Year: 2017
Member Content:
Newsletter:
-
The 6 Laws of Technology Everyone Should Know
Christopher Mims: His example was DDT, a pesticide and probable carcinogen that nonetheless saved the lives of hundreds of thousands of people in India as a cheap and effective malaria prevention. Today, we can see how one technology, Facebook groups, can serve as a lifeline for parents of children with rare diseases while also radicalizing…
-
Twitter, It’s Time to End Your Anything-Goes Paradise
Farhad Manjoo: As I’ve argued before, Twitter has become the small bowel of the American news landscape — the place where the narratives you see on prime-time cable are first digested and readied for wider consumption. It’s no accident that it is President Trump’s social network of choice. And it’s also no accident that foreign…
-
New Ulysses Update: iPhone X, Revised Object Editors, and a New Theme
Great update to keep the app feeling perfect with iOS. The new D12 theme is also really great, I think a lot of people are going to love using it.
-
GORUCK Black Friday Deals
GORUCK started their deals on all bags (just not black ones) this week. $250 for a GR1 is a fucking steal, I grabbed another one. If you’ve been waiting: get on it. Ranger Green and Steel are both awesome colors. These are easily the best backpacks money can buy.
-
We Can’t Trust Facebook to Regulate Itself
Sandy Parakilas: Facebook is free to do almost whatever it wants with your personal information, and has no reason to put safeguards in place. That’s got to be a terrifying sentence for any Facebook user.
-
Android Phones Always Track You
Keith Collins: Since the beginning of 2017, Android phones have been collecting the addresses of nearby cellular towers—even when location services are disabled—and sending that data back to Google. The result is that Google, the unit of Alphabet behind Android, has access to data about individuals’ locations and their movements that go far beyond a…
-
Mainstream use cases for a microblog
One complaint I kept hearing when people started getting access was: “I can’t see how many followers I have”, or “there’s no one here”. But that’s thinking about it wrong. Micro.blog in my eyes is a platform for openly sharing your content to other places. That’s why the content starts on my site and get’s…
-
Outdoor Research Sequence L/S Zip Top – Everyday Wear
I have one of these as well, love it.
-
iPad Productivity Report — 11/20/17
Suppress notifications with prejudice, hidden feature reminder, and personal hotspots.
-
The devious art of lying by telling the truth
Melissa Hogenboom: Misleading by “telling the truth” is so pervasive in daily life that a new term has recently been coined to describe it: paltering. As noted, this is very common in business.
-
Twitter will remove verification badges from accounts that break rules
When I first saw this, I was ready to say “Fuck Twitter” yet again (and still, they deserve that monicker for many things), but the more I think about this, the more I think this might be borderline accidental genius. Think about it like this, the people with these badges really seem to care about…
-
DEVONthink vs iCloud Drive and iOS Files
In short, iCloud unless you like to be, umm, particular about file management. Also, I in no way agree that the speed differences are negligible. DEVONthink is slow as fuck.
-
iPad Productivity Report — 11/13/17
Focused, attentive, diversion-less, but not precious, work.
-
The New York Times Magazine Struggles to Explain a Parent Company
Kevin Roose, in an otherwise uninteresting article: The sensors on cars used by Waymo, the self-driving-car division of Alphabet, Google’s corporate parent, have struggled in heavy rain and snow. Editor: “Waymo, that’s the Google company right? Be sure to point that out to juice the SEO.” Roose: “Actually it’s an Alphabet company.” Editor: “Yeah, they…
-
How to do Everything
Cory Doctorow: That presents a paradox: if the purpose of lifehacking is to mindfully choose your priorities, what can you do when that process leads you to a position where no more choices are possible?
-
Against Productivity
Quinn Norton: Technically Americans work slightly more hours per year than the Japanese, but neither of those numbers include unpaid overtime or extra work you’re supposed to do around and for your regular job. Uncounted, this work remains unreal, though its consequences are harder to dismiss. The Japanese have defined a form of death-from-productivity: karōshi.…
-
Sean Parker unloads on Facebook “exploiting” human weakness
Mike Allen, relaying a comment from Sean Parker: “The thought process that went into building these applications, Facebook being the first of them, … was all about: ‘How do we consume as much of your time and conscious attention as possible?’”
-
How to resist technology addiction
Caroline Knorr: What do the big tech companies say to the criticism that they’re designing addictive products? They typically give the business argument, that they’re creating products people love to use and are constantly trying to improve people’s experience (Facebook says it polls users daily to gauge success).
-
Thoughts on the iPhone X – Anxious Robot
I was going to write some thoughts I have about the X, but Justin’s thoughts mirrors mine.
-
Fuck Twitter
Gabe Weatherhead: So here I am, 12 months later. I’m still saying “Fuck you Twitter” and I mean it more than I did in 2016.