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[39]Subscribe to skip adsAdvertisement
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Federal Agents arrest a man during an Immigration Enforcement Operation in
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Minneapolis, Minneapolis, MN, U.S., January 13, 2026.Mostafa Bassim/Anadolu via
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Getty Images
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[40]Politics
|
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|
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Fascists Are Pathetic
|
||||
|
||||
[41][Vic]
|
||||
By [42]David Roth
|
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|
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9:27 AM EST on January 15, 2026
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• [43]Share on Bluesky
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• [44]Share on Reddit
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[47]
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475Comments
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|
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Two days before a shouting cluster of its agents surrounded the car of a
|
||||
Minneapolis mother and [48]shot her to death last week, ICE was demanding
|
||||
answers from the Hilton hotel group on Twitter. "Why did your team in
|
||||
Minneapolis cancel our federal law enforcement officer and agent reservations?"
|
||||
the government account of the Immigrations and Customs Enforcement agency [49]
|
||||
asked, repeatedly tagging Hilton's corporate account per the longstanding suite
|
||||
of best practices among the population of squeakers prone to this kind of
|
||||
social media crashout.
|
||||
|
||||
The meltdown continued in a subsequent post, which began with the capitalized
|
||||
sentence "NO ROOM AT THE INN!": "When officers attempted to book rooms using
|
||||
official government emails and rates, Hilton Hotels maliciously CANCELLED their
|
||||
reservations," the agency, which [50]had a $28.7 billion budget in 2025,
|
||||
posted. "This is UNACCEPTABLE. Why is Hilton Hotels siding with murderers and
|
||||
rapists to deliberately undermine and impede DHS law enforcement from their
|
||||
mission to enforce our nation’s immigration laws?" The hotel group and the
|
||||
independently owned hotel in question both [51]apologized later that day, both
|
||||
taking care to note that they don't condone any kind of discrimination. In the
|
||||
streets, the horrors continued.
|
||||
|
||||
It is not accurate to say that the current government of the United States
|
||||
speaks with one voice; there are too many half-sociopath [52]influencers and
|
||||
podcasters and unstable television personalities scrabbling around in high
|
||||
positions for there to be anything like that kind of shared purpose, and the
|
||||
reactionary social media gremlins working under them are all too busy [53]
|
||||
signaling to their own degenerate micro-communities to get into anything like
|
||||
harmony. But, one brutal and stupid year into the second Trump administration,
|
||||
it seems fair to say that the federal government has cohered into a sort of
|
||||
collective personality. It is maybe more accurate to say that the public-facing
|
||||
part of the federal government is identifiable at this moment as a specific and
|
||||
repellent type of American Guy.
|
||||
|
||||
You do not have to know this guy personally to know what he is about; you do
|
||||
not need to understand what he believes to grasp how dangerous he is or why.
|
||||
You need only to put some tactical gear and a gaiter on him, dress him up with
|
||||
whatever weaponry looks toughest, and drop him behind the wheel of a rented
|
||||
Jeep Wagoneer. Instinct and panic and a gnarled suite of anti-values will do
|
||||
the work from there; you can't trust him for much, but you can trust that this
|
||||
guy will point that vehicle's enormous snarling grille at a smaller vehicle
|
||||
being driven by someone the guy in question has identified as a target. They
|
||||
would be doing this, or spending hours every day fantasizing about doing it,
|
||||
even if they had not been told that [54]their right do it now supersedes every
|
||||
other right in public life.
|
||||
|
||||
This type of person exists in American life—"our neighbors, friends, and loved
|
||||
ones," in [55]the words of Oklahoma Senator Markwayne Mullin—in sufficient
|
||||
enough numbers that everyone who does not want to become a character in the
|
||||
incoherent first-person shooter video game that plays over their every waking
|
||||
moment knows to avoid them. They are all around us, but contra Sen. Mullin they
|
||||
are not really our neighbors or friends; they do not quite fit that concept,
|
||||
and cannot really buy into it. They are self-deputized; their personal defects
|
||||
make them unstable in a way that leads inexorably to car crashes.
|
||||
|
||||
In his weepy tweet defending their negligible honor and that of the work they
|
||||
do, Mullin calls them "red-blooded American patriots," and that, too, is both
|
||||
directionally correct and plainly laughable on the merits. They're American,
|
||||
all right, and the patriotism they claim—an old, small, ignorant version, but
|
||||
one that for those reasons nevertheless has some claim on the word—is just one
|
||||
of many. Before they put on plate carriers and masks and threw themselves into
|
||||
the dirty business of terrorizing their neighbors and breaking their families,
|
||||
they were still identifiable as who and what they are and always were—seething,
|
||||
unappeasable, deliriously and defiantly pig-stupid, and absolutely a threat to
|
||||
the peace and comfort and flourishing of everyone and anything else. The masks
|
||||
only make them easier to see.
|
||||
|
||||
Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem speaks at a news conference on
|
||||
January 7, 2026 in Brownsville, Texas.Kristi Noem doing the classic Standing
|
||||
Around In Front Of A Bunch Of Uniformed CHUDs maneuver in Texas in January
|
||||
2026. (Michael Gonzalez/Getty Images)
|
||||
|
||||
There is no disjunction between the political movement that is so frantically
|
||||
preening and whining and lying [56]on social media and into any camera lens it
|
||||
can find, and the one prosecuting an aimless, endless, brutish reign of terror
|
||||
in the hospitals and outside the preschools and across the big-box parking lots
|
||||
of the greater Twin Cities metropolitan area. They are two sides of the same
|
||||
coin, or the same side of this particular personality type—baffled, brutish,
|
||||
plainly terrified and out of control, incapable of self-regulation or basic
|
||||
self-soothing, never learning a single thing and making as big and violent a
|
||||
mess as they can on principle. There is no legible strategy in the ICE-led
|
||||
offensive in Minnesota beyond [57]trying to make the situation worse to see
|
||||
what might happen, and no sense of what victory might look like; when "get told
|
||||
to eat shit by dozens of bystanders" and "drive off amid a cloud of tear gas"
|
||||
represent this big a part of the tactical stack, it becomes easy to doubt that
|
||||
there actually is any broader goal.
|
||||
|
||||
It's a terror campaign, of course, but the people doing it are themselves so
|
||||
terrified and so manifestly out of their depth and incapable, and so deeply
|
||||
lost in their own single-serving fogs of war, that it all becomes recursive.
|
||||
Its purpose, to the extent one is visible, is to keep going. The original
|
||||
justification for the surge was [58]an incomprehensible viral video by a
|
||||
conservative influencer, but it has since become both [59]a campaign of
|
||||
indiscriminate punishment and cyclical content creation and omnidirectional
|
||||
retribution—a frantic tantrum unconvincingly dressing itself up as an act of
|
||||
stern paternal discipline, and a screen-addled movement of hair-trigger
|
||||
illiterates that has [60]lost the ability to do anything but react, generating
|
||||
new scenes to react to.
|
||||
|
||||
It could only ever be incoherent, and was always going to be brutal. As a
|
||||
farcical re-enactment of the lost foreign wars of the last two decades on
|
||||
American soil, it could not be any other way. For the same reason, it is hard
|
||||
to know when or how it will end. In Trump's second term, the federal government
|
||||
has intentionally rid itself of the capacity to do anything but make things
|
||||
worse; it has quite literally traded Ph.D scientists and dedicated civil
|
||||
servants for the chance to hastily stand up this expansion team from the
|
||||
waiver-wire flotsam of the violence worker community. The public money that was
|
||||
once spent, grudgingly and kludgily, on keeping people alive is now being spent
|
||||
on this mission and others like it, whose only purpose is to hurt those that
|
||||
the state has identified as enemies.
|
||||
|
||||
The people carrying this out have been behaving [61]exactly as you might expect
|
||||
armed sadists to behave after they'd been told that they would be immune from
|
||||
any future consequences. None of them really seem to understand the mission
|
||||
they've been given beyond some atavistic mandate to violently pacify and punish
|
||||
everyone that Doesn't Look Right, to make everything clean and quiet and keep
|
||||
it that way, to patrol empty streets with their blood up and their guns out
|
||||
until such time as the threat, which was always just everything and everyone
|
||||
else, is somehow neutralized.
|
||||
|
||||
And that may well be what the mission actually is. Some people who did not know
|
||||
anything, and who kept themselves scared all the time, and who held a grudge
|
||||
against the whole rest of humanity because of how ignorant and frightened that
|
||||
bigger world's existence made them feel, handed weapons to other people who
|
||||
felt the same way, and told them to figure it out. All that war and the ways in
|
||||
which the rot it made weakened various important structures and edifices, the
|
||||
terrible use reactionary cynics found for that rot, the toxins that invariably
|
||||
showed up in the groundwater downstream from all that violence—all of these
|
||||
things made the culture stupid and cruel in new ways, or maybe just in very old
|
||||
ones. All of that made this awful moment, too.
|
||||
|
||||
The capacity to cry about being treated rudely on social media while carrying
|
||||
out this open-ended gambit is new, but the instinct to do so wasn't. There is
|
||||
something deeply, shamefully American about this strike force of out-of-town
|
||||
shitheads complaining about the customer service it has received from the
|
||||
people it is trying to oppress, and doing so in language—NO ROOM AT THE INN!
|
||||
—that stridently references and oafishly misuses one of the foundational
|
||||
stories of the faith that movement relentlessly claims. A lesson about
|
||||
humanity, and a whole humane way of seeing the world, shrinks so effortlessly
|
||||
into a preening, indignant, fundamentally meaningless complaint.
|
||||
|
||||
Minnesota, among other places, is currently in a stalemate between people who
|
||||
[62]want to live their normal lives without fear of being brutalized or
|
||||
terrorized or beaten or even killed, and an occupying force that understands
|
||||
preventing that from happening as more or less the substance and purpose of its
|
||||
mission, and that is awful. But just because the people doing all that shooting
|
||||
and crying don't know what they're doing doesn't mean anyone else is as
|
||||
deceived. Every day, those pissy goons go out looking for trouble, and every
|
||||
day people who never previously imagined that they would do such a thing tell
|
||||
them to fuck off, absorb outsized violence for doing so, and resolve to do it
|
||||
again the next day.
|
||||
|
||||
It's inspiring, this persistence of community and care in the face of a
|
||||
campaign to annihilate them, and the defiance of people who want to live their
|
||||
lives against a force that doesn't want anything at all, and all of these small
|
||||
and vital human things pushing up through the attempt to make those things and
|
||||
that resistance impossible. But it is also a reminder of how pathetic—how
|
||||
sincerely and deeply abject, how valueless and lost—this offensive is. There is
|
||||
all this rude and humble everyday life and all these different types of people
|
||||
who believe it is meaningful, and then there is this attempt, overseen by an
|
||||
elite that doesn't believe in anything at all, to replace it with something
|
||||
dumber, simpler, more demeaning, and more like content. They are going to lose,
|
||||
and not just because they are outnumbered.
|
||||
|
||||
Recommended
|
||||
|
||||
[63]Sports Highlight Of The Day
|
||||
[64]
|
||||
|
||||
The Sports Highlight Of The Day Is This ICE Goon Eating Shit
|
||||
|
||||
[65]240Comments
|
||||
[66]Tom Ley
|
||||
January 12, 2026
|
||||
[67]Ice guy slips and falls
|
||||
[68]Subscribe to skip adsAdvertisement
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||||
If you liked this blog, please share it! Your referrals help Defector reach new
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readers, and those new readers always get a few free blogs before encountering
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• [69]Share on Bluesky
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• [70]Share on Reddit
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• [71]Share on WhatsApp
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• [72]Share on Email
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||||
[73][Vic]
|
||||
[74]David Roth
|
||||
[75]@davidjroth.bsky.social
|
||||
|
||||
Editor. Co-host of The Distraction.
|
||||
|
||||
Read More:
|
||||
|
||||
• [76]Actual Existing Trumpism,
|
||||
• [77]dhs,
|
||||
• [78]donald trump,
|
||||
• [79]Fascism,
|
||||
• [80]ice,
|
||||
• [81]jd vance,
|
||||
• [82]kristi noem,
|
||||
• [83]Minneapolis,
|
||||
• [84]Trumpism
|
||||
|
||||
Stay in touch
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Sign up for our free newsletter
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[85][ ]Email
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Sign up
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More from Defector
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[87]NBA
|
||||
[88]
|
||||
|
||||
Sixers Enact Intentional, Then Unintentional Tribute To The Late Great Dan
|
||||
McQuade
|
||||
|
||||
[89]157Comments
|
||||
[90][rat]
|
||||
[91]Ray Ratto
|
||||
January 30, 2026
|
||||
[92]Tyrese Maxey #0 of the Philadelphia 76ers reacts after the game against the
|
||||
Sacramento Kings at Xfinity Mobile Arena on January 29, 2026 in Philadelphia,
|
||||
Pennsylvania. The 76ers defeated the Kings 113-111.
|
||||
[93]Announcements
|
||||
[94]
|
||||
|
||||
Dan McQuade, 1983–2026
|
||||
|
||||
[95]1104Comments
|
||||
[96][IMG]
|
||||
[97]Tom Ley
|
||||
January 28, 2026
|
||||
[98]Dan McQuade sits in a blue chair, which is big and fake leather-ish, and
|
||||
has big arms on it. He has his head resting on his left arm, which is on the
|
||||
left arm of the chair. He has long light brown hair, a beard cropped to his
|
||||
face, and I dunno I'd say he's pretty handsome, but I am biased as I am the
|
||||
subject of the photo. Dan is wearing a red shirt with a grey and white tabby
|
||||
cat's face on it, with a rose under (and patially covering) the cat. Under that
|
||||
it says DEFECTOR with the 4 degrees slant logo. He has on blue shorts or pants
|
||||
(they're shorts, I know they're shorts), they're not jeans but they're not
|
||||
sweats, like a sort of inbetween situation. There's a hospital admit bracelet
|
||||
on his left arm. His right arm is on the other arm of the couch.
