2026-04-24


Worthy

  • Netflix Was Held Together with Duct Tape

    The companies you admire were held together with duct tape on day one. All of them. Amazon was Bezos packing books in a garage. Airbnb was two guys renting out air mattresses because they couldn’t make rent. The polished, professional, inevitable-looking version of those companies didn’t exist yet. It got built later, slowly, by people who were embarrassed by what they had but shipped it anyway. The reason this matters... founders today are comparing their messy, unfinished, embarrassing day-one company to other companies’ day-3,000 versions. And then wondering why they feel like frauds. Stop doing that.

    Netflix didn’t become Netflix because we had a vision. We became Netflix because we shipped a deeply imperfect thing on April 14th, 1998, and then spent the next 28 years finding out what it was.

etc

  • Assassination Culture

    the attempt on Sam’s life, while apparently colored or shaped to some degree by the broader AI conversation, is not unique to the technology industry. American culture, which has grown more deliriously in favor of violence for years, has finally arrived at the point where that word, “violence,” is no longer sufficient. What we’re really talking about, specifically, is assassination, as the figure of the “‘good guy”’ killer is now very much ascendant, and our country, shaped by the psychotic contours of the internet, is now very much inside a new assassination culture. There’s frankly nothing we can do about this at the moment, and my intention here is not to solve the problem. But I do hope we can get a good majority of my fellow professional talking assholes on the internet to face the truth, which is that every single public figure in the country, including every one of us, is in legitimately mortal danger.

    • It seems just months ago that people were being removed from projects they had founded and led for decades because of their insensitive language... Where did the turn happen?
  • The Declining Driver's License: Good, Bad, or Both?

    In 1983, nearly half of all 16-year-old Americans had a driver’s license. By 2022, that share had fallen in half to ~25%. Even at 18 years old the rate dropped from roughly 80% to 60% over the same period. This trend is real, decades-long, and expected to continue. I want to tell you this is good news, and I think it mostly is. But fewer licenses doesn’t mean more kids on bikes — it may just mean teenagers spending more time on screens and not going anywhere at all.

    The current causes driving the rate down are well-known: insurance costs are punishing. A 16-year-old on a standalone insurance policy runs $6,000–$6,700/year before all other vehicle costs, The GDL requirements are big hurdles even if teens don’t cite them as the main barrier, and the cultural meaning of the license has eroded. A driver’s license used to mean you could finally go somewhere without asking your parents. That’s a weaker sell when everything comes to you (Uber, DoorDash, etc.).

  • Preliminary Report on the LaGuardia Crash


Religion / Tribal / Culture War and Re-Segregation

Info Rental / ShowBiz / Advertising

TechSuck / Geek Bait

  • IP networking in deep space

    from the Moon and the asteroid belt to other planets. In these environments, delay isn’t just an inconvenience. It fundamentally affects how networks behave. Long round‑trip times have serious consequences for protocols like TCP, which rely on a steady stream of acknowledgements (ACKs) to manage sending rates, estimate delay, and trigger retransmissions. Marc has been working on simulating the effects of extremely long delays using Earth‑based virtual hosts and software. His approach uses the Linux TUN device, TC‑NETEM, and code developed by his team. This setup allows them to programmatically define experiments that introduce delay, loss, and packet reordering, with packet‑in‑flight times that can span hours. It also makes it possible to study how switches, routers, and other intermediate elements behave in an end‑to‑end IP exchange.

    • Self-sync, bursting type protocols will be required I think. Consideration of just what kinds of exchanges can happen at these distances is needed too: We're not gonna see a lot of web crawling happening over them. Design for what can be done, not what we do elsewhere.

Space / Boomy Zoomers / UFO

Neo Gambling / Crypto con games

Trump

External Security / Militaria / Diplomania

Pox / COVID / BioTerror AgitProp