Rob Miller's Avatar

Rob Miller

@robm.wtf

• writer • https://roblog.co.uk • strategist • https://orso.so • umami lover • https://msgist.com/ & https://honestumami.com/ • documentary watcher • https://docked.blog/ • photographer • https://reldn.co.uk/ • Romanista • https://romer.world/ 📍 London

279
Followers
822
Following
417
Posts
13.11.2024
Joined
Posts Following

Latest posts by Rob Miller @robm.wtf

I find this so common in critiques of LLMs from professionals in non-tech domains; as if "an LLM can do X" can only mean "you can one-shot this in ChatGPT with a vague prompt", and any scaffolding you put around the LLM is somehow cheating. (cf. @ed3d.net's recent "can an LLM index a book" posts)

02.03.2026 14:11 👍 12 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

Honestly the collective national level of disdain for Brits living in Dubai on all my social media platforms today really is bringing the UK together as one in a way that's hard to achieve in the modern era.

02.03.2026 11:08 👍 4596 🔁 754 💬 89 📌 54
And for example, DuPont had safety ingrained in the culture since the very beginning of their foundation. DuPont started as a gunpowder company and gun powder companies, they have the problem that they have lots of explosions. And the way that the founder managed this risk was that he had two principles. The first one was that he the CEO lived with his family inside the premises of the company, which means that if there was an explosion, there would be a chance that he would be affected. Number two, he had the principle that every time that a new machine was installed in the plant, one of the directors had to operate for the first day so that if the machine was unsafe. Then the director will be the first one suffering from it. This is great because it's a perfect incentive to keep things safe.

And for example, DuPont had safety ingrained in the culture since the very beginning of their foundation. DuPont started as a gunpowder company and gun powder companies, they have the problem that they have lots of explosions. And the way that the founder managed this risk was that he had two principles. The first one was that he the CEO lived with his family inside the premises of the company, which means that if there was an explosion, there would be a chance that he would be affected. Number two, he had the principle that every time that a new machine was installed in the plant, one of the directors had to operate for the first day so that if the machine was unsafe. Then the director will be the first one suffering from it. This is great because it's a perfect incentive to keep things safe.

I always love this story, about the DuPont gunpowder factory's culture of safety, from Luca Dellanna. 1. Make the factory director live in the factory, so they're personally invested in its safety; 2. Make someone from management the first person to operate every new bit of machinery

16.02.2026 14:43 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Meteorological (mists, clouds, wind, rain, storm, tempest, smoke, darkness, shadows, gloom). Topographical (impenetrable forests, inaccessible mountains, chasms, gorges, deserts, blasted heaths, icefields, the boundless ocean). Architectural (towers, prisons, castles covered in gargoyles and crenellations, abbeys and priories, tombs, crypts, dungeons, ruins, graveyards, mazes, secret passages, locked doors). Material (masks, veils, disguises, billowing curtains, suits of armour, tapestries). Textual (riddles, rumours, folklore, unreadable manuscripts and inscriptions, ellipses, broken texts, fragments, clotted language, polysyllabism, obscure dialect, inserted narratives, stories-within-stories). Spiritual (religious mystery, allegory and symbolism, Roman Catholic ritual, mysticism, freemasonry, magic and the occult, Satanism, witchcraft, summonings, damnation). Psychological (dreams, visions, hallucinations, drugs, sleep-walking, madness, split personalities, mistaken identities, doubles, derangement, ghostly presences, forgetfulness, death, hauntings).

Meteorological (mists, clouds, wind, rain, storm, tempest, smoke, darkness, shadows, gloom). Topographical (impenetrable forests, inaccessible mountains, chasms, gorges, deserts, blasted heaths, icefields, the boundless ocean). Architectural (towers, prisons, castles covered in gargoyles and crenellations, abbeys and priories, tombs, crypts, dungeons, ruins, graveyards, mazes, secret passages, locked doors). Material (masks, veils, disguises, billowing curtains, suits of armour, tapestries). Textual (riddles, rumours, folklore, unreadable manuscripts and inscriptions, ellipses, broken texts, fragments, clotted language, polysyllabism, obscure dialect, inserted narratives, stories-within-stories). Spiritual (religious mystery, allegory and symbolism, Roman Catholic ritual, mysticism, freemasonry, magic and the occult, Satanism, witchcraft, summonings, damnation). Psychological (dreams, visions, hallucinations, drugs, sleep-walking, madness, split personalities, mistaken identities, doubles, derangement, ghostly presences, forgetfulness, death, hauntings).

