“They’re waking up every morning, going to sleep every night, rubbing their hands together, thinking, ‘This is great. All I got to do is be on the right end of the giant roller coaster, and everything’s going to be fine,’” said Dan Alpert, managing partner of Westwood Capital.
In other words: Even if markets don’t believe a word of what Trump says, it’s better to make money by giving him the benefit of the doubt than to lose money while ignoring him. Traders aren’t just worried about a TACO – they’re trying to take advantage of the situation.
Totally reasonable way to run an economy.
www.cnn.com/2026/03/31/i...
3 weeks ago
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"As AI-augmented research proliferates, the scope of scientific inquiry is contracting."
www.ft.com/content/0c63... [paywalled]
1 month ago
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i think there is a very simple explanation for this, at least in 2026. the cultural apparatus orbiting around Trump lives in a world entirely governed by short feedback loops.
gambling
social media
meme stonks
junk cryptocurrency
LLMs
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www.quantamagazine.org/break-it-to-...
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Humbled by Evolution
Understanding the history and diversity of life inspires awe and wonder.
1. I’m quite happy with this popular piece that Lee Dugatkin and I wrote recently. For the next two weeks it’s free to read on the American Scientist website.
2 months ago
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I think the fundamental gap here is that non-creative people think that creative people make things for the end product, when in fact it’s the act of creation and not the end point that makes it worthwhile.
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Opinion | Donald Trump’s Cowboy Diplomacy
1/Trump diplomacy is less the Wild West and more Westeros. It is not about actors untethered from the state but a powerful state serving the interests of the clans.
www.nytimes.com/2025/12/15/o...
4 months ago
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This is rather wonderful (written up by the ever reliable Mark Buchanan). We can imagine making quantum clocks that arefully reversible and generate no entropy. But the entropic cost of extracting a classical tick is, in relative terms, huge.
physics.aps.org/articles/v18...
5 months ago
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AI has introduced a lot of new moves into the game tree and defied a lot of conventional wisdom, but overall the families of strategies have only changed incrementally post-AlphaGo.
7 months ago
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In short, it seems like centuries of collective, cumulative innovation has done pretty well, all things considered. Humans can't play as good as AI but AI seem to have rediscovered much of the human strategic repertoire.
7 months ago
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The twilight of tech unilateralism
Suddenly, America is in a whole different world
"But a few short months ago, the United States believed that it could use its chokehold on advanced semiconductors to create a grand global scheme for controlling the development of AI...The technological bets...look to be going bad."
www.programmablemutter.com/p/the-twilig...
8 months ago
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a lot of rage against Boomers is a kind of subconscious recognition that the period from ~1950-1990 is the basis of a shared popular culture is nothing is coming to replace it
8 months ago
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LLMs
1) Are better than their haters claim
2) Are much worse than their acolytes claim
kinda that simple
9 months ago
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Instead of trying to find a mode of information processing that can only be done in protein/water colloids, we'd be better advised to take comfort in the things people *can't* do — like be edited or copied. We can have legal personhood because we're non-fungible that way.
10 months ago
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this user has correctly divined how a LLM works: you imagine that you are talking to a person but you are actually talking to an abstract representation of the collective efforts of everybody involved in moving the pointer
10 months ago
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I should say though that this is a pretty good article, explaining why the right way to develop AI is as a domain-specific tool.
10 months ago
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Techno dystopia, libertarian hell
Imagine a future in which humans succeed in colonizing other planetary systems. It is then easy to imagine an intergalactic human population numbering something huge beyond imagining – 1040, say – all...
Here is my review of two new books looking at different but ultimately overlapping aspects of the utopias and dystopias of the libertarian far right. Adam Becker delves into the fantastical techno-utopias of Silicon Valley, while...
www.the-tls.co.uk/science-tech...
10 months ago
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This is a mosaic of the images covering the entire sky as observed by the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), part of its All-Sky Data Release.
The sky can be thought of as a sphere that surrounds us in three dimensions. To make a map of the sky, astronomers project it into two dimensions. Many different methods can be used to project a spherical surface into a 2-D map. The projection used in this image of the sky, called Aitoff, takes the 3-D sky sphere and slices open one hemisphere, and then flattens the whole thing out into an oval shape.
In the mosaic, the Milky Way Galaxy runs horizontally across this map. The Milky Way is shaped like a disk and our solar system is located in that disk about two-thirds of the way out from the center. So we see the Milky Way as a band running through the sky. As we look toward the center of the galaxy, we are looking through more of the disk than when we are looking at large angles away from the center, and you can see a noticeable increase in stars (colored blue-green) toward the center of the image.
Nature presents us with 80 "octaves" of light, of which humans can see exactly 1.
Bringing the other 79 octaves into view has taken two centuries of effort, but it has transformed our ability to sense our place in the cosmic order. My new Aeon essay: 🧪🔭
aeon.co/essays/willi...
10 months ago
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James Murray's book on Mathematical Biology has a nice chapter on the "Use and abuse of fractals in biology" which I enjoyed immensely. I think this terminology "use and abuse" can apply to many powerful (but limited!) human tools such as metaphors, power laws, stylistic models, etc.
10 months ago
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I've said this before, but the problem is that the acceptable rate of wrong answers depends *heavily* on the task in question.
Counterintuitively, the simpler and less important the task, the *lower* the acceptable failure rate!
11 months ago
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I have a couple of benchmark papers and it is very hard to elicit the correct identification of a problem when these models assume a lot of good faith in legit science papers. When parts of the paper have extra sound methodology, Claude will additionally amplify confidence and rigor of the paper.
11 months ago
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You can think LLMs are aren’t intelligent, are built in exploitative ways, aren’t useful, overhyped, but if you don’t think they’re a wildly interesting scientific artifact I don’t know what to tell you
11 months ago
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imagine an ant which lives on a map of your hometown. there are many things which you know about your hometown which that ant can never learn. but it is not the case that the ant living on that map knows nothing about your hometown.
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