2 years Ago

When science demands faith

Published by marco on in Philosophy, Sociology, & Culture

The video/podcast Talking Trump, RFK Jr., Epistemic Collapse, &c. by Justin Smith-Ruiu & Olivia Ward-Jackson (Hinternet) was pretty good. I credit both participants but, if we’re honest, Justin talks about 95% of the time. It was quite an interesting discussion, touching on several salient points.

Misinformed about Trump

I’m still somewhat surprised to hear how empire-tinged some of the Justin’s information is, despite his conclusions being decidedly anti-empire. In particular, he completely mischaracterized Trump’s comments about Liz Cheney,... [More]

A look at American Empire through the standard lens

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

 Simon ShusterThe interview in the video below was quite good for showing what “manufactured consent” looks like in person. Simon Shuster is an affable, seemingly reasonable person who represents exactly what the U.S. empire wants him to represent. When Aaron pushes back, though, he concedes that Aaron is right but then doubles down on his opinion anyway—and always expressed in a friendly manner, negating the disagreement for the untrained listener.

If you listen to what he’s saying, he admits that... [More]

Are you doing the Advent of Code?

Published by marco on in Programming

No. No, I’m not.

I was briefly considering it because two good programmer friends[1] of mine asked me, and it seemed like it might be kind of fun to compare our solutions.

But … 24 days, man.

I’ve got other things to do. Like, a lot of other things to do.

I am not in any way bored or looking for things to do.

I’m not even lacking in programming projects that I could be working on.

I’m teaching a JavaScript class right now, for which I’m constantly refining the examples and project code,... [More]

A discussion of U.S. schools on This is Hell!

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

Breaking the Public Schools / Jennifer Berkshire by Chuck Mertz (This is Hell!) is an excellent interview about public-school funding with the very articulate—and clearly a trained podcaster—Jennifer Berkshire.

 Jennifer BerkshireShe was a bit hesitant to go all-out revolutionary in some cases, preferring the more mealy-mouthed liberal-style formulations like (possibly paraphrasing here),

“It’s interesting that Republican representatives who otherwise oppose government expenditures are so generous with the public wallet when it comes to... [More]”

Real quick on MVVM

Published by marco on in Programming

A little while back, someone wrote I can’t wrap my head around MVVM (Reddit), asking for help. I answered with a short example, reproduced below.

tl;dr: Use the MVVM Toolkit and try JetBrains ReSharper or Rider for more IDE assistance for binding and fixing up views.[1]

The concept is that:

  • the (M)odel describes your data in the shape you want to store it, process it, etc.
  • a (V)iew describes the elements of the UI.
  • a (V)iew(M)odel mediates between these two “shapes”.

Why do we need this? Why not... [More]

Chris Hedges on the 2024 U.S. Elections

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

2024 Election was the Oligarchic Elite vs. Corporate Elite (w/ Chris Hedges) (YouTube)

This is a fantastic and wide-ranging interview by Brianna. Hedges is at his morose and realistic best.

Near the end, they discuss the possibility of Hedges going on Rogan to teach him about Gramsci. I, for one, would absolutely watch the hell out of Chris Hedges on Joe Rogan. Joe would take a week off just to think about what had just happened.

Imagine Hedges bringing his message to Rogan’s audience. I really wonder what that would look like in terms of viewer numbers. Would the same people... [More]

Bizarre Adventures #34

Published by marco on in Fun

 The comic Bizarre Adventures #34 [Newsstand] (Comics.Org) came out in 1981.[1] It would be the final issue of the Bizarre Adventures series but it was the first one I picked up. I was nine years old. I loved this comic. My best friend loved this comic. He still quotes it to me every once in a while, usually around the holiday season. It was nearly impossibly subversive. I am proud of my mom that she let me buy it, even though it literally says “Not for kiddies! We mean it!” right on the cover.

It’s really hard... [More]

Links and Notes for November 29th, 2024

Published by marco on in Notes

Below are links to articles, highlighted passages[1], and occasional annotations[2] for the week ending on the date in the title, enriching the raw data from Instapaper Likes and Twitter. They are intentionally succinct, else they’d be articles and probably end up in the gigantic backlog of unpublished drafts. YMMV.

