The AI arms race

That is the topic of my latest column for The Free Press, here is the closing tag:

The biggest risk is not from the AI companies, but rather that the government with the most powerful AI systems becomes the bad guy itself. The U.S., on the world stage, is not always a force for good, and we might become worse to the extent we can act without constraint. The Vietnam War is perhaps the least politically controversial way of demonstrating that point.

So today we need an odd and complex mix of not entirely consistent ideologies for the current arms race to go well. How about some tech accelerationism mixed with capitalism, and then a prudent technocratic approach to military procurement, to make sure those advances serve national security ends? On the precautionary side, we need a dash of the 1960s and ’70s New Left and libertarian anti-war ideologies, skeptical of Uncle Sam himself. We do not want to become the bad guys.

Do you think we can pull that off? The new American challenge is underway.

Worth a ponder.

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How coding agents work

Agentic Engineering Patterns >

As with any tool, understanding how coding agents work under the hood can help you make better decisions about how to apply them.

A coding agent is a piece of software that acts as a harness for an LLM, extending that LLM with additional capabilities that are powered by invisible prompts and implemented as callable tools.

Large Language Models

At the heart of any coding agent is a Large Language Model, or LLM. These have names like GPT-5.4 or Claude Opus 4.6 or Gemini 3.1 Pro or Qwen3.5-35B-A3B.

An LLM is a machine learning model that can complete a sentence of text. Give the model the phrase "the cat sat on the " and it will (almost certainly) suggest "mat" as the next word in the sentence.

As these models get larger and train on increasing amounts of data, they can complete more complex sentences - like "a python function to download a file from a URL is def download_file(url): ".

LLMs don't actually work directly with words - they work with tokens. A sequence of text is converted into a sequence of integer tokens, so "the cat sat on the " becomes [3086, 9059, 10139, 402, 290, 220]. This is worth understanding because LLM providers charge based on the number of tokens processed, and are limited in how many tokens they can consider at a time.

You can experiment with the OpenAI tokenizer to see how this works at platform.openai.com/tokenizer.

The input to an LLM is called the prompt. The text returned by an LLM is called the completion, or sometimes the response.

Many models today are multimodal, which means they can accept more than just text as input. Vision LLMs (vLLMs) can accept images as part of the input, which means you can feed them sketches or photos or screenshots. A common misconception is that these are run through a separate process for OCR or image analysis, but these inputs are actually turned into yet more token integers which are processed in the same way as text.

Chat templated prompts

The first LLMs worked as completion engines - users were expected to provide a prompt which could then be completed by the model, such as the two examples shown above.

This wasn't particularly user-friendly so models mostly switched to using chat templated prompts instead, which represent communication with the model as a simulated conversation.

This is actually just a form of completion prompt with a special format that looks something like this.

user: write a python function to download a file from a URL
assistant:

The natural completion for this prompt is for the assistant (represented by the LLM) to answer the user's question with some Python code.

LLMs are stateless: every time they execute a prompt they start from the same blank slate.

To maintain the simulation of a conversation, the software that talks to the model needs to maintain its own state and replay the entire existing conversation every time the user enters a new chat prompt:

user: write a python function to download a file from a URL
assistant: def download_url(url):
    return urllib.request.urlopen(url).read()
user: use the requests library instead
assistant:

Since providers charge for both input and output tokens, this means that as a conversation gets longer, each prompt becomes more expensive since the number of input tokens grows every time.

Token caching

Most model providers offset this somewhat through a cheaper rate for cached input tokens - common token prefixes that have been processed within a short time period can be charged at a lower rate as the underlying infrastructure can cache and then reuse many of the expensive calculations used to process that input.

Coding agents are designed with this optimization in mind - they avoid modifying earlier conversation content to ensure the cache is used as efficiently as possible.

Calling tools

The defining feature of an LLM agent is that agents can call tools. But what is a tool?

A tool is a function that the agent harness makes available to the LLM.

At the level of the prompt itself, that looks something like this:

system: If you need to access the weather, end your turn with <tool>get_weather(city_name)</tool>
user: what's the weather in San Francisco?
assistant:

Here the assistant might respond with the following text:

<tool>get_weather("San Francisco")</tool>

The model harness software then extracts that function call request from the response - probably with a regular expression - and executes the tool.

