The Rundown for December 31, 2022

  • One Hour of Medieval Eminem.

  • The Rise of User-Hostile Software - “We are truly living in an era of user-hostile software, and when I say “user-hostile” I mean it as “software that doesn’t really care about the needs of the user but rather about the needs of the developer.” And this is not a problem that is bound to a specific operating system (or version thereof) or class or computers. It’s literally cross-platform, and it follows customers from home, to office, to their commute.”

  • Looks like teen smoking is pretty much dead in the U.S., thanks to vaping -

The fear that vaping is a gateway to smoking has been completely eliminated by the data that shows vaping is in fact a diversion from smoking. And why not? It is safer, cheaper, more convenient and more discrete. Teenage smokers will soon become curiosities, like people who still listen to cassettes tapes.

...

Did we arrive at this position by careful planning? Absolutely not! We got here by a devious path full of chaos, confusion, outright lies, illegal actions and misdirection.
  • Accounting framework for ESG-related transactions - “As ESG features become more pervasive in the market, alternative approaches to assessing ESG features could be introduced under US GAAP to alleviate the operational burden on companies when entering into green transactions.”

  • Checking out Research Rabbit, although I’m not sure where it will land in my research and writing workflow

The Rundown for December 12, 2022

  • How to decode credit card numbers.

  • Ex libris - the book plates of famous writers. This almost makes me regret foregoing physical books. Then I remember I have my library everywhere I need to read.

  • A list of powerful “decision razors” - “A “razor” is a rule of thumb that simplifies decision making."

  • Bruce Schneier on Regulating DAO’s: “Tying free speech arguments to the cause of DAOs like Tornado Cash imperils some of the important free speech victories that were won in the past. But the risks for everyone might be even greater if that argument wins. A world where democratic governments are unable to enforce their laws is not a world where civic spaces or civil liberties will thrive.”

  • Fermi paradox explained through other civilizational endgames: collapse or homeostasis.

We propose a new resolution to the Fermi paradox: civilizations either collapse from burnout or redirect themselves to prioritizing homeostasis, a state where cosmic expansion is no longer a goal, making them difficult to detect remotely.