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Last active November 3, 2024 23:12
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2024 reading list

Things I might read in 2024.



  • Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, Richard Howard (translator) - The Little Prince
  • (Translation by) Sam Hamill - Yellow River: Three Hundred Poems From the Chinese
  • Sayaka Murata, Ginny Tapley Takemori (translator) - Convenience Store Woman (via)
  • Jorge Luis Borges - Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius (in Labyrinths)/ printed (via)
  • Franz Kafka - The Metamorphosis (via)
  • William Olaf Stapledon - Star Maker/ audio, go to 12m35s to skip past the introduction spoilers

  • The Heart of Innovation: A Field Guide for Navigating to Authentic Demand/ audio (via)
  • Peter D. Kaufman - Poor Charlie's Almanack: The Wit and Wisdom of Charles T. Munger, Expanded Third Edition
  • Lia A. DiBello - Expertise in Business: Evolving with a Changing World (in The Oxford Handbook of Expertise) (via)
  • Joël Glenn Brenner - The Emperors of Chocolate: Inside the Secret World of Hershey and Mars
  • Elad Gil - High Growth Handbook/ audio
  • W. Edwards Demming - The New Economics for Industry, Government, Education/ audio
  • W. Edwards Demming - The New Economics for Industry, Government, Education/ the PDF or ebook
  • Henrik Karlsson - Escaping Flatland/ including the posts I SingleFile'd
  • the relevant-looking posts on benkuhn.net/posts
  • Commoncog Case Library Beta
  • Keith J. Cunningham - The Road Less Stupid: Advice from the Chairman of the Board/ audio
  • Keith J. Cunningham - The 4-Day MBA/ video
  • Cedric Chin's summary of 7 Powers
  • Akio Morita, Edwin M. Reingold, Mitsuko Shimomura - Made in Japan: Akio Morita and Sony
  • Nomad Investment Partnership Letters or redacted (via)
  • How to Lose Money in Derivatives: Examples From Hedge Funds and Bank Trading Departments
  • Brian Hayes - Infrastructure: A Guide to the Industrial Landscape
  • Accelerated Expertise (via)/ printed, "read Chapters 9-13 and skim everything else"
  • David J. Gerber - The Inventor's Dilemma (via Oxide and Friends)
  • Alex Komoroske - The Compendium / after I convert the Firebase export in code/websites/compendium-cards-data/db.json to a single HTML page
  • Rich Cohen - The Fish That Ate The Whale (via)
  • Bob Caspe - Entrepreneurial Action/ printed, skim for anything I don't know



Interactive fiction


unplanned notable things read


unplanned and abandoned

  • Ichiro Kishimi, Fumitake Koga - The Courage to Be Disliked/ audio
  • Matt Dinniman - Dungeon Crawler Carl/ audio
  • Charles Eisenstein - The More Beautiful World Our Hearts Know Is Possible/ audio
  • Geoff Smart - Who: The A Method for Hiring/ audio
  • Genki Kawamura - If Cats Disappeared from the World/ audio
  • Paul Stamets - Fantastic Fungi: How Mushrooms Can Heal, Shift Consciousness, and Save the Planet/ audio
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ivan commented Sep 15, 2024

You are correct about Mirena being more effective than Paragard. This study shows that the 7-year pregnancy rate for TCu380A (Paragard) is 2.5 per 100, but only 0.5 per 100 for Mirena.

Mirena had a lower pregnancy rate than Paragard in every year of the study. Mirena is still more effective than Paragard in years 6 and 7, despite it only being licensed for 5 years whereas Paragard is licensed for 12.

Yes, both are extremely effective methods of contraception, but anyone who says they are equal is misinformed.

https://old.reddit.com/r/birthcontrol/comments/6jx5vn/hormone_911_mirena_iud_vs_paraguard/djidey5/

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ivan commented Sep 16, 2024

Apply-Degger is a long-form, deep dive into the most important philosophical book of the last 100 years. Each episode of this podcast series will present one of the key concepts in Heidegger’s philosophy. Taken together, the episodes will lay out the entirety of Heidegger project for people who are curious, serious and interested, but who simply don’t have the time to sit down and read the 437 densely-written pages of the book. It is our hope that this series will show how Heidegger’s thinking might be applied to one’s life in ways which are illuminating, elevating and beneficial.

https://www.onassis.org/channel/apply-degger-podcast-simon-critchley

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ivan commented Sep 16, 2024

No, Heidegger explicitly attempts to refute and attack Descartes's supposition "cogito ergo sum" (the first therefore). And one can read all of Heidegger's early philosophy as an attempt to undo the errors started by Descartes: Heidegger faults Descartes with stymieing all of modern philosophy with a false first presupposition.

