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πŸ“– The Wise Man's Fear by Patrick Rothfuss (2011; via Shalev NessAiver). Sequel to The Name of the Wind. Patrick Rothfuss joins the ranks of several other fantasy authors in having an unfinished series. I ended up reading the rants of his fans and editors as well as counter points that authors don't owe readers books. This book was a fine sequel; not as great and a bit graphic at times.


πŸ“– The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss (2007; via Shalev NessAiver). It's got stories-within-stories, sympathetic magic-as-physics, and a prodigy for a main character. What more could you want?









🐦 Simon Maechling on microplastics (Simon Maechling).

You’ve been told microplastics are everywhere.

In your food. In your blood. Even in your brain.

You should panic. You should rage.

But what if most of it was junk science?

Worth reading the whole thread.








πŸ“ Rearchitecting GitHub Pages (Hailey Somerville / GitHub Blog; via Sam Lambert). Sam's tweet says it all:

Until ~2015, GitHub Pages hosted over 2 million websites on 2 servers with a multi-million-line nginx.conf, edited and reloaded per deploy. This worked incredibly well, with github.io ranking as the 140th most visited domain on the web at the time.














πŸ“ How well can large language models predict the future? (Houtan Bastani, Simas Kučinskas, and Ezra Karger / Forecasting Research Institute). A continuous approach to test forecasting models. They do mention a potential hiccup:

When provided market forecasts in their prompts, multiple LLMsβ€”including GPT-4.5β€”simply copy them.

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