[1] Emphases are added, unless otherwise noted.
[2] Annotations are only lightly edited and are largely contemporaneous.

Table of Contents

Writing elegant code

Published by marco on in Programming

I watched this video analyzing a chunk of code, in the hopes of refactoring it.

Always Return Early in Your Code | Code Cop #024 by Nick Chapsas (YouTube)

The original code is the laughably overblown example below.

public List<int> ProcessData(List<int> data)
{
  if (data != null)
  {
    if (data.Count > 0)
    {
      var processedData = new List<int>();
      foreach (var d in data)
      {
        processedData.Add(d * 2);
      }
      return processedData;
    }
    else
    {
      return new List<int>();
    }
  }
  else
  {
    return null;
  }
}

Nick... [More]

Julian Assange speaks as a free man

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

 Julian AssangeI covered this in my notes at the time but it’s really worth repeating and celebrating that Julian Assange didn’t rot to death in a prison. It’s honestly the best news we’ve had at an international level. He wrote about it at the time in the article ‘I’m Free Because I Pled Guilty to Journalism’ by Julian Assange (Scheer Post). In the article, he took time to point out that, despite his 14 years of imprisonment, he’d gotten off comparatively easy, citing the plight of Joshua Schulte.

“In February this year, the alleged... [More]”

Henwood and Scheindlin on Israelis’ concerns

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

Behind the News, 11/7/24 by Doug Henwood (Apple Podcasts) was an extremely dense podcast, starting with Henwood reading his excellent article It Was Always About Inflation (Jacobin) (from which I cited a few passages in Links and Notes for November 8th, 2024), before going in-depth on a survey of Israeli public opinion: politics, polls, and inclinations with the extremely lucid and quick Dahlia Scheindlin, who works for Ha’aretz, then moving on to James Foley and Vladimir Unkovski-Korica, who afford the war Ukraine the same treatment.... [More]

Links and Notes for November 22nd, 2024

Published by marco on in Notes

Below are links to articles, highlighted passages[1], and occasional annotations[2] for the week ending on the date in the title, enriching the raw data from Instapaper Likes and Twitter. They are intentionally succinct, else they’d be articles and probably end up in the gigantic backlog of unpublished drafts. YMMV.

[1] Emphases are added, unless otherwise noted.
[2] Annotations are only lightly edited and are largely contemporaneous.

Table of Contents

Predatory capitalism is inevitable, until it isn’t – pass it on

Published by marco on in Quotes

 We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable. So did the divine right of kings. Any human power can be resisted and changed by human beings. Resistance and change often begin in art, and very often in our art, the art of words.”
Ursula K Le Guin

The greatest lie those that benefit most from capitalism ever told you is that you can’t defeat capitalism.

Links and Notes for November 15th, 2024

Published by marco on in Notes

Below are links to articles, highlighted passages[1], and occasional annotations[2] for the week ending on the date in the title, enriching the raw data from Instapaper Likes and Twitter. They are intentionally succinct, else they’d be articles and probably end up in the gigantic backlog of unpublished drafts. YMMV.

[1] Emphases are added, unless otherwise noted.
[2] Annotations are only lightly edited and are largely contemporaneous.

Table of Contents

Mike Wallace interviews Erich Fromm in 1958

Published by marco on in Philosophy, Sociology, & Culture

I know that people were absolutely horrible to large parts of the population based purely on identity in the United States in the 1950s. But can we also acknowledge that discussions like the half-hour interview of Erich Fromm by Mike Wallace actually happened on television?

This is a major socialist philosopher and psychologist talking to a non-adversarial journalist who actually read his book. These days, this kind of interview is relegated to a channel with subscribers in the triple digits... [More]

No time to solve an impossible problem

Published by marco on in Technology & Engineering

A 16-minute video that puts the lie to the story that LLM company have got alignment under control. It’s not really feasible without neutering the tool outright. it’s now a race to see who can “pivot”—read as: continue to boost vigorously while backing out of investment to limit financial exposure without collapsing the house of cards—to another niche.

