The World

How efficient are you at reading this article? ๐Ÿง

Here’s an interesting article from the New York Times on how many companies digitally monitor their employees’ time in some pretty invasive and distrustful ways.

This includes taking screenshots and photos randomly in 10-minute chunks and actually docking pay if you don’t appear productive. So every trip to the bathroom is possible lost pay. ๐Ÿคฆ๐Ÿปโ€โ™‚๏ธ

And hospice workers being paid by productivity points. ๐Ÿ˜ณ “A visit to the dying: as little as one point.”

And social workers being penalized for not typing on their keyboard while actively counseling patients in drug treatment facilities. ๐Ÿคจ

But the brilliance of this article is how they present it.

To let you appreciate how annoying this kind of digital surveillance is, the article tells you as you read it if you’ve been “idle” for too long. It ends with a summary of your reading efficiency stats, which will inevitably make you feel weird. ๐Ÿ˜‚

Also, I wonder how these companies would feel about the The Ship Repairman Story.

Software Dev

Pulse: Network Inspector

If you want to debug your network traffic on iOS, Pulse looks like a great alternative to WiresharkProxyman, and Charles Proxy.

Pulse takes a different approach, embedding into your app rather than sniffing the network, which can be pretty invasive. (Proxyman “basically performs a MITM attack to see your encrypted traffic.” ๐Ÿค”)

๐Ÿ‘‰ Pulse: Network Inspector

What I wished iOS had is a simple analog of Safari Web Inspector. So I built just that.

Via iOS Dev Weekly.

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