Hanging out in Cambridge, MA for the next couple of days. It’s been ages since I’ve been here, but it’s one of my favorite places.
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Foursquare’s location database used to be superb, but man, I’m constantly having to fact check it now. I think it’s time to wean myself away. Is there something better than Yelp for finding places to eat that my friends enjoy?
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"“The benchmarking data is one of the things that makes the index so valuable,” Franklin said. “It’s not just ‘How am I doing?’ It’s ‘How am I doing compared to other similarly sized news organizations across companies around the country?’ Several publishers have mentioned how valuable the benchmarking data is to them.”" Seems like a useful way to let small newsrooms collaborate to share data that affects their bottom line. I'd love to see more projects along these lines.
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"Behind the scenes, Facebook programmed the algorithm that decides what people see in their news feeds to use the reaction emoji as signals to push more emotional and provocative content — including content likely to make them angry. Starting in 2017, Facebook’s ranking algorithm treated emoji reactions as five times more valuable than “likes,” internal documents reveal. The theory was simple: Posts that prompted lots of reaction emoji tended to keep users more engaged, and keeping users engaged was the key to Facebook’s business." Much later, they turned the value of angry responses to zero - with no effect on Facebook's engagement.
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"In July, Judge Preska found Mr. Donziger guilty of all charges. On Oct. 1, Mr. Donziger was sentenced to six months in prison, a day after he asked the court to consider an opinion by independent United Nations experts that found his court-ordered home confinement of more than two years a violation of international human rights law." This is a pretty outrageous sentence, and the details about the case are almost - but sadly not quite - unbelievable.
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When I was 13 a friend of mine polled all his schoolfriends to write down their goals. People wrote all kinds of inspiring things (through an early teenage lens). Me? I wrote "to find a good desktop publishing application".
I am still that kid.
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Which static CMS would you pick for a longform writing project that updates daily?
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"Hertz said in its announcement that it will complete its purchases of the Tesla Model 3 small cars by the end of 2022. It also said it will establish its own electric vehicle charging network as it strives to produce the largest rental fleet of electric vehicles in North America." Most importantly, this is a major step towards mainstreaming electric cars in the US.
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"Facebook employees have long understood that their company undermines democratic norms and restraints in America and across the globe. Facebook’s hypocrisies, and its hunger for power and market domination, are not secret. Nor is the company’s conflation of free speech and algorithmic amplification. But the events of January 6 proved for many people—including many in Facebook’s workforce—to be a breaking point."
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"Over the last three years, Chrome has been working to empower web applications that want to push the boundaries of what's possible in the browser. One such web application has been Photoshop. The idea of running software as complex as Photoshop directly in the browser would have been hard to imagine just a few years ago. However, by using various new standardized web technologies, Adobe has now brought a public beta of Photoshop to the web." It's amazing to me that this is possible - and I honestly question whether it's really necessary. But I get that it makes a ton of sense for Chrome OS users in particular.
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“The novel finding is that heart rate correlation between subjects does not require them to actually be interacting, or even be in the same place. They can be listening to stories all alone at home, and their heart rate fluctuations will align with the story, and thus correlate with other listeners. It’s not the interaction between people but the story itself that does the trick.”
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"While the transition to remote work in early 2020 was abrupt for everyone, some found themselves thriving more than others – in many cases, thanks to their personality type. Many introverted workers found working from a distraction-free environment preferable. Client needs also changed in ways that benefited introverts’ skillsets, while virtual communication offered introverts more opportunities to share their thoughts. For ‘quiet deliverers’ who may once have flown under the radar, remote work offered not only a less taxing day-to-day, but also an opportunity to combine that extra energy with new ways of working – and really stand out."
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"Rolling Stone separately confirmed a third person involved in the main Jan. 6 rally in D.C. has communicated with the committee. This is the first report that the committee is hearing major new allegations from potential cooperating witnesses. While there have been prior indications that members of Congress were involved, this is also the first account detailing their purported role and its scope. The two sources also claim they interacted with members of Trump’s team, including former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, who they describe as having had an opportunity to prevent the violence."
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“Onstage, he refers to himself as the man who walked away from fifty million dollars, but the credibility he derived from that act sixteen years ago is now being deployed defensively and cynically, as if to place above suspicion any possible motive for telling denigrating jokes about trans people. He is also the man who walked into a reported sixty-million-dollar Netflix deal.”
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“"When we think about natural selection, we think about it happening over hundreds, or thousands, of years," said Samuel Wasser, a conservation biologist at the University of Washington, who was not involved in the research. "The fact that this dramatic selection for tusklessness happened over 15 years is one of the most astonishing findings."”
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Beware of anyone who argues that encryption - or any other freedom from surveillance - is a bad thing.
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So you’re telling me a bomb cyclone *isn’t* like, a really good cyclone?
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“But for anyone who’s paid attention to the ins and outs of In-N-Out over the years, news that the fast-food chain refused to do the vaccine checks required by both counties should not have been a shock. Nor should its petulant response: “We refuse to become the vaccination police for any government.” The LGBTQ community has long been wary of the company, and with good reason.” I’ve been to In N Out for the last time.
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I’ve got a feeling I’ve been to In N Out for the last time.
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I feel so bad for flies that get stuck inside cars. They’ll be so far away from home :(
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I ate breakfast at a Grateful Dead themed diner. They were my Dad’s neighbors before they were really big. Once, he organized an anti-Vietnam War protest (as a veteran) and got them to play; thousands of people turned up. The headlines read: Lynch Him! I’m really proud.
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If you’re thinking about a university degree entirely based on how much you’ll earn, you’re thinking about it wrong. Please also consider what it will add to your life in terms of meaning and knowledge.
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It turns out they forked Mastodon but are lying about it and aren’t complying with the AGPL: “Truth Social doesn’t comply with that license and, in fact, refers to its service as “proprietary.” Its developers apparently attempted to scrub references that would make the Mastodon connection clear — at one point listing a “sighting” of the Mastodon logo as a bug — but included direct references to Mastodon in the site’s underlying HTML alongside obvious visual similarities.”
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Werd I/O © Ben Werdmuller. The text (without images) of this site is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.