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My name is Craig, and I'm in ~~Bangkok~~ Rayong with my wife (@beny) and three cats, Hutchi, Hanna, and Haesu.

The banner picture is of a sign on the side of the road in Korat, Thailand, put there by the local administration. It says, "If you are drunk, drive slowly." I didn't take the picture, but it says a lot about the reason I live in Thailand.

2025-06-22

@meganL
I use Beeper.com. It wraps all the services up using matrix bridges.

2025-06-21

@theleftistlawyer
The media will focus it's biased spot light on one group of suffering and then the next at the wish of politicians and their personal goals.

We need to remember all the suffering and that the only way to win is to not follow their distractions.

2025-06-21

Princess Hana being very undignified, but still cute. She got a belly rub after the photo.

#Caturday

Our cute tabby cat laying on her back with all paws spread out. She is in a scratching basket.
2025-06-19

@NDPOST
Srettha Thavisin is an ex-prime minister not the current prime minister.

2025-06-18

@ecpoir

WTF. Does Israel really want to end up as popular as North Korea?

Actually they might have already succeeded.

@AlJazeera @middle-east-news-AlJazeera

Tip boosted:
Cats of YoreCatsOfYore
2025-06-18

Cutest couple. 💕 Photo from my collection, no written date/info.

Black and white photo of a young light skinned woman wearing a plaid shirt and dark pleated skirt, holding a medium hair, tabby cat outside in the sun.
Tip boosted:
Kid Maniaclintruin
2025-06-17

@ArtHarg @randahl
I'd consider the source...
☠ ✝ ☠

Christianity;
The popular belief that a celestial Jewish baby who is also his own father, born from a virgin mother, died for three days so that he could ascend to heaven on a cloud and then make you live forever only if you symbolically eat his flesh, drink his blood and telepathically tell him you accept him as your lord & master so he can remove an evil force from your spiritual being that is present in all humanity because an immoral woman made from a man's rib was hoodwinked by a talking reptile possessed by a malicious angel to secretly eat forbidden fruit from a magical tree.
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2025-06-17

Why yes. Yes that IS the Gulf of MEXICO on the coverage map for Donald Trump's new mobile phone "service." 😂😂😂

Photo by Christopher Colt on June 16, 2025. May be an image of map, radar and text that says 'MONTANA D. MINN SED. Minpeapolis WYO. MICH Madison NEBR. Oitawa IOWA MAINE Detroit GOLO ©Mapbox Mapbox|@OpenStreetMap ©OpenStreetMap ILL. United States. Mo. OHIO IND. Los.Angeles ARIZ. OKLA. KY. New York ARK. TEÑN TEXAS MISS ALA. Houston à¶‚à¶ŻàŻ‡à¶ž. SIN Gulfo of Mexico GUAN: Sargasso Sea Pahamas HHene Âź Cuba Coverage available No coverage 120 i Jamaica Dorminieen Republie Cn... Guadoloupo Map. and. Map.and_service.infa service.infc'.
2025-06-16

@Deglassco
And in Australia, where there are less guns, black Australians get killed while in custody instead. I would like to say I don't get it, but I do.

2025-06-16

@intransitivelie

"Rather than taking the chance of unintentionally offending someone or of being misunderstood, it is best to relinquish the old innocuous proverbial expression all together."

The advice in the article is sound. Why possibly offend people for a stupid saying?

I won't use the expression on purpose again

2025-06-15

@MostlyHarmless
Photons don't have mass. They are protestant

2025-06-14

A big baby getting some TLC at the shop near my house.

Both Aunty and cat look just as content.

#Caturday #Thailand

A older lady sitting on the floor with a large tabby cat sitting with her getting a pat
Tip boosted:
Aure Free Press :verified:Free_Press@mstdn.social
2025-06-09

“Couple of billionaires having a hissy little catfight. Who gives a shit? The world actually has problems.”
- Stephen King

On petty fighting between Trump and Musk

#AureFreePress #News #press #headline #GOP #Politics #uspolitics #uspol

2025-06-09

@blazetrends
I tried to go to your site, but gave up. Not worth trouble due to the Captcha

Tip boosted:
Fabio Manganiellofabio@manganiello.social
2025-06-08

Why Bell Labs worked so well, and could innovate so much, while today’s innovation, in spite of the huge private funding, goes in hype-and-fizzle cycles that leave relatively little behind, is a question I’ve been asking myself a lot in the past years.

And I think that the author of this article has hit the nail on its head on most of the reasons - but he didn’t take the last step in identifying the root cause.

What Bell Labs achieved within a few decades is probably unprecedented in human history:

  • They employed folks like Nyquist and Shannon, who laid the foundations of modern information theory and electronic engineering while they were employees at Bell.

