2023-12-16 Links

Daily Reads:

Listened to Rishad Tobaccowala interview side hustle expert Chris Guillebeau on his podcast What Next. It prompted me to follow Chris’ podcast – Side Hustle School and listen to several stories of side hustlers earning their first $1,000. The stories are <5 minutes long, and reflect on both the successes and failures of getting there. He’s done over 2500 episodes, which is stunning discipline.

In Regretful accelerationism, Ben Thompson comes around to the idea that despite the riches of the internet for his personal benefit, there is merit in humanity finding ways back to what is real.

His post also had the phrase Schelling point so had to look it up. It refers to a solution or focal point that people tend to use in the absence of communication because it seems special or relevant to them. Named after Thomas Schelling who introduced it in the context of Game Theory. It’s based on common knowledge, knowledge that everyone knows everyone knows.

Is the idea of unit economics back in business vocabulary? I’ve heard it mentioned in nearly every recent product podcast recently. Making a profit on each unit of product or service guarantees that the company will be profitable at whatever scale it reaches. For the last 20 or so years in the cheap finance world, that seemed like a quaint idea, but is now coming right back into fashion.

Efoso Ojomo is a senior research fellow at the Clayton Christensen Institue for Disruptive Innovation. He argues in this post that corruption is ‘hired’ to make progress. When society offers few legitimate options to make progress, corruption becomes attractive.

Matt Webb shares a framework for exploring Generative AI as a tech savvy org.

QOTD:

I suspect we humans do better with constraints; the Internet stripped away the constraint of physical distribution, and now AI is removing the constraint of needing to actually produce content.
– Ben Thompson ^QOTD

Music:

Zach Bryan: Something in the Orange

2023-12-15 Links

Daily Reads:

Another light reading day.

Sanjeev Bhaskar reads Spike Milligan‘s letter home during World War II. Hilarious of course.

Lenny Rachitsky’s compilation of guests speaking about failures was useful.

Hal Elrod on the James Altucher Show referred to one of my own heroes, Jim Rohn. A fascinating episode, and James doesn’t hesitate to ask the uncomfortable questions.

Music:

The White Horse Guitar Club – A Rainy Night In Soho

2023-12-13 Links

Daily Reads:

Ash Maurya makes it simple: Just Start

Leo Babauta suggests an alternate way of thinking and dealing with a full inbox: a spiritual practice

Kaiser Fung (I’ve not linked to him in a while!) shares a powerful visualisation on expectations on investment returns between investors and professionals

Like a bridge, your presentation needs structure, recommends John Zimmer

QOTD:

Whenever books are burned men also in the end are burned.
– Heinrich Heine, poet, journalist, and essayist

Music:

Carson McKee challenged himself to write and record a song in one afternoon. Only So Much

2023-12-12 Links

Daily Reads:

Ness Labs: how to remember what you read

John Durrant, Ordinary Mastery: Serving the unseen forces of creation, talks about listening, a topic I think is really important for my own explorations.

Bookmarked this AI Incidents database, will be as important as Molly White’s version on Web3

Bruce Schneier on AI & Trust

Semantic Memory (fact based memory) vs Episodic Memory (specific events). No episodic memory, and you can’t imagine the future! Fascinating reading on the Long Now – The moment I lost my sense of time

Tom Whitwell: 52 things I learned in 2023

Terence Eden on learning from a month of writing

Daddy-daughter podcast! This is such a cool thing that Cory Doctorow and his daughter Poesy have done for 11 years.

QOTD:

You only have power over people as long as you don’t take everything away from them. But when you’ve robbed a man of everything, he’s no longer in your power — he’s free again.
– Alexander Solzhenitsyn

Music:

The Dead South – Broken Cowboy

2023-12-10 Links

Daily Reads:

Ben Werdmuller’s description of himself as being a Humanist Technologist" was the only thing I had time to read today.

QOTD:

A humanist technologist, then, is someone who uses multidisciplinary skills to help organizations use or understand technology in order to improve personal and social conditions.
– Ben Werdmuller

Music:

I’ grateful for Willie Nelson’s reminder to Just Breathe

2023-12-09 Links

Daily Reads:

Watching a craftsman at work is fascinating. Why violins have f-holes has a couple of videos that were captivating.

Charlie Munger has legendary status in many circles so there’s quite a few articles about him in my feed. Bob Ewing joins the dots with Charlie Munger, Machiavelli, Epictetus, and ChatGPT all in one place. Gaping Void illustrates some of Munger’s lessons in How we communicate is how we succeed.

Kent Beck writes a reference letter about himself but three years out into the future. Interesting approach to get clarity around what he wants to accomplish, and establish priorities.

I’m catching up (barely) with Cory Doctorow’s blog posts. This one, titled "If buying isn’t owning, piracy isn’t stealing" tackles the one sided "terms and conditions" customers sign up to when the companies that sell you digital products can fuck you over at will by downgrading or changing features or the availability of features that you have already paid for.

HT Andrew Curry: Monica Ali Talking about AI’s and writing

Baldur Bjarnason, in Don’t be a correctness bully, makes the case that positive reinforcement alone can help someone change their mind. The idea applies in so many contexts for me right now.

Charlie Stross: Made of lies (and more lies) _LLMs don’t answer your questions accurately—rather, they deliver a lump of text in the shape of an answer

Benedict Cumberbatch reading a complaint of a notoriously grumpy playwright is a perfect end to my media consumption for the day.

QOTD:

Interpretations is the highest branch of the singer’s art.
– Harry Plunket Greene.

Music:

Glen Hansard and Lisa O’Neill sing "Fairytale of New York"at Shane MacGowan’s funeral

2023-12-08 Links

Daily Reads:

Podcast: On Big Questions with Cal Fussman, Delta’s Chief Marketing Officer Alicia Tillman. I loved the enthusiasm and energy that Tillman clearly brings to her job. I particularly enjoyed how she described her job in marketing as producing stories that resonated within every function of her company. Interesting listen.

QOTD:

The real index of civilization is when people are kinder than they need to be.
– Louis de Bernieres

Music:

Joan Baez: Diamonds and Rust