Peak quarter intensity across the topic's active span. Higher values mean attention was concentrated into a shorter stretch rather than spread evenly over time.
Related:?
Topics that appear in the same chunks as this one. Use this to find semantic neighbors, not ranking neighbors.
A short read on the topic's time range, peak episode, and strongest associations. Use it as the quick orientation before drilling into examples.
origin model appears in 27 chunks across 17 episodes, from 2024-03-11 to 2026-06-15.
Its densest episode is Bits and Bobs 4/22/24 (2024-04-22), with 5 observations on this topic.
Semantically it travels with pocket universe, security model, and app model, while by chunk count it sits between marginal cost and search engine; its yearly rank moved from #11 in 2024 to #137 in 2026.
Over time
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Raw mentions over time. Use this to see absolute attention, not relative rank among all topics.
Range2024-03-11 to 2026-06-15Mean1.6 per episodePeak5 on 2024-04-22
Observations
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The primary evidence view for this topic. Sort it chronologically when you want concrete examples behind the larger pattern.
Showing 27 observations sorted from latest to earliest.
...ized primarily by viable business models, not by amount of user value.
The same origin model creates a cave where the origin's owner can hoard things.
For example, hoarding a bunch of user data they can rent out to advertisers.
What if we had...
...all consumer software today, the assumption of the same origin policy.
The same origin model: it's safe to go to a new place, because the new place starts with nothing.
A startup has to start with zero data, a cold start. But the aggregator a...
... normal cage is a big cube.
Straight, easy-to-reason-about edges.
E.g. the same-origin model in browsers today.
But the real world is fractally wrinkled and complex.
A straight line will slice right through the middle of a real world concept....
...out security or privacy models.
What's the last time you thought about the same-origin model, the fundamental model that underlies the web and modern apps' laws of physics?
The inductive willingness of less-savvy people to trust a security mo...
...y are apps and web apps today non-composable?
The reason is because of the same-origin model.
In traditional operating systems, different apps can coordinate via the filesystem.
That's powerful, but also dangerous (without protections).
Files...
How often do you think about the origin model when you use the web?
It's absolutely foundational, and yet you never have to think about it.
That's how the privacy constraints should be.
A force o...
...bility.
Apps are islands: little monoliths.
It's an extension of the web's same-origin model… but without the iframe composition primitive.
This is one of the reasons apps have a one-size-fits-all shape.
Other kinds of experiences (e.g. web a...