|
||||
[99]Cycling
|
||||
[100]
|
||||
|
||||
Double Kangaroo Chaos Will Reverberate Across The Cycling Season
|
||||
|
||||
[101]58Comments
|
||||
[102][hea]
|
||||
[103]Patrick Redford
|
||||
January 28, 2026
|
||||
[104]The peloton rides past a kangaroo road sign during the Tour Down Under UCI
|
||||
Men's Cycling in Adelaide on January 25, 2026.
|
||||
[105]Podcasts
|
||||
[106]
|
||||
|
||||
How Do You Make A Podcast When The World Is On Fire?
|
||||
|
||||
[107]4Comments
|
||||
[108]A headshot of Jae Towle Vieira
|
||||
[109]Jae Towle Vieira
|
||||
January 28, 2026
|
||||
[110][2025_NormalGossip_LogoArt_16_9_Loc]
|
||||
[111]NFL
|
||||
[112]
|
||||
|
||||
Bill Belichick Becomes The Target Of Someone Else’s Pettiness, For A Change
|
||||
|
||||
[113]158Comments
|
||||
[114][rat]
|
||||
[115]Ray Ratto
|
||||
January 28, 2026
|
||||
[116]Head coach Bill Belichick of the North Carolina Tar Heels gives a thumbs
|
||||
up during the ACC Football Kickoff at Hilton Charlotte Uptown on July 24, 2025
|
||||
in Charlotte, North Carolina. He looks real weird doing it.
|
||||
[117]NFL
|
||||
[118]
|
||||
|
||||
Heartwarming: Miserable Man Frustrated In Ultimately Insignificant Way
|
||||
|
||||
[119]252Comments
|
||||
[120][Vic]
|
||||
[121]David Roth
|
||||
January 28, 2026
|
||||
[122]New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick announces he is leaving the
|
||||
team during a press conference at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough,
|
||||
Massachusetts, on January 11, 2024.
|
||||
[123]See all posts
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[124]Subscribe to skip adsAdvertisementClose
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[126]Defector home
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[127]Defector home
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This is Defector, a new sports blog and media company. We made this place
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together, we own it together, we run it together. Without access, without
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© Copyright 2026
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|
||||
[41] https://defector.com/author/david-roth
|
||||
[42] https://defector.com/author/david-roth
|
||||
[43] https://bsky.app/intent/compose?text=Fascists%20Are%20Pathetic%20-%20https%3A%2F%2Fdefector.com%2Ffascists-are-pathetic
|
||||
[44] http://www.reddit.com/submit/?title=Fascists%20Are%20Pathetic&url=https%3A%2F%2Fdefector.com%2Ffascists-are-pathetic
|
||||
[45] https://api.whatsapp.com/send/?text=Check%20out%20this%20story%3A%20Fascists%20Are%20Pathetic%20https%3A%2F%2Fdefector.com%2Ffascists-are-pathetic
|
||||
[46] mailto:?body=https%3A%2F%2Fdefector.com%2Ffascists-are-pathetic&subject=Fascists%20Are%20Pathetic
|
||||
[47] https://defector.com/fascists-are-pathetic#coral_thread
|
||||
[48] https://defector.com/ice-agent-kills-woman-dhs-tells-obvious-insane-lies-about-it
|
||||
[49] https://bsky.app/profile/bencollins.bsky.social/post/3mbpd7zecxc2p
|
||||
[50] https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/analysis-opinion/big-budget-act-creates-deportation-industrial-complex
|
||||
[51] https://www.404media.co/hilton-hotel-that-refused-dhs-reservations-backpedals/
|
||||
[52] https://defector.com/kingdom-of-the-biters
|
||||
[53] https://theintercept.com/2026/01/13/dhs-ice-white-nationalist-neo-nazi/
|
||||
[54] https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/stephen-miller-said-ice-officers-181934483.html
|
||||
[55] https://x.com/SenMullin/status/2008994615454748933
|
||||
[56] https://defector.com/jd-vance-is-a-hog-thatll-eat-any-slop
|
||||
[57] https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2026/01/former-ice-workers-trump-violence-by-design-renee-good/
|
||||
[58] https://www.cjr.org/laurels-and-darts/ice-minnesota-fraud-somali-community-nick-shirley-viral-debunked-video-dhs-surge.php
|
||||
[59] https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/hundreds-federal-agents-are-headed-minnesota-noem-says-rcna253547
|
||||
[60] https://www.theverge.com/tech/856948/nick-shirley-minnesota-daycare-fraud-influencer-media-cycle
|
||||
[61] https://www.propublica.org/article/videos-ice-dhs-immigration-agents-using-chokeholds-citizens
|
||||
[62] https://defector.com/when-everyday-life-becomes-domestic-terrorism
|
||||
[63] https://defector.com/category/sports-highlight-of-the-day
|
||||
[64] https://defector.com/the-sports-highlight-of-the-day-is-this-ice-goon-eating-shit
|
||||
[65] https://defector.com/the-sports-highlight-of-the-day-is-this-ice-goon-eating-shit#coral_thread
|
||||
[66] https://defector.com/author/tom-ley
|
||||
[67] https://defector.com/the-sports-highlight-of-the-day-is-this-ice-goon-eating-shit
|
||||
[68] https://defector.com/products
|
||||
[69] https://bsky.app/intent/compose?text=Fascists%20Are%20Pathetic%20-%20https%3A%2F%2Fdefector.com%2Ffascists-are-pathetic
|
||||
[70] http://www.reddit.com/submit/?title=Fascists%20Are%20Pathetic&url=https%3A%2F%2Fdefector.com%2Ffascists-are-pathetic
|
||||
[71] https://api.whatsapp.com/send/?text=Check%20out%20this%20story%3A%20Fascists%20Are%20Pathetic%20https%3A%2F%2Fdefector.com%2Ffascists-are-pathetic
|
||||
[72] mailto:?body=https%3A%2F%2Fdefector.com%2Ffascists-are-pathetic&subject=Fascists%20Are%20Pathetic
|
||||
[73] https://defector.com/author/david-roth
|
||||
[74] https://defector.com/author/david-roth
|
||||
[75] https://bsky.app/profile/davidjroth.bsky.social
|
||||
[76] https://defector.com/tag/actual-existing-trumpism
|
||||
[77] https://defector.com/tag/dhs
|
||||
[78] https://defector.com/tag/donald-trump
|
||||
[79] https://defector.com/tag/fascism
|
||||
[80] https://defector.com/tag/ice
|
||||
[81] https://defector.com/tag/jd-vance
|
||||
[82] https://defector.com/tag/kristi-noem
|
||||
[83] https://defector.com/tag/minneapolis
|
||||
[84] https://defector.com/tag/trumpism
|
||||
[87] https://defector.com/category/nba
|
||||
[88] https://defector.com/sixers-enact-intentional-then-unintentional-tribute-to-the-late-great-dan-mcquade
|
||||
[89] https://defector.com/sixers-enact-intentional-then-unintentional-tribute-to-the-late-great-dan-mcquade#coral_thread
|
||||
[90] https://defector.com/author/ray-ratto
|
||||
[91] https://defector.com/author/ray-ratto
|
||||
[92] https://defector.com/sixers-enact-intentional-then-unintentional-tribute-to-the-late-great-dan-mcquade
|
||||
[93] https://defector.com/category/announcements
|
||||
[94] https://defector.com/dan-mcquade-1983-2026
|
||||
[95] https://defector.com/dan-mcquade-1983-2026#coral_thread
|
||||
[96] https://defector.com/author/tom-ley
|
||||
[97] https://defector.com/author/tom-ley
|
||||
[98] https://defector.com/dan-mcquade-1983-2026
|
||||
[99] https://defector.com/category/cycling
|
||||
[100] https://defector.com/double-kangaroo-chaos-will-reverberate-across-the-cycling-season
|
||||
[101] https://defector.com/double-kangaroo-chaos-will-reverberate-across-the-cycling-season#coral_thread
|
||||
[102] https://defector.com/author/patrick-redford
|
||||
[103] https://defector.com/author/patrick-redford
|
||||
[104] https://defector.com/double-kangaroo-chaos-will-reverberate-across-the-cycling-season
|
||||
[105] https://defector.com/category/podcasts
|
||||
[106] https://defector.com/how-do-you-make-a-podcast-when-the-world-is-on-fire
|
||||
[107] https://defector.com/how-do-you-make-a-podcast-when-the-world-is-on-fire#coral_thread
|
||||
[108] https://defector.com/author/jae-towle-vieira
|
||||
[109] https://defector.com/author/jae-towle-vieira
|
||||
[110] https://defector.com/how-do-you-make-a-podcast-when-the-world-is-on-fire
|
||||
[111] https://defector.com/category/nfl
|
||||
[112] https://defector.com/bill-belichick-becomes-the-target-of-someone-elses-pettiness-for-a-change
|
||||
[113] https://defector.com/bill-belichick-becomes-the-target-of-someone-elses-pettiness-for-a-change#coral_thread
|
||||
[114] https://defector.com/author/ray-ratto
|
||||
[115] https://defector.com/author/ray-ratto
|
||||
[116] https://defector.com/bill-belichick-becomes-the-target-of-someone-elses-pettiness-for-a-change
|
||||
[117] https://defector.com/category/nfl
|
||||
[118] https://defector.com/heartwarming-miserable-man-frustrated-in-ultimately-insignificant-way
|
||||
[119] https://defector.com/heartwarming-miserable-man-frustrated-in-ultimately-insignificant-way#coral_thread
|
||||
[120] https://defector.com/author/david-roth
|
||||
[121] https://defector.com/author/david-roth
|
||||
[122] https://defector.com/heartwarming-miserable-man-frustrated-in-ultimately-insignificant-way
|
||||
[123] https://defector.com/all
|
||||
[124] https://defector.com/products
|
||||
[126] https://defector.com/
|
||||
[127] https://defector.com/
|
||||
[130] https://www.twitch.tv/defectormedia
|
||||
[131] https://bsky.app/profile/defector.com
|
||||
[132] https://defector.com/tips
|
||||
[133] https://defector.com/advertise-with-defector
|
||||
[134] https://defector.com/other-stuff
|
||||
[135] https://defector.com/other-stuff
|
||||
[136] https://defector.com/defector-hall-of-fame
|
||||
[137] https://defector.com/masthead
|
||||
[138] https://defector.com/privacy-notice
|
||||
[139] https://defector.com/terms-of-use
|
||||
[140] https://joinlede.com/
|
||||
302
static/archive/interconnected-org-heqhgj.txt
Normal file
302
static/archive/interconnected-org-heqhgj.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,302 @@
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
[1]Interconnected
|
||||
|
||||
A blog by Matt Webb
|
||||
|
||||
• [2]About
|
||||
• [3]Archive
|
||||
• [4]Work
|
||||
|
||||
Subscribe for $0
|
||||
|
||||
• [5]Email
|
||||
• [6]RSS feed
|
||||
• [7](What is a feed?)
|
||||
|
||||
Unoffice Hours
|
||||
|
||||
• [8]Book a call
|
||||
• [9](What is this?)
|
||||
|
||||
a.k.a. genmon
|
||||
|
||||
• [10]Bluesky
|
||||
• [11]X/Twitter
|
||||
• [12]Insta
|
||||
• [13]Mastodon
|
||||
• [14]LinkedIn
|
||||
|
||||
Building the AI clock
|
||||
|
||||
• [15]Check out Poem/1
|
||||
|
||||
Singing the gospel of collective efficacy
|
||||
|
||||
20.01, Friday 30 Jan 2026 [16]Link to this post
|
||||
|
||||
If I got to determine the school curriculum, I would be optimising for
|
||||
collective efficacy.
|
||||
|
||||
So I live in a gentrified but still mixed neighbourhood in London (we’re the
|
||||
newbies at just under a decade) and we have an active WhatsApp group.
|
||||
|
||||
Recently there was a cold snap and a road nearby iced over – it was in the
|
||||
shade and cyclists kept on wiping out on it. For some reason the council didn’t
|
||||
come and salt it.
|
||||
|
||||
Somebody went out and created a sign on a weighted chair so it didn’t blow
|
||||
away. And this is a small thing but I LOVE that I live somewhere there is a
|
||||
shared belief that (a) our neighbourhood is worth spending effort on, and (b)
|
||||
you can just do things.
|
||||
|
||||
Similarly we all love when the swifts visit (beautiful birds), so somebody
|
||||
started a group to get swift nest boxes made and installed collectively, then
|
||||
applied for subsidy funding, then got everyone to chip in such that people who
|
||||
couldn’t afford it could have their boxes paid for, and now suddenly we’re all
|
||||
writing to MPs and following the legislation to include swift nesting sites in
|
||||
new build houses. Etc.
|
||||
|
||||
It’s called collective efficacy, the belief that you can make a difference by
|
||||
acting together.
|
||||
|
||||
(People who have heard of Greta Thunberg tend to [17]have a stronger sense of
|
||||
collective efficacy (2021).)
|
||||
|
||||
It’s so heartening.
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
You can just do things
|
||||
|
||||
That phrase was a Twitter thing for a while, and I haven’t done the archaeology
|
||||
on the phrase but there’s this blog post by Milan Cvitkovic from 2020: [18]
|
||||
Things you’re allowed to do.
|
||||
|
||||
e.g.
|
||||
|
||||
• `Say I don’t know'
|
||||
• `Tape over annoying LED lights'
|
||||
• `Buy goods/services from your friends'
|
||||
|
||||
I read down the list saying to myself, yeah duh of course, to almost every
|
||||
single one, then hit certain ones and was like – oh yeah, I can just do that.