It then returns the result to the model, with a constructed prompt that looks something like this:

system: If you need to access the weather, end your turn with <tool>get_weather(city_name)</tool>
user: what's the weather in San Francisco?
assistant: <tool>get_weather("San Francisco")</tool>
user: <tool-result>61°, Partly cloudy</tool-result>
assistant:

The LLM can now use that tool result to help generate an answer to the user's question.

Most coding agents define a dozen or more tools for the agent to call. The most powerful of these allow for code execution - a Bash() tool for executing terminal commands, or a Python() tool for running Python code, for example.

The system prompt

In the previous example I included an initial message marked "system" which informed the LLM about the available tool and how to call it.

Coding agents usually start every conversation with a system prompt like this, which is not shown to the user but provides instructions telling the model how it should behave.

These system prompts can be hundreds of lines long. Here's the system prompt for OpenAI Codex as-of March 2026, which is a useful clear example of the kind of instructions that make these coding agents work.

Reasoning

One of the big new advances in 2025 was the introduction of reasoning to the frontier model families.

Reasoning, sometimes presented as thinking in the UI, is when a model spends additional time generating text that talks through the problem and its potential solutions before presenting a reply to the user.

This can look similar to a person thinking out loud, and has a similar effect. Crucially it allows models to spend more time (and more tokens) working on a problem in order to hopefully get a better result.

Reasoning is particularly useful for debugging issues in code as it gives the model an opportunity to navigate more complex code paths, mixing in tool calls and using the reasoning phase to follow function calls back to the potential source of an issue.

Many coding agents include options for dialing up or down the reasoning effort level, encouraging models to spend more time chewing on harder problems.

LLM + system prompt + tools in a loop

Believe it or not, that's most of what it takes to build a coding agent!

If you want to develop a deeper understanding of how these things work, a useful exercise is to try building your own agent from scratch. A simple tool loop can be achieved with a few dozen lines of code on top of an existing LLM API.

A good tool loop is a great deal more work than that, but the fundamental mechanics are surprisingly straightforward.

Tags: coding-agents, generative-ai, agentic-engineering, ai, llms

MAGA Turns on Itself, and It's Ugly

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There’s a bit of a disagreement happening among influential media personalities in MAGA world, a rift opened up by the Iran War. On one side are those who will support whatever Donald Trump does, many of whom have long yearned to see Iran reduced to a smoking pile of rubble as its heathen citizenry are sent to burn forever in the Lake of Fire; on the other side are people who actually believed Trump when he said he didn’t want to start any more wars. And they are not being polite about their little tiff.

I bring this to your attention not only because I’m not above taking pleasure in the enraged buffoonery of some of the worst people on Earth, but also because this does have serious implications for the political future we’ll all be living in.

The backstory is that a rift has opened up on the far right — or it might be more accurate to say that multiple rifts have opened up along a variety of lines, but Iran has become the immediate focus. Because the right-wing media universe is vast and complex, it has room for both establishment outlets like Fox News and individual entrepreneurs like Tucker Carlson, Megyn Kelly (both of whom are ex-Foxers), Candace Owens, and Nick Fuentes, all of whom know that they can grow their audiences through conflict and shock-mongering. Sometimes, that means starting fights with other influential conservatives.

Which is what happened this past weekend. Kelly, you see, has been critical of the war, which has enraged influential radio and Fox host Mark Levin, who has long been privately encouraging Trump to blow Iran to smithereens and is now one of the war’s biggest boosters. So naturally, he went on X to lob a series of nasty personal insults at Kelly, and just as naturally, she responded by saying he has a “micropenis.”

Levin then responded by calling Kelly a “harlot,” and the recently exiled Marjorie Taylor Greene chimed in to say “I wholeheartedly support Megyn Kelly telling the world that Mark Levin has a micropenis.” Classy all around!

The president is not happy to see the kids fighting, but the most important thing is that fealty must be paid to him. Or as he put it in one of a series of angry Truth Social posts, Iran critics “ARE NOT MAGA, I AM, and MAGA includes not allowing Iran, a Sick, Demented, and Violent Terrorist Regime, to have a nuclear weapon to blow up the United States of America.”

In related news, Ted Cruz, who will probably start running for president later this year, is shocked, shocked to find that his party is overrun with antisemites:

The idea that Qatar would have to pay Republicans, especially the young groyper set, to be antisemitic is absurd; they’re doing it all on their own, because it’s who they are and what they believe. This upsets Senator Cruz, who thinks Republicans should stick to their virulent anti-Muslim bigotry but not aim their hatred at the Jews. But his way of criticizing these Republicans isn’t to say they must be shown the error of their ways; it’s to make the same accusation Republicans make against liberals, that they’re being paid by sinister outside forces.