thinking about Nick Groom's suggested "seven types of obscurity" in Gothic novels, forming a handy "is it goth" checklist lmao

15.02.2026 21:56 👍 535 🔁 200 💬 9 📌 22
AI won’t automatically make legal services cheaper In a lengthy article that is my new gold standard for analysing the actual consequences of introducing AI into an industry, Justin Curl, Sayash Kapoor, and Arvind Narayanan explore the effects of AI o...

I think this is the gold standard for "how is AI going to affect this industry?" analysis; the "AI as Normal Technology" guys taking a look at law roblog.co.uk/2026/02/ai-l...

15.02.2026 14:23 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
How the New York Times uses a custom AI tool to track the “manosphere” The New York Times has developed a tool to download, transcribe, and summarise various right-wing podcasts, part of what they call the “manosphere”, in order to spot signs of division and discontent w...

An interesting use of LLMs in the newsroom: the New York Times' tool for tracking right-wing sentiment in the (awfully named) "manosphere" roblog.co.uk/2026/02/new-...

15.02.2026 10:18 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Saint Cavish at Gem Garden One of my favourite YouTube channels at the moment is @saintcavish, Christopher St. Cavish’s explorations of Chinese cooking. Christopher is no mere visitor, dipping in briefly and superficially to a ...

One of my favourite YouTube channels at the moment: saintcavish’s thoughtful and beautiful films about Chinese cooking roblog.co.uk/2026/02/sain...

14.02.2026 09:50 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Elizabeth Goodspeed on imperfection as design strategy Creatives’ social media accounts are awash with lo-fi, analogue aesthetics, most of which are created digitally, often with cookie-cutter kits that undermine the whole idea of what “analogue” is suppo...

I enjoyed this Elizabeth Goodspeed piece about the growing prevalence of "analogue" aesthetics and craft-fixation in creative work: roblog.co.uk/2026/02/faki...

13.02.2026 12:53 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

"everyone has to get back to the office because the important thing about business is human interaction" is dying, but "white collar jobs will be replaced by AI agents within 18 months" cannot yet be born; in this interregnum a variety of morbid symptoms appear.

13.02.2026 09:52 👍 522 🔁 155 💬 7 📌 4

There's a labeller that does this! It's great bsky.app/profile/xblo...

10.02.2026 09:17 👍 1 🔁 1 💬 1 📌 0

We did a rewatch of all the StudioCanal-restored Ealings at the back end of last year and, while they're all brilliant, this remains my favourite I think. It also made me go out and get Alexander Mackendrick's fascinating book "On Film-Making"

09.02.2026 21:45 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Richard Thompson: Calvary Cross live
Richard Thompson: Calvary Cross live YouTube video by Liam Davies

One of my favourite live performances and an all-time great guitar solo: Richard Thompson's The Calvary Cross, 1975. Not a note wasted www.youtube.com/watch?v=R8i6...

09.02.2026 14:20 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
The Mundanity of Excellence Via Matt Webb, from his broader (and fascinating) post about the nature of work and what the roboticisation of domestic labour might take from us, comes this topical and counter-intuitive nugget about...

The mundanity of excellence (or why Olympians probably don't actually work harder than you): roblog.co.uk/2026/02/mund...

09.02.2026 09:54 👍 1 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
Video thumbnail

Timeline break: Here's the Dolmio Family doing the "funny how" scene from Goodfellas.

04.02.2026 11:57 👍 49 🔁 19 💬 2 📌 3
Post image

exactly. this is not difficult.

as.ft.com/r/58ed1b23-d...

03.02.2026 13:21 👍 20375 🔁 5293 💬 238 📌 216

DOCTOR: I told him he needed to get out to a show, that was how he would cure his depression.