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
I think collective efficacy is maybe 50% taking off the blinkers and giving
|
||||
yourself (as a group) permission to do things.
|
||||
|
||||
But it’s also 50% belief that it’s worth acting at all.
|
||||
|
||||
And that belief is founded part in care, and part in faith that what you are
|
||||
doing can actually make a difference.
|
||||
|
||||
For instance:
|
||||
|
||||
A lot of my belief in the power of government comes from the fact that, back in
|
||||
the day, London’s tech scene was not all that. So in 2009 I worked with
|
||||
Georgina Voss to figure out the gap, then in 2010 bizarrely got invited on a
|
||||
trade mission to India with the Prime Minister and got the opportunity to make
|
||||
the case about east London to them, and based on that No. 10 launched Tech City
|
||||
(which we had named on the plane), and that acted as a catalyst on the work
|
||||
that everyone was already doing to get the cluster going, and then we were off
|
||||
to the races. WIRED magazine wrote it up in 2019: [19]The story of London’s
|
||||
tech scene, as told by those who built it (paywall-busting link).
|
||||
|
||||
So I had that experience and now I believe that, if I can find the right ask,
|
||||
there’s always the possibility to make things better.
|
||||
|
||||
That’s a rare experience. I’m very lucky.
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
ALTHOUGH.
|
||||
|
||||
Should we believe in luck?
|
||||
|
||||
Psychologist Richard Wiseman, [20]The Luck Factor (2003, PDF):
|
||||
|
||||
I gave both [self-identified] lucky and unlucky people a newspaper, and
|
||||
asked them to look through it and tell me how many photographs were inside.
|
||||
On average, the unlucky people took about two minutes to count the
|
||||
photographs whereas the lucky people took just seconds. Why? Because the
|
||||
second page of the newspaper contained the message “Stop counting - There
|
||||
are 43 photographs in this newspaper.”
|
||||
|
||||
`Lucky people generate their own good fortune via four basic principles.'
|
||||
|
||||
They are skilled at creating and noticing chance opportunities, make lucky
|
||||
decisions by listening to their intuition, create self-fulfilling
|
||||
prophesies via positive expectations, and adopt a resilient attitude that
|
||||
transforms bad luck into good.
|
||||
|
||||
I insist that people are not lucky nor unlucky. Maybe some amount of luck is
|
||||
habit?
|
||||
|
||||
You can just be lucky?
|
||||
|
||||
(Well, not absolutely, privilege is big, but maybe let’s recalibrate luck from
|
||||
believing it is entirely random, that’s what I’m saying.)
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
When I was a kid I used to play these unforgivingly impossible video games –
|
||||
that’s what home video games were like then. No open world play, multiple ways
|
||||
to win, or adaptive difficulty. Just pixel-precise platform jumps and timing.
|
||||
|
||||
Yet you always knew that there was a way onto the next screen, however long it
|
||||
took.
|
||||
|
||||
It taught a kind of stubborn optimism.
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
Or, in another context, `No fate but what we make.'
|
||||
|
||||
Same same.
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
All of which makes me ask:
|
||||
|
||||
Could we invent free-to-plan mobile games which train luckiness?
|
||||
|
||||
Are there games for classrooms that would cement a faith in collective efficacy
|
||||
in kids?
|
||||
|
||||
Or maybe it’s proof by demonstration.
|
||||
|
||||
I’m going into my kid’s school in a couple of weeks to show the class photos of
|
||||
what it looks like inside factories. The stuff around us was made by people
|
||||
like us; it’s not divine in origin; factories are just rooms.
|
||||
|
||||
I have faith that - somehow - at some point down the line - this act will help.
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
If you enjoyed this post, please consider sharing it by email or on social
|
||||
media. [21]Here’s the link. Thanks, —Matt.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Most recent posts
|
||||
|
||||
• Singing the gospel of collective efficacy 30 Jan 2026 (This post)
|
||||
• [22]Do today’s work today 23 Jan 2026
|
||||
• [23]The natural home for AI agents is your Reminders app 15 Jan 2026
|
||||
• [24]Real like ghosts or real like celebrities? 9 Jan 2026
|
||||
• [25]My top posts in 2025 3 Jan 2026
|
||||
• [26]More scraps from my notes file 26 Dec 2025
|
||||
• [27]Filtered for conspiracy theories 19 Dec 2025
|
||||
• [28]My new fave thing to go to is algoraves 11 Dec 2025
|
||||
• [29]My mental model of the AI race 5 Dec 2025
|
||||
• [30]Context plumbing 29 Nov 2025
|
||||
• [31]Spinning up a new thing: Inanimate 19 Nov 2025
|
||||
• [32]3 books with Samuel Arbesman 14 Nov 2025
|
||||
|
||||
Continue reading: [33]All in 2025
|
||||
|
||||
streak New posts for 305 consecutive weeks (see: [34]blogging tips)
|
||||
|
||||
New? Start here: [35]Best of 2025 (also [36]2024, [37]2023, [38]2022, [39]2021,
|
||||
[40]2020)
|
||||
Or explore the archives: [41]On this day
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
Archive
|
||||
|
||||
• [42]2026 5 posts
|
||||
• [43]2025 61 posts
|
||||
• [44]2024 60 posts
|
||||
• [45]2023 68 posts
|
||||
• [46]2022 96 posts
|
||||
• [47]2021 128 posts
|
||||
• [48]2020 118 posts
|
||||
• [49]2019 23 posts
|
||||
• [50]2018 47 posts
|
||||
• [51]2017 22 posts
|
||||
• [52]2016 48 posts
|
||||
• [53]2015 88 posts
|
||||
• [54]2014 30 posts
|
||||
• [55]2013 6 posts
|
||||
• [56]2012 27 posts
|
||||
• [57]2011 76 posts
|
||||
• [58]2010 2 posts
|
||||
• [59]2009 2 posts
|
||||
• [60]2008 59 posts
|
||||
• [61]2007 20 posts
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
[62][ ] Search
|
||||
Since February 2000. Copyright © 2026 Matt Webb.
|
||||
|
||||
p.s. here’s [70]my blogroll and the [71]colophon.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
References:
|
||||
|
||||
[1] https://interconnected.org/home/
|
||||
[2] https://interconnected.org/
|
||||
[3] https://interconnected.org/home/2026/01/30/efficacy#archive
|
||||
[4] https://www.actsnotfacts.com/
|
||||
[5] https://buttondown.com/genmon
|
||||
[6] https://interconnected.org/home/feed
|
||||
[7] https://aboutfeeds.com/
|
||||
[8] https://calendly.com/mwie/30min
|
||||
[9] https://interconnected.org/home/2020/09/24/unoffice_hours
|
||||
[10] https://bsky.app/profile/genmon.org
|
||||
[11] https://x.com/genmon
|
||||
[12] https://www.instagram.com/genmon/
|
||||
[13] https://mastodon.social/@genmon
|
||||
[14] https://www.linkedin.com/in/genmon/
|
||||
[15] https://poem.town/
|
||||
[16] https://interconnected.org/home/2026/01/30/efficacy
|
||||
[17] https://interconnected.org/home/2021/04/08/efficacy
|
||||
[18] https://milan.cvitkovic.net/writing/things_youre_allowed_to_do/
|
||||
[19] https://archive.ph/GJrTT
|
||||
[20] http://richardwiseman.com/resources/The_Luck_Factor.pdf
|
||||
[21] https://interconnected.org/home/2026/01/30/efficacy
|
||||
[22] https://interconnected.org/home/2026/01/23/umpa
|
||||
[23] https://interconnected.org/home/2026/01/15/reminders
|
||||
[24] https://interconnected.org/home/2026/01/09/real
|
||||
[25] https://interconnected.org/home/2026/01/03/top-posts
|
||||
[26] https://interconnected.org/home/2025/12/26/scraps
|
||||
[27] https://interconnected.org/home/2025/12/19/filtered
|
||||
[28] https://interconnected.org/home/2025/12/11/live
|
||||
[29] https://interconnected.org/home/2025/12/05/training
|
||||
[30] https://interconnected.org/home/2025/11/28/plumbing
|
||||
[31] https://interconnected.org/home/2025/11/19/inanimate
|
||||
[32] https://interconnected.org/home/2025/11/14/arbesman
|
||||
[33] https://interconnected.org/home/2025
|
||||
[34] https://interconnected.org/home/2020/09/10/streak
|
||||
[35] https://interconnected.org/home/2026/01/03/top-posts
|
||||
[36] https://interconnected.org/home/2024/12/30/top-posts
|
||||
[37] https://interconnected.org/home/2023/12/22/top-posts
|
||||
[38] https://interconnected.org/home/2022/12/21/top_posts
|
||||
[39] https://interconnected.org/home/2021/12/23/top_posts
|
||||
[40] https://interconnected.org/home/2020/12/17/top_posts
|
||||
[41] https://interconnected.org/home/on-this-day
|
||||
[42] https://interconnected.org/home/2026
|
||||
[43] https://interconnected.org/home/2025
|
||||
[44] https://interconnected.org/home/2024
|
||||
[45] https://interconnected.org/home/2023
|
||||
[46] https://interconnected.org/home/2022
|
||||
[47] https://interconnected.org/home/2021
|
||||
[48] https://interconnected.org/home/2020
|
||||
[49] https://interconnected.org/home/2019
|
||||
[50] https://interconnected.org/home/2018
|
||||
[51] https://interconnected.org/home/2017
|
||||
[52] https://interconnected.org/home/2016
|
||||
[53] https://interconnected.org/home/2015
|
||||
[54] https://interconnected.org/home/2014
|
||||
[55] https://interconnected.org/home/2013
|
||||
[56] https://interconnected.org/home/2012
|
||||
[57] https://interconnected.org/home/2011
|
||||
[58] https://interconnected.org/home/2010
|
||||
[59] https://interconnected.org/home/2009
|
||||
[60] https://interconnected.org/home/2008
|
||||
[61] https://interconnected.org/home/2007
|
||||
[70] https://interconnected.org/home/blogroll
|
||||
[71] https://interconnected.org/home/2024/10/28/colophon
|
||||
307
static/archive/javascriptweekly-com-bszyss.txt
Normal file
307
static/archive/javascriptweekly-com-bszyss.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,307 @@
|
||||
[1]JavaScript Weekly
|
||||
[2]Archives| [3]Latest| [4]RSS
|
||||
[5][ ]Subscribe now »
|
||||
Easy to unsubscribe at any time. Your e-mail address [7]is safe — here's [8]our
|
||||
privacy policy.
|
||||
[10]« Prev
|
||||
[11]Next »
|
||||
|
||||
#769 — January 20, 2026 [12]Read on the Web
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Together with [13]Mescius
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
JavaScript Weekly
|
||||
|
||||
[14][wcs3cbapnd4mar9cocya]
|
||||
[15]jQuery 4.0 Released — 20 years on from its original release, the
|
||||
ever-popular ([16]in terms of actual usage) library reaches 4.0 with a
|
||||
migration to ES modules (compatible with modern build tools) along with
|
||||
dropping support for IE 10 and older. With jQuery being a popular guest in our
|
||||
newsletters in the early years, it’s fantastic to see it pop back for a
|
||||
quick visit.
|
||||
|
||||
Timmy Willison
|
||||
|
||||
💡 If you're using jQuery, you'll find [17]jQuery Migrate, an official tool to
|
||||
help you upgrade, useful. jQuery in 2026 is a somewhat legacy choice, though,
|
||||
and [18]you might not need jQuery at all..
|
||||
|
||||
[19][dceb6cf2]
|
||||
|
||||
[20]Add Excel-like Spreadsheet Functionality to Your JavaScript Apps — SpreadJS
|
||||
is the industry-leading JavaScript spreadsheet for adding advanced spreadsheet
|
||||
features to your enterprise apps. Build finance, analysis, budget, and other
|
||||
apps. Excel I/O, 500+ calc functions, tables, charts, and more. [21]View
|
||||
demos now.
|
||||
|
||||
SpreadJS from MESCIUS inc sponsor
|
||||
|
||||
[22]Astro is Joining Cloudflare — Big news in the Web framework space as the
|
||||
team behind [23]the popular Astro framework ([24]the beta of v6.0 is now
|
||||
available) is headed to Cloudflare. Few major frameworks are now not under the
|
||||
wing of a larger entity.
|
||||
|
||||
Schott and Irvine-Broque
|
||||
|
||||
IN BRIEF:
|
||||
|
||||
• 🕒 [25]Temporal Playground is an online sandbox for playing around with the
|
||||
[26]Temporal API.
|
||||
|
||||
• Svelte has released patches for [27]five vulnerabilities affecting the
|
||||
Svelte ecosystem.
|
||||
|
||||
• 🤖 Ryan Dahl, creator of both Node.js and Deno, [28]says on X that "the era
|
||||
of humans writing code is over" and "That's not to say SWEs don't have work
|
||||
to do, but writing syntax directly is not it." I hope not, but these are
|
||||
interesting times!
|
||||
|
||||
RELEASES:
|
||||
|
||||
• [29]Electron 40.0 – The popular cross-platform desktop app framework
|
||||
upgrades to Chromium 144, V8 14.4, and Node 24.11.1.
|
||||
|
||||
• [30]Node.js v25.4.0 (Current) – require(esm) is now marked as stable.
|
||||
|
||||
• [31]React Native Windows 0.81, [32]Aurelia 2 RC, [33]Deno 2.6.5
|
||||
|
||||
📖 Articles and Videos
|
||||
|
||||
[34][jgxwxup4zgn1lvkdjife]
|
||||
[35]ASCII Characters Are Not Pixels: A Deep Dive Into ASCII Rendering — Alex
|
||||
digs deep into getting ASCII-based graphics rendering just right with
|
||||
JavaScript, complete with examples of the algorithms used and numerous demos.
|
||||
The neatest technical blog post I’ve seen so far this year.
|
||||
|
||||
Alex Harri
|
||||
|
||||
[36]JavaScript Now a First-Class Citizen in Aspire — [37]Aspire is a Microsoft
|
||||
framework for orchestrating the deployment of distributed apps. Originally just
|
||||
for .NET, [38]Aspire 13 now makes JavaScript a first-class citizen, so you can
|
||||
run Vite and full-stack JS apps with service discovery, telemetry, and
|
||||
production-ready containers.