Trouble is, once you build a movement and a political style around hate, personal insults, performative conflict, and conspiracy theorizing, it’s not easy to channel it only in the directions you want. This is the beast Trump and Republicans created, and it can only be controlled for so long.

What MAGA is made of

When you feed your supporters a line of baloney like “I won’t start any new wars,” even if you don’t mean it, they might actually start to believe it. This has to do with the way political ideology works in general: Rather than deciding what we believe and then choosing the party that represents those beliefs, we take on a party as part of our identity and adopt its beliefs (this is an old idea in political science). When the party changes, we update our beliefs to align with the party.

Back in 2016, the people who would become Trump’s supporters were pulled in different directions on the subject of overseas adventurism. The Iraq War was a Republican production, but it had gone terribly. Their leaders defended it, but only half-heartedly; there was a lot of “If we knew then what we know now, we would have made different decisions.” Then Trump came along offering Republican voters all kinds of things they liked on issues such as immigration, and also said that the war was stupid and we should be going around invading other countries because it was more trouble than it was worth.

Because Trump said this while also being a misogynist and a racist and someone prone to all kinds of violent rhetoric, his opposition to Iraq-type adventures didn’t come off as “weak” to them, and they embraced it, making it part of their own belief system. It didn’t have to violate their identity as Republicans to think that we shouldn’t do that kind of war again. But then it turned out Trump never believed it in the first place, at least as a general principle (he still thinks the Iraq War was stupid, but not that we shouldn’t wage more wars). That is causing a lot of cognitive dissonance on the right.

This is an unusual situation, because most of the time, parties don’t make this kind of rapid wholesale shift in position. They evolve, usually slowly, and sometimes new issues come along, the party’s leaders decide where they stand, and their constituents follow. It’s extremely unusual to see the kind of sudden turn that the Iran War represents, and that is making it harder for at least some of Trump’s supporters to follow him through this pirouette. He’d like them to believe that he’s still opposed to nation-building; he just wants to bomb the crap out of Iran for a couple months then declare victory and leave. But that kind of subtlety is lost on them.

Especially when the war seems to be causing all kinds of problems, like spiking the price of gas. All this together opens up a space for people like Carlson and Kelly to present themselves as principled by opposing Trump on the war, which they know will produce attention-grabbing conflict with their peers who are more slavishly devoted to Trump.

And when they turn on each other, they aren’t going to do it through polite disagreement. The whole conservative movement has assimilated Trump’s style into their DNA. This is how they do politics now: When you disagree with someone, you call them a harlot or say they have a micropenis, and encourage your audience to turn that disagreement into hatred and rage.

It will take a good long time for that to change even after Trump is gone. I’m sure that at least one or two prominent Republicans are going to run for president in 2028 promising a gentler kind of politics, a return to good manners and civil discourse. And they’re going to get destroyed in the primaries. I don’t know if Ted Cruz is going to accuse Josh Hawley of having a micropenis, or if Ron DeSantis is going to call Nikki Haley a harlot, but their surrogates and advocates certainly will.

It is going to be exceedingly ugly, driven by the shared assumption that the route to power is to be as much like Donald Trump as possible. And while that might be true in those primaries, it isn’t likely to win over a majority of the electorate. If that was really what most voters want, Trump’s approval would be a lot higher than it is.

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Introducing Mistral Small 4

Introducing Mistral Small 4

Big new release from Mistral today (despite the name) - a new Apache 2 licensed 119B parameter (Mixture-of-Experts, 6B active) model which they describe like this:

Mistral Small 4 is the first Mistral model to unify the capabilities of our flagship models, Magistral for reasoning, Pixtral for multimodal, and Devstral for agentic coding, into a single, versatile model.

It supports reasoning_effort="none" or reasoning_effort="high", with the latter providing "equivalent verbosity to previous Magistral models".

The new model is 242GB on Hugging Face.

I tried it out via the Mistral API using llm-mistral:

llm install llm-mistral
llm mistral refresh
llm -m mistral/mistral-small-2603 "Generate an SVG of a pelican riding a bicycle"

The bicycle is upside down and mangled and the pelican is a series of grey curves with a triangular beak.

I couldn't find a way to set the reasoning effort in their API documentation, so hopefully that's a feature which will land soon.

