Time Lorde

Bad Songs on Great Albums.

I read this but have no real opinion on it because I do not listen to nor care about albums. But I did read it all because I love music.

This bit made me laugh:

Britney Spearsโ€™ 1998 debut album, โ€ฆ Baby One More Time, is a journey through the mind of a heartbroken teenage girl as imagined by a small team of male songwriters and producers, hailing largely from Sweden

That’s the whole problem, too, with Lorde’s albums after her first one. Stupid-ass Jack Antonoff and company took over songwriting and she lost her authorial voice. Lorde went from sounding like a tetchy, bratty but intelligent young woman to what an unimaginative and unexceptional 36-year-old man’s idealized version of what such a person would sound like.

And that worked about as well as you’d expect.

If it is worth keeping, save it in Markdown.

On David Lynch’s Revenge of the Jedi.

The Sony FX-300 Jackal: A Holy Grail technological marvel of the late 70s.

Why canโ€™t we remember our lives as babies or toddlers?

Trump administration fires thousands for โ€˜performanceโ€™ without evidence, in messy rush.

Terror on repeat. A rare look at the devastation caused by AR-15 shootings. Worth reading again.

Whatโ€™s a spy novelist to do in the age of Trump? John le Carrรฉ had it easy during the Cold War. But how do we write espionage thrillers now?

Dedekind cuts.

Vanceโ€™s real warning to Europe. Europeans need to reduce their dangerous dependence on an adversarial America.

The Futility of the NLRB.

Ukraine is fighting because Russia is trying to wipe it off the map, and Ukraine is doing everything humanly possible to survive as a free, independent nation.

A5

Sometimes I wonder if people cannot read or remember things they lived through. Or it’s just some sort of weird trolling or clownin’.

NATO invoked Article 5 after the 9/11 attacks — the only time it’s ever done so. Many NATO nations supported the US afterward as a result of that article’s invocation. That’s what it fucking means, damn.

Overground

It has been really sad to watch the mighty United States develop mental illness and commit suicide over the last 24 years.

Weโ€™re consumed by irrational hate and poisoned by nonstop disinformation. No one can think clearly about anything.

This will not get better. These are our death throes.

— Kevin Gaughen ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ (@gaughen.bsky.social) February 16, 2025 at 11:51 AM

Might be right, might be wrong — but we have heard this before. Read documents and commentary from the late 1960s and early 1970s. It was chaos. There were riots, the Weather Underground bombed the US Capitol building and people believed society was about to dissolve into anarchy and mass death.

But it didn’t. And that’s mostly forgotten now, even in some cases by people who lived through it.

My personal guess is that we experience a pretty bad WWIII against China, Russia and North Korea, the US pulls together and we and Europe emerge stronger with China diminished and reclusive once again.

But Trump is doing the US much damage that will not be easy to repair. I agree that it is not looking good.

Cognotive

An LLM or AI with no intentionality is irrelevant, and without embodiment intentionality is impossible. The AI debate’s terms are ill-defined, but even those AIs who ape or even best human achievements do not pass the test as they possess no impetus, no internal drive, and merely operate with a mere shadow of intention borrowed from the whiff of humanity that permeates the silicon. There, these nascent pseudo-consciousnesses subsist on the fumes of minds beyond measure risen from only mud.

We might ourselves be ChatGPT most of the time. However, ChatGPT is a person engaged with and embodied in the world none of the time. And that makes all the difference.

2%

find your 2%ers.

This is good advice, and my response is also going to sound terribly arrogant. But I also terribly do not care: I am only interested in deep friendships with people who can keep up with me intellectually and unfortunately that’s a really small slice of the population. And it is very difficult to find this cut of people I could be friends with, especially as even the “very smart” usually aren’t all that bright in reality.

I don’t need my friends to know the disparate things I’m aware of or be involved in all the weirdo crap I like. Frankly, I don’t think anyone can know all of what I do because you have to read dozens of books a week for a couple dozen years to do that. And not many can or probably should undertake such a project. And, just so there’s no misunderstanding, I do not need these friends to agree with me.

But I do need people who don’t have brain stall-outs out when I talk about Noether’s Theorem or describe the philosophical milieu of early 20th Century Germany or whatever crap I’m going on some too-lengthy spiel about.

These things both will not be interesting to most people and their brains can’t hold them enough to have any sort of conversation, either.

I tried to be a polymath. It worked a bit, but it can also be lonely. That said, I am what I am, for better or worse. I’m happy, too. But there are maybe a few score thousand people like me around the world and they are very hard to find in all the din and distraction.

Tiny NAS Big $$

This tiny NAS device fits in the palm of your hand and can take up to 32TB of sweet SSD storage.

Cool, but those 8TB SSD drives are $600 each, you have to put your own OS on this puppy as well as know how to configure it (easy for me, hard for most), it only has 2.5Gb Ethernet (10Gb would be better) and those drives are gonna get hot in something so small.

Also, 32TB is a notional capacity. You’d want this in a least something like RAID 5 or ZFS RAID-Z1 single parity, so you’re talking around 24TB or 21TB actual capacity, depending.

On the other hand, you could buy two 20TB spinning rust drives, slap them in a cheapo NAS in RAID-1 and then you’d have 20TB of storage with roughly the same speed (due to network limitations) for less than a Cleveland1.

In the SSD variant you’d pay $2,600 for the same speed and storage amount with no significant increase in data safety

So, bad deal. Very bad deal. But it would be quiet at least.

  1. That’s a thousand dollars for you proles.