Heidegger's fault with Descartes lies in the very first two words: "I think." Heidegger does not believe that the "I" (Dasein/Being) is the thing that thinks (directly at least). In Descartes' world, humans are "res cogitans" ("thinking machines"): the "I" is that which thinks. For Descartes, there is some thing that is doing the thinking. In Heidegger's world, there is not some mysterious being that thinks, but rather the "I" is the experiencing/thinking itself (the "thrown-openness"). This is why Heidegger always uses verbs/gerunds to describe Being.

For Heidegger, the simple statement "I think" cannot possibly be true because there is no "I" behind the thinking. For Heidegger, the analog basic first-claim would instead simply be: "there is thinking" (the "ego"/"I" as we think about it is the "thinking" itself for Heidegger).

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20956949

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ivan commented Sep 16, 2024

There's a separate entitlement used for remote access software without the repeated prompts (com.apple.developer.persistent-content-capture), so you basically need Apple's permission to build that category of software now, and open source remote access software is not possible.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41559761

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ivan commented Sep 16, 2024

No matter the framework, if you see something with “effect” in the name, try not to use it. Seriously. Do your best.

one of the reasons Svelte 5 has a rune called '$effect' (rather than something like 'watch' or 'autorun' or whatever) is to discourage you from actually using it

basically they're complexity magnets — people use them for the wrong things (e.g. updating state that should be derived, or doing work that belongs in an event handler), and spaghetti ensues. They're mostly escape hatches

https://x.com/Rich_Harris/status/1835439010195677317

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ivan commented Sep 16, 2024

Which translation of "Being and Time" should I get?

I have read both as well as the original German text. I don't think the SUNY [Stambaugh] translation does as good of a job defining the terms and their intent/purpose.

https://old.reddit.com/r/philosophy/comments/n7lrj/which_translation_of_being_and_time_should_i_get/

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ivan commented Sep 17, 2024

The first part of Being and Time analyzed what life is like in a completely new way, which I think points toward the solution. Heidegger abandoned the fundamental eternalist assumption that meaning must come from some ordering principle such as God or rationality. He showed how life is structured instead by “circumspection,” a non-dual awareness in which everyday circumstances show up as always already meaningful in our interactions with them. This understanding of meaning as neither objective nor subjective, but interactive is fundamental to Meaningness.

Then Heidegger took a wrong turn. The further analysis of meaning he developed in the second half of the book was definitely mistaken (as he later acknowledged).

https://meaningness.com/further-reading

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ivan commented Sep 18, 2024

I don't think you're taking into account the context or intended audience. It's a casual forum message posted in reply to someone else's message.

They have not written a "falsehoods programmers believe" article. They have proposed that one ought to be written and have given a starting point for what it might cover.

They offered their list to "get the ball rolling", confirming that they don't see it as a finished product.

They sent it to other readers of the same forum, who might be expected to have more knowledge of this topic, not to whoever runs across it on the front page of HN.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41541770

on Hacker News commenters thinking everything is an article written for them

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ivan commented Sep 18, 2024

Bits UI is a collection of headless component primitives that enable you to build your own custom components. They have been thoughtfully designed to prioritize simplicity without compromising customizability.

Under the hood, most of these components are powered by Melt UI, which provides an even lower-level builder API for creating headless components. Bits takes that API and wraps it in a more familiar component interface, allowing us to handle some quality of life improvements for you.

https://www.bits-ui.com/docs/introduction

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ivan commented Sep 18, 2024

BREAKING: MOSSAD REMOTELY DETONATES ALL APPLE VISION PROS, NO INJURIES REPORTED

https://x.com/ElonBachman/status/1836142167355433290

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ivan commented Sep 18, 2024

I once took some of my roommate's Adderall in order to grind on a work project. Every thought I had felt revelatory, the keyboard just danced, felt like I was Tom Cruise writing that Jerry McGuire manifesto. Read it over the next day and trashed most of it.

