My personal favorite part, is the part where this still surprises anyone. Second only to the part that people still use this shit.
Category: Links
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The Unwearable Lightness of Being: My Week Without a Smartwatch
Lauren Goode:
At the same time, the value of an activity tracker isn’t always proportionate to the burden of one. They all have these damn proprietary chargers, and you have to charge them all the time, and for what? So they can count steps? The more I thought about it, the more I needed a break from wearing a wrist Tamagotchi. Be gone, smartwatch, I thought.
Then I started to really miss it.
My take away is that Goode likes smart watches but has no clue why. Would be interesting to me to see if replacing the smart watch with a dumb watch would garner the same affection.
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Every moment of every day, mobile phone apps collect detailed location data.
That’s a way higher price than any monetary expense of paying for the app.
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I used all the best stuff for a week and it nearly broke me
Speaking of the best. This was great.
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The best doesn’t exist. A psychologist explains why we can’t stop searching.
Rachel Sugar:
We have this sense that there is an objective best, and in virtually no area of life is that true. It’s not even that, “Well, there’s the best for me, and then there’s the best for you.” It isn’t even clear that there is a best for me. There’s a whole set of things that are probably more or less equivalent.
This whole article is clearly written by someone who is fine settling for good enough.
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Social media outpaces print newspapers in the U.S. as a news source
Completely unsurprising, and yet utterly terrifying.
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The Divide Between Silicon Valley and Washington Is a National-Security Threat
Amy Zegart and Kevin Childs:
In the past year, Google executives, citing ethical concerns, have canceled an artificial-intelligence project with the Pentagon and refused to even bid on the Defense Department’s Project JEDI, a desperately needed $10 billion IT-improvement program. While stiff-arming Washington, Google has been embracing Beijing, helping the Chinese government develop a more effective censored search engine despite outcries from human-rights groups, American politicians, and, more recently, its own employees.
That is an absolutely damning paragraph.
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Tech Companies Insist on Ruining Great Cities
Jack Nicas and Karen Weise reporting:
“Every day as a C.E.O., you have employees coming to you saying, ‘I don’t make enough to buy a house for my family,’ and you already feel like you are paying through the nose,” said Glenn Kelman, chief executive of Redfin, the real estate site based in Seattle. “Almost everyone is looking at other affordable places where you can open an office.”
I seriously can’t believe it has taken this long for the most obvious things to occur to these companies, like expanding beyond one singular location for an entire industry. On the Seattle front, I used to contend it was the best city in the US, but Amazon has soured me on that opinion.
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Starting from Scratch – Base Wardrobe, Steve on Everyday Wear
This was a lot of fun/work putting together. It’s quite interesting to imagine you have no clothes and you are rebuilding from scratch. We actually wrote these independently, but they came out very similar in areas.
My post on this comes Monday. In the mean time, check out how Steve would rebuild his wardrobe.
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JIRA is an Antipattern
Jon Evans:
Let me reiterate: to write elegant software, you must keep both the macro and the micro vision in your mind simultaneously while working. JIRA is good at managing micro pieces. But you need something else for the macro. (And no, a clickable prototype isn’t enough; those are important, but they too require descriptive context.)
He goes on to talk about writing a ten pager about what you are trying to create. I like the idea of writing out some prose, but hate the idea of a ten page document. That’s absurd.
If you can’t describe what your software needs to do in one sentence, you don’t yet understand what you are building. Once you get that once sentence figured out, then write a page or two about how you are going to accomplish that.
Either way, JIRA has by in large has become JIRA for JIRA’s sake. And more worryingly, I’ve often seen it become a place to point fingers to blame for errors or delays, or features not coming out right. And the frustrating part is that this finger pointing is done completely unintentionally and ends up frustrating and confusing everyone, so the end result is usually doubling down on JIRA for the next week or so.
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I’ve tried logging my exercise and diet – but are health apps really a good idea?
Solid read. It is pretty clear that most ‘health’ apps are far more concerned with engagement than with help. Though I suspect most genuinely start off by wanting to help. There’s long been a trend with Nicholas Felton at the top of that, about logging your life to analyze the data. I call bullshit.
Most people log for trivial and idiotic rewards and rarely do they bother with any type of analysis. It’s logging to log for the sake of a log that you can hold up at some point.
