Link Roundup #1

Breadcrumbs – by Simon Sarris – The Map is Mostly Water

A vision of virtuous social media usage. Simon Sarris suggests leaving “breadcrumbs”: short snippets that show what you are doing in the real world. People follow the breadcrumbs and then learn more about you. A collection of breadcrumbs ends up being an honest, genuine description of a person, better than a dating doc or resume.

How to read more books – by David R. MacIver

I often have the problem of both wanting and not wanting to do something. This post is about reading more books, but the techniques extend to pretty much anything. I particularly like DRMacIver’s concept of spells, behavioral algorithms you can run on yourself to redirect energy and become more productive.

DRMacIver has some of the best writing out there for dealing with productivity, motivation, and pragmatic management of emotions.

Writes and Write-Nots by Paul Graham

A worrying story of how widespread LLM usage could play out. If people offload more and more of their writing to AIs, they will eventually lose the ability to write independently. Writing is the same as thinking, so we can expect people to lose the ability to think as well.

Eigenrobot on The Last Unicorn (1982)

I recently rewatched The Last Unicorn and very much enjoyed it despite not being into the fantasy genre. Eigenrobot points to a possible reason why: the film is less a fantasy and more a deconstruction of fantasy. It’s about characters who are confused about what kind of story they are in, and what their place is in it.

Oil Shocks, Price Controls, and War, the Marginal Revolution Podcast

An enlightening summary of what was going on economically in the 70s. I much prefer Tyler Cowen as a historian than an econonomist. His recent appearance on Rick Rubin’s podcast also had some interesting stories about the history of Asia.

Community Archive

A queryable, downloadable, and searchable database of tweets. It’s opt-in, but an impressive array of posters have already contributed their archives.

How glowing up ruined my life – Alivia D’Andrea on YouTube

A woman’s retrospective on a “glowing up” journey of losing weight, becoming active, and clearing up skin. This isn’t very interesting on the object level, and indeed this video doesn’t go deep into the specifics of her glow up, but I appreciated the honesty and clarity of her retrospective thought. It’s a good illustration of how people can self-inflict delusions that are obviously harmful when looked at from the outside. It also illustrates how and why people inflict needless suffering on themselves.

On Building Git for Lawyers – by Jordan Bryan

At the Pareto frontier of software engineering and lawyering, you can save a gazillion dollars worth of productivity for law firms by creating Git for Microsoft Word’s docx format.

Another lesson: even highly paid specialists have unproductive, slow workflows, and you can always learn a lot by paying attention to how someone works. There is more low-to-medium hanging fruit out there.

Will the China Cycle Come for Airbus and Boeing? – Construction Physics Substack

Why can’t China build commercial aircraft? Usually China is able to be competitive in manufacturing via appropriating processes built out in other countries (the “China Cycle”), but this hasn’t happened with aircraft. This post tells several stories of China’s failures in this area since the 70s, and ends on an uncertain note for whether or not their most recent attempt will succeed.

On Self-Respect (1961) by Joan Didion

I think a lot about nebulous qualities– for example, how do some people have more conversational “energy” than others? Or “confidence”? Didion’s conception of “self-respect” is more of a “meta-quality” that concerns how one should relate to one’s self.

Also, Didion’s style is beautiful and refreshing, like nothing I’ve ever seen.

Dominic Cummings on War and Peace

I’ve been having trouble getting into War and Peace, which hasn’t quite captured me the same way Anna Karenina did. Cummings pulls out several compelling passages that give me plenty to look forward to.

“The most deranged working habit I’ve ever heard” (from Paul Bloom on Conversations with Tyler)

Full quote:

[BLOOM]: My oddest work habit is that I work — not always, but often — in six-minute bursts. I have a whiteboard right next to me. I’ll work on a Substack for six minutes, then a reference letter for six minutes. Then I’ll rush and fold my laundry for six minutes. Then I’ll answer email for six minutes. Go on social media for six minutes. Then do this for 10 more things and go back to the Substack and repeat. Then three, four hours will go by. I don’t recommend it for everybody.

COWEN: That’s an approximation? Or you’ve set it like a timer? Or is the timing internal?

BLOOM: Not an approximate, I have a timer. When my timer beeps, I could be mid-word. I’ll stop and go on to the next. For me, (a) this keeps me from getting bored. Also, by stopping mid-word or stopping wherever I’m stopping, when I go back to it, the energy is still there to want to continue. I highly recommend it to everybody.

I’ve been using this technique in my job and to great effect. Why does it work? For one, it forces me to conceptualize work as smaller chunks. It also prevents me from going too deep into any particular rabbit hole, which I often do as a defense against working on something more important but less interesting.