|
||||
|
||||
Microsoft
|
||||
|
||||
[39]Breakpoints and console.log Is the Past, Time Travel Is the Future — 15x
|
||||
faster JavaScript debugging than with breakpoints and console.log, supports
|
||||
Vitest, jest, Karma, Jasmine, and more.
|
||||
|
||||
Wallaby Team sponsor
|
||||
|
||||
[40]Introducing the <geolocation> Element — Chrome 144 introduces a new
|
||||
<geolocation> element for requesting user location data, moving away from a
|
||||
JavaScript-triggered prompt.
|
||||
|
||||
Viana, Le, Steiner
|
||||
|
||||
📄 [41]Bootstrapping Bun – “My journey running the build system for Bun …
|
||||
without relying on any of its usual binary dependencies — namely itself.”
|
||||
Bradley Walters
|
||||
|
||||
📄 [42]Building a Scroll-Driven Dual-Wave Text Animation with GSAP Valentin
|
||||
Descombes
|
||||
|
||||
📄 [43]How the Electron Team Improved Window Resize Behavior Niklas Wenzel
|
||||
|
||||
📄 [44]How to Learn to Build Apps in 2026 Eric Elliott
|
||||
|
||||
🛠 Code & Tools
|
||||
|
||||
[45][sp5w3urjw73n3rnjqoai]
|
||||
[46]Starry Night 3.9: GitHub-Like Syntax Highlighting — GitHub’s own syntax
|
||||
highlighter isn’t open source, but this library is a powerful alternative that
|
||||
tries to get as close as it can, with support for hundreds of languages. I’ve
|
||||
[47]put a basic Web demo here to show off how to use it on the Web.
|
||||
|
||||
Titus Wormer
|
||||
|
||||
[48]Extension.js 3: Browser Extension Development Framework — Create
|
||||
cross-browser extensions without manual build configuration and develop, build,
|
||||
and preview across browsers with a unified workflow. [49]GitHub repo.
|
||||
|
||||
Cezar Augusto et al.
|
||||
|
||||
[50]Easily Add Image Editing to your Web App — Import pintura, give it an
|
||||
image, and instantly get features like cropping, rotating, and annotation. [51]
|
||||
Try for free today.
|
||||
|
||||
Pintura sponsor
|
||||
|
||||
[52]React Aria: Adobe's World-Class React Components — React Aria has a
|
||||
fantastic new site and all-new documentation that really sells the entire
|
||||
experience, complete with interactive CSS and Tailwind examples to get started
|
||||
quickly.
|
||||
|
||||
Adobe
|
||||
|
||||
[53]localspace: Modern localForage-Compatible Storage Toolkit — [54]localForage
|
||||
is/was a popular storage library that wrapped various browser storage APIs with
|
||||
a simple, localStorage-like API. It hasn’t been updated for years, though, and
|
||||
“localspace exists to bridge that gap”.
|
||||
|
||||
Michael Lin
|
||||
|
||||
• ⭐ [55]p5.js v2.2 – The powerful JavaScript visual/creative coding toolkit
|
||||
now includes WebGPU mode as a core feature ([56]explained well here and
|
||||
[57]here).
|
||||
|
||||
• 🎥 [58]Mediabunny 1.29.0 – The TypeScript media toolkit adds support for
|
||||
reading and writing MPEG Transport Stream (.ts) files. [59]Demo site.
|
||||
|
||||
• [60]Prettier 3.8 – The opinionated code formatter adds full support for
|
||||
[61]Angular 21.1 which was released last week.
|
||||
|
||||
• [62]LogTape 2.0 – Simple logging library for all major JS runtimes. [63]
|
||||
Changelog.
|
||||
|
||||
• ☎︎ [64]vue-tel-input 9.6 – Telephone number input for Vue. ([65]Demo.)
|
||||
|
||||
• [66]d3-3d 2.0 – D3-powered visualizations, but projected into 3D.
|
||||
|
||||
• [67]Convert 6.0 – Small, fast library for type-safe unit conversions.
|
||||
|
||||
• [68]SuperDiff 4.0 – Rich readable diffs for arrays and objects.
|
||||
|
||||
• [69]Jasmine 6.0 – Long-standing JavaScript BDD framework.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
📰 Classifieds
|
||||
|
||||
🔑 [70]Add API key auth to any JS backend. Clerk handles generation, hashing,
|
||||
scopes, and instant revocation. [71]Free during public beta.
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
Notion, Dropbox and LaunchDarkly have switched to [72]Meticulous for frontend
|
||||
tests that provide near-exhaustive coverage with zero developer effort. [73]
|
||||
Find out why.
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
🛠️ Auth0 for AI Agents provides a foundation for developers to build AI agents
|
||||
without compromising security or innovation. [74]Start building.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
📢 Elsewhere in the ecosystem
|
||||
|
||||
Some other interesting tidbits in the broader landscape:
|
||||
|
||||
[75][ry47g3jm8zcchbvpn3ga]
|
||||
• 🔎 The VS Code team has put together a fascinating blog post about [76]how
|
||||
they implemented a new, fast client-side docs search system for the VS Code
|
||||
site using Rust and WebAssembly. You can use their [77]docfind engine for
|
||||
yourself too, and [78]there's a live demo here showing off how fast it is
|
||||
over an index of 50,000 news articles.
|
||||
|
||||
• 📊 HTTP Archive has released its [79]latest Web Almanac for 2025 packed with
|
||||
raw stats, trends, and observations about the state of the Web over the
|
||||
past year, covering areas like [80]WebAssembly, [81]performance, and
|
||||
ever-increasing [82]page weight.
|
||||
|
||||
• A developer makes [83]a prediction that Microsoft will eventually
|
||||
discontinue Windows in favor of a Windows-themed Linux distribution.
|
||||
|
||||
• Things are [84]not looking good for the MySQL project.
|
||||
|
||||
• [85]The State of WebAssembly in 2025 and 2026.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
[86]« Prev
|
||||
[87]Next »
|
||||
[88][ ]Subscribe now »
|
||||
Easy to unsubscribe at any time. Your e-mail address [90]is safe — here's [91]
|
||||
our privacy policy.
|
||||
[web]
|
||||
|
||||
References:
|
||||
|
||||
[1] https://javascriptweekly.com/
|
||||
[2] https://javascriptweekly.com/issues
|
||||
[3] https://javascriptweekly.com/latest
|
||||
[4] https://javascriptweekly.com/rss/
|
||||
[7] https://cooperpress.com/spam.html
|
||||
[8] https://cooperpress.com/legal/privacy/
|
||||
[10] https://javascriptweekly.com/issues/768
|
||||
[11] https://javascriptweekly.com/issues/770
|
||||
[12] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179441/web
|
||||
[13] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179442/web
|
||||
[14] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179443/web
|
||||
[15] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179443/web
|
||||
[16] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179444/web
|
||||
[17] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179445/web
|
||||
[18] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179446/web
|
||||
[19] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179442/web
|
||||
[20] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179442/web
|
||||
[21] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179442/web
|
||||
[22] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179447/web
|
||||
[23] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179448/web
|
||||
[24] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179449/web
|
||||
[25] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179450/web
|
||||
[26] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179451/web
|
||||
[27] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179452/web
|
||||
[28] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179453/web
|
||||
[29] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179454/web
|
||||
[30] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179455/web
|
||||
[31] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179456/web
|
||||
[32] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179457/web
|
||||
[33] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179458/web
|
||||
[34] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179459/web
|
||||
[35] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179459/web
|
||||
[36] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179460/web
|
||||
[37] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179461/web
|
||||
[38] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179462/web
|
||||
[39] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179463/web
|
||||
[40] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179464/web
|
||||
[41] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179465/web
|
||||
[42] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179466/web
|
||||
[43] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179505/web
|
||||
[44] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179467/web
|
||||
[45] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179468/web
|
||||
[46] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179468/web
|
||||
[47] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179469/web
|
||||
[48] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179470/web
|
||||
[49] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179471/web
|
||||
[50] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179472/web
|
||||
[51] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179472/web
|
||||
[52] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179473/web
|
||||
[53] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179474/web
|
||||
[54] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179475/web
|
||||
[55] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179476/web
|
||||
[56] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179477/web
|
||||
[57] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179478/web
|
||||
[58] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179479/web
|
||||
[59] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179480/web
|
||||
[60] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179481/web
|
||||
[61] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179482/web
|
||||
[62] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179483/web
|
||||
[63] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179484/web
|
||||
[64] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179485/web
|
||||
[65] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179486/web
|
||||
[66] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179487/web
|
||||
[67] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179488/web
|
||||
[68] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179489/web
|
||||
[69] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179490/web
|
||||
[70] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179491/web
|
||||
[71] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179491/web
|
||||
[72] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179492/web
|
||||
[73] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179492/web
|
||||
[74] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179493/web
|
||||
[75] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179494/web
|
||||
[76] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179494/web
|
||||
[77] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179495/web
|
||||
[78] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179496/web
|
||||
[79] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179497/web
|
||||
[80] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179498/web
|
||||
[81] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179499/web
|
||||
[82] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179500/web
|
||||
[83] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179501/web
|
||||
[84] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179502/web
|
||||
[85] https://javascriptweekly.com/link/179503/web
|
||||
[86] https://javascriptweekly.com/issues/768
|
||||
[87] https://javascriptweekly.com/issues/770
|
||||
[90] https://cooperpress.com/spam.html
|
||||
[91] https://cooperpress.com/legal/privacy/
|
||||
501
static/archive/milan-cvitkovic-net-aqgldo.txt
Normal file
501
static/archive/milan-cvitkovic-net-aqgldo.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,501 @@
|
||||
• [1]Writing
|
||||
|
||||
• [2]Science
|
||||
|
||||
• [3]About
|
||||
|
||||
Things you're allowed to do
|
||||
|
||||
December 13, 2020, updated January 9, 2023
|
||||
|
||||
This is a list of things you’re allowed to do that you thought you weren’t, or
|
||||
didn’t even know you could.
|
||||
|
||||
I haven’t tried everything on this list, mainly due to cost. But you’d be
|
||||
surprised how cheap most of the things on this list are (especially the free
|
||||
ones).
|
||||
|
||||
Note that you can replace “hire” or “buy” with “barter for” or “find a DIY
|
||||
guide to” nearly everywhere below. E.g. you can clean the bathroom in exchange
|
||||
for your housemate doing a couple hours’ research for you.
|
||||
|
||||
Learning and decision making
|
||||
|
||||
• Hire a researcher or expert consultant
|
||||
□ I hired a researcher ([4]Elizabeth Van Nostrand, whom you can and
|
||||
should [5]hire too) to help write this very post, which is largely
|
||||
about how to hire people to do things!
|
||||
□ They can:
|
||||
☆ Help validate whether a crazy idea is possible
|
||||
☆ Do [6]epistemic spot checks of your work
|
||||
☆ Map the landscape of opinions on a topic
|
||||
☆ Write literature surveys
|
||||
☆ Find people worth talking to about a potential topic and writing
|
||||
briefs about them
|
||||
☆ Opposition or market research
|
||||
☆ Find options for big purchases like houses or insurance
|
||||
☆ Compile datasets
|
||||
☆ Find un-Googleable things
|
||||
□ To find one:
|
||||
☆ Look for books or scholarly articles on the topic, and email the
|
||||
author
|
||||
○ Graduate students are especially good, and often know more than
|
||||
the “experts”
|
||||
○ If you find someone genuinely interested in what you’re working
|
||||
on, you might be able to collaborate and not pay
|
||||
☆ Look for interested individuals in the long tail of blogs
|
||||
○ E.g. by Google searching with "site: medium.com" and finding
|
||||
the authors
|
||||
☆ Use a matchmaking service (see [7]Appendix)
|
||||
☆ Search through professional organizations directories (e.g. Bar
|
||||
Association, American Academy of Pediatrics)
|
||||
☆ Google the topic +
|
||||
○ “blog”
|
||||
○ “podcast”
|
||||
○ “expert witness”
|
||||
○ “book”
|
||||
○ “consultant”
|
||||
○ “reddit”
|
||||
□ What do I pay them?
|
||||
☆ Some post their prices online
|
||||
☆ If you’re hiring a grad student you can pay them at or above their
|
||||
school’s graduate student stipend, which you can Google.
|
||||
☆ [8]Make sure they get something out of the project (and other tips)
|
||||
• [9]Ask obvious questions
|
||||
• Ask questions online
|
||||
□ You know those answers you enjoy reading on Stack Exchange, Reddit,
|
||||
Quora, etc.? Someone had to ask those questions. It can be you.
|
||||
□ If you’re embarrassed by the question, it’s easy to be anonymous
|
||||
• Run surveys
|
||||
□ Twitter
|
||||
☆ Or ask someone with a larger following to do it
|
||||
□ Google Surveys
|
||||
□ Amazon Mechanical Turk
|
||||
• Buy advertisements, [10]especially in legacy media
|
||||
• Run [11]genuine randomized control trials on yourself
|
||||
• Buy research or data
|
||||
□ See [12]Appendix, [13]here, or [14]here
|
||||
□ Or find it on [15]SciHub or [16]Libgen
|
||||
• Hire someone to pentest/doxx you
|
||||
□ Or put out a bounty for it, like [17]Gwern used to
|
||||
• Hire a graphic designer to turn your appalling sketches into beautiful
|
||||
diagrams or slides
|
||||
• Host small gatherings or conferences on topics you care about
|
||||
□ These are much easier to set up than you’d think, especially in the age
|
||||
of Zoom
|
||||
• Hire a tutor
|
||||
□ [18]Language tutors are surprisingly cheap and better than any app
|
||||
□ [19]Wyzant and many other sites exist for general tutoring
|
||||
□ For niche tutoring you can try general freelance sites like [20]Fiverr
|
||||
or [21]Upwork
|
||||
□ Services like [22]Sharpest Minds exist for professional training
|
||||
• [23]Dissect a cadaver (even as a non-medical student)
|
||||
• Pick a spot on the map that simply seems strange and just go there. (HT
|
||||
Michael Nielsen)
|
||||
• Hire someone just as an excuse to make yourself complete a project
|
||||
□ Sure you could proofread your own document. But if you hire a
|
||||
proofreader, you have to actually deliver them something at some point.