CHOTINER: So you learned this technique in school?

DR: No, not— listen it was good advice. Pagliacci was in town.

C: Right. Is it standard to give advice before learning a patient’s name?

DR: Now look

02.02.2026 03:58 👍 8727 🔁 1800 💬 1 📌 35

Sarcasm that Spinotti seems to recognise about 0.05% of

01.02.2026 23:44 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
You and I are two journalists talking, essentially.

Yeah. So, I mean, to me, the experience was about, yes, being a reporter—being a cinematographer in a documentary, and doing my best to make Melania look visually beautiful with the lighting.

One thing reporters try to do is to spotlight ideas or news stories, and what you’re trying to do is spotlight her face and its beauty. I do see a real similarity there.

Yeah. We were trying to do the best we could. Again, as I told you, I was the guy with a camera, with a couple of assistants in the Trumps’ apartment when they came back to the White House at night. So there’s an interview with Melania at that point, and we organized the lights in the best possible way.

It’s important to make them look as good as possible, too. That’s part of your job, or our job.

You and I are two journalists talking, essentially. Yeah. So, I mean, to me, the experience was about, yes, being a reporter—being a cinematographer in a documentary, and doing my best to make Melania look visually beautiful with the lighting. One thing reporters try to do is to spotlight ideas or news stories, and what you’re trying to do is spotlight her face and its beauty. I do see a real similarity there. Yeah. We were trying to do the best we could. Again, as I told you, I was the guy with a camera, with a couple of assistants in the Trumps’ apartment when they came back to the White House at night. So there’s an interview with Melania at that point, and we organized the lights in the best possible way. It’s important to make them look as good as possible, too. That’s part of your job, or our job.

You told the Times that Brett “made some mistakes.” Has he told you that he made mistakes?

No. No. No. Isaac, no. All I’m saying is that I worked with him twelve hours, fifteen hours, a day, and then everybody went their own way. Our age difference is wide. I could be his father.

I read that Roman Polanski is a father figure to him. So that role might already be filled. There are a lot of people who feel affection for Brett.

Yeah, yeah. Because he’s a good kid. [In 2007’s Paris-based “Rush Hour 3,” Ratner gave a cameo to Polanski, who had fled to France after being accused of anally and vaginally raping a thirteen-year-old. He was later accused of sexually assaulting other teen-agers, which he denies. In the cameo, Polanski has a comic scene where he prepares to do an anal-cavity search of Jackie Chan and Chris Tucker.]

You told the Times that Brett “made some mistakes.” Has he told you that he made mistakes? No. No. No. Isaac, no. All I’m saying is that I worked with him twelve hours, fifteen hours, a day, and then everybody went their own way. Our age difference is wide. I could be his father. I read that Roman Polanski is a father figure to him. So that role might already be filled. There are a lot of people who feel affection for Brett. Yeah, yeah. Because he’s a good kid. [In 2007’s Paris-based “Rush Hour 3,” Ratner gave a cameo to Polanski, who had fled to France after being accused of anally and vaginally raping a thirteen-year-old. He was later accused of sexually assaulting other teen-agers, which he denies. In the cameo, Polanski has a comic scene where he prepares to do an anal-cavity search of Jackie Chan and Chris Tucker.]

Are you going to do “Heat 2”?

No, I’m not. I think I probably interrupted my collaboration with Michael Mann.

Why?

I don’t know. It’s one of those things. I did five movies with Michael, and sometimes with these things, for some reason, you get interrupted. The last one I did was with the actor in Chicago.

“Public Enemies”?

“Public Enemies.” Yes, that’s right. It would be too complex to explain to you now.

If you’re not doing “Heat 2,” there’s maybe room for “Melania 2” at some point, with more focus on her achievements.

Yeah, we’ll see about that.

Are you going to do “Heat 2”? No, I’m not. I think I probably interrupted my collaboration with Michael Mann. Why? I don’t know. It’s one of those things. I did five movies with Michael, and sometimes with these things, for some reason, you get interrupted. The last one I did was with the actor in Chicago. “Public Enemies”? “Public Enemies.” Yes, that’s right. It would be too complex to explain to you now. If you’re not doing “Heat 2,” there’s maybe room for “Melania 2” at some point, with more focus on her achievements. Yeah, we’ll see about that.

