, <some-prog>
without installing <some-prog>
!substack link A couple of years ago I went to a talk by a neurobiologist named Andrew Huberman that was, I think, broadly about mindfulness. But he said something as kind of a casual aside thatβs stuck with me ever since: Humans, like predatory mammals, have eyes on the fronts of their heads in order to be able to focus on a single point (prey while hunting). That focus raises stress hormones like cortisol in the brain, and thatβs why predators need to spend so much time recharging. Itβs why if you go on a safari and drive past a pride of lions theyβre probably all asleep, and itβs why my cat is currently taking her second nap of the day after spending an hour staring at the hall closet.
Huberman [said that] you can imagine how much those stress hormones get ratcheted up when weβre spending so much time focusing on tiny devices in our hands. Weβre literally hunting for information. And we still have a lot of βwildβ in our brains. I think that when we talk about βwildernessβ and how itβs being lost in our modern era, we have to look inward as well as outward.
article bullshit: a spectrum of superfluous, cluttered, unnecessary and deceptive content. you know what it looks like when you see it - it clogs up the web. everywhere when information is cheap, attention becomes expensive! we’re all trying to maximize singla to noise, so people will eventually gravitate towards generally useful products. create genuinely well thought out products that add signal, not noise, and genuinely benefit people rather than abusing them
modern nomograms two-dimensional graphic calculating devices; allow very fast computation and provide immediate visual feedback to help navigate the spatial meaning of the numbers they’re working with. The most available of these are services like desmos, allowing users to easily isualize and graph relationships
article idea: because running code uses energy, writing inefficient code is morally wrong
[[Ethical web]] guidelines suggest that this is the case; by minimizing any impact, systems use fewer resources, meaning that we do not cause pain to others through contributing to reused, impactful inefficiencies in code
the line between running code and polluting the environment is relatively straightforward, unless you live and your code is always run in places primarily dependent on renewable power β in which case your impact is substantially diminished
The essay primarily disputes the last point: that it is a complete moral wrongdoing, and a direct contribution to the suffering of others, to support this practice. This asks what a contribution to suffering is, and where this suffering is best placed; perhaps the best place for suffering is a small cut (one of, say, 1000) to the users of the software rather than a gunshot wound to the developer
We started playing [[Myst]] (realMyst edition) last night and really enjoyed it.
Read a little bit about [[Karrot]] and how they make their software.
Reading [[Informatics of the Oppressed]]. Looking at historic experiments in informatics from [[Cuban socialism]] and [[liberation theology]] for redistribution of informational wealth. Think I came across it via [[Panda]].
Had a quick look at kinopio.club for weeknote diagrams. I don’t think it was working properly? The how to thing seemed to be missing a bunch of cards.
Spiderwiki: "Spiders appear to offload cognitive tasks to their webs, making them one of a number of species with a mind that isnβt fully confined within the head." https://www.quantamagazine.org/the-thoughts-of-a-spiderweb-20170523/
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