π The Captain Class: A New Theory of Leadership by Sam Walker (2017). A book about leadership in various sports dressed up as a business book. The main thing it seems to promote is "unusual" leadership which would seem to account for all the contradictory advice.
π 21 Facts About Throwing Good Parties (Uri Bram / Atoms vs Bits; via Tyler Cowen). These rules apply broadly to many other kinds of interactions too.
π Hacker Laws# (Dave Kerr). Nice collection of rules-of-thumb.
π¦ Karpathy on Sutton (Andrej Karpathy). This helped me understand the debate that Sutton and Dwarkesh were having when it seemed like they just used words very differently.
π Scam GPT: GenAI and the Automation of Fraud (Lana Swartz, Alice E. Marwick, & Kate Larson / Data & Society; via Bruce Shneier). Make sure you have a talk with your parents about how these things work.
π Fate and Destiny: From Holocaust to the State of Israel by Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik (2000). A reprint of Kol Dodi Dofek. Change some of the senator names plus a few dates and this could have been written yesterday.
π Why Not Me? by Mindy Kaling (2015; via Seth Rogan). Where in the world did I see a recommendation from Seth Rogan and what possessed me to add this book to my queue? No clue. Sometimes I just end up reading random things. This was pretty random.
π Someday This Pain Will Be Useful to You: A Novel by Peter Cameron (2025; via Tim Ferriss & Gretchen Ruben). No clue what I expected.
π Scale: The Universal Laws of Life, Growth, and Death in Organisms, Cities, and Companies by Geoffrey West (2017; via Robin Hanson). A look at constraints in different systems.
π Tap Dancing to Work: Warren Buffett on Practically Everything, 1966-2013 by Carol J. Loomis (2012; via Bill Gates). If you've read other books about Buffett, not much new here.
π Like, Comment, Subscribe: Inside YouTube's Chaotic Rise to World Domination by Mark Bergen (2022). Like many books in this genre, you get a sense of how quickly people's id/ego/superego merged with a quickly growing internet startup.
π The Predictioneer's Game: Using the Logic of Brazen Self-Interest to See and Shape the Future by Bruce Bueno De Mesquita (2009). Reading this book in 2025 is like finding an ancient prophecy that everyone has forgotten. Not perfect, but so many good calls. It also contains this gem:
My idea is that the Israeli and Palestinian governments will distribute a portion of their tax revenue generated from tourism (and only from tourism) to each other. Before going into the detailsβwhere the devil residesβletβs first see why tourist revenue and not any other. Why not, for example, promote peace by setting up joint Israeli-Palestinian ventures, or allowing freer movement between regions, or some other scheme? As we will see, shared tourist revenue provides a nearly unique opportunity.
[...]
The tourist tax revenue arrangement need not last forever. It must include an irrevocable commitment for it to persist for a long time (say twenty years), and it is important that this tax revenue sharing be tied to a fixed formula based on the current populations and not on future changes in those populations. Opening the formula to renegotiation could create perverse incentives. It is also essential that the definition of tax revenue originating from spending by tourists be based on predetermined rules for estimating this source of income. Independent accounting firms might be used to provide a standard way to define and identify tourist revenue and the taxes derived from it. This tax revenue would then be allocated to each side over the agreed duration of the program based on a onetime fixed population-based formula with no questions asked.
Using Game Theory to play through the whole scenario was a fascinating take.
π How to Win in a Winner-Take-All World: The Definitive Guide to Adapting and Succeeding in High-Performance Careers by Neil Irwin (2025; via Tyler Cowen). The advice isn't bad, per se. But I definitely thought this was written in the 90s and not June 2025. Tyler Cowen called it "both subtler and broader than the title alone would indicate," but I guess I missed the deep insight.
π Old Man's War by John Scalzi (2007; via Jeffrey Klein). Fun read.
π The Courage to Be Disliked: The Japanese Phenomenon That Shows You How to Change Your Life and Achieve Real Happiness by Ichiro Kishimi & Fumitake Koga (2018; via Patrick Gleason). I never heard of Alfred Adler or his school of psychology (he was a contemporary of Freud's). There are lots of commonplace examples which makes this an interesting read, but I suspect some of the claims are a bit too strong (e.g., "trauma" not being a real thing).
π The Sweaty Startup: How to Get Rich Doing Boring Things by Nick Huber (2025). Small things make a pile.
π Legal Systems Very Different from Ours by David Friedman, Peter Leeson, & David Skarbek (2019). I re-read this to remember the general kinds of problems human legal systems solve.
π The No S Diet: The Strikingly Simple Weight-Loss Strategy That Has Dieters Raving--and DroppingPounds by Reinhard Engels & Ben Kallen (2008). The rules are literally on the cover and the rest of the book is commentary. Being a diet book from 2008 it's got some references to psych studies that didn't replicate. But from a UX perspective, brilliant.
π Transform: Mayo Clinic Platform and the Digital Future of Health by Paul Cerrato M.A. & John D. Halamka M.D. M.S. (2025; via Jeremy Wertheimer). The bits about NLP felt ancient, but other bits were modern enough.
π Good To Great And The Social Sectors: A Monograph to Accompany Good to Great by Jim Collins (2011). Short and to the point.
π You're a Slow Thinker. Now what? (Afiq / Casual Physics). I wish this was studied more.
π Thank you for being annoying (Adam Mastroianni / Experimental History). Many things are the result of being irritated.
π Brainstorming terrible ideas in a group (Ruslan Osipov). Brainstorming doesn't usually get people moving around in the search space enough; coming up with terrible ideas might actually help.
π Why Todayβs Humanoids Wonβt Learn Dexterity (Rodney Brooks). While it's hard for me to judge on the main argument, I can totally see the words changing:
Following that pattern, what it means to be a humanoid robot will change over time.
Before too long (and we already start to see this) humanoid robots will get wheels for feet, at first two, and later maybe more, with nothing that any longer really resembles human legs in gross form. But they will still be called humanoid robots.
π Getting More Strategic (Cate Huston / Accidentally in Code).
We often talk about strategy like itβs defining the end state, setting and describing the destination. But strategy is about defining the incremental steps β the proximate objectives β that can take us towards that end state. Strategy is understanding where we are at β context β and the path from there to where we need to go. Any strategic βplanβ, is best executed as a set of proximate objectives.
π Illiteracy is a policy choice (Kelsey Piper / The Argument). Some things actually work.
π Your UX Design EDC (Every Day Carry) (Jon Daiello). I particularly like the "Evidence Arsenal" because that has, historically, been the hardest bit for me with clients.
π How to Motivate Yourself To Do A Thing You Don't Want to Do (Ashley Janssen). A reasonable framework.
π AI Psychosis Is Rarely Psychosis at All (Robert Hart / Wired). "It's a delusion, Michael!"
π I Vibecoded a Dispute Resolution App (Sarah Constantin / Rough Diamonds). There should be 10 versions of this. Too bad people got so upset about the idea of such an app.