|
||||
|
||||
Interpersonal
|
||||
|
||||
• Say “I don’t know” or “I don’t have an opinion” when you don’t
|
||||
• Not tell white lies
|
||||
□ You can be nice and tell the truth at the same time.
|
||||
□ Especially to kids when they annoy you.
|
||||
• Don’t drink (alcohol), even when you’re expected to
|
||||
• Buy goods/services from your friends
|
||||
□ It’s not weird unless you make it weird
|
||||
□ Everyone knows some starving artists and needs to buy holiday gifts
|
||||
□ Doesn’t apply to every service obviously: don’t take out loans from
|
||||
your friends
|
||||
• Travel to friends just to visit them
|
||||
• Move close to friends
|
||||
• Live in multiple places with multiple people
|
||||
□ Rent spare rooms or couches part-time in multiple homes
|
||||
□ Arrange your own timeshare system with friends
|
||||
☆ E.g. a group of nine friends can rent three three-bedroom
|
||||
apartments in three cities
|
||||
☆ This also gives you flexibility over which jurisdiction you’re
|
||||
taxed in
|
||||
• Be a nomad
|
||||
• Ask your acquaintances, “Hey, I want to leave my house more, are there any
|
||||
cool events you’re going to soon?” (HT Sasha Chapin)
|
||||
• Actively try to make yourself a better conversation partner
|
||||
□ Via [24]Sasha Chapin
|
||||
□ Via [25]Chana Messinger
|
||||
□ Via [26]Adam Mastroianni
|
||||
• Start a blog or substack so you can say “I’m a writer” without lying. Then
|
||||
start conversations with strangers by saying “Hi, I’m a writer doing a
|
||||
piece about <location/circumstance you’re in>. Can I ask you a few
|
||||
questions?”
|
||||
□ This is especially handy when traveling or at a restaurant.
|
||||
• Romance
|
||||
□ Ask people out on dates
|
||||
□ Ask your friends to set you up
|
||||
□ Hire a matchmaker
|
||||
□ Buy premium versions of dating apps
|
||||
□ Get couples therapy
|
||||
• Give to charity
|
||||
□ You can, to the best of our knowledge, [27]save someone’s (statistical)
|
||||
life with not that much money. This is a big deal.
|
||||
|
||||
Support and accountability
|
||||
|
||||
• Hire a coach
|
||||
□ For your professional area
|
||||
☆ [28]An Atul Gawande article on the subject
|
||||
☆ [29]On clicker training
|
||||
□ Personal trainer
|
||||
□ Nutritionist
|
||||
□ Meditation guide
|
||||
• Visit a physical therapist
|
||||
• Buy task-specific devices that prevent multitasking
|
||||
□ Kindle
|
||||
□ Freewrite Traveller
|
||||
□ Dedicated music players
|
||||
□ Dedicated notebooks for specific purposes (day planner, exercise log,
|
||||
etc.)
|
||||
• Engage a human productivity monitor
|
||||
□ I know two people who have hired people to sit next to them or
|
||||
frequently contact them to keep them on-task
|
||||
□ Examples: [30]focusmate.com and [31]coding-pal.com
|
||||
|
||||
Making the most of your resources
|
||||
|
||||
• First, figure out [32]how much your time is really worth to you, and then
|
||||
act/spend accordingly
|
||||
• Modify your stuff
|
||||
□ Tape over annoying LED lights
|
||||
□ Remove logos ([33]example)
|
||||
□ Write in books
|
||||
□ Rip off tags
|
||||
□ Rotate your monitor to portrait
|
||||
• Repair your stuff, or get it repaired
|
||||
□ Shoes
|
||||
□ Clothes
|
||||
□ Luggage and [34]outdoor gear
|
||||
□ Furniture
|
||||
□ Car
|
||||
☆ You can buy at-home car care
|
||||
• Grocery delivery
|
||||
• Cleaning services
|
||||
□ Can be regular or just when you need a big spring clean
|
||||
□ Don’t forget carpet cleaning, vent cleaning, and air filter replacement
|
||||
• Laundry service
|
||||
• Nannies over daycare
|
||||
• Write on a post-it note affixed to a greeting card rather than on the
|
||||
greeting card itself, so the recipient can throw away the post-it and reuse
|
||||
your card
|
||||
□ Employ similar logic for any disposable/consumable item
|
||||
• Ask for free upgrades or coupons
|
||||
□ At checkout you can just ask “Do you have any coupons I can apply to
|
||||
this?”
|
||||
• Treat fines like payments
|
||||
□ E.g. park illegally and let yourself think of the (expected value of
|
||||
the) fine as a parking fee
|
||||
□ Obviously don’t break rules that matter like blocking a fire exit
|
||||
• [35]Contest unjust fines
|
||||
□ [36]DoNotPay offers lots of services like this, like unsubscribing you
|
||||
from services or sending faxes digitally
|
||||
• Don’t pay, or renegotiate, bills
|
||||
□ [37]Example with hospital bills
|
||||
• Let the credit cards on recurring bills expire
|
||||
• Call/email executives at company to complain about things
|
||||
□ E.g. using [38]RocketReach
|
||||
• Telemedicine
|
||||
• Surgery for appearance or comfort
|
||||
• At-home vet care
|
||||
• Enroll [39]yourself (or [40]your pet) in a clinical trial or research study
|
||||
• Generate your own audiobooks
|
||||
• Generate your own ebooks
|
||||
□ [41]1dollarscan.com
|
||||
• Get verbal things written down
|
||||
□ [42]transcribeme.com
|
||||
□ [43]otter.ai
|
||||
• Personal assistant services (or a real PA if you can afford it)
|
||||
□ [44]Magic, [45]TaskRabbit, [46]Fancy Hands, and similar services can
|
||||
approximate many of these. There are also more serious services like
|
||||
[47]Double.
|
||||
□ Manage email
|
||||
□ Helping you move
|
||||
□ Getting visas and arranging travel
|
||||
□ Stand in line for you
|
||||
□ Errands
|
||||
□ Filing paperwork
|
||||
• Hire a personal stylist
|
||||
• And if you grew up in a thrifty family, like me:
|
||||
□ Paying for parking in convenient location
|
||||
□ Hotels where you can sleep comfortably
|
||||
□ Non-public transportation, especially when traveling
|
||||
□ Buying comfortable mattress, shoes, etc.
|
||||
□ Buying clothes for appearance or comfort instead of just the lowest
|
||||
price
|
||||
□ Bottled water when you’re thirsty
|
||||
☆ And in general fulfilling any bodily need for < $5 (restrooms,
|
||||
buying a hat when you forgot yours, etc.)
|
||||
□ Buy your way out of advertising on e.g. Spotify or YouTube
|
||||
□ Actually turn the heat/AC on
|
||||
☆ And in general, [48]being willing to spend a few minutes to fix
|
||||
small annoyances
|
||||
○ You could even get someone to observe you to help figure this
|
||||
out
|
||||
☆ Seriously, just put 3-IN-ONE oil on that squeaky hinge already
|
||||
|
||||
Professional
|
||||
|
||||
• Ignore what’s on the jobs page and directly pitch someone at a company on
|
||||
hiring you
|
||||
□ The jobs page is always out-of-date anyway
|
||||
□ Figure out what their needs are before you make your pitch
|
||||
• Negotiate for better terms in your job offer
|
||||
□ Easier than asking for a raise - you have more leverage
|
||||
□ You can ask for a signing bonus equal to the cost of exercising all
|
||||
your options, which shows commitment to the company
|
||||
□ Propose a longer vesting schedule to demonstrate commitment
|
||||
• Ask for a raise
|
||||
• Ask to waive admission or graduation requirements
|
||||
• Drop out/quit your job
|
||||
□ Or go on leave from your job/school until they kick you out. They often
|
||||
won’t.
|
||||
• Live off your savings while trying something new
|
||||
• If you can’t live off your savings, get a grant
|
||||
□ [49]Emergent Ventures
|
||||
□ [50]ACX Grants
|
||||
□ Kickstarter
|
||||
□ These days there are always new microgrant programs starting, [51]
|
||||
here’s one list
|
||||
• Work for yourself
|
||||
□ Coaching, contracting, etc.
|
||||
• [52]Cold contact people
|
||||
□ Yes, even famous people. Or anyone who wrote something you like. Just
|
||||
make sure you have something to say or a good question.
|
||||
• [53]Write forwardable emails
|
||||
• [54]Follow up many times
|
||||
□ You won’t make people mad if you’re polite.
|
||||
• Approach a person or group you admire and ask whether they want to cofound
|
||||
something with you
|
||||
□ “Here’s my story, my goal is to build a company/nonprofit/whatever in
|
||||
this space, maybe I can help you with X role.”
|
||||
• Propose that a person, group, or company contract-to-hire you
|
||||
□ Even if you want a cofounder role, this can be done well
|
||||
• Learn how professionals email by [55]reading leaked emails.
|
||||
• Use contract-to-hire
|
||||
□ Even for CEO-level roles, this can be done well
|
||||
• As mentioned above, buy [56]research or data, e.g. for compensation
|
||||
• Market-test a mere idea by (1) setting up a landing page with an interest
|
||||
form and (2) buying a cheap social media ad campaign. (HT [57]@daytimeskye)
|
||||
• Merge with your competitors, a la PayPal
|
||||
• Work in public
|
||||
□ Or mostly in public, a la SpaceX who livestreams everything
|
||||
• Sell to unusual markets
|
||||
□ ZetrOZ was building a medical device, but started by selling to olympic
|
||||
horse teams, then olympic human athletes
|
||||
□ Some biotech companies start in pets
|
||||
• Charge more
|
||||
• Write interviews with yourself and send them to journalists (HT Tom Kalil)
|
||||
• Fly to people for in-person meetings/visits to demonstrate seriousness
|
||||
• In general, just ask for things, even if you’ve never heard someone ask for
|
||||
them
|
||||
□ It’s okay if the things are crazy. You can always mollify afterward by
|
||||
saying “I know that’s a crazy thing to ask for, but I have a rule that
|
||||
I always ask.”
|
||||
|
||||
Related, Probably Better Lists
|
||||
|
||||
• Dwarkesh Patel’s [58]list of “barbell strategies”
|
||||
• Katja Grace’s [59]How to trade money and time
|
||||
• Sam Bowman’s [60]Things I Recommend You Buy and Use
|
||||
• Rob Wiblin [61]channeling Sam
|
||||
• Arden Koehler [62]channeling Rob
|
||||
• Arden Koehler [63]channeling herself
|
||||
• Sam Bowman [64]channeling himself
|
||||
• [65]Estimated hourly costs of buying free time (see comments)
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
Thanks to [66]Gwern, [67]Stephen Malina, [68]Alexey Guzey, [69]Elliot Jin, [70]
|
||||
iandanforth, [71]Joshua M. Clulow, [72]Kay, [73]zoba, [74]ryandrake, a guy I
|
||||
can’t name who offers “personal assistant concierge services for high-net-worth
|
||||
families,” and [75]Elizabeth Van Nostrand for some of the ideas above.
|
||||
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
|
||||
Appendix: Sources of experts
|
||||
|
||||
Name Type Comments Target URL
|
||||
Audience
|
||||
Expertise Academics to comment on many Journalists [76]
|
||||
Finder subjects link
|
||||
Women’s Media Women only, focuses on [77]
|
||||
Center current events and politics Journalists link
|
||||
SheSource
|
||||
National
|
||||
Association of Seems like a low [78]
|
||||
Personal Financial only bar to entry Journalists link
|
||||
Financial
|
||||
Advisors
|
||||
Owned by PR firm,
|
||||
ProfNet Wide range of experts presumably works Journalists [79]
|
||||
for experts more link
|
||||
than you
|
||||
Presumably biased
|
||||
Coursera Academics from top schools towards people who Journalists [80]
|
||||
Expert Network only have made Coursera link
|
||||
courses
|
||||
Curated experts from
|
||||
ExpertFile universities, institutions, Journalists [81]
|
||||
think tanks, associations, link
|
||||
companies and other sources
|
||||
Aimed mostly at professional [82]
|
||||
GURU expertise (Sales, Marketing, Businesses link
|
||||
Eng, etc.)
|
||||
Amber Biology Biologists only Science [83]
|
||||
projects? link
|
||||
Help a Requires
|
||||
Reporter Out affiliation with a Journalists [84]
|
||||
(HARO) highly ranked link
|
||||
website
|
||||
Self
|
||||
Improvement Individuals [85]
|
||||
Experts link
|
||||
Directory
|
||||
JurisPro Expert witnesses Lawyers [86]
|
||||
link
|
||||
ForensisGroup Expert witnesses Lawyers [87]
|
||||
link
|
||||
Expert Expert witnesses Lawyers [88]
|
||||
Institute link
|
||||
|
||||
Appendix: Sources of research and data
|
||||
|
||||
• Top choices:
|
||||
□ [89]IBIS
|
||||
□ [90]Profound
|
||||
□ [91]Research Monitor
|
||||
□ [92]EuroMonitor
|
||||
• [93]Inside View
|
||||
• [94]US Census Data
|
||||
• [95]SBA’s Office of Entrepreneurship Education Resources
|
||||
• [96]Pew Research Center
|
||||
• [97]Statista
|
||||
• [98]marketresearch.com
|
||||
• [99]Plunkett Research
|
||||
• [100]The Market Intelligence Co.