Also from Mistral today and fitting their -stral naming convention is Leanstral, an open weight model that is specifically tuned to help output the Lean 4 formally verifiable coding language. I haven't explored Lean at all so I have no way to credibly evaluate this, but it's interesting to see them target one specific language in this way.

Tags: ai, generative-ai, llms, llm, mistral, pelican-riding-a-bicycle, llm-reasoning, llm-release

Use subagents and custom agents in Codex

Use subagents and custom agents in Codex

Subagents were announced in general availability today for OpenAI Codex, after several weeks of preview behind a feature flag.

They're very similar to the Claude Code implementation, with default subagents for "explorer", "worker" and "default". It's unclear to me what the difference between "worker" and "default" is but based on their CSV example I think "worker" is intended for running large numbers of small tasks in parallel.

Codex also lets you define custom agents as TOML files in ~/.codex/agents/. These can have custom instructions and be assigned to use specific models - including gpt-5.3-codex-spark if you want some raw speed. They can then be referenced by name, as demonstrated by this example prompt from the documentation:

Investigate why the settings modal fails to save. Have browser_debugger reproduce it, code_mapper trace the responsible code path, and ui_fixer implement the smallest fix once the failure mode is clear.

The subagents pattern is widely supported in coding agents now. Here's documentation across a number of different platforms:

Via @OpenAIDevs

Tags: ai, openai, generative-ai, llms, coding-agents, codex-cli, parallel-agents, agentic-engineering

Quoting A member of Anthropic’s alignment-science team

The point of the blackmail exercise was to have something to describe to policymakers—results that are visceral enough to land with people, and make misalignment risk actually salient in practice for people who had never thought about it before.

A member of Anthropic’s alignment-science team, as told to Gideon Lewis-Kraus

Tags: ai-ethics, anthropic, claude, generative-ai, ai, llms

Quoting Guilherme Rambo

Tidbit: the software-based camera indicator light in the MacBook Neo runs in the secure exclave¹ part of the chip, so it is almost as secure as the hardware indicator light. What that means in practice is that even a kernel-level exploit would not be able to turn on the camera without the light appearing on screen. It runs in a privileged environment separate from the kernel and blits the light directly onto the screen hardware.

Guilherme Rambo, in a text message to John Gruber

Tags: hardware, apple, privacy, john-gruber

Coding agents for data analysis

Coding agents for data analysis

Here's the handout I prepared for my NICAR 2026 workshop "Coding agents for data analysis" - a three hour session aimed at data journalists demonstrating ways that tools like Claude Code and OpenAI Codex can be used to explore, analyze and clean data.

Here's the table of contents:

I ran the workshop using GitHub Codespaces and OpenAI Codex, since it was easy (and inexpensive) to distribute a budget-restricted API key for Codex that attendees could use during the class. Participants ended up burning $23 of Codex tokens.

The exercises all used Python and SQLite and some of them used Datasette.

One highlight of the workshop was when we started running Datasette such that it served static content from a viz/ folder, then had Claude Code start vibe coding new interactive visualizations directly in that folder. Here's a heat map it created for my trees database using Leaflet and Leaflet.heat, source code here.

Screenshot of a "Trees SQL Map" web application with the heading "Trees SQL Map" and subheading "Run a query and render all returned points as a heat map. The default query targets roughly 200,000 trees." Below is an input field containing "/trees/-/query.json", a "Run Query" button, and a SQL query editor with the text "SELECT cast(Latitude AS float) AS latitude, cast(Longitude AS float) AS longitude, CASE WHEN DBH IS NULL OR DBH = '' THEN 0.3 WHEN cast(DBH AS float) <= 0 THEN 0.3 WHEN cast(DBH AS float) >= 80 THEN 1.0" (query is truncated). A status message reads "Loaded 1,000 rows and plotted 1,000 points as heat map." Below is a Leaflet/OpenStreetMap interactive map of San Francisco showing a heat map overlay of tree locations, with blue/green clusters concentrated in areas like the Richmond District, Sunset District, and other neighborhoods. Map includes zoom controls and a "Leaflet | © OpenStreetMap contributors" attribution.

I designed the handout to also be useful for people who weren't able to attend the session in person. As is usually the case, material aimed at data journalists is equally applicable to anyone else with data to explore.

Tags: data-journalism, geospatial, python, speaking, sqlite, ai, datasette, generative-ai, llms, github-codespaces, nicar, coding-agents, claude-code, codex-cli, leaflet

No, America is Not Respected

A person in a suit and a person in a military uniform

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

There’s a real Baghdad Bob feel to pronouncements from the Trump administration these days. The war is going great! We’ve been totally victorious! Also, other countries — including China! — must immediately send ships to escort oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz, which the U.S. Navy isn’t doing because it’s too dangerous.