If the health app you use, doesn’t actually provide actionable data, then you are logging to log. Acting on data to make a change is great. Logging data so that you have it is pointless.
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Google is Still Shady, Even If You Try to Dodge It
The DuckDuckGo blog:
Private browsing mode and being logged out of Google offered very little filter bubble protection. These tactics simply do not provide the anonymity most people expect. In fact, it’s simply not possible to use Google search and avoid its filter bubble.
Ultimately:
We often hear of confusion that private browsing mode enables anonymity on the web, but this finding demonstrates that Google tailors search results regardless of browsing mode. People should not be lulled into a false sense of security that so-called “incognito” mode makes them anonymous.
If the average person knew this, and accepted it, they’d shit a brick. The. Switch to DuckDuckGo which is far superior.
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Notes and LiquidText
Gabe Weatherhead:
I’ve spent my entire career working with PDFs as reference material. I have thousands of documents and many, many notes. I feel like I spent my life doing it all wrong. LiquidText is an indispensable tool for any researcher or student.
Such a killer app. If I still worked in real estate it would have been a game changer.
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TOLL, an action-thriller novel by Matt Gemmell
Out today, I had it in pre-order myself on Apple Books. Really enjoyed the first novel in the series and have been looking forward to reading this one too.
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Work-Life Balance
Speaking of lifestyle changes, this post at Working Mother, has this tidbit that bothers me:
Instead of work and life outside of the office being two totally separate parts of our lives, Bezos envisions a more harmonic relationship between the two. In his world, work and life outside of work are reciprocal rather than competing, compartmentalized parts.
First, this coming from Bezos is fucking rich. Secondly, I think this is still not the right way to think about it. Work and ‘life’ should not be things that happen at set points during the day. I often told people when bringing them on in my last job, that I didn’t care when they work or for how long, just get the job done and do it well.
I told them that if that meant leaving for an hour mid-morning to grocery shop, and then working later, that’s great. Life shouldn’t be hard, as a “boss” I always felt it was asinine to make life harder by making someone be chained to set hours when they “have” to work.
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Men’s Health on Standing versus Sitting
Men’s Health has a follow up to that NYT post. From Michael Frederickson, M.D.:
It really has to be a lifestyle. Not “okay, I’ll sit all day (even though it’s really bad) and then I’ll try and make up for at another time.” Think about your lifestyle and how you can work around inactive periods.
Indeed.
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NYT: Standing Desks are Overrated
Aaron E. Carroll:
But standing is not exercise. Many health groups recommend that people at work take frequent walking breaks. Replacing sitting with standing does not fulfill that recommendation and may even mislead people into thinking they’re doing enough activity.
Standing desks are “overrated” in the same way that any other health advice is: it’s not a panacea so stop treating it like one. That said, reading this article, I can’t help but think the advice is: change positions often. As a long time standing desk user I think you are far more likely to change positions often when standing than when sitting. Say, 100% more likely, as that’s quotable.
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Building Technology for Good
Wilneida Negrón:
By then, my experience working as a therapist, social worker, immigrant rights advocate, and social movement researcher had made me deeply skeptical of Mark Zuckerberg’s “move fast and break things” ethos, which has defined Silicon Valley. While this mantra is credited with ushering in an era of incredible innovation–the products, platforms, and tools developed by “tech giants”–I saw how it reinforced the ways our social, economic, and political systems and institutions can privilege some groups over others, and reproduce bias and inequality.
Here’s something to think about: Apple has almost the inverse ethos as Facebook. Both Facebook and iPhone have massively transformed the world. Which has transformed it for better, which for worse?
I’m not sure there is a clear answer, however my gut says that Facebook is more net negative than iPhone. I wonder how much of that could have been avoided if more consideration was given while building out the Facebook, as was given when Apple built iPhone.
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Knit Velcro Patch Caps from All Day Ruckoff
Speaking of All Day Ruckoff, I just picked up one of these new knit caps. Damn is it nice, and perhaps the warmest cap I’ve owned. I’ll be using this for my early morning rucks.
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GORUCK Gear & Colorway Directory at All Day Ruckoff
A huge benefit for people like me. And damn, there’s been some sweet colors out there. The new 10L Bullet Ruck colors are stellar. Great resource from All Day Ruckoff.