|
||||
• [101]Jinfo
|
||||
• [102]IDC
|
||||
• [103]Gartner
|
||||
• [104]Pitchbook
|
||||
• [105]Crunchbase
|
||||
• [106]Option Impact salary information
|
||||
• [107]The Venture Capital Executive Compensation Survey
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
References:
|
||||
|
||||
[1] https://milan.cvitkovic.net/writing/
|
||||
[2] https://milan.cvitkovic.net/science/
|
||||
[3] https://milan.cvitkovic.net/about/
|
||||
[4] https://acesounderglass.com/
|
||||
[5] https://acesounderglass.com/hire-me/
|
||||
[6] https://acesounderglass.com/tag/epistemicspotcheck/
|
||||
[7] https://milan.cvitkovic.net/writing/things_youre_allowed_to_do/#appendix-sources-of-experts
|
||||
[8] https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/evyBmPw9ZnzmoFmP6/experiment-a-good-researcher-is-hard-to-find
|
||||
[9] http://mindingourway.com/obvious-advice/
|
||||
[10] https://www.news10.com/news/national/90-year-old-man-spends-10k-on-ads-to-tell-att-ceo-about-his-slow-internet-service/
|
||||
[11] https://www.gwern.net/Nootropics#blinding-yourself
|
||||
[12] https://milan.cvitkovic.net/writing/things_youre_allowed_to_do/#appendix-sources-of-research
|
||||
[13] https://blog.alexa.com/sites-for-market-research/
|
||||
[14] https://web.jinfo.com/go/blog/73431
|
||||
[15] https://twitter.com/Sci_Hub
|
||||
[16] https://twitter.com/libgen_project
|
||||
[17] https://www.gwern.net/Blackmail#pseudonymity-bounty
|
||||
[18] https://www.italki.com/
|
||||
[19] https://www.wyzant.com/
|
||||
[20] https://www.fiverr.com/
|
||||
[21] https://www.upwork.com/
|
||||
[22] https://www.sharpestminds.com/
|
||||
[23] https://alok.github.io/2022/11/09/dissection/
|
||||
[24] https://sashachapin.substack.com/p/making-normal-conversations-better
|
||||
[25] https://twitter.com/ChanaMessinger/status/1463160594941554696
|
||||
[26] https://experimentalhistory.substack.com/p/good-conversations-have-lots-of-doorknobs
|
||||
[27] https://www.givewell.org/giving101/Your-dollar-goes-further-overseas
|
||||
[28] https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2011/10/03/personal-best
|
||||
[29] https://www.npr.org/2020/02/03/802422904/when-things-click-the-power-of-judgment-free-learning
|
||||
[30] https://www.focusmate.com/
|
||||
[31] https://coding-pal.com/
|
||||
[32] https://programs.clearerthinking.org/what_is_your_time_really_worth_to_you.html
|
||||
[33] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WVeGDitPqKo
|
||||
[34] https://rainypass.com/
|
||||
[35] https://donotpay.com/
|
||||
[36] https://donotpay.com/
|
||||
[37] https://twitter.com/SievaKozinsky/status/1343664550617305088
|
||||
[38] https://rocketreach.co/
|
||||
[39] https://www.dummies.com/health/how-to-enroll-in-a-clinical-trial/
|
||||
[40] https://loyalfordogs.com/
|
||||
[41] https://1dollarscan.com/
|
||||
[42] https://transcribeme.com/
|
||||
[43] https://otter.ai/
|
||||
[44] https://getmagic.com/
|
||||
[45] https://www.taskrabbit.com/
|
||||
[46] https://www.fancyhands.com/
|
||||
[47] https://withdouble.com/
|
||||
[48] https://radimentary.wordpress.com/2018/01/29/hammertime-day-1-bug-hunt/
|
||||
[49] https://www.mercatus.org/emergent-ventures
|
||||
[50] https://astralcodexten.substack.com/p/apply-for-an-acx-grant
|
||||
[51] https://github.com/nayafia/microgrants
|
||||
[52] https://guzey.com/personal/what-should-you-do-with-your-life/#cold-emails-and-twitter
|
||||
[53] https://www.startuphacks.vc/blog/2015/06/24/how-to-write-a-forwardable-introduction-email
|
||||
[54] https://guzey.com/follow-up/
|
||||
[55] https://twitter.com/TechEmails
|
||||
[56] https://milan.cvitkovic.net/writing/things_youre_allowed_to_do/#appendix-sources-of-research
|
||||
[57] https://twitter.com/daytimeskye/status/1608107407678349317
|
||||
[58] https://web.archive.org/web/20220309155302/https://dwarkeshpatel.com/barbell-strategies/
|
||||
[59] https://meteuphoric.com/2014/03/25/how-to-trade-money-and-time/
|
||||
[60] https://medium.com/@s8mb/things-i-recommend-you-buy-and-use-second-edition-457a8e7163f6
|
||||
[61] https://medium.com/@robertwiblin/things-i-recommend-you-buy-and-use-rob-edition-1d7b2ce27d68
|
||||
[62] https://www.facebook.com/ardenlk/posts/10156553178262333
|
||||
[63] https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ZrSzGLuwIEWeQJ_2zL5vpYDyV-LmC-8SBy-Q4WPF318/edit
|
||||
[64] https://sambowman.substack.com/p/things-i-recommend-you-buy-2020-sam-bowman
|
||||
[65] https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/KuFSkLwhSkEZJYALE/collating-widely-available-time-money-trades
|
||||
[66] https://www.gwern.net/
|
||||
[67] https://twitter.com/an1lam
|
||||
[68] https://twitter.com/alexeyguzey
|
||||
[69] https://twitter.com/robot__dreams
|
||||
[70] https://twitter.com/iandanforth
|
||||
[71] https://twitter.com/jmclulow
|
||||
[72] https://twitter.com/K4y1s
|
||||
[73] https://news.ycombinator.com/user?id=zoba
|
||||
[74] https://news.ycombinator.com/user?id=ryandrake
|
||||
[75] https://acesounderglass.com/
|
||||
[76] https://expertisefinder.com/
|
||||
[77] https://www.womensmediacenter.com/shesource/
|
||||
[78] https://www.napfa.org/newsroom
|
||||
[79] https://profnet.prnewswire.com/ProfNetHome/What-is-Profnet.aspx
|
||||
[80] https://experts.coursera.org/
|
||||
[81] https://expertfile.com/
|
||||
[82] https://www.guru.com/
|
||||
[83] https://www.amberbiology.com/
|
||||
[84] https://www.helpareporter.com/
|
||||
[85] https://www.selfgrowth.com/experts.html
|
||||
[86] https://www.jurispro.com/
|
||||
[87] https://www.forensisgroup.com/
|
||||
[88] https://www.expertinstitute.com/
|
||||
[89] https://www.ibisworld.com/
|
||||
[90] https://profound.com/
|
||||
[91] https://www.eifl.net/e-resources/research-monitor
|
||||
[92] https://www.euromonitor.com/store
|
||||
[93] https://www.insideview.com/
|
||||
[94] https://www.census.gov/
|
||||
[95] https://www.sba.gov/offices/headquarters/oee/resources/2836
|
||||
[96] http://www.pewresearch.org/
|
||||
[97] https://www.statista.com/
|
||||
[98] https://www.marketresearch.com/
|
||||
[99] https://www.plunkettresearch.com/how-to-buy/
|
||||
[100] https://market-intelligence.com.au/
|
||||
[101] https://www.jinfo.com/
|
||||
[102] https://www.idc.com/
|
||||
[103] https://www.gartner.com/en
|
||||
[104] https://pitchbook.com/
|
||||
[105] https://www.crunchbase.com/
|
||||
[106] https://www.optionimpact.com/
|
||||
[107] https://www.advanced-hr.com/VCECS
|
||||
714
static/archive/om-co-i3epdl.txt
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714
static/archive/om-co-i3epdl.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,714 @@
|
||||
[1]Skip to content
|
||||
[2]Site Logo for om.co
|
||||
|
||||
[3]On my Om
|
||||
|
||||
Technology & Change: Field Notes From The Present Future
|
||||
|
||||
• [4]About Om
|
||||
• Search
|
||||
|
||||
[5] January 21, 2026
|
||||
|
||||
Velocity Is the New Authority. Here’s Why
|
||||
|
||||
Why does everyone feel overwhelmed by information? Why does it feel impossible
|
||||
to trust what passes through our streams? We tend to blame individual
|
||||
publications, specific platforms, or bad actors. The real answer has less to do
|
||||
with any single media entity and more with structural changes in the
|
||||
information ecosystem.
|
||||
|
||||
I started my “information” life typing copy on an ill-tempered Remington. As
|
||||
a teenage reporter, I saw newspapers being typeset, one letter at a time. It
|
||||
was a messy, slow, and laborious process. So I don’t carry romantic
|
||||
notions about the old days. I’ve been quick to embrace any technology that,
|
||||
in Stephen Covey’s words, helps me keep “the main thing the main thing.” The
|
||||
main thing is telling a thoroughly reported, well-written story.
|
||||
|
||||
The early 1990s Internet, followed by blogging at the turn of the century, and
|
||||
social media a decade later all helped me do that main thing. In the mid-2000s
|
||||
I embraced Dave Winer’s mantra of “sources going direct.” As far back as
|
||||
2009, I outlined the coming changes in my essays “[6]How Internet Content
|
||||
Distribution and Discovery Are Changing” and “[7]Amplification and the Changing
|
||||
Role of Media.”
|
||||
|
||||
For the past decade and a half, the whole information ecosystem has become much
|
||||
larger, faster and noisier. It is hardly surprising that nothing works. And we
|
||||
feel a collective sense of overwhelming disappointment.
|
||||
|
||||
So, why does nothing work?
|
||||
|
||||
Authority used to be the organizing principle of information, and
|
||||
thus the media. You earned attention by being right, by being first
|
||||
in discovery, or by being big enough to be the default. That world is gone. The
|
||||
new and current organizing principle of information is velocity.
|
||||
|
||||
What matters now is how fast something moves through the network: how quickly
|
||||
it is clicked, shared, quoted, replied to, remixed, and replaced. In a system
|
||||
tuned for speed, authority is ornamental. The network rewards motion first and
|
||||
judgment later, if ever. Perhaps that’s why you feel you can’t discern between
|
||||
truths, half-truths, and lies.
|
||||
|
||||
With so much coming at us all the time, it is difficult to give any single
|
||||
story or news event much weight. More content means already
|
||||
fragmented attention fractures even further.
|
||||
|
||||
Greenland, Iran, Venezuela, Epstein Files, Dodgers. On and on.
|
||||
|
||||
Networks have always shaped how societies are organized. Roman roads didn’t
|
||||
just make travel easier; they mapped the reach of the state and the limits of
|
||||
power. Shipping routes determined where colonial empires flourished and where
|
||||
they faded. In the Victorian age, the railways didn’t just shorten journeys;
|
||||
they rearranged British society.
|
||||
|
||||
They created commuting and leisure, turned market towns into suburbs,
|
||||
standardized national time, and collapsed the meaning of distance. They also
|
||||
reordered authority: timetables mattered as much as parliaments. What looks
|
||||
like cultural choice is often the echo of infrastructure. Today’s mobile,
|
||||
cloud-linked world is another Victorian moment. Networks compress time and
|
||||
space, then quietly train us to live at their speed.
|
||||
|
||||
That’s why we get all our information as memes. The meme has become
|
||||
the metastory, the layer where meaning is carried. You don’t need to read the
|
||||
thing; you just need the gist, compressed and passed along in
|
||||
a sentence, an image, or a joke. It has taken the role of the headline. The
|
||||
machine accelerates this dynamic. It demands constant material; stop feeding it
|
||||
and the whole structure shakes. The point of the internet now is mostly to hook
|
||||
attention and push it toward commerce, to keep the engine running. Anyone can
|
||||
get their cut.
|
||||
|
||||
Velocity has taken over.
|
||||
|
||||
Algorithms on YouTube, Facebook, TikTok, Instagram, and Twitter do not optimize
|
||||
for truth or depth. They optimize for motion. A piece that moves fast is
|
||||
considered “good.” A piece that hesitates disappears. There are almost no
|
||||
second chances online because the stream does not look back. People are not
|
||||
failing the platforms. People are behaving exactly as the platforms reward. We
|
||||
might think we are better, but we have the same rat-reward brain.
|
||||
|
||||
We built machines that prize acceleration and then act puzzled that everything
|
||||
feels rushed and slightly manic. The networks of the past were slower and at a
|
||||
scale that was adaptable. I wrote about this years ago, and nothing since has
|
||||
disproved it. So when the author of “beliefs outrun facts” says nothing works,
|
||||
now you know why.
|
||||
|
||||
The fundamental network-level changes should give you a good idea of why we
|
||||
have a growing ambivalent relationship toward media as an organized information
|
||||
entity. I will get into technology media from startup perspective in a
|
||||
separate piece. For now, I will stick to the broader media ecosystem.
|
||||
|
||||
Let’s use YouTube technology reviews as a case study, because they are
|
||||
universally understandable. Take the launch of a new phone: when
|
||||
the embargo lifts, dozens of polished video reviews appear on YouTube. They run
|
||||
about 20 minutes, share similar thumbnails, and use the same mood lighting. The
|
||||
reviewers had access to the phones before everyone else, so they had time to
|
||||
prepare their reviews.
|
||||
|
||||
In the old days, before the current phase of content abundance, folks like Walt
|
||||
Mossberg, Ed Baig, David Pogue, and Steven Levy were often the first to get
|
||||
Apple products for review. Sure, these folks had big platforms, but that head
|
||||
start gave them a lot of clout, which meant many non-Apple
|
||||
companies offered them early access to their products. I never felt cheated
|
||||
or misled by their reviews, though I did notice what they omitted after using
|
||||
the product for a few months.
|
||||
|
||||
These days, things are markedly different. For YouTubers, access is the
|
||||
currency of survival. Access, of course, means suggested talking points. Again,
|
||||
nothing new. What’s different is that every reviewer knows that if they paint
|
||||
outside the lines, they’ll lose access. If you don’t have the review out when
|
||||
the embargo lifts, it doesn’t matter if you have a better review; no one is
|
||||
going to notice.
