town called "Knik" which all the locals pronounced with a hard "K" like "Kuh-nick". It launched a terrible habit of intentionally pronouncing silent K on all words, which was way more fun that it should have been. I started using all sorts of phrases just so I could pronounce the hard K, like "Don't get your kuh-nickers in a twist". I also started using a handle of "The Knight of Knik" which I of course pronounced as "The Kuh-nite of Kuh-nik", which then I shortened to "The Knik Knight" (pronounced "Kuh-nik Kuh-night"). I likewise applaud the author's restraint.

stavros 4 hours ago

This looks interesting but I have no idea what it's talking about. I assume this is how non-techies feel when reading a programming article.

  • microflash 4 hours ago

    Indeed. I’m also quite lost but it caught the eye of an acquaintance. Hopefully, we’ll have a discussion over tea about it.

    To me, knitting seems to be such an intimate art where a person pours their skill and heart. When I wrap myself in the sweater that my grandmother knit for me in a city far away from home, I feel her presence and love in the patterns woven in the fabric, wondering what she’d have been thinking while knitting. “I was thinking about the latest mischief of our naughty goats and this boy frolicking along with them.” She’d answer whenever someone asked.

    Programming and automating this takes away all that intimacy out of that art but I guess it is inevitable for the “engineering” minds. Maybe there’s a wonder to it just by exploring the possibilities, albeit through machines.

    • WillAdams 3 hours ago

      The thing is, early knitting machines were advertised by showing them competing against "mighty fishermen of many years" since it was deemed a necessary activity for fishing communities in winter.

      View it as an extension of Jaquard looms and the punch cards used for them being the precursors of modern computers.

      c.f., the Native American representations of Intel chip designs:

      https://kottke.org/24/09/a-navajo-weaving-of-an-intel-pentiu...

  • kruffalon 3 hours ago

    This is a programming article, just not in your subfield.

    If you have any programming background and some time to aquiantence yourself with the specific words and aspects of this kind of programming I'm sure it will make sense to you too :)

    • stavros 3 hours ago

      It's mostly the knitting terms I don't know, not so much the engineering ones. Fairisle, Jacquard, etc.

      • oh_my_goodness 3 hours ago
        2 more

        Possibly you might be missing the point. Unless maybe this comment is subtle humor?

        • kruffalon 38 minutes ago

          If it is subtle humour it's too subtle for me ;)