1 comments

  • srean 4 hours ago
    I am always pleasantly amused that many HN folks share with me a love for weaving, knitting and knotting; not to mention ropes.

    Dang had once posted a long list of HN discussions on these topics.

    I think there is something about them that squirts a little bit of dopamine in our pattern seeking, puzzle solving brains.

    For me, one of draws was how does the symmetry of the woven pattern get weft into the cloth. Multi-shaft looms does it differently from, say, a Kashmiri rug.

    When I had joined HN decades ago I had no idea that there would be this shared interest. Frankly, there were no reason for this to be the case.

    Then one day this happened

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44462404

    • shrubble 6 minutes ago
      The creator of SNOBOL and Icon programming languages, Ralph Griswold, also developed an interest in weaving and wrote about it; see for instance https://www.thelacebee.com/the-lace-notes/tess-the-professor...
    • mitthrowaway2 2 hours ago
      I have heard it said that the word "technology" shares its roots with the word "textiles". Maybe it's not so surprising that there would be a shared interest as well!
      • shagie 2 hours ago
        https://www.etymonline.com/word/*teks-

        > Proto-Indo-European root meaning "to weave," also "to fabricate," especially with an ax, also "to make wicker or wattle fabric for (mud-covered) house walls."

        > It might form all or part of: architect; context; dachshund; polytechnic; pretext; subtle; technical; techno-; technology; tectonic; tete; text; textile; tiller (n.1) "bar to turn the rudder of a boat;" tissue; toil (n.2) "net, snare."

        > It might also be the source of: Sanskrit taksati "he fashions, constructs," taksan "carpenter;" Avestan taša "ax, hatchet," thwaxš- "be busy;" Old Persian taxš- "be active;" Latin texere "to weave, fabricate," tela "web, net, warp of a fabric;" Greek tekton "carpenter," tekhnē "art;" Old Church Slavonic tesla "ax, hatchet;" ...

    • 8bitsrule 2 hours ago
      Always good to learn more about the timeline of techniques lost in the mists of time. Some of the finest works of art were 'coded' in fibers, much more durable that most other media!
    • zem 2 hours ago
      I think it's not just puzzle solving - for me it's the idea of creating something from raw materials where that something is itself a standard building block. it appeals to the same part of me that programming does.