|
||||
|
||||
The system rewards whoever speaks first, not whoever lives with it long enough
|
||||
to understand it. The “review” at launch outperforms the review written two
|
||||
months later by orders of magnitude. The second, longer, more in-depth, more
|
||||
honest review might as well not exist. It’s not that people are less honest by
|
||||
nature. It’s that the structure pays a premium for compliance and levies a tax
|
||||
on independence. The result is a soft capture where creators don’t have to be
|
||||
told what to say. The incentives do the talking.
|
||||
|
||||
People do what the network rewards. Writers write for the feed. Photographers
|
||||
shoot for the scroll. Newsrooms frame stories as conflict because conflict
|
||||
travels faster than nuance. Even our emotional lives adapt to latency and
|
||||
refresh cycles. The design of the network becomes the choreography of daily
|
||||
life.
|
||||
|
||||
In older networks, the constraints were physical. The number of train lines
|
||||
limited where cities could grow. The number of printing presses limited how
|
||||
many voices could speak. In our case, the constraint is temporal: how fast
|
||||
something can be produced, clicked, shared, and replaced. When velocity becomes
|
||||
the scarcest resource, everything orients around it. This is why it’s wrong to
|
||||
think of “the algorithm” as some quirky technical layer that can be toggled on
|
||||
and off or worked around. The algorithm is the culture. It decides what gets
|
||||
amplified, who gets to make a living, and what counts as “success.”
|
||||
|
||||
Once velocity is the prize, quality becomes risky. Thoughtfulness takes time.
|
||||
Reporting takes time. Living with a product or an idea takes time. Yet the
|
||||
window for relevance keeps shrinking, and the penalty for lateness is
|
||||
erasure. We get a culture optimized for first takes, not best takes. The
|
||||
network doesn’t ask if something is correct or durable, only if it moves. If it
|
||||
moves, the system will find a way to monetize it.
|
||||
|
||||
The algorithm doesn’t care whether something is true; it cares whether it
|
||||
moves. Day-one content becomes advertising wearing the mask of criticism.
|
||||
|
||||
All of this folds back into a larger point. When attention is fragmented and
|
||||
speed becomes the dominant value, media rearranges itself around that
|
||||
reality. Not because anyone wakes up wanting to mislead people, but because the
|
||||
context makes some paths survivable and others impossible.
|
||||
|
||||
The YouTube algorithm is the real enforcer because it rewards velocity. Get
|
||||
into the algorithmic slip stream and you get the numbers and make money. So
|
||||
it is no surprise that most day-one reviews are, well, anything but. This goes
|
||||
back to my original premise that when velocity becomes the defining metric,
|
||||
authority is displaced.
|
||||
|
||||
You don’t need to be right; you need to be first in the feed. Generalize this
|
||||
beyond YouTube tech reviews and you see the same pattern
|
||||
everywhere. I’m flabbergasted by how much good journalism goes unnoticed every
|
||||
day. We didn’t just put journalism, entertainment, politics, and
|
||||
private lives on networks. We let the networks rewrite what those things are
|
||||
forand how they work.
|
||||
|
||||
None of what I am saying is new. Decades ago the media sage Marshall McLuhan
|
||||
summed it up in his timeless phrase, “The medium is the message.” The medium,
|
||||
the technology or channel of communication, influences society and individuals
|
||||
more profoundly than the content, altering our senses and habits and, in turn,
|
||||
our perception, interaction, and culture. The only difference is that network
|
||||
is like a hydra, and data is the fuel that adds velocity, the new metric of
|
||||
perceived reality.
|
||||
|
||||
The cost of all this isn’t abstract. It’s the review that took three months but
|
||||
no one will read. It’s the investigation that required patience. It’s the work
|
||||
of understanding something before declaring judgment. All of it still exists,
|
||||
still gets made. It just doesn’t travel. And in a system where only what
|
||||
travels matters, we’ve made expertise indistinguishable from noise.
|
||||
|
||||
In the age of AI, will any of this matter when our idea of information will be
|
||||
entirely different?
|
||||
|
||||
January 21, 2026. San Francisco
|
||||
|
||||
Photo Courtesy of [8]Yousef Hussain via [9]Unsplash
|
||||
|
||||
[10]My Essays, [11]Technology
|
||||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||||
[12] 29 comments
|
||||
|
||||
Subscribe to discover Om’s fresh perspectives on the present and future.
|
||||
|
||||
Email address [13][ ]
|
||||
|
||||
SUBSCRIBE
|
||||
|
||||
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|
||||
[f962dea24b9cd8]
|
||||
|
||||
Om Malik is a San Francisco based writer, photographer and investor. [26]Read
|
||||
More [27]
|
||||
|
||||
29 thoughts on this post
|
||||
|
||||
1. [141e0d] Michaela Barnes says:
|
||||
[28]January 21, 2026 at 10:30 am
|
||||
|
||||
15 years old now, but seems relevant
|
||||
|
||||
[29]https://www.amazon.com/Blur-Know-Whats-Information-Overload/dp/
|
||||
1608193012
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[30]Reply
|
||||
1. [f962de] Om Malik says:
|
||||
[31]January 21, 2026 at 10:44 am
|
||||
|
||||
Thank you. It seems like we are seeing a progressive degradation.
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[32]Reply
|
||||
2. [bd4312] Peter says:
|
||||
[33]January 21, 2026 at 11:56 am
|
||||
|
||||
OM,
|
||||
Thoughtful and well put. You’ve captured something many of us feel
|
||||
instinctively but struggle to articulate – that the system now rewards
|
||||
speed over understanding, and motion over meaning. When velocity becomes
|
||||
the metric, judgment and depth inevitably get crowded out. A sobering but
|
||||
important reflection.
|
||||
Best regards,
|
||||
Peter
|
||||
BTW, I really like your photographic style!
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[34]Reply
|
||||
1. [f962de] Om Malik says:
|
||||
[35]January 21, 2026 at 6:59 pm
|
||||
|
||||
Peter,
|
||||
|
||||
Thank you for the kind words on my photography. It is my sanity valve.
|
||||
|
||||
On the post, thanks for reading. I am glad it caught your attention and
|
||||
you have felt this. It took me a long time to write this piece, because
|
||||
I hate writing about media as often as I end up doing. 🙂 I much prefer
|
||||
to write about the new and the novel.
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[36]Reply
|
||||
1. [0d16e6] JT says:
|
||||
[37]January 28, 2026 at 11:51 am
|
||||
|
||||
@Peter, Late-stage newsrooms quietly valued speed over accuracy,
|
||||
even if they didn’t say it outright. That was 20 years ago. I think
|
||||
that spread like a virus.
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[38]Reply
|
||||
3. [5911a3] Harald Striepe says:
|
||||
[39]January 21, 2026 at 12:20 pm
|
||||
|
||||
Very poignant.
|
||||
Thank you.
|
||||
|
||||
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|
||||
[40]Reply
|
||||
1. [f962de] Om Malik says:
|
||||
[41]January 21, 2026 at 6:57 pm
|
||||
|
||||
Thank you Harald.
|
||||
|
||||
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|
||||
[42]Reply
|
||||
4. [51ebdd] SlicksSlack says:
|
||||
[43]January 21, 2026 at 12:20 pm
|
||||
|
||||
2nd and 3rd last paragraphs are very slight rewrites of each other? Am I
|
||||
missing a point there? Everything else lands with more or less nodding
|
||||
agreement.
|
||||
|
||||
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|
||||
[44]Reply
|
||||
1. [f962de] Om Malik says:
|
||||
[45]January 21, 2026 at 6:55 pm
|
||||
|
||||
I should have deleted one of them, but damn, morning without coffee
|
||||
sucks. And I should not post without waiting and re-reading 🙂 Sorry
|
||||
about that.
|
||||
|
||||
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|
||||
[46]Reply
|
||||
5. [23405c] Gideon Rosenblatt says:
|
||||
[47]January 21, 2026 at 1:47 pm
|
||||
|
||||
Another thought-provoking post, Om. In one of your recent posts, you noted
|
||||
that for younger segments messages are becoming preferred to the feed. How
|
||||
do you think that maps to the velocity phenomenon your describing?
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[48]Reply
|
||||
1. [f962de] Om Malik says:
|
||||
[49]January 21, 2026 at 6:57 pm
|
||||
|
||||
Gideon
|
||||
|
||||
Thanks for the comment. I am hoping to hang out with some young people
|
||||
soon and would love to update you how they think. My guess is that
|
||||
“messages” is a way to slowdown things for them. But I would answer
|
||||
when I am more educated myself.
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[50]Reply
|
||||
6. [a702e8] [51]Parveen K Chopra says:
|
||||
[52]January 21, 2026 at 2:48 pm
|
||||
|
||||
Last para repeated, haha
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[53]Reply
|
||||
1. [f962de] Om Malik says:
|
||||
[54]January 21, 2026 at 6:55 pm
|
||||
|
||||
Oops. Fixed. Thanks for the heads up!
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[55]Reply
|
||||
7. [c68329] [56]Eric Marcoullier says:
|
||||
[57]January 21, 2026 at 4:04 pm
|
||||
|
||||
“Show me the incentive and I’ll show you the outcome.”
|
||||
— Charlie Munger
|
||||
|
||||
All of us early folks (yay, Business 2.0; yay, IGN) really thought we were
|
||||
creating a new way to expand the availability of news and information.
|
||||
|
||||
What we didn’t realize was that when news becomes a commodity, people stop
|
||||
paying and ads mean everything. We can no longer prioritize valuable
|
||||
information and nuanced framing.
|
||||
|
||||
“If it bleeds, it leads” is an old TV adage but man does it feel relevant
|
||||
today,
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[58]Reply
|
||||
1. [f962de] Om Malik says:
|
||||
[59]January 21, 2026 at 6:54 pm
|
||||
|
||||
The whole point is that we have undermined the value system around
|
||||
attention. Everything is marketing. Everyone is selling. So no ones to
|
||||
say anything that adds friction in the process of selling. 🙂
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[60]Reply
|
||||
8. [14ad96] Bob Mason says:
|
||||
[61]January 21, 2026 at 4:23 pm
|
||||
|
||||
This feels intimately connected to this post from Nic Carter released today
|
||||
as well. And of course, I received both by way of email newsletters.
|
||||
|
||||
[62]https://murmurationstwo.substack.com/p/
|
||||
the-for-you-page-is-killing-social
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[63]Reply
|
||||
1. [f962de] Om Malik says:
|
||||
[64]January 21, 2026 at 6:54 pm
|
||||
|
||||
Thank you Bob for sharing this.
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[65]Reply
|
||||
9. [984d4e] Ike Nassi says:
|
||||
[66]January 21, 2026 at 7:39 pm
|
||||
|
||||
Hmm…. Don’t see a photo.
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[67]Reply
|
||||
10. [f95f4a] MARKO BJELAC says:
|
||||
[68]January 22, 2026 at 1:09 am
|
||||
|
||||
As often, a very interesting article.
|
||||
|
||||
IMHO the point a bit too much drilled in. Also, a bit defeatist.
|
||||
|
||||
For example,
|
||||
|
||||
This is why it’s wrong to think of “the algorithm” as some quirky
|
||||
technical layer that can be toggled on and off or worked around.
|
||||
|
||||
I agree with the “worked around” bit but social media algorithms actually
|
||||
are technical layers. They are just technology and all technology can be
|
||||
turned off, but their owners do not want that. So, we can use
|
||||
algorithm-free technology for getting information. I am using that as I
|
||||
read your newsletter. A long time ago I’ve abandoned Twitter. I still use
|
||||
Linkedin for networking. Every once in a while I try to scroll Linkedin’s
|
||||
feed but every time I do that I see low-grade info wasting my time so I
|
||||
just stop.
|
||||
|
||||
I am a paying subscriber of one Substack. I follow several others for free.
|
||||
Although these also tend to have bias as again the incentive is to get as
|
||||
much subscribers as possible.
|
||||
|
||||
I’m also subscribed to several [69]https://theconversation.com/ feeds.
|
||||
These are giving me unbiased (I currently feel) reports on the state of the
|
||||
world.
|
||||
|
||||
As Eric commented, the incentive is the reason for this degradation, and it
|
||||
didn’t start with social media or the internet. If it bleeds it leads. The
|
||||
core problem is financing the journalists. Journalism is a public service
|
||||
and should be financed that way. Why can’t it be set up that way?
|
||||
Peer-reviewed like science (although that one is also being corrupted by
|
||||
financial incentives).
|
||||
|
||||
So, looks dark but I see ways out. How to get there?
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[70]Reply
|
||||
11. [795954] Menachem Sharron says:
|
||||
[71]January 22, 2026 at 5:10 am
|
||||
|
||||
Thank you dear Om.
|
||||
I enjoy reading your emails very much.
|
||||
Keep going.
|
||||
Rgds
|
||||
Menachem Sharron
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[72]Reply
|
||||
1. [f962de] Om Malik says:
|
||||
[73]January 22, 2026 at 7:18 am
|
||||
|
||||
Thank you Menachem. Wishing you my best
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[74]Reply
|
||||
12. [4d7ec0] Priya Narasimhan says:
|
||||
[75]January 22, 2026 at 5:41 am
|
||||
|
||||
Great writing, Om! Long time reader, first time commenting…
|
||||
You’ve articulated what we’re all feeling in daily life. I’ve been thinking
|
||||
technology is outpacing human adaptability and when it needs intervention,
|
||||
if at all…
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[76]Reply
|
||||
1. [f962de] Om Malik says:
|
||||
[77]January 22, 2026 at 7:21 am
|
||||
|
||||
Thank you Priya for reading and commenting.
|
||||
|
||||
We are at a point where human adaptability is going to redefine itself,
|
||||
and we will perhaps in time learn how to use tools that are only
|
||||
emerging that will help us figure out how to deal with so much chaos on
|
||||
the information front. But that would also mean that we might need to
|
||||
know what we want from our information flows. I am not sure, we are
|
||||
there yet.