Gwern talked about rabbit holes on his recent podcast appearance. There is a proper time for going down rabbit holes, and the instinct is there for a good reason. But sometimes you have to do the opposite.

Simon Sarris on website aesthetics

A starting vibe for website aesthetics. The interactive animations on his website (simonsarris.com) are also a good point of inspiration. I hope to make the blog more like this at some point in the future.

Ripley Ischia knit shirt and Jade Checker Chet knit from the Scott Fraser Collection

Obscenely expensive, but I felt I had no choice but to buy these shirts which spoke directly to my soul.

The Little Mermaid (ongoing series) by sympathetic opposition

A retelling of the original Little Mermaid by Hans Christian Andersen. Sympopp adds a modern touch with references to gender discourse and psychoanalysis.

Masterpieces of Japan (@JapanTraCul) on Twitter

Beautiful art that’s mostly vertical and works well as phone wallpapers.

I use the Slideshow Wallpaper app to rotate through art on my phone.

@marysia_cc on Twitter

More good art that can be used for phone wallpapers.

A proposed redesign of Serbian currency

Aerial Embroidery

See also the artist’s Instagram. (I originally learned about this from Twitter but can’t find the original link.)

Postmodern Jukebox

Lovely jazz-swingy covers of popular songs, highly recommended. IMO their version of “Creep” is better than Radiohead’s.

@mikenekolala on Twitter

The most photogenic cat I’ve ever seen, highly recommended follow.


If you clicked on any of these links or found one of the descriptions interesting, please let me know in the comments!

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One response to “Link Roundup #1”

  1. Breadcrumbs – by Simon Sarris – The Map is Mostly Water

    I really like this one because it speaks to me. Especially the part that says that a trail of breadcrumbs is way more sincere than a dating doc due to lack of poseur. I’m going to have to incorporate this into my daily routine, but will have to do further reflection on if there is a mindset framework for creating breadcrumbs, thoughtless breadcrumps provide negative value I think.

    How to read more books – by David R. MacIver

    I like how this article sets up external structures. I read the other links in this paragraph re: spells, I’ve been trying to design a individualized journal/workbook for my life and though initially I’ve been focusing on the mindset framework before starting a process, this got me thinking about the actual process (shellwork) as well. He specifically mentions that he doesn’t have a way of formalizing the process, but I’d like to give it a shot through my studies through the journal making. 

    Writes and Write-Nots by Paul Graham

    Kind of relevant to my job as we’re potentially working with a research firm to explore value lock in by AI usage. 

    Relevant to me: I’m much more motivated to write after reading this. Something to mention, no matter how intellectual the topic, the words only flow if they’re from the heart. The next step for me after reading this is to a)figure out how to incorporate interesting ideas into my heart b)indulge in what the heart cares about and excrete it in writing. Also relevant to the previous links. 

    How glowing up ruined my life – Alivia D’Andrea on YouTube

    I appreciated this retrospective and I’m glad there was a self acceptance arc. I forgot how much emphasis women in society can place on their looks. I’m not exactly exempt but I’m fortunate that my life experiences have allowed me to place value in areas besides superficial features now. A side point prompted by the links you posted above, I hate to trivialize suffering/insecurities but I think a lot of times in society, people can learn to find value in themselves just by reading more non-fiction. 

    On Building Git for Lawyers – by Jordan Bryan

    This is pretty exciting to read. Seems like an obvious pain point. I look forward to following their progress. 

    On Self-Respect (1961) by Joan Didion

    I’m developing self love but I’ve never really reflected on self respect, I guess I just took it for granted. Only while reading this that I think that particularly for myself, this might be in limited supply, so thank you for waking me up to that. Actually this article was a bit hard for me to read, though I still got a strong impression that it was significant, either because of Didion’s way of writing was strange to me or because the concepts introduced were rather alien. I’m not sure of which so I put it in my read later list to read later after when I can manage to reflect on my own self respect and have some sort of self internal model to reference when re-reading.

    Dominic Cummings on War and Peace

    Never read Tolstoy, and after reading this 

    This post, plus your X post on Anna K, has inspired me to give the Tolstoy a chance. I wasn’t that inspired by Cumming’s post alone, War and Peace seems to require a love of history and appreciation for human nature embedded in history (I understand by saying this I’m falling into the same trap of Vera talking about “these days”), but Anna K seems to be more relatable, I wondered how relatable it could be but then I read your X post which put me over the edge on deciding to read Tolstoy. 

    @marysia_cc on Twitter

    I really like this art! Followed

    All and all I really enjoyed this post and interestingly, content in a large amount of these links seemed to speak personally to me (including the Tolstoy one). I don’t know if it’s your particular taste in content or if I’m just under informed in your part of the internet, in which case I look forward to getting to know things you discover.

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