Oh cool, the next season of Silo comes out in July. This season will be heavily based on Shift, and I am curious to see how viewers respond. It’s… very very different.
Looking for other ideas? I've indexed a number of times people have asked this question and some of the answers I've run across.
Looking for the opposite of this list? Try: How do you use your typewriter? [Wrong Answers Only Edition] This is where you'll find the quirky off-label use cases like "boat anchor", "doorstop", "paper weight", etc. that the non-typewriter afficionados will be sure to appreciate throwing about.Want to watch: Holy Rollers: The True Story of Card Counting Christians
via “Blackjack”, episode #466 of This American Life podcast
kottke.org
Rogue One: The Andor Cut
David Kaylor is re-editing Rogue One into what he calls “The Andor Cut”; the trailer seems pretty compelling and...
A Rogue One fan edit by David Kaylor is on the way. It tells the story from Cassian Andor’s perspective, better aligning it with the Disney+ series. Andor is, IMO, the best Star Wars content since The Empire Strikes back.
Kaylor has plenty of experience creating successful fan edits:
The remixed Rogue One will be out on May 25, available in 4K with 5.1 surround sound. Kaylor has previously produced cuts of all three original trilogy Star Wars movies, Star Wars: Episode III - The Siege of Mandalore & Revenge of the Sith (a combo of the third prequel and part of the 7th season of Clone Wars).
Optimistic about this one!
My son is doing a project on the history of programming languages and I’ve never felt more like a “well, actually” guy in my life. My brain is permanently broken because of being a programmer. Every little detail that’s slightly inaccurate makes me twinge. 😂
Daredevil finale was so so good. Heavy-handed, but it’s a superhero show on Disney+. I’ll give them credit, they managed to land the whole duality of good and evil thing. The cameos, new heroes and villains, dramatic reveals, all of it — worked!
Last week I learned that you can buy 1:14.5 scale RC models of KOMATSU heavy machinery. They weigh about 40 lbs and cost about five grand. I used to think the most Dad shit ever was model trains, but now I want a tiny construction site in my front yard. I mean look at these things!
On my second flight of the day headed back west. This flight is gnarly — 5 hours long and I’m in a window seat. It’s an exit row in “comfort,” I just don’t like being trapped. On the plus side, I’m running a “ralph loop” dev cycle using Claude Code Remote Control while reading “The Well of Ascension.”
These “I tricked into giving me instructions for building an explosive and all it took was 90 minutes of gaslighting” stories are silly. You know where else you can find this information? Every search engine ever, in far less than 90 minutes. Performative clickbait.
kottke.org
New Banksy: Blinded by Nationalism
The artist Banksy has installed (without a permit, one assumes) a new statue in London that depicts a man in a...
Relevant, thoughtful, and public — the hallmarks of Banksy’s artwork.
In Chicago on business. The company has an office 5 minutes from O’Hare that is perfect for meetings where people are coming from all over the country. The only downside is that there is basically nothing fun nearby. Fly thousands of miles to be confined to a 5 mile radius.
Fascinating article that makes a creative case for Universal Basic Income, of which I am a proponent. The author’s argument uses a three-pointed, triangular series of points that are incredibly distinct, but still come together as a coherent whole.
The first argument pertains to Albert Einstein, who famously worked as a patent clerk when he rewrote physics in the span of a single year. He was afforded time to think thanks to the job having very few demands.
if universal basic income enables even one more Einstein to become Einstein over the course of the next century, it will have paid for itself a thousand times over.
The second argument comes from a series of UBI trials in Ireland and New York, which confirmed the (in my view) obvious.
When you give everyone in a community a floor of income, entrepreneurship skyrockets. New businesses get started. People take risks they wouldn’t have otherwise taken. This isn’t surprising. Starting a business is terrifying when the downside is losing your house. It’s a lot less terrifying when the downside is falling back on a basic income.
The final argument involves a “microtonal math rock band” from Quebec, and I’ll save the beautiful crescendo for the linked post. It’s worth a read!
via Jason Kottke