https://x.com/ElonBachman/status/1832317786804384195

that explains a lot of tweeting perhaps

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ivan commented Sep 20, 2024

I can't claim that I have any idea of how this model is built, but from their shifty excuses touching on "alignment" I'm confident that o1 is actually two copies of the same model, one "raw" and unchained that is fine-tuned for CoT, and one that has been crippled for safety and human alignment to parse that and provide the actual reply. They have finally realized how detrimental the "lobotomizing" process is to the models general reasoning, and this is their solution. It makes sense that they are afraid to unleash that onto the world, but we've already seen the third "filter" model that summarizes the thoughts to slip some of that through (just yesterday it was seen to have "emotional turmoil" as one of the reasoning steps), so it's just a matter of time before it makes something crazy slip through.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41590517

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ivan commented Sep 20, 2024

Not parent, but I did use Mastodon for about a year. I ended up moving back to Twitter because:

1. I just couldn't vibe with the culture there. From my POV, Mastodon is made out of pearl-clutchers and politics.

2. So much drama. The FediSearch drama. The Raspberry Pi incident. It's just so tiring and you feel like you need to walk on eggshells all the time.

3. So much drama. You would just pray that your admin didn't get into a spat with another admin and get defederated. You could get a solo server, but that costs money and you might get blocked by a large server's admin anyway.

4. So much drama. Pray that your server doesn't shut down, because you can't import your posts elsewhere. Solo, yes, but costs money.

At least with Twitter, the rules are sort of well known, and you can follow anyone there unless they block you personally.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41581923

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ivan commented Sep 20, 2024

According to this article, Arc requires an account and sends Google's Firebase the hostname of every page you visit along with your user ID. Does this make Arc the least private web browser currently being used?

I think OperaGX wins that award

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41599934

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ivan commented Sep 20, 2024

How much are they paying for H100's? If they are paying $10k: 350,000 NVIDIA H100 x $10k = $3.5b

Significantly more than that; MFN pricing for NVIDIA DGX H100 (which has been getting priority supply allocation, so many have been suckered into buying them in order to get fast delivery) is ~$309k, while a basically equivalent HGX H100 system is ~$250k, coming to a price per GPU at the full server level being ~$31.5k. With Meta’s custom OCP systems integrating the SXM baseboards from NVIDIA, my guess is that their cost per GPU would be in the ~$23-$25k range.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39682217

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ivan commented Sep 20, 2024

fun trick i've discovered for having a good experience on here: say things that emotionally resonate with people, even if they're totally wrong and thereby cause great unseen diffuse harm. audiences love that. what are you afraid of, getting arrested by the diffuse harm police?

https://x.com/VesselOfSpirit/status/1835968123238785294

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ivan commented Sep 20, 2024

OnlyFans creator Bhad Bhabie has previously shared her earnings dashboard in '21, '22, '24, which shows over $70M in gross earnings and $57M in payouts (figures not independently verified)

>50% of revenues are from "her" privately messaging users

https://x.com/ballmatthew/status/1834688840084472154

see also https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhad_Bhabie

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ivan commented Sep 20, 2024

when I download an image and its a webp I genuinely get so mad I have to take deep breaths for 5 seconds

https://x.com/alex_orlov_/status/1835282471354761444

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ivan commented Sep 20, 2024

he is so close to figuring out people only laugh at his jokes because he is their boss / worth 100 billion dollars

https://x.com/realMichalNNN/status/1835640731580453161

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ivan commented Sep 20, 2024

It was always sad to me that most of the people I met who believed [Craig Wright] were non-native English speakers.

Just my experience with his followers in person. Made me suspect they couldn't detect nuance or bullshit in our language.

It's frightening to think about the implications of this when generalized toward mainstream topics.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41542265

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ivan commented Sep 20, 2024

wait is the way twitter search currently works that only the first 280 characters of a long tweet are indexed??? what the fuck

Yes. Architecturally long tweets are extended metadata on 280 characters tweets

https://x.com/jltvar/status/1836877434265751964

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ivan commented Sep 20, 2024

Head words are civilized words, domesticated words, RLHF’d words. The part of me that learned how to generate language like this learned how to do it in school, in order to pass classes. Head words are mostly bullshit. And LLMs are tracer dye for places in society where language production was already mostly bullshit. It was completely predictable in advance that they would be used to cheat on homework.

Words that come from lower in the body are terrifying. They are a million years old. Not domesticated. Not safe for work. They have horrendous implications you could easily spend your life running away from. Taking them seriously might require you to upend everything. But they are not bullshit.

