11 year old: “The best thing about Santa Claus is that I don’t have to write him a thank you note!”
Ryan Barrett
_@snarfed.org
npub10hx8...p26l
pave the cowpaths


> Democracy is the worst form of government…except for all the others.
– Winston Churchill

Fun fact: “six seven” traces its roots all the way back to Old English in the 1380s. Geoffrey Chaucer coined it in his epic poem _Troilus and Criseyd_ :
> But manly set the world on sixe and sevene;
> And, if thou deye a martir, go to hevene."
200 years later, Shakespeare picked it up and used it in his play _Richard II_ :
> But time will not permit: all is uneven
> And every thing is left at six and seven
The common English phrase “at sixes and sevens,” from an early dice game that preceded craps, is unrelated.
> It is thought that the expression was originally _to set on cinque and sice_ (from the French for five and six). These were apparently the most risky numbers to shoot for (‘to set on’) and anyone who tried for them was considered careless or confused.

> You should consider that the essential art of civilization is maintenance.
– Pete Seeger

TIL: "free driver"
opposite of free rider
"...geoengineering’s economics are almost the exact opposite of climate change’s: While global warming is a “free rider” problem, where countries must collaborate to avoid burning cheap fossil fuels, solar geoengineering is a “free driver” problem, where one country could theoretically do it alone."


Heatmap News
Exclusive: Stardust Solutions Raises $60 Million to Build a Solar Geoengineering System by 2030
A U.S. firm led by former Israeli government physicists, Stardust seeks to patent its proprietary sunlight-scattering particle — but it won’t d...
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Lately I’ve been thinking about orphaned code. Code that’s still running, live, with no remaining developers or users.
Forgotten hardware devices. Deserted VMs on cloud free tiers. Smart contracts whose DAOs disbanded years ago. Old school internet worms. Abandoned, starving Tamagotchi.
Can you think of other examples?
There are obvious conclusions here about maintainability, ecosystem security, etc, but I’m not here to lecture, I have no particular conclusions. Just a vibe.
The history of coffee is basically one long quest to make it taste as good as it smells.
"These two statements are both true: 'all accidents are preventable' and 'we cannot prevent all accidents.'"
– Timber Stinson-Schroff, Safe New World, Summer of Protocols


Summer of Protocols
Safe New World Web - Summer of Protocols
Safe New World
Timber Stinson-Schroff
From 1900 to 2017, the fatality rate in the American coal mining industry fell by 97%.1 What made this ...
I'm a big fan of harm reduction. Passkeys are *better* than passwords. Nuclear power is *better* than coal or LNG. Vaping is *better* (maybe?) than smoking.
Harm reduction isn't perfect. It's often not even good enough. But it's better then the status quo, and that's important.
Yes, moral hazard and risk homeostasis exist. We should always work toward improving things; adopting a better solution isn't an excuse for complacency.
But better is still better. Don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good. Incremental improvement is real improvement. Embrace it!
"You strap a database to a laundromat and you’ve got a business."
– Matthew Panzarino 

The Verge
Exit interview: Matthew Panzarino dishes on lessons learned from 10 years at TechCrunch
It’s been a chaotic but ultimately successful decade for Panzarino and TechCrunch. With AI on the horizon and new hands at the helm, what’s nex...