Partner With Rational Optimists
Incrementally correct personal websites
To listen well, get curious
Your Lifestyle Has Already Been Designed
After dread · Cennydd Bowles
What Buddhism can do for AI ethics
Bottoming Out
George Saunders's Advice to Graduates
The Unbearable Lightness of Being Opaque to Ourselves: Milan Kundera on Writing and the Key to Great Storytelling
Rewilding your attention
our truly quirky dimensions are never really grasped by these recommendation algorithms. They have all the dullness of a Demographics 101 curriculum; they sketch our personalities with the crudity of crime-scene chalk-outlines. They’re not wrong about us; but they’re woefully incomplete.
The metaphor suggests precisely what to do: If you want to have wilder, curiouser thoughts, you have to avoid the industrial monocropping of big-tech feeds. You want an intellectual forest, overgrown with mushrooms and towering weeds and a massive dead log where a family of raccoons has taken up residence.
For me, it’s meant slowly — over the last few years — building up a big, rangy collection of RSS feeds, that let me check up on hundreds of electic blogs and publications and people. (I use Feedly.) I’ve also started using Fraidycat, a niftily quixotic feed-reader that lets you sort sources into buckets by “how often should I check this source”, which is a cool heuristic; some people/sites you want to check every day, and others, twice a year.
Other times I spend an hour or two simply prospecting — I pick a subject almost at random, then check to see if there’s a hobbyist or interest-group discussion-board devoted to it. (There usually is, running on free warez like phpBB). Then I’ll just trawl through the forum, to find out what does this community care about?
Surface Tension
The Real Benefits Of Staying Off Social Media
Long Distance Thinking
Why Life Can’t Be Simpler - Farnam Street
How can wonder transform us?
Scriptnotes Episode 541: Intelligence vs. Charisma
Systems thinking is what makes designers great — Tanner Christensen
Poor design meets one need while creating a dozen others. Good design resolves problems without negatively affecting anything else in its ecosystem.
We call this lens of thinking "systems thinking." It tends to separate the genuinely great designers from the pretty-great ones.
The designers who do tremendous work know that what they're creating does not exist within a bubble. They understand that the context of what they're making plays a vital role in how the team should build it. They know how what they create affects everything it touches, particularly the people. The design is intentional. Trade-offs are known, weighted, and decided on. Not only in the immediate problem space but in the surrounding spaces too.
Multipotentiality: When High Ability Leads to Too Many Options