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tolerance

983 karmajoined 2 anni fa

Submissions

The employment effects of ICE enforcement in US cities

brookings.edu
10 points·by tolerance·mese scorso·2 comments

WordPress at 23

wordpress.org
4 points·by tolerance·mese scorso·3 comments

Why Can't Writers Seem to Quit Substack?

talkscratch.com
8 points·by tolerance·2 mesi fa·7 comments

Short form video "clippers" are overrunning the internet

npr.org
5 points·by tolerance·2 mesi fa·0 comments

Grove.el – An Obsidian-like note-taking mode for Emacs

jonathanchu.is
33 points·by tolerance·2 mesi fa·1 comments

Bring Back the Jedi Knights

realcleardefense.com
4 points·by tolerance·2 mesi fa·1 comments

Kanye West Bought an Architectural Treasure Then Gave It a Violent Remix (2024)

newyorker.com
7 points·by tolerance·2 mesi fa·1 comments

Steak 'n Shake: We're going 'back to the glory days of fast food'

thehill.com
8 points·by tolerance·3 mesi fa·4 comments

Doing: Git for Scatterbrains

github.com
2 points·by tolerance·3 mesi fa·0 comments

The Texas Lawyer and Part-Time Pastor Who Beat Meta and Google

wsj.com
2 points·by tolerance·3 mesi fa·0 comments

The Discourse Is Getting Both Smarter and Dumber

richardhanania.com
2 points·by tolerance·3 mesi fa·0 comments

The "Me" Decade and the Third Great Awakening

nymag.com
3 points·by tolerance·4 mesi fa·0 comments

Why Cormac McCarthy stopped reading new novels

unherd.com
6 points·by tolerance·4 mesi fa·2 comments

Lobsters Vibecoding Challenge

gist.github.com
2 points·by tolerance·5 mesi fa·0 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by tolerance·5 mesi fa·0 comments

Removing analytics from all my sites

baty.net
2 points·by tolerance·5 mesi fa·0 comments

A practical case on why we need the humanities

acoup.blog
10 points·by tolerance·9 mesi fa·1 comments

David Foster Wallace on 9/11, as Seen from the Midwest

rollingstone.com
7 points·by tolerance·10 mesi fa·0 comments

comments

tolerance
·l’altro ieri·discuss
Try reading the entire thing.
tolerance
·3 giorni fa·discuss
Long read. But this has been known for over 20 years.

> Reading has always been associated with education and more generally with urban social elites. Although contemporary commentators deplore the decline of “the reading habit” or “literary reading,” historically the era of mass reading, which lasted from the mid-nineteenth through the mid-twentieth century in northwestern Europe and North America, was the anomaly.

"Reading and the Reading Class in the Twenty-First Century"

https://sociology.northwestern.edu/documents/faculty-docs/fa...
tolerance
·3 giorni fa·discuss
A good idea to consider might be what Hans Magnus Enzensberger referred to as "second-order illiteracy".

> [The second-order illiterate] has come a long way: his loss of memory causes him no suffering; his lack of will makes life easy for him; he values his inability to concentrate; he considers it an advantage that he neither knows nor understands what is happening to him. He is mobile. He is adaptive. He has a talent for getting things done. We need have no worries about him. It contributes to the second-order illiterate's sense of well-being that he has no idea that he is a second-order illiterate. He considers himself well-informed; he can decipher instructions on appliances and tools; he can decode pictograms and checks. And he moves within an environment hermetically sealed against anything that might infect his consciousness. That he might come to grief in this environment is unthinkable. After all, it produced and educated him in order to guarantee its undisturbed continuation.

https://www.thefreelibrary.com/IN+PRAISE+OF+ILLITERACY.-a062...
tolerance
·3 giorni fa·discuss
This is what people mean when they name "taste" as a major qualifying trait for humans who work with AI.

I poked around the different GitHub repos to get a feel for how this was done but would appreciate a proper write-up about it.
tolerance
·3 giorni fa·discuss
Not a problem. Thanks. These are great.
tolerance
·3 giorni fa·discuss
> It's a fair question, but it irritates me because it suggests that we should accept the self-destruction of vast swaths of the population in the name of perfect liberty.

We shouldn't. But to what end?
tolerance
·4 giorni fa·discuss
Whoever did the typography for this website went bananas. The pull quotes and block quotes are real pleasing to look at.

Somewhere I think I have a copy of Grossman's A Writer at War.
tolerance
·4 giorni fa·discuss
What do you mean? "Communities" on social media platforms vary, common behavioral traits that the platform may engender not withstanding.

The platform Craig Mod built looks like the equivalent of getting book recommendations exclusively from your mutual follows on Twitter.
tolerance
·4 giorni fa·discuss
This link is more informative.

https://craigmod.com/roden/102/#the-good-place

Craig Mod is an interesting example of someone who makes a living online through "ethical" content production.
tolerance
·5 giorni fa·discuss
Yeah. This is it. #RollsOverRings
tolerance
·6 giorni fa·discuss
https://www.monsantotechnology.com/Vegetables/main-page-mons...

Poetic license, pal!
tolerance
·7 giorni fa·discuss
The African diaspora is under-represented here! Or they (on the continent) are asleep.
tolerance
·7 giorni fa·discuss
I do think that this blog post is quaint and I find it hard to hate on a guy showing up at his kid's school and giving a talk—oh boy, remember when your parents came to school? Or anyone's parents. Especially a dad? Woowee.

The cynic in me can't resist remarks like "the children yearn for the mines".

Then another part of me thinks...how much of a factory is "just a room" to the people who are not its engineers, designers and owners.

Does the sweaty work in a factory net you the same sort of socioeconomic leverage that it used to? The other day I had a thought that a lot of 2000s sitcoms had dads who managed factories. George Lopez. Damon Wayans. Jim Belushi? Doug Heffernan drove for UPS.

You know, just think, in about 20 years some of these kids in that classroom may just be supervising the young adults of today who failed to make the right pivot in the labor market. The Lindy effect suggests that this blog will be around long enough to show those old guys this post to see if they agree.

Will future sweaty factory work be any good?
tolerance
·7 giorni fa·discuss
I get where you're coming from. I think that the clock sounds dumb too.

But what makes life "possible and enjoyable" in the most mundane sort of way that every human being can agree with relies on STEM. Before that though is the role that religion has in making life possible and enjoyable in ways that are beyond cold reason and material exploits.

Poets come last.
tolerance
·8 giorni fa·discuss
Check this out: https://cdn.mises.org/destruction_and_creation_by_john_r_boy...

> I'm aware of four big picture questions that predict 16 possible (and incompatible) futures of great divergences [...]

What are they?
tolerance
·8 giorni fa·discuss
This was quite a satisfying read.
tolerance
·8 giorni fa·discuss
I recognized this submission from its title but did not remember what it was about. For some reason this anecdote reminded me. Yes now I know it's about the man who built staircases with his father.

I can never look at staircases the same.
tolerance
·8 giorni fa·discuss
It looks like the base Jekyll theme.
tolerance
·8 giorni fa·discuss
Dude, these guys are player haters. Don't waste your time here.
tolerance
·9 giorni fa·discuss
Technopopulist dog whistle.