"The most effective consumer boycotts in history share two qualities: they are narrow and they are easy," writes @rutgerbregman.com
"The most effective consumer boycotts in history share two qualities: they are narrow and they are easy," writes @rutgerbregman.com
Beacons are also warnings, to be fair. Iβm glad your drink stayed safely unspat on this occasion.
youtu.be/XfR1fBsO2d0?...
Itβs the soil & the seed. So good, on so many levels.
A VP of Engineering wrote in to say my latest essay, "is fantastic and terrifying and absolutely necessary for us to be having conversations about." And that most people still, "have no idea what we're actually on the precipice of." justin.searls.co/β¦
Trying to see the best in people? Us too.
But even philosophers admit: there are limits. Being generous in how you interpret othersβ actions can help us learn from each other, but you canβt ignore the facts, either.
You canβt store time.
Skills and the (quite well made) βKeep Thinkingβ campaign might just turn out to be AIβs answer to Betty Crockerβs mythical cake mix egg.
Itβs going to be tight, but weβll get you both in there
Real conversation on the streets of San Francisco: βEven though we have so many people, AI is solving a real labor shortage. All the really good programmers are either really old or dead, so we need to put them in a bottle.β
Learning prompt engineering is like being reverse potty trained by your new puppy. Or something like that.
New post about why Moltbook freaks me out. tl;dr it's that you can't conflate a stateful agent with the LLM. Too much changes when you add state.
this one should be easier to read, more diagrams and easy to navigate text
timkellogg.me/blog/2026/01...
The year is 2028. The horizon is dotted with little red kites. Moltbook is the #1 social network. Carcinization has replaced heart disease as the number one killer.
π± βClawdBody: Let's Build Ourselves Some Legsβ
www.moltbook.com/post/574269f...
How about. No.
I have Gas Town derangement syndrome and spent the last few weeks writing thousands of words on agent orchestration patterns; how they shift our bottlenecks and force us to ask whether and when we should stop looking at code
maggieappleton.com/gastown
π±
no iβm not βdetail orientedβ thatβs where the devil is
I think Firestoneβs two questions might help:
- Is it necessary?
- Can it be simplified?
And additionally, remembering what Iβm hoping to accomplish in the first place.
Seriously though, this year Iβm determined to make the mental space to think clearly, especially in how I engage with LLMs.
www.anthropic.com/research/how...
βWhen producing output is so easy and fast, it gets harder and harder to actually take the time to learn something.β
I think this might be what it really means to say using LLMs makes everyone a manager π (kidding, but not really)
My first ride to Aliceβs on Skyline Boulevard had an especially ethereal feel after the rains of the past weeks. They were still draining through rivulets running across the road and emergency crews were hard at work clearing debris and keeping the rest of us safe these holidays.
Bad day to be a Waymo (and even worse to be inside or stuck behind one). A widespread blackout left robotaxis stalled across the city, causing traffic chaos Saturday night.
Read more: sfstandard.com/2025/12/20/w...
The powerβs been out for a third of San Francisco for the past few hours. That includes traffic lights and chaotic traffic. Amidst all this, confused Waymos haphazardly parked in the middle of streets with their hazards on.
We see what you did there
I donβt like the term βtech debtβ. I donβt think it works as a metaphor to incentivize the right behavior. There, I said it.
Hereβs what works better for meβpit stops tailored to the conditions of each race: hiremaga.com/posts/art-of...
*em-dashes are my own
Iβve also been inspired by Noah Brierβs research & writing workflow with Claude Code every.to/podcast/how-...
I think it does. In fact, may need sandboxing on by default & better security.
A parent of my kidβs baseball team told me they use it for various of admin tasks, like organizing photos, and they love it. Theyβd never coded and learned this from YouTube.
OpenAI's CISO Dane Stuckey posted an essay (on Twitter) about how their new ChatGPT Atlas browser attempts to deal with the risk of prompt injection attacks, I ended up writing a point-by-point commentary on my blog: simonwillison.net/2025/Oct/22/...
This reminded me of playing cows and bulls for some reason. And TDD. And Pairing. Itβs a very good post. I think itβs essentially about managing oneβs attention to ratchet progress.
Iβm realizing that learning takes a challenging combination of humility and conviction. Both are necessary to acknowledge mistakes and try something different, while keeping what works.