1. Free Speech is a signal showing who has power. On June 20 Wendy Kaminer, former board member of the ACLU, accused the ACLU of backing away from their longstanding defense of free speech. She based this on a leaked internal ACLU memo, which, to be fair, tries to have it both ways. First saying “As… Continue reading Saturday Links 7-Jul-2018: Free Speech and power, Tribal nations, Imperceptibly changing minds, flying electric spiders
Category: Link post
Post which is a list of links with commentary. Not about any single particular topic.
Saturday Links 30-Jun-2018: Next gen Apple maps, WEIRD Cousin Marriage, Fermi Paradox, Dunbar limits on places
1. Next gen Apple Maps coming in iOS12. In his story, Matthew Panzarino unsurprisingly hits the Apple PR privacy talking point (Apple is not bad bad bad like Google) rather hard. But that’s expected since he’s getting an exclusive from Apple. Main points: Apple built their next gen mapping data up from scratch (no external partners) by driving… Continue reading Saturday Links 30-Jun-2018: Next gen Apple maps, WEIRD Cousin Marriage, Fermi Paradox, Dunbar limits on places
Saturday Links 23-Jun-2018: Disability is down, German immigrants, Patrilineal kin groups, Paul McCartney carpool karaoke
Here are links/commentary on what I found most interesting to read recently. 1. Asian discrimination lawsuit against Harvard won’t change anything, except damage their claims to meritocracy. Not much new if you’ve been paying attention to the lawsuit. By now it’s clear Harvard and the Ivy League capped admissions for Asians at about 17% at… Continue reading Saturday Links 23-Jun-2018: Disability is down, German immigrants, Patrilineal kin groups, Paul McCartney carpool karaoke
Thursday Links 21-Jun-2018: the rise of market Autocracies, Uighurs, Taubes comeuppance, Scootermania
I normally do my links post on Saturday, but was travelling. So here’s one for Thursday to catch up, and I’ll do another this coming Saturday. 1. One-state regimes are embracing markets but remain autocratic. Tyler Cowen called this “one of my more interesting columns as of late.” I agree. It’s excellent. He argues one… Continue reading Thursday Links 21-Jun-2018: the rise of market Autocracies, Uighurs, Taubes comeuppance, Scootermania
Saturday Links 9-Jun-2018: Facebook teens, Ozimek’s economy is alright, Ritchie’s Hypeology, chill out on banning plastic straws
Once again it’s Saturday. So here’s what I enjoyed reading this week, with commentary as to why. 1. Pew Research shows teens using Facebook less. Teens are way cool so Facebook is doomed. A narrative that’s been overplayed for at least a decade. Example. But now Pew has a survey (with real survey data, not… Continue reading Saturday Links 9-Jun-2018: Facebook teens, Ozimek’s economy is alright, Ritchie’s Hypeology, chill out on banning plastic straws
Saturday Links 2-Jun-2018: AI’s balmy winter, Malaria GMO mosquitoes, Marshmallow 2.0, Mass of life on Earth
Here’s links and commentary for this week….. 1. AI’s balmy winter. Filip Piekniewski has a post arguing AI Winter Is Well On Its Way. It’s an excellent corrective to the past several years of AI hype. Recommended! That said, I didn’t find it completely convincing, though my objections are mostly definitional.
Saturday links 26-May-2018: Golden Rice, Algorithmic social feeds, Racism as original sin, Asteroid smotes flying birds
1. FDA approves Golden Rice. Mark Lynas is a former anti-GMO activist, who in 2013 changed his mind about genetically modified organisms (GMOs). Quote: It eventually dawned on me … that I was actually being anti-science in the way I was talking about GMOs, and that there are many ways a stronger scientific consensus on… Continue reading Saturday links 26-May-2018: Golden Rice, Algorithmic social feeds, Racism as original sin, Asteroid smotes flying birds
Saturday Links 19-May-2018: AI GPUs crush Moore’s law, Europa plumes, Ice cores and Rome, evolving cultural brains
Here’s my Saturday weekly reads. Links to what I enjoyed reading, with commentary. 1. AI GPUs crush Moore’s law. Human intuition appears to be hardwired to linear growth. Steve is a teenager, and if he grows an inch/year he’ll soon wind up as tall as his dad. But what if Steve grew exponentially? He’d match… Continue reading Saturday Links 19-May-2018: AI GPUs crush Moore’s law, Europa plumes, Ice cores and Rome, evolving cultural brains
Saturday Links 12-May-2018: Google Duplex means…begun, the spam war has. Also genomics math, chokers are the best, hearing with a vibrating vest.
It’s Saturday again, so here’s links/commentary on what I read and learned from this week. 1. Begun, the spam war has. The big tech news this week was the announcement of Google Duplex. Duplex launched with a demo of it calling a hair salon on the phone and talking to a human to make an… Continue reading Saturday Links 12-May-2018: Google Duplex means…begun, the spam war has. Also genomics math, chokers are the best, hearing with a vibrating vest.
Saturday Links 5-May-2018: Viral sex redistribution, Filipinos 700k years ago, Contingency of Marx, Marchetti’s constant, Email as micromeetings
My weekly list of good reads. With commentary on why I liked them. This week has more than usual, so let’s go. 1. Robin Hanson, sex redistribution, viral outrage. To recap, Hanson wrote a short post arguing inequality in the distribution of sex may be similar in importance to inequality in the distribution of income.… Continue reading Saturday Links 5-May-2018: Viral sex redistribution, Filipinos 700k years ago, Contingency of Marx, Marchetti’s constant, Email as micromeetings
