WTF Happened in 1971? I heard about this site, which is full of scary economic charts, on TWIT. Apparently, the year 1971 is a major inflection point in the trajectory of the American economy.
🎵 I found a new Bleachers single today, featuring Bruce Springsteen. I was hoping for a new album this year, but this will have to do for now.
This metal monolith in Red Rocks is quite an expensive, and bland-looking, prank.
I’m weirdly not into Thanksgiving this year. I don’t even want to bake a pie (I love pie—usually). I really want brownies instead. And I want lasagna instead of turkey—but I won’t get my way with that, I’m afraid.
Elon Musk is now world’s second-richest person, as net worth has grown more than $100 billion this year
That Elon Musk’s wealth grew by $100 billion this year is super alarming to me.
I Lived Through A Stupid Coup. America Is Having One Now
The coup was a farce at the time but how soon it turned to tragedy. They called it a constitutional crisis, but how soon it became a real one. Right now, the same thing is happening to you. I’m trying to warn you America. It seems stupid now, but the consequences are not.
We are squarely in the farce phase. Bill Maher has been calling it, since at (at least) 2016, a “slow moving coup.” This coup is almost certainly not going to succeed, but the damage has already been done. I expect to see it happen over and over again, until it actually works.
iJustine’s M1 Macs review video is absolutely hilarious.
I find, the more I work with git, the less good I seem to be at it! Yes, this seems to be the Dunning–Kruger Effect in action.
‘Reach Out to Trump Supporters,’ They Said. I Tried.
Wajahat Ali, writing an op-ed in the New York Times, has given up on Trump supporters:
We cannot help people who refuse to help themselves.
I get it. It was shocking that Trump actually gained in the vote count after four years of doing everything he could to diminish American standing and influence in the world, and the rights and lives of people within his own borders. It is worse to have lived through an era in which the Republican Party went from a political movement with some bad ideas about taxation and social services to a full-on fascist personality cult.
It’s easy to blame Trump. He is a problem. But he is not the only problem. Ali hits at this deep into the article (my emphasis added in bold), stating something that is vital to understanding the predicament we are in:
Trump is an extension of their id, their culture, their values, their greed. He is their defender and savior. He is their blunt instrument. He is their destructive drug of choice.
The thing we should not forget about the Trump supporters is that they empower him—it’s not the other way around. If Trump is a lightning rod, his supporters are the lightning.
You can’t turn your back on those people because they are still here and are not going anywhere. Changing their minds might be a generation’s worth of work, but it is work that has to be done because social institutions are breaking down, and not by accident. The Republican Party transformed itself over the past fifty years into what it is now, through planning, determination, and lots and lots of money. There is no reason that the Democratic Party can’t do the same. It takes a lot of things, but most of all will.
This article has something interesting to say about Ron Howard’s films, but I disagree with its premise that Ron Howard is “typically dismissed as a studio workman rather than an artist.” Who “dismisses” the director of Apollo 13, Frost/Nixon, and A Beautiful Mind?
John Gruber’s suggestion of a progressive, tax-bracket-like system for Apple’s App Store commissions is much smarter than the system Apple announced today. They should just run things like this by him (@gruber) first. 😂
Apple’s biggest App Store critics are not impressed with its new fee cut for small developers
Nick Statt in The Verge reports:
Epic Games and Spotify, united in their fight against Apple, each released statements on Wednesday slamming the iPhone maker following news of its new App Store fee reduction for developers making less than $1 million per year.
File this under “some people are never happy.”
While I don’t love all of Apple’s policies—for example, it is ridiculous that developers have to opt in to the small business program—I believe that, as the owner of their platform (which is not even the majority platform), they do have the right to make and enforce whatever rules they choose.
I found this statistic (emphasis added) in the article very interesting:
The cut should apply to an estimated 98 percent of iOS app developers that generated just 5 percent of the App Store’s revenue last year, according to analytics firm Sensor Tower.
That is a long, long tail. It really makes me think about how insignificant most app developers are to Apple.
New York City to Close Public Schools Again as Virus Cases Rise
Eliza Shapiro reports in The New York Times:
New York City’s entire public school system will shutter on Thursday, Chancellor Richard A. Carranza wrote in an email to school principals, in a worrisome signal that a second wave of the coronavirus has arrived. Schools have been open for in-person instruction for just under eight weeks.
This is no great surprise to me, despite having hear Mayor de Blasio say the contrary just yesterday on the radio.
The Rise and Fall of Getting Things Done
I very much enjoyed Cal Newport’s rumination on Getting Things Done (GTD), and Merlyn Mann’s contributions to personal productivity culture, in The New Yorker.
Finding Getting Things Done, through Merlyn Mann’s 43 Folders, was transformative for me. It supercharged my productivity, for a while at least, numerous times in my life.
GTD techniques and processes have not fixed the root problems with knowledge work, which Newport points out in the article:
In this context, the shortcomings of personal-productivity systems like G.T.D. become clear. They don’t directly address the fundamental problem: the insidiously haphazard way that work unfolds at the organizational level. They only help individuals cope with its effects. A highly optimized implementation of G.T.D. might have helped Mann organize the hundreds of tasks that arrived haphazardly in his in-box daily, but it could do nothing to reduce the quantity of these requests.
We have a workaholic culture that puts a lot of pressure on the individual worker to be responsible for many, many things that are outside the worker’s control. GTD is both a means of dealing with this pressure, and a personal methodology that prolongs one’s exposure to all this pressure. It increases the number of balls you can keep in the air, but doesn’t address the problem that others keep throwing more and more balls at you that they expect you to juggle.
Gruber’ s review of the M1 Macs is the only one I plan to read closely. I want an M1-based Mac Mini so badly now. In any other year I would have ordered it already.
I don’t know if it is my imagination, or just my desire for a new computer, but Xcode 12 seems so slow on Big Sur.
I have updated my very old MacBook Pro to Big Sur, and am pleased that it actually works and is more-or-less acceptable in appearance, sound, and operating speed. I long for one of the new Mac Minis, though. I bet it would be so much faster and smoother to use.
It seems really weird to me that Pfizer’s COVID Vaccine Has to Be Stored at -80°C. How unfortunate. I hope people can work out the logistics of it.
I’m looking forward to watching the next episode of “The Mandalorian.” It is my favorite Star Wars property since the original trilogy, by a long shot. I don’t even consider myself a Star Wars fan anymore, but I like “The Mandalorian” a lot, because it is so different.
None of the Trump flags (huge flags!) in my neighborhood have been taken down yet. All but one of the Biden signs are down. At this point, I’m expecting the Trump flags never to be taken down.