Isaac Chotiner's interview with "Melania" cinematographer Dante Spinotti is one of the most sarcastic things I've ever read, I love it

01.02.2026 23:44 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

I love these so much

28.01.2026 16:55 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Preview
Jingle Bells (Batman Smells): an incomplete festive folk-rhyme taxonomy Gather round the fire, everyone, and let me tell you a story. It has everything you could want in a Christmas blockbuster: superheroes and villains, a car crash, children singing, a mystery to solv…

The playground memetics also reminds me of loreandordure.com/2025/12/16/j...

28.01.2026 15:27 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
I Am The Walrus (Remastered 2009)
I Am The Walrus (Remastered 2009) YouTube video by The Beatles - Topic

Great (if unexpectedly harrowing) post! I never realised the "umpa umpa stick it up your jumper" phrase was from music hall, but I guess that means it's yet another music hall reference in a Beatles song (it features at the end of I am the Walrus): www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ws5k...

28.01.2026 15:27 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
Preview
The Uncomfortable Truths About Immigration On highbrow pro-immigration misinformation & what the elites don’t want you to know

This is a very good, measured piece on why and immigration "liberals" often (but shouldn't) exaggerate/overegg the evidence on the positive impacts of immigration.

(ignore the title)

alexanderkustov.substack.com/p/the-uncomf...

23.01.2026 17:53 👍 42 🔁 13 💬 7 📌 2

People "who are disgusted with how 'woke' the police have become", but *who already are the police*. Officers who think "it's a shame what happened to our mates at Charing Cross, you can't say anything these days, if only I could give these scum a good kicking they wouldn't nick phones" etc.

19.01.2026 11:15 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Preview
The decisions of dictators Autocrats, trapped by the dynamics of power, often make awful decisions. Why is that?

There was a great paper written a couple of years ago about the worsening quality of the advice received by dictators as their rule gets more precarious, and the dynamics that lead to it: roblog.co.uk/2023/04/dict...

14.01.2026 20:22 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Thinking Of You (feat. Lisa Tomlins)
Thinking Of You (feat. Lisa Tomlins) YouTube video by Lord Echo - Topic

Was reminded of Lord Echo + Lisa Tomlins joyous Kiwi reggae cover of Sister Sledge's "Thinking of You" this morning: youtu.be/coHut-f2olw

14.01.2026 10:15 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

I finished it a couple of weeks ago. I had to set aside some time on a quiet Saturday morning to read the last couple of chapters, both because I didn't want it to end and because I had a sense of how I might feel when it did. "Whimsical and devastating" is exactly right – thank you for it.

04.01.2026 09:33 👍 18 🔁 1 💬 1 📌 0
Preview
Inside ‘Operation Absolute Resolve,’ the U.S. Effort to Capture Maduro

The gushing tone of US articles about military operations is nauseating. Nerds fawning over jocks, coopting the language of "elite units", "MH-47 helicopters", regimental nicknames and then casually dropping in "oh and 40 Venezuelan civilians died too" www.nytimes.com/2026/01/03/u...

04.01.2026 09:18 👍 2 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
@joepompliano on Threads posted a pic of a map dotted with dozens of yacht names and said: “Pretty much every billionaire that owns a superyacht is in St. Barth right now for New Year's Eve - Jeff Bezos, Miriam Adelson, Shahid Khan, Sergey Brin, Jerry Jones, and 100+ others”

@joepompliano on Threads posted a pic of a map dotted with dozens of yacht names and said: “Pretty much every billionaire that owns a superyacht is in St. Barth right now for New Year's Eve - Jeff Bezos, Miriam Adelson, Shahid Khan, Sergey Brin, Jerry Jones, and 100+ others”

orcas have the chance to do the funniest thing

31.12.2025 17:25 👍 9694 🔁 2697 💬 335 📌 342

Hard to disagree with this.

29.12.2025 13:56 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

An absolute pleasure, and Merry Christmas right back at ya

24.12.2025 08:52 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0