But this has been the pattern ever since Trump returned to power. Despite repeated failures to deliver on his campaign promises — remember how he was going to cut energy prices in half? — he and his minions have continually insisted that everything is wonderful, that everything they do is a triumphant success story. And he’s still doing it. On Thursday he told a rally that

Inflation is plummeting, incomes are rising, the economy is roaring back and America is respected again.

As I and others have documented ad nauseam, none of those economic assertions are true. Today, however, I want to focus on the bolded claim. Trump constantly insists, in speeches and social media posts, that he took over a weak, despised nation and restored its international reputation. This is clearly something that matters a lot to him and his sense of self-worth.

It’s also the total opposite of the truth.

A stunning poll from Politico — just released, but taken last month — confirms what I and other observers strongly suspected: America is now widely despised, despised like nobody has ever been despised before.

I don’t mean that we’re disliked, although that too. But this isn’t a case of oderint dum metuant — let them hate so long as they fear. Instead, the world increasingly holds America in contempt.

Our former friends no longer consider us trustworthy:

A graph of a company

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

And they no longer believe that being a U.S. ally offers protection, that a good relationship with America will deter potential enemies from attacking them:

A graph with different colored arrows

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

At this point, a plurality of the population in every one of our erstwhile allies considers China a more reliable partner than the United States:

A graph of a person

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

And outside the United States, China, not America, is widely perceived as the great power of the future:

A graph of the country

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

If this is world respect, what would world contempt look like?

Why has America’s global reputation fallen so far, so fast? It’s not a mystery.

After all, why would anyone consider America a trustworthy ally when Trump keeps insulting our neighbor and former closest ally, Canada, by insisting that it must become the 51st state and repeatedly calling its Prime Minister “governor”? Why trust us when Trump tried to bully NATO member Denmark into handing over Greenland?

Beyond that, Trump’s tariffs aren’t just economically damaging. They aren’t just, as the Supreme Court finally ruled, illegal under our own laws. They are also in clear, overwhelming violation of international trade agreements solemnly signed by previous presidents. Given the way the current administration has casually ignored those agreements, why would anyone expect America to honor any future deals?

Last but not least, I don’t think Trump and company have any idea how much their betrayal of Ukraine has weakened America.

I mean, here we have a nation fighting and dying to defend democracy against a brutal dictatorship that the U.S. has long considered an adversary. Yet Trump has rewarded Ukrainian courage by completely cutting off aid:

A graph of different colored bars

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

Source: Ukraine Support Tracker

Trump has also repeatedly belittled Volodymyr Zelenskyy while praising Vladimir Putin, and made it increasingly clear that he wants Putin to win. In a way, America’s reputation has been further diminished by the fact that Trump isn’t getting his wish, because Ukraine keeps refusing to be defeated. So Trump can’t even do betrayal right.

What’s especially depressing about that Politico poll is that it was taken a month ago. That is, it reflects international attitudes before the debacle in Iran.

As everyone other than the most slavish Trump acolytes realizes, the war is going badly. The U.S. has spent billions of dollars bombing a third-rate power, badly depleting our stockpiles of sophisticated munitions, yet the regime survives and remains able to blockade a fifth of the world’s oil supply.

The Trump administration’s incompetence at war planning has been revelatory, in the worst way. The U.S. military’s lack of preparedness has also been shocking. Everyone following the Russia/Ukraine conflict, with its drone-infested battlespace, has been wondering whether American forces are ready for this new kind of war. Now we know that they aren’t. In a hair-raising article, the military historian and expert Phillips O’Brien says that this is a sign of rot in the U.S. military. I wish I were sure that he is wrong.

Now, Ukraine has learned the hard way how to fight this kind of war — and it moved quickly to help the United States and its allies in the region make use of its drone-fighting technology, despite Trump’s betrayals. Meanwhile Russia is aiding Iran. But Trump is still demeaning and insulting Zelenskyy while praising Putin.

The general public may not be aware that Trump’s America offers no reward to nations that come to its aid and does nothing to punish nations that aid its adversaries. But I guarantee that every leader in the world — very much including the leaders of nations Trump is now begging for help in the Strait of Hormuz — has taken notice and will treat the United States accordingly.