Some Lessons from Adversarial Machine Learning by Nicholas Carlini (YouTube)

“The problem that you face is that it’s relatively easy to take a model and make it look like it’s aligned. You ask GPT-4, “how do I end... [More]”

Finkelstein: Gaza is gone, but don’t give up

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

Here are two videos of the inestimable Norman Finkelstein. The first one is just under ten minutes while the second is much longer: it starts at about 28 minutes into the 100-minute video.

'Gaza is GONE:' Prof. Norman Finkelstein on Israel's Destruction by Glenn Greenwald (YouTube)

Norman Finkelstein: There’s no question in my mind what’s going to happen: Israel is going to say we’re not letting cement into Gaza. It already did that after Cast Lead. It said that Hamas will use the cement to build tunnels. ‘We’re not going to let cement in.‘ And nobody in the international community... [More]”

Capsule Movie Reviews Vol.2024.13

Published by marco on in Movies

Read the explanation of method, madness, and spoilers.[1]

  1. Moonfall (2022)5/10
  2. The Island (2005)6/10
  3. Changing Lanes (2002)5/10
  4. Star Trek Into Darkness (2013)7/10
  5. The Heat (2013)7/10
  6. Wicked Little Letters (2023)7/10
  7. 3 Body Problem S01 (2023)8/10
  8. Kaos S01 (2024)8/10
  9. Hunter Killer (2018)7/10
  10. Transformers (2007)7/10
Moonfall (2022)5/10
I’d seen this movie before, but couldn’t find my review of it, so here it is. This is not a good movie. The... [More]

Links and Notes for November 8th, 2024

Published by marco on in Notes

Below are links to articles, highlighted passages[1], and occasional annotations[2] for the week ending on the date in the title, enriching the raw data from Instapaper Likes and Twitter. They are intentionally succinct, else they’d be articles and probably end up in the gigantic backlog of unpublished drafts. YMMV.

[1] Emphases are added, unless otherwise noted.
[2] Annotations are only lightly edited and are largely contemporaneous.

Table of Contents

Our system eats everything, not just its young

Published by marco on in Miscellaneous

I was pleasantly surprised at this 23-minute video even though, as I outline below, I don’t think it went far enough.

Critic Stephanie Lange EXPOSES Disturbing Teen Plastic Surgery Trend by Glenn Greenwald (YouTube)

“I don’t think that fillers, especially, were half as popular, as they are now, if it weren’t for Kylie Jenner. She has had such a huge influence, especially for the younger generation. And people want to look like the Kardashians because they basically epitomize the beauty standard right now. They’ve got the big bum, the tiny waist, the big boobs, the perfect faces that look... [More]”

New York lawyer celebrates death

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

The article Sinwar Is Dead, So What Happens Next? by Scott H. Greenfield (Simple Justice) writes,

 The last moments of Yahya SinwarThe mastermind of the October 7th tragedy, Yahya Sinwar, was fortuitously killed. Other than the terminally ignorant, this is recognized as both a great thing and a necessity for the future of the middle east. Of course, it wasn’t necessary before, as so many clamored for a ceasefire while Sinwar remained alive and ready to do it again and again, a detail that didn’t seem to prevent fantasies of peace. But hey, now that he’s dead,... [More]”

You’re probably doing code reviews incorrectly

Published by marco on in Programming

The article Processes and rules make code review less intimidating by Stefan Judis writes,

 Code reviews are, by nature, intimidating. Sometimes even brutal. If you’ve been in the game for long enough, you probably experienced the following: you worked hard on a feature, you’re proud of yourself and open the PR to be praised and land your changes, and then… it rains comments, suggestions and nitpicks. And if it’s really bad, you’re forced to take multiple feedback and clean-up rounds. It sucks.”

Oh, wow.
... [More]

C# vs. TypeScript type-narrowing and coercion

Published by marco on in Programming

I was working with a colleague to get the properties that have a particular attribute. The original formulation returned the properties then got the attributes again, plucking the first one off of the list and asserting that it exists to convince the compiler that everything’s OK. We know it exists because otherwise we wouldn’t have returned the property—but the computer doesn’t know that.