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[78]Reply
|
||||
13. [41caa2] [79]Jamie Diamond says:
|
||||
[80]January 22, 2026 at 8:38 am
|
||||
|
||||
As a career tech PR guy pitching countless startup stories over the years
|
||||
to various waves of media over the last (Om my gosh 4 decades) – Om, this
|
||||
is your most cutting story for me in your vast writing history. It’s not
|
||||
about me being able to do my job, its not even about the future of AI and
|
||||
storytelling – I have four little girls that we home school and what kind
|
||||
of connection will they have and what kind of culture of knowledge will
|
||||
they grow up in? When the snarky/lie/click-bait meme wins the velocity
|
||||
narrative race in January of 2026, what’s my now 4 year old going to be
|
||||
dealing with as she’s read Little Women today and being surrounded by what
|
||||
authority when she’s 18/28/38? And to totally go off the rails, it’s
|
||||
today’s velocity authority that pits us all against one another – I’d cite
|
||||
the book Hate Inc. as to why velocity authority focused on stirring up hate
|
||||
to drive profit is completely wrong for any culture to be addicted to. Who
|
||||
is creating the opposite and I’ll do free PR for YOU.
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[81]Reply
|
||||
14. [152fb9] Lee Doolan says:
|
||||
[82]January 22, 2026 at 4:33 pm
|
||||
|
||||
“… The main thing is telling a thoroughly reported, well-written story….”
|
||||
|
||||
That is exceedingly rare nowadays.
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[83]Reply
|
||||
1. [f962de] Om Malik says:
|
||||
[84]January 22, 2026 at 6:28 pm
|
||||
|
||||
They are rare to find, but not rare as an entity
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[85]Reply
|
||||
15. [178c8c] [86]Andrew McLuhan says:
|
||||
[87]January 23, 2026 at 12:18 pm
|
||||
|
||||
“For the ‘message’ of any medium or technology is the change of scale or
|
||||
pace or pattern that it introduces into human affairs.” (1964)
|
||||
|
||||
Always nice to see someone get it.
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[88]Reply
|
||||
1. [f962de] Om Malik says:
|
||||
[89]January 23, 2026 at 4:13 pm
|
||||
|
||||
I think it helps to have been old and have read things as they were
|
||||
meant to be read — in full long form. Thanks for stopping by!
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[90]Reply
|
||||
16. [02174e] [91]Arix Fïen says:
|
||||
[92]January 24, 2026 at 12:21 am
|
||||
|
||||
This really resonates with me. I keep feeling that tension between wanting
|
||||
to slow down and understand something properly, and knowing the system
|
||||
barely rewards that anymore. When velocity becomes the signal of value,
|
||||
depth almost feels like a liability. It’s sobering to see how
|
||||
infrastructure quietly rewrites what authority, trust, and even “good work”
|
||||
look like.
|
||||
|
||||
Loading...
|
||||
[93]Reply
|
||||
|
||||
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January 16, 2026 Our Algorithmic Grey-Beige World I start my morning going
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January 25, 2026 The Joy of Neo-noir I’ve been enjoying Lawrence
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Sanders again. Specifically, the Archy McNally series: those breezy Palm Beach
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mysteries from the ‘90s…
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With 30+ years in Silicon Valley as a journalist, entrepreneur, and venture
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References:
|
||||
|
||||
[1] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#content
|
||||
[2] https://om.co/
|
||||
[3] https://om.co/
|
||||
[4] https://om.co/about/
|
||||
[5] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/
|
||||
[6] https://om.co/2009/05/17/how-internet-content-distribution-discovery-are-changing/
|
||||
[7] https://om.co/2012/10/13/amplification-the-changing-role-of-media/
|
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[8] https://unsplash.com/@usefieee?utm_source=unsplash&utm_medium=referral&utm_content=creditCopyText
|
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[9] https://unsplash.com/photos/a-blurry-photo-of-a-city-street-at-night-WmdpCOQZk4g?utm_source=unsplash&utm_medium=referral&utm_content=creditCopyText
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[10] https://om.co/category/work/essays/
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[11] https://om.co/category/work/technology/
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[12] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comments
|
||||
[26] https://om.co/about/
|
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[27] https://om.co/author/om/
|
||||
[28] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180398
|
||||
[29] https://www.amazon.com/Blur-Know-Whats-Information-Overload/dp/1608193012
|
||||
[30] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180398#respond
|
||||
[31] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180401
|
||||
[32] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180401#respond
|
||||
[33] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180402
|
||||
[34] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180402#respond
|
||||
[35] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180426
|
||||
[36] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180426#respond
|
||||
[37] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180774
|
||||
[38] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180774#respond
|
||||
[39] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180403
|
||||
[40] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180403#respond
|
||||
[41] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180425
|
||||
[42] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180425#respond
|
||||
[43] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180404
|
||||
[44] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180404#respond
|
||||
[45] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180423
|
||||
[46] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180423#respond
|
||||
[47] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180405
|
||||
[48] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180405#respond
|
||||
[49] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180424
|
||||
[50] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180424#respond
|
||||
[51] https://www.alotusinthemud.com/
|
||||
[52] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180407
|
||||
[53] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180407#respond
|
||||
[54] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180422
|
||||
[55] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180422#respond
|
||||
[56] http://www.marcoullier.com/
|
||||
[57] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180409
|
||||
[58] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180409#respond
|
||||
[59] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180420
|
||||
[60] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180420#respond
|
||||
[61] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180411
|
||||
[62] https://murmurationstwo.substack.com/p/the-for-you-page-is-killing-social
|
||||
[63] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180411#respond
|
||||
[64] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180421
|
||||
[65] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180421#respond
|
||||
[66] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180428
|
||||
[67] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180428#respond
|
||||
[68] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180437
|
||||
[69] https://theconversation.com/
|
||||
[70] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180437#respond
|
||||
[71] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180443
|
||||
[72] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180443#respond
|
||||
[73] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180449
|
||||
[74] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180449#respond
|
||||
[75] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180445
|
||||
[76] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180445#respond
|
||||
[77] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180450
|
||||
[78] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180450#respond
|
||||
[79] https://jdiamondpr.com/
|
||||
[80] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180451
|
||||
[81] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180451#respond
|
||||
[82] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180463
|
||||
[83] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180463#respond
|
||||
[84] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180467
|
||||
[85] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180467#respond
|
||||
[86] http://www.tmitm.com/
|
||||
[87] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180515
|
||||
[88] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180515#respond
|
||||
[89] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180526
|
||||
[90] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180526#respond
|
||||
[91] http://aifiedblog.wordpress.com/
|
||||
[92] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#comment-180533
|
||||
[93] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/?replytocom=180533#respond
|
||||
[94] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/#respond
|
||||
[107] https://akismet.com/privacy/
|
||||
[108] https://om.co/2026/01/16/our-algorithmic-grey-beige-world/
|
||||
[109] https://om.co/2026/01/25/neo-noir/
|
||||
[137] https://twitter.com/om
|
||||
[138] https://www.instagram.com/om/
|
||||
[139] https://om.co/feed/
|
||||
[140] https://om.co/contact-om/
|
||||
[141] https://wordpress.com/wp/?partner_domain=om.co&utm_source=Automattic&utm_medium=colophon&utm_campaign=Concierge%20Referral&utm_term=om.co
|
||||
[142] https://pressable.com/?utm_source=Automattic&utm_medium=rpc&utm_campaign=Concierge%20Referral&utm_term=concierge
|
||||
[149] https://x.com/intent/tweet?via=%username%&url=%url%&text=%prefix%%text%%suffix%&hashtags=%hashtags%
|
||||
1253
static/archive/www-astralcodexten-com-z9axyx.txt
Normal file
1253
static/archive/www-astralcodexten-com-z9axyx.txt
Normal file
File diff suppressed because it is too large
Load Diff
71
static/archive/www-manton-org-htmmhe.txt
Normal file
71
static/archive/www-manton-org-htmmhe.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,71 @@
|
||||
● [1]Manton Reece
|
||||
[2]About [3]Photos [4]Videos [5]Archive [6]30 days [7]90 parks [8]Replies [9]
|
||||
Reading [10]Search [11]Also on Micro.blog
|
||||
|
||||
Velocity and authenticity
|
||||
|
||||
[12]Jan 21, 2026
|
||||
|
||||
When I read a blog post I love, I usually find my favorite part of it to quote
|
||||
in a short post on my own blog. Sometimes I can’t find a single excerpt that
|
||||
fits, so I turn it into a full blog post and add more commentary. Such is the
|
||||
case with [13]this fantastic essay by Om Malik:
|
||||
|
||||
What matters now is how fast something moves through the network: how
|
||||
quickly it is clicked, shared, quoted, replied to, remixed, and replaced.
|
||||
In a system tuned for speed, authority is ornamental. The network rewards
|
||||
motion first and judgment later, if ever. Perhaps that’s why you feel you
|
||||
can’t discern between truths, half-truths, and lies.
|
||||
|
||||
Om doesn’t focus on ad-based platforms, but I think the incentives are similar.
|
||||
Meta is fine with rushing us through an algorithmic feed because there is no
|
||||
end. The more engaged we are, the more ads we see.
|
||||
|
||||
We built systems that reward acceleration, then act surprised when
|
||||
everything feels rushed, shallow, and slightly manic. People do what the
|
||||
network rewards. Writers write for the feed. Photographers shoot for the
|
||||
scroll. Newsrooms frame stories as conflict because conflict travels faster
|
||||
than nuance.
|
||||
|
||||
We should slow down in 2026. Take more time to read longer posts. Full stories,
|
||||
not headlines. This is why when I cancelled all of my news subscriptions, I
|
||||
kept only The New Yorker. Longer, thoughtful posts that I read once a week
|
||||
instead of all the time.
|
||||
|
||||
AI will bring us infinite content, with a velocity that humans can’t match. It
|
||||
will be noise, overwhelming. Then we will become numb to it. The only antidote
|
||||
is authenticity. Knowing that what you’re reading is coming from a real human
|
||||
with their own perspective, their own strengths and flaws, because you’ve
|
||||
followed them for years.
|
||||
|
||||
[14]Also on Bluesky [15] [3]
|
||||
Manton Reece [16]@manton
|
||||
|
||||
• [17]RSS
|
||||
• [18]JSON Feed
|
||||
• [19]Surprise me!
|
||||
• [20]Tweets
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
References:
|
||||
|
||||
[1] https://www.manton.org/
|
||||
[2] https://www.manton.org/about/
|
||||
[3] https://www.manton.org/photos/
|
||||
[4] https://www.manton.org/videos/
|
||||
[5] https://www.manton.org/archive/
|
||||
[6] https://www.manton.org/30-days/
|
||||
[7] https://www.manton.org/90-parks/
|
||||
[8] https://www.manton.org/replies/
|
||||
[9] https://www.manton.org/reading/
|
||||
[10] https://www.manton.org/search/
|
||||
[11] https://micro.blog/manton
|
||||
[12] https://www.manton.org/2026/01/21/velocity-and-authenticity.html
|
||||
[13] https://om.co/2026/01/21/velocity-is-the-new-authority-heres-why/
|
||||
[14] at://did:plc:pko7wbcggok753hnvndxh3ni/app.bsky.feed.post/3mcxsfazjmv2m
|
||||
[15] https://www.manton.org/
|
||||
[16] https://micro.blog/manton
|
||||
[17] https://www.manton.org/feed.xml
|
||||
[18] https://www.manton.org/feed.json
|
||||
[19] https://www.manton.org/surprise-me/
|
||||
[20] https://www.manton.org/tweets/
|
||||
49
static/archive/www-manton-org-to8xs2.txt
Normal file
49
static/archive/www-manton-org-to8xs2.txt
Normal file
@@ -0,0 +1,49 @@
|
||||
● [1]Manton Reece
|
||||
[2]About [3]Photos [4]Videos [5]Archive [6]30 days [7]90 parks [8]Replies [9]
|
||||
Reading [10]Search [11]Also on Micro.blog
|
||||
|
||||
[12]Jan 20, 2026
|
||||
|
||||
[13]Matt Mullenweg blogged about Scott Adams, trying to reconcile good memories
|
||||
of Dilbert with later racist comments:
|
||||
|
||||
When I was younger, I used to have a more binary view of people, but as
|
||||
I’ve grown, read a ton of biographies, seen the press cycles, and been
|
||||
lucky enough to meet some idols and villains, I’ve become much more
|
||||
comfortable taking everyone as a flawed human being.
|
||||
|
||||
Nuance here is difficult because we shouldn’t downplay hurtful comments with a
|
||||
“both sides”-style argument. Sometimes we must draw a line. Still, I agree we
|
||||
should avoid reducing people to a single moment.
|
||||
|
||||
[14]Also on Bluesky [15] [3]
|
||||
Manton Reece [16]@manton
|
||||
|
||||
• [17]RSS
|
||||
• [18]JSON Feed
|
||||
• [19]Surprise me!
|
||||
• [20]Tweets
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
References:
|
||||
|
||||
[1] https://www.manton.org/
|
||||
[2] https://www.manton.org/about/
|
||||
[3] https://www.manton.org/photos/
|
||||
[4] https://www.manton.org/videos/
|
||||
[5] https://www.manton.org/archive/
|
||||
[6] https://www.manton.org/30-days/
|
||||
[7] https://www.manton.org/90-parks/
|
||||
[8] https://www.manton.org/replies/
|
||||
[9] https://www.manton.org/reading/
|
||||
[10] https://www.manton.org/search/
|
||||
[11] https://micro.blog/manton
|
||||
[12] https://www.manton.org/2026/01/20/matt-mullenweg-blogged-about-scott.html
|
||||
[13] https://ma.tt/2026/01/a-better-writer/
|
||||
[14] at://did:plc:pko7wbcggok753hnvndxh3ni/app.bsky.feed.post/3mcui3dej6n2n
|
||||
[15] https://www.manton.org/
|
||||
[16] https://micro.blog/manton
|
||||
[17] https://www.manton.org/feed.xml
|
||||
[18] https://www.manton.org/feed.json
|
||||
[19] https://www.manton.org/surprise-me/
|
||||
[20] https://www.manton.org/tweets/
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user