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TinyBig

407 karmajoined 14 tahun yang lalu

Submissions

Pretext, Pretext, Pretext: Building reasons to be together

seeingthesystem.com
3 points·by TinyBig·bulan lalu·1 comments

Shareholder primacy undermined its own logic

seeingthesystem.com
3 points·by TinyBig·2 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Buying Back our Slack: AI and the case for rebuilding the firm

seeingthesystem.com
3 points·by TinyBig·4 bulan yang lalu·1 comments

How Institutions Forget How to Move

seeingthesystem.com
2 points·by TinyBig·5 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

The Game That Ate Itself

seeingthesystem.com
2 points·by TinyBig·5 bulan yang lalu·1 comments

Lessons from economies that closed their borders

seeingthesystem.com
8 points·by TinyBig·5 bulan yang lalu·2 comments

Amp It Up and the Seduction of Intensity

seeingthesystem.com
1 points·by TinyBig·6 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

The Average Customer and Other Hallucinations

substack.com
2 points·by TinyBig·6 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

The Architecture of Truth-Seeking

eyeofthesquid.com
1 points·by TinyBig·7 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

AI Is Breaking the Moral Foundation of Modern Society

eyeofthesquid.com
111 points·by TinyBig·7 bulan yang lalu·191 comments

The Last Days of the Managerial Class

eyeofthesquid.com
34 points·by TinyBig·10 bulan yang lalu·32 comments

comments

TinyBig
·kemarin·discuss
The law you've cited only applies for "emergency transport".

Falck has found a workaround: Bill emergencies as "non-emergency" so they can balance bill. This is, of course, fraud. I'm sure that enough don't understand the law that this makes them a lot of money.
TinyBig
·bulan lalu·discuss
[flagged]
TinyBig
·2 bulan yang lalu·discuss
On top of token tracking, they're also scoring employees on how much they teach Ai to their colleagues. As bad as the token dashboard sounds, employees being forced to try to mine each other for credit sounds worse.
TinyBig
·3 bulan yang lalu·discuss
There are many hyper-credentialized, gatekept systems but most of them don't share the feature of producing structurally worse outcomes as literary fiction. I believe this system is already selling the seeds of its own demise.

A small group of agents hold most of the power, and the system has confused power for taste. This has also, in my experience, led to the outlets that hold the most power using that power to push agendas instead of seeking out the best literature. I do not believe this can persist indefinitely.
TinyBig
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
A game-theoretic model of why AI automation might be a trap: each firm's rational choice to automate erodes the aggregate demand all firms depend on. The Nash equilibrium is slow-motion collapse.
TinyBig
·5 bulan yang lalu·discuss
Tariffs continue to be a major topic of debate. The author examines what happened to countries that closed their borders and protected domestic industry with the promise of strength and self-sufficiency. The historical record is surprisingly consistent.
TinyBig
·6 bulan yang lalu·discuss
When Saks Fifth Avenue put out feelers to sell off pieces of BergdorfGoodman, I took it as a very bad sign.

Bergdorf is the crown jewel in that portfolio. Anytime you see a corporation pawning off its winners to fund its losers, they're in very, very deep trouble.
TinyBig
·6 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I'm working on an app to make testing available to all brick and mortar retailers (proofpod.ai).

The most difficult technical challenge has been designing a pipeline to fully automate choosing test & control locations using synthetic difference-in-differences.
TinyBig
·6 bulan yang lalu·discuss
A phrase I liked to describe what we're doing with LLMs is "building a personal panopticon". The benefits are immense but you're placing a huge bet on the landlord of the tower.
TinyBig
·6 bulan yang lalu·discuss
I've taken one of the electric roll-on/roll-off ferries that cross from Denmark to Sweden over the Øresund strait. Zero fumes, zero vibration, incredibly quiet. Awesome to see this tech being used for longer crossings.
TinyBig
·7 bulan yang lalu·discuss
James C. Scott’s Seeing Like a State is a useful lens here. Scott argues that modern states flattened human complexity into legible categories so they could govern: surnames, maps, censuses, standardized occupations. You lose a lot of nuance, but in theory the trade-off is that the state can then build institutions that serve the public.

AI feels like a more extreme version of that flattening, but without the civic purpose that justified it. You end up with legibility without legitimacy. That’s the part I think we don’t have a good framework for yet.
TinyBig
·8 bulan yang lalu·discuss
If you already know how to touch type, I recommend using software to mirror your keyboard when the spacebar is held down. I lacked the use of my dominant arm for a few months while recovering from an injury, and by week 3, mirroring no longer required conscious thought.