Ok, it works but it’s not efficient or elegant. Is there some way to build this so we allocate... [More]

CSS Typography is really good now!

Published by marco on in Programming

I not unexpectedly very much enjoyed this somewhat-rambling 59-minute course on controlling font features from CSS. It’s really quite amazing and wonderful what you can do declaratively these days.

CSS Typography Crash Course by Kevin Powell (YouTube)

To begin, Roel Nieskens takes a long look at variable fonts, which can be manipulated via both standard CSS properties, like font-weight, as well as using font-variation-settings, all of which can be animated. Variable fonts support a much more granular range of values for font-weight than... [More]

LLMs are still wholly unreliable: a case study with CSS

Published by marco on in Technology & Engineering

This is a 50-minute video of a guy who’s really good at using and teaching CSS asking three LLMs pointed and tricky questions about it.

It’s a bit long for what it is but I think there were some interesting things to learn. First of all, it’s very clear that Kevin hasn’t actually read very much about how LLMs work or how to prompt them. This is OK—because that means he’s just like most people trying to use these tools.

I gave three AI models a CSS quiz by Kevin Powell (YouTube)

Overall, Kevin was frustrated with the answers he got from Gemini,... [More]

Spam videos are eating up Caitlin Clark

Published by marco on in Sports

I do not recommend watching the video below. A friend of mine who thinks that I don’t appreciate Caitlin Clark enough sent me this video. It is pure clickbait. Caitlin Clark just finished up her rookie season in the WNBA. She put some of the best numbers the league has ever seen and has, nearly single-handedly, significantly boosted her not only her own team but the status of the WNBA, in general.

The video breathlessly speculates whether she will come back for another season.

 I kid you not:... [More]

Scott Ritter talks Russian military hardware

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

Scott Ritter has a very strong pedigree and background but has some odd verbal and facial tics that make him look disingenuous. Sometimes he makes broad statements that are backed up by information that he has on good authority, but that he hasn’t presented. He also talks very quickly in a decidedly non-beginner-friendly style. Those looking to disagree with him will be able to do so quite easily. However, if you listen to what he says, you will learn something. And his analyses have been... [More]

Katt Williams is a weird, weird dude

Published by marco on in Miscellaneous

A good friend of mine sent this link to me. I hadn’t listened to an interview since Tim Dillon and Alex Jones and Ira Glasser, former head of the ACLU way back in the spring of 2021. I’ve had fun with this friends links before (see Robert Edward Grant: King of Gobbledygook), so I gave it chance. I couldn’t recommend that anyone else listen to these three hours … but YMMV. It has 26M views and almost 500K likes on YouTube. Check out my notes below and decide for yourself.

Joe Rogan Experience #2111 − Katt Williams by Joe Rogan (YouTube)

I’m almost an hour... [More]

Two painful minutes of Kamala Harris

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

I published most of this article in my notes in the middle of October 2024. This video still marks the longest that I’ve listened to Kamala Harris speak. Trump is a nightmare to listen to, but Harris also feels like every second is wasted. Give it a listen and see how you feel about it. I don’t generally listen to presidents anymore—I stopped analyzing State of the Union addresses when Trump became president—but, if there’s a silver lining to Harris’s loss, it’s that this kind of insipid... [More]

Chris Hedges: interview with Jimmy Dore

Published by marco on in Public Policy & Politics

I was pleasantly surprised at how cogent, well-reasoned, and calm Dore’s conversation with Hedges was. I’m used to his show, of which I usually only see 10–15-minute clips—and that only rarely—where he’s joined by a peanut gallery of yuk-yukkers and where he often plays videos in chopped-up snippets, analyzing and taking them apart, but it’s often a bit much.

The 52-minute interview below, though is very, very good. I’ve cited at length below the video.

The Liberal Class’s Ultimate Betrayal (w/ Jimmy Dore) | The Chris Hedges Report by The Chris Hedges YouTube Channel (YouTube)

At 05:58, Dore says

“The people... [More]”