  • They discovered the first evidence of the black hole at the center of our galaxy in the 1930s while analyzing static noise on shortwave transmissions.

  • They developed in 1937 the first speech codec and the first speech synthesizer.

  • They developed the photovoltaic cell in the 1940, and the first solar cell in the 1950s.

  • They built the first transistor in 1947.

  • They built the first large-scale electronic computers (from Model I in 1939 to Model VI in 1949).

  • They employed Karnaugh in the 1950s, who worked on the Karnaugh maps that we still study in engineering while he was an employee at Bell.

  • They contributed in 1956 (together with AT&T and the British and Canadian telephone companies) to the first transatlantic communications cable.

  • They developed the first electronic musics program in 1957.

  • They employed Kernighan, Thompson and Ritchie, who created UNIX and the C programming language while they were Bell employees.

And then their rate of innovation suddenly fizzled out after the 1980s.

I often hear that Bell could do what they did because they had plenty of funding. But I don’t think that’s the main reason. The author rightly points out that Google, Microsoft and Apple have already made much more profit than Bell has ever seen in its entire history. Yet, despite being awash with money, none of them has been as impactful as Bell. Nowadays those companies don’t even innovate much besides providing you with a new version of Android, of Windows or the iPhone every now and then. And they jump on the next hype wagon (social media, AR/VR, Blockchain, AI
) just to deliver half-baked products that (especially in Google’s case) are abandoned as soon as the hype bubble bursts.

Let alone singlehandedly spear innovation that can revolutionize an entire industry, let alone make groundbreaking discoveries that engineers will still study a century later.

So what was Bell’s recipe that Google and Apple, despite having much more money and talented people, can’t replicate? And what killed that magic?

Well, first of all Bell and Kelly had an innate talent in spotting the “geekiest” among us. They would often recruit from pools of enthusiasts that had built their own home-made radio transmitters for fun, rather than recruiting from the top business schools, or among those who can solve some very abstract and very standardized HackerRank problems.

And they knew how to manage those people. According to Kelly’s golden rule:

How do you manage genius? You don’t

Bell specifically recruited people that had that strange urge of tinkering and solving big problems, they were given their lab and all the funding that they needed, and they could work in peace. Often it took years before Kelly asked them how their work was progressing.

Compare it to a Ph.D today who needs to struggle for funding, needs to produce papers that get accepted in conferences, regardless of their level of quality, and must spend much more time on paperwork than on actual research.

Or to an engineer in a big tech company that has to provide daily updates about their progress, has to survive the next round of layoffs, has to go through endless loops of compliance, permissions and corporate bureaucracy in order to get anything done, has their performance evaluated every 3 months, and doesn’t even have control on what gets shipped - that control has been taken away from engineers and given to PMs and MBA folks.

Compare that way of working with today’s backlogs, metrics, micromanaging and struggle for a dignified salary or a stable job.

We can’t have the new Nyquist, Shannon or Ritchie today simply because, in science and engineering, we’ve moved all the controls away from the passionate technical folks that care about the long-term impact of their work, and handed them to greedy business folks who only care about short-term returns for their investors.

So we ended up with a culture that feels like talent must be managed, even micromanaged, otherwise talented people will start slacking off and spending their days on TikTok.

But, as Kelly eloquently put it:

“What stops a gifted mind from just slacking off?” is the wrong question to ask. The right question is, “Why would you expect information theory from someone who needs a babysitter?”

Or, as Peter Higgs (the Higgs boson guy) put it:

It’s difficult to imagine how I would ever have enough peace and quiet in the present sort of climate to do what I did in 1964
 Today I wouldn’t get an academic job. It’s as simple as that. I don’t think I would be regarded as productive enough.

Or, as Shannon himself put it:

I’ve always pursued my interests without much regard for final value or value to the world. I’ve spent lots of time on totally useless things.

So basically the most brilliant minds of the 20th century would be considered lazy slackers today and be put on a PIP because they don’t deliver enough code or write enough papers.

So the article is spot on in identifying why Bell could invent, within a few years, all it did, while Apple, despite having much more money, hasn’t really done anything new in the past decade. MBAs, deadlines, pseudo-objective metrics and short-termism killed scientific inquiry and engineering ingenuity.

But the author doesn’t go one step further and identify the root cause.

It correctly spots the business and organizational issues that exist in managing talent today, but it doesn’t go deeper into their economic roots.

