π Torah United: Teachings on the Weekly Parashah from Rav Avraham Yitzchak HaKohen Kook, Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik, and the Chassidic Masters by Aaron Goldscheider (2023; via Rachel & Jacob Novikov).
π Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver (2022; via Jenny Melcher). If David Copperfield happened during the modern opioid epidemic.
π Fossil Future: Why Global Human Flourishing Requires More Oil, Coal, and Natural Gas--Not Less by Alex Epstein (2022; via Bryan Caplan). The title and subtitle are intentionally provocative, but not technically wrong once you think about how many things are made of, e.g., plastic. However, glad to see nuclear get its own chapter.
π Black Flags: The Rise of ISIS by Joby Warrick (2015; via Rob Reid). A bit outdated now, but still a wild ride.
π Number Go Up: Inside Crypto's Wild Rise and Staggering Fall by Zeke Faux (2023; via Jeremy Wertheimer).
π Peak Mind: Achieve Peak Mindfulness and Unlock Your Full Potential by Amishi P. Jha (2021; via Ann Rose Greenberg).
π Learn Better: Mastering the Skills for Success in Life, Business, and School, or How to Become an Expert in Just About Anything by Ulrich Boser (2017).
ποΈ Multimodal AI Models on Apple Silicon with MLX with Prince Canuma (Prince Canuma / TWIMLAI). Very cool story about how MLX came to be and how it got good.
π¦ Is AI already impacting the job market? (Bharat Chandar). Seems like solid initial signal from paycheck data.
π Nine Rules for Managing Humans Managing Nuclear Reactors (Charles Yang / Asterisk). Includes a reprint of a powerful article by Admiral Hyman Rickover from 1979.
π Class Dismissed (Jeremy Stern / Colossus). Deep-dive interview with Joe Liemandt to include details about Alpha School.
π¦ 10 Lessons from Ryan Petersen (Shane Parrish).
π Building Ultra Cheap Energy Storage for Solar PV (Austin Vernon). Detailed and with strong testable claims for the business Austin is building.
π The McPhee method (James Somers). If you capture and enumerate enough detail, you'll have the materials to mechanically produce great work.
π βAsthenesβ as a Jewish Textual Reference to Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (Shayna Herszage-Feldan / Lehrhaus). Despite knowing all the behaviors from the Gemara, I don't think I ever thought of OCD as explaining them.
π What are Forward Deployed Engineers, and why are they so in demand? (Gregely Orosz / The Pragmatic Engineer). An enzyme-like position that empowers engineers to convert specific customer needs into product features.
π Starting with pytestβs parametrize (Ned Batchelder). I have so many tests that could use this.
π NIST Finalizes βLightweight Cryptographyβ Standard to Protect Small Devices (NIST). I guess better 15 years late than never.
π Of Marx and Moloch: How My Attempt to Convince Effective Altruists to Become Socialists Backfired Completely (Lennox). We should strongly encourage people to admit when they change their mind.
π Virtual School Hit the Mainstream 5 Years Ago. How Popular Has It Gotten? (Lauren Coffey / EdSurge). Somewhat.
π AI: great expectations (Rodney Brooks). This is a republication of Rodney's article from March 1988. Great example of the difficulty of "over and under estimating the power of AI."
π Heritability puzzlers (Dynomight). Pretty good explanation of what "heritability" actually means. Still confusing.
π Your Review: My Fatherβs Instant Mashed Potatoes (Redacted / ACX). Simulacra of simulacra.
π Developers, Reinvented (Thomas Dohmke).
π Bag of words, have mercy on us (Adam Mastroianni / Experimental History). Humans gonna anthropomorphize.
π No, AI is not Making Engineers 10x as Productive (Colton Voege). One time I was in a meeting with over 100 people where we were told that we had to improve our performance by 10X year-over-year. After many rousing speeches of how important it was to 10X our performance, I asked the only question that came to mind: "For how many years in a row, do we expect to be able to 10X our performance?" The non-engineering speaker did not understand why all the engineers laughed.
π The ChatGPT sharing dialog demonstrates how difficult it is to design privacy preferences (Simon Willison). Soon: NeuraLink policy to default share all thoughts to the internet considered harmful.
An Unsolved Victorian-Era Riddle #
In which I propose a solution.
I came across this riddle, purportedly by Bishop Samuel Wilberforce, but it seems that attribution is in error:
Iβm the sweetest of voices in orchestra heard,
But yet in an orchestra never have been.
Iβm a bird of fine plumage, but less like a bird
Nothing ever in Nature was seen.
Touching earth I expire; in water I die;
Though I do progress, I can run, swim and fly.
Darkness destroys me, and light is my death;
And I can't keep alive without stopping my breath.
If my name canβt be guessed by a boy or a man,
By a woman or girl it certainly can.
Some proposed answers:
- "Time" or "Whale" ("orca") (via Anomaly Info)
- "Angel" (via Notes and Queries) meaning "(1) a heavenly being, (2) an old English coin, and (3) a fish."
- "Comet" or "Painting" (via Reddit)
I sort of get "Whale" and "Angel" (assuming those definitions are real), but I don't get the others, so I'd like to propose a different solution: "The HMS Kestrel".
The ship did exist in Wilberforce's time (in case he did write the riddle): it was launched in 1856 when Wilberforce was 51 (he died in 1873, aged 68) and it was sold in 1866 after seeing some action in the 1850s and 1860s.
My analysis:
Iβm the sweetest of voices in orchestra heard,
But yet in an orchestra never have been.
"Kestrel" is a play on the prominent sound ("sweetest sound") in "Orchestra," but the ship was never in an orchestra.
Iβm a bird of fine plumage, but less like a bird
Nothing ever in Nature was seen.
A kestrel is "the common name give to several species of predatory birds," so its a "bird of fine plumage". A ship looks nothing like a bird.
Touching earth I expire; in water I die; Though I do progress, I can run, swim and fly.
The HMS Kestrel was a Clown-class gunboat which had a wood hull, steam power, and sails. They were often used for shallow water bombardment.
The dangers of running aground ("touching earth") and sinking ("in water") were real (see next item). The "run" of the steam engine helped "swim" (in water) while the sails let it "fly" (by air).
Darkness destroys me, and light is my death;
And I can't keep alive without stopping my breath.
Bit of a stretch, but with ChatGPT's help: Night operations ("darkness") and being discovered by the enemy ("light") were both operational hazards. Indeed, the HMS Kestrel was part of the second Battle of Taku Forts:
The attack was a bloody shambles, and it was clear that retreat was the only alternative to complete annihilation. Lee had grounded, and Kestrel had sunk halfway to its funnels in the Haiβs brown waters. Cormorant was a loss, and the shattered Plover was grounded and abandoned. The Kestrel was later recovered, but the other three were written off as total losses.
To avoid detection, perhaps the ship had to turn off the loud steam engine ("stopping my breath").
If my name canβt be guessed by a boy or a man,
By a woman or girl it certainly can.
A kestrel is a predatory bird which Victorians considered a masculine trait, but birds, more generally, were largely associated with feminity.
π Literacy lag: We start reading too late (Erik Hoel / The Intrinsic Perspective). I'm not saying you need to force parents to teach their 3 year-olds to read, but claiming it's not "developmentally appropriate" seems crazy.