Old, ambient Japanese music became a smash hit. obscure chillout tunes are becoming popular again due to being featured in situational playlists.
Month: November 2020
Malleable Systems Collective
- Software must be as easy to change as it is to use it.
- All layers, from the user interface through functionality to the data within, must support arbitrary recombination and reuse in new environments.
- Tools should strive to be easy to begin working with but still have lots of open-ended potential.
- People of all experience levels must be able to retain ownership and control.
- Recombined workflows and experiences must be freely sharable with others.
- Modifying a system should happen in the context of use, rather than through some separate development toolchain and skill set.
Too Clever By Half
The smartest play for coyotes in the meta-game is never to Skirmish with humans. Never. And if you find yourself in a Skirmish-with-Humans game, then the smart play is to act scared, to run away at top speed from a jangling coffee can. But no, coyotes are too clever by half, plenty smart enough to understand and master the reality of their immediate situation, but nowhere near smart enough to understand or withstand the reality of their larger situation. It’s their nature to play the scheming mini-game. They can’t help themselves. And that’s why the coyotes always lose. It’s always the meta-game that gets you.
Organizational Metaphors
NOBL Academy
Machine: an organization is a series of connected parts arranged in a logical order in order to produce a repeatable output
Organism: an organization is a collective response to its environment and, to survive, must adapt as the environment changes
Brain: an organization is a set of functions designed to process information and learn over time
Cultural System: an organization is a mini-society, with its own culture and subcultures defined by their values, norms, beliefs, and rituals
Political System: an organization is a game of gaining, influencing, and coordinating power
Psychic Prison: an organization is a collection of myths and stories that restrict people’s thoughts, ideas, and actions
Instrument of Domination: an organization is a means to impose one’s will on others and exploit resources for personal gains
Flux and Transformation: an organization is an ever-changing system indivisible from its environment
Metaverse economy
Tim Sweeney argues that platforms need to offer their services at cost to enable the Metaverse. Quite self-serving, but not entirely wrong.
100 Little Ideas
A list of ideas, in no particular order and from different fields, that help explain how the world works.
- Depressive Realism
- Skill Compensation
- Curse of Knowledge
- Base Rates
- Base-Rate Neglect
- Compassion Fade
- System Justification Theory
- 3 Men Make a Tiger
- Burdian’s Ass
- Pareto Principle
- Sturgeon’s Law
- The Matthew Effect
- Impostor Syndrome
- Anscombe’s Quartet
- Ringelmann Effect
- Semmelweis Reflex
- False-Consensus Effect
- Boomerang Effect
- Chronological Snobbery
- Outgroup Homogeneity
- Planck’s Principle
- McNamara Fallacy
- Courtesy Bias
- Berkson’s Paradox
- Group Attribution Error
- Baader-Meinhof Phenomenon
- Ludic Fallacy
- Normalcy Bias
- Actor-Observer Asymmetry
- The 90-9-1 Rule
- Texas Sharpshooter Fallacy
- Fredkin’s Paradox
- Poisoning the Well
- Golem Effect
- Appeal to Consequences
- Plain Folks Fallacy
- Behavioral Inevitability
- Apophenia
- Self-Handicapping
- Hanlon’s Razor
- False Uniqueness Effect
- Hard-Easy Effect
- Neglect of Probability
- Cobra Effect
- Braess’s Paradox
- Non-Ergodic
- Pollyanna Principle
- Declinism
- Empathy Gap
- Abilene Paradox
- Collective Narcissism
- Moral Luck
- Feedback Loops
- Hawthorne Effect
- Perfect Solution Fallacy
- Weasel Words
- Hormesis
- Backfiring Effect
- Reflexivity
- Second Half of the Chessboard
- Peter Principle
- Friendship Paradox
- Hedonic Treadmill
- Positive Illusions
- Ironic Process Theory
- Clustering Illusions
- Foundational Species
- Bizarreness Effect
- Nonlinearity
- Moderating Relationship
- Denomination Effect
- Woozle Effect
- Google Scholar Effect
- Inversion
- Gambler’s Ruin
- Principle of Least Effort
- Dunning-Kruger Effect
- Knightian Uncertainty
- Aumann’s Agreement Theorem
- Focusing Effect
- The Middle Ground Fallacy
- Rebound Effect
- Ostrich Effect
- Founder’s Syndrome
- In-Group Favoritism
- Bounded Rationality
- Luxury Paradox
- Meat Paradox
- Fluency Heuristic
- Historical Wisdom
- Fact-Check Scarcity Principle
- Emotional Contagion
- Tribal Affiliation
- Emotional Competence
Idea Adoption Curve
ideas are also on an adoption curve. This is why NYT, Vox etc are fundamentally uncompelling, since they sit too late in the cycle.
Vinyl PC
Booting a PC from vinyl for a warmer, richer OS
To pull off the trick, Jozef leverages the rarely used and little known cassette tape interface that PCs had back in the early days. This required building a new bootloader and burning it to ROM to make the PC listen to audio signals with its 8255 programmable peripheral interface chip.

Automated bestsellers
What is Barack Obama Book? It’s not a book, exactly. It’s an SEO ploy by a shadowy company that has scores of $2.99 knockoffs ready to be downloaded. But it’s also not not a book, in the sense that it is words on pages, bound by covers or delivered to your Kindle. I don’t think Barack Obama Book was written by a human being, but I do think the A.I. that excreted it made some decent points about Barack Obama. University Press has churned out 55 books since February 2019, and I like to imagine the hardworking A.I. behind these titles holed up in a hotel room somewhere, chain-smoking, downing coffee, and furiously digesting every single extant fact about, say, Queen Elizabeth. Then the A.I. compacts all that information into a small, dense slab of readable prose and sends it out into the world. “To knowledge!” University Press toasts at night, watching the royalties flood in. Sometimes it invites over friends like Birthday Song, who performs 100s of versions of the birthday song personalized for individual names on Spotify, or Videogyan, who creates iterative animations of babies doing ordinary tasks and has nearly 10M YouTube subscribers. Perhaps a bit sloshed, University Press lectures its friends long into the evening: “Ultimately,” it intones, “Barack Obama is just a human being with considerable charisma and charm who used his abilities to help him become President of the United States.” Its friends raise their glasses. “Happy Birthday Barack,” sings Birthday Song.
Law of Shitty Clickthroughs
There are a few drivers for the Law of Shitty Clickthroughs, and here’s a summary of the top ones:
Customers respond to novelty, which inevitably fades
First-to-market never lasts
More scale means less qualified customers