There are some writers who I deeply admire and respect who seem to be able to generate words with their entire bodies at once. One day I will learn this and then maybe I will write things worth reading.

https://qchu.substack.com/p/core-dump

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ivan commented Sep 21, 2024

If you want to catch an important or busy person's attention, send them a personalized email on a Sunday. Works almost 100% of the time.

https://x.com/DStrachman/status/1835488596284899499

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ivan commented Sep 21, 2024

On a related note: the worst thing you can possibly do as an open source developer is to create a product for the general public to use.

You hate tickets without repro? Enjoy the barrage of “help. Doent work”, “me too” and “HELLO IT’S BEEN 3 DAYS” messages.

I think the problem isn't it being open source but it being GitHub flavored open source. If you're building a product, you probably should not be having it on GitHub with issues enabled.

There are very good reasons why the support processes of commercial entities that build products are the way they are. You do want a lot more friction and you do likely want to limit support to paying customers.

GitHub-style public issue trackers are just a bad idea overall IMO. They only work if the "public" is only "public" because everyone _in theory_ could take part. In practice however, you only want to grant such unlimited write access to vetted individuals. This happened to happen automatically previously (because getting to the point where you even know where to open a ticket _was_ part of the vetting process), but with GitHub as the default for everyone and everything, it needs to be a conscious effort.

If you think about it, it is completely insane how any random individual just has to press one button to publish whatever they want to a super prominent part of what is effectively your products/projects website. That simply shouldn't be a power random individuals have

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41579591

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ivan commented Sep 21, 2024

If it really was only 5 minutes of daily practice (optimistic curve) to maintain 90% of my physics knowledge and problem-solving skills, I’d easily commit to working on this while drinking my tea in the morning and keep myself 90% sharp. Conversely, if it required 47 minutes per day (pessimistic curve), realistically it wouldn’t be worth it.

But I didn’t have an answer to the question: What is the actual cost for maintaining different levels of knowledge?

This question is crucial because it directly impacts how we approach learning and knowledge retention. If the cost is low, we might be more inclined to maintain a broader range of knowledge. If it’s high, we might need to be more selective about what we choose to retain.

[...]

MathAcademy has not only helped me relearn and solidify mathematical concepts, but it’s also changed my perspective on what effective learning can look like.

https://jonathanwhitmore.com/posts/2024-09-10-MathAcademy-after-2000-points/

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ivan commented Sep 21, 2024

People born before 2000, what trivial skill do you have that no one uses anymore?

i can read

https://x.com/unormal/status/1835505532251099538

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ivan commented Sep 21, 2024

On Page 3 of the Mr Beast doc already he drops insight that is essentially philosophical.

Says he's trying to create the best YouTube videos - not the "best produced" or "funniest" videos.

Videos conditioned by the non-arbitrary nature of YouTube, not just "good".

Good example of why I believe American intellectuals need to read business writing.

A huge amount of the best thinking in America goes towards business, so an intellectual who refuses to engage with business is missing out on some of the best thought in the culture.

https://x.com/rjkarmayogi/status/1835545638773112885

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ivan commented Sep 21, 2024

People like Mr. Beast have managed to discover psychological attention hacks that are not too dissimilar from sex or fear-based content (porn or a lot of political ads), but more insidious because it’s much more tame and “fun” on the surface.

And while I don’t think either can be made explicitly illegal without some pretty nasty second-order effects on freedom of expression, we can’t expect the likes of Google to provide a social fix here. Government will need to take note, label, and activate against this at some level. The TikTok ban means we’ve noticed this can be dangerous at least when rival nation-states are involved, but the call is coming from inside the house.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41550327

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ivan commented Sep 21, 2024

Finally had to have “the talk” with my kid. Now he knows if he gets a phone call from Mom or Dad, but we can’t say the passphrase, he’s talking to a computer.

https://x.com/gfodor/status/1836977396131516793

"hey, you up for getting together next week?"
"sure, I guess, to do what?"
"doesn't matter, we just need to gather some new meatspace entropy for future remote attestations"

https://x.com/gfodor/status/1837297070044237993

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ivan commented Sep 21, 2024

The hard truth is that if you want to build a serious educational product, you can't be afraid to charge money for it. You can't back yourself into a corner where you depend on a massive userbase.

Why? Because most people are not serious about learning, and if you depend on a massive base of unserious learners, then you have to employ ineffective learning strategies that do not repel unserious students. Which makes your product suck.

https://x.com/justinskycak/status/1835093662176530722

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