You see, MBA graduates and CEOs didn’t destroy the spirit of scientific and engineering ingenuity spurred by the Industrial Revolution just because they’re evil. I mean, there’s a higher chance for someone who has climbed the whole corporate ladder to be a sociopath than there is for someone you randomly picked from the street, but not to the point where they would willingly tame and screw the most talented minds of their generation, and squeeze them into a Jira board or a metric that looks at the number of commits, out of pure sadism.

They did so because the financial incentives have drastically changed from the times of Bells Labs.

The Bells Labs were basically publicly funded. AT&T operated the telephone lines in the US, paid by everyone who used telephones, and they reinvested a 1% tax into R&D (the Bells Labs). And nobody expected a single dime of profits to come out from the Bells Labs.

And btw, R&D was real R&D with no strings attached at the time. In theory also my employer does R&D today - but we just ended up treating whatever narrow iterative feature requested by whatever random PM as “research and development”. It’s not like scientists have much freedom in what to research or engineers have much freedom in what to develop. R&D programs have mostly just become a way for large businesses to squeeze more money out of taxpayers, put it in their pockets, and not feel any moral obligation of contributing to anything other than their shareholders’ accounts.

And at the time the idea of people paying taxes, so talented people in their country could focus on inventing the computer, the Internet or putting someone on the moon, without the pressure of VCs asking for their dividends, or PMs asking them to migrate everything to another cloud infrastructure by next week, or to a new shiny framework that they’ve just heard in a conference, wasn’t seen as a socialist dystopia. It was before the neoliberal sociopaths of the Chicago school screwed up everything.

The America that invested into the Bell Labs and into the Apollo project was very different from today’s America. It knew that it was the government’s job to foster innovation and to create an environment where genuinely smart people could do great things without external pressure. That America hadn’t yet been infected by the perverse idea that the government should always be small, that it’s not the government’s job to make people’s lives better, and that it was the job of privately funded ventures seeking short-term returns to fund moonshots.

And, since nobody was expecting a dime back from Bell, nobody would put deadlines on talented people, nobody hired unqualified and arrogant business specialists to micromanage them, nobody would put them on a performance improvement plan if they were often late at their daily standups or didn’t commit enough lines of code in the previous quarter. So they had time to focus on how to solve some of the most complex problems that humans ever faced.

So they could invent the transistor, the programming infrastructure still used to this day, and lay the foundations of what engineers study today.

The most brilliant minds of our age don’t have this luxury. So they can’t revolutionarize our world like those in the 20th century did.

Somebody else sets their priorities and their deadlines.

They can’t think of moonshots because they’re forced to work on the next mobile app riding the next wave of hype that their investors want to release to market so they can get even richer.

They have to worry about companies trying to replace them with AI bots and business managers wanting to release products themselves by “vibe coding”, just to ask those smart people to clean up the mess they’ve done, just like babies who are incapable of cleaning up the food they’ve spilled on the floor.

They are seen as a cost, not as a resource. Kelly used to call himself a “patron” rather than a “manager”, and he trusted his employees, while today’s managers and investors mostly see their engineering resources as squishy blobs of flesh standing between their ambitious ideas and their money, and they can’t wait to replace them with robots that just fullfill all of their wishes.

Tech has become all about monetization nowadays and nothing about ingenuity.

As a result, there are way more brilliant minds (and way more money) in our age going towards solving the “convince people to click on this link” problem rather than solving the climate problem, for example.

Then of course they can’t invent the next transistor, or bring the next breakthrough in information theory.

Then of course all you get, after one year of the most brilliant minds of our generation working at the richest company that has ever existed, is just a new iPhone.

https://links.fabiomanganiello.com/share/683ee70d0409e6.66273547

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Photo of a black cat sitting loaf-like. She is looking at the camera and one ear is bent backwards/flipped inside out, because she rolls like that.Photo looking down on a black cat, who is sitting like a human attempting a forward fold in yoga: back legs splayed out, front paws on the floor in front of her.Close-up photo of a black cat sitting in her cat tree, front paws just over the edge of the perch, tongue sticking out because she was interrupted mid-bath by something out the window.Cat sleeping in the top perch of a cat tree set in front of a large window. The cat’s head is hanging upside-down over the side of the perch, and she absolutely does not care.
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2025-06-08
A fresh loaf of seed-covered sourdough bread.Lefty, with her eyes barely open, on her favorite blue pillow.
Tip boosted:
kurtshkurtsh
2025-06-07

In Defense of the Middle Class:
When entrepreneur, NYU Business professor, philanthropist & UCLA Bruin 👌 Scott Galloway breaks down how the biillionaire class is destroying America... and how this will end.

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2025-06-06

Man, I just wish my dad lived long enough to hear white guys telling each other to go back to Africa

Split screen of bannon and musk

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