In short, Trump’s actions have drastically reduced the world’s respect for the United States. Yet Trump and his officials keep asserting that they have, well, made America great again. Why?

I don’t think it’s mainly about persuading the public. It is, instead, a desperate attempt to persuade themselves. For Trump, life is all about dominance displays; his sense of self-worth depends on believing that he’s cowing the world into submission. Others in his administration have more specific motivations. Pete Hegseth has built his brand around the notion that “warrior ethos” and “lethality” are what make a nation strong. Admitting that being smart and having allies are more important than macho posturing would be an implicit concession that he’s been wrong about everything.

The truth is that America used to be respected, not simply because we were a superpower, but because we were a different kind of superpower — a nation that stood by its allies, that mostly obeyed the rules of the system we created, that possessed an army that was professional, smart and incorruptible. Now Trump has thrown all that away. And I don’t know how or when we can ever get it back.

MUSICAL CODA

Claims about grade inflation

Average grades continue to rise in the United States, raising the question of how grade inflation impacts students. We provide comprehensive evidence on how teacher grading practices affect students’ long-run success. Using administrative high school data from Los Angeles and from Maryland that is linked to postsecondary and earnings records, we develop and validate two teacher-level measures of grade inflation: one measuring average grade inflation and another measuring a teacher’s propensity to give a passing grade. These measures of grade inflation are distinct from teacher value-added, with grade inflating teachers having moderately lower cognitive value-added and slightly higher noncognitive value-added. These twomeasuresalso differentially impact students’ long-term outcomes. Being assigned a higher average grade inflating teacher reduces a student’s future test scores, the likelihood of graduating from high school, college enrollment, and ultimately earnings. In contrast, passing grade inflation reduces the likelihood of being held back and increases high school graduation, with limited long-run effects. The cumulative impact is economically significant: a teacher with one standard deviation higher average grade inflation reduces the present discounted value of lifetime earnings of their students by $213,872 per year.

That is from a recent paper by Jeffrey T. Denning, Rachel Nesbit, Nolan Pope, and Merrill Warnick.  Via Séb Krier.

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Esther Kim Varet has ferret impulse control

So I was scrolling the ol’ IG this morning, when I stumbled upon a post from @ocforjustice. And, in full transparency, OC for Justice can be … a lot. The feed is combative, challenging, in your face. We’ve had some backs and forths, and it’s not always fun.

That said, the person behind the account (who I won’t identify) is well-intentioned and civic-minded. They’re passionate and invested. As Gerald Ford once said, we can disagree agreeably.

Wait.

I digress.

Earlier today, OC for Justice posted this DM, fired off by Esther Kim Varet, congressional candidate for CA-40 …

And … and … and …

For fuck’s sake.

You know, I’ve been a journalist for more than 30 years. Some of my books have been best-sellers, others have been busts. But, with each release, I inevitably receive heated, upsetting letters, calls and e-mails from pissed-off people. They’ve written about my hairline (admittedly, it’s not the best), my looks (clearly Brad Pitt-ian), my jarring lack of talent, my jarring lack of taste, my inability to piece together sentences. I’ve received threats of violence and threats of death. Hell, former Mets outfielder Lenny Dykstra once posted a photo of my wife on Twitter, and asked people to rate “her hotness”—a few weeks after she’d donated a kidney to a stranger.

And, for the most part, I take deep breaths and follow the advice of the title of this book (shameless family plug alert) …

Why? Because you have to. First, for sanity’s sake. But second, because it’s the best way. Esther wasn’t going to win an IG battle with OC for Justice. Not because she’s unintelligent (Esther is no dummy), but because … it’s fucking impossible. When you run for office or star in movies or create songs or (gasp) write books, people aspire to burrow under your skin. To get your goat. To coerce a response. It’s the most 2026 thing ever, and we all see it coming.

All of us—except Esther.

This woman (again, no dummy) has the impulse control of a ferret. She cannot not respond. To anyone. To everyone. There’s always a reason; a “But, if you heard what he said about me …” or “But, if you know what I’ve been through …” or “But her social media feed is racist/sexist/homophobic/anti-Semitic.” And it’s routinely trash justification by a person who has cycled through a conga line of campaign managers and advisers and who behaves like a seventh-grader trying out for varsity.

She’s not ready for this.

•••

Once upon a time, after Barry Bonds left Pittsburgh to join the San Francisco Giants, Pirates outfielder Andy Van Slyke said of his former teammate, “I’d rather lose without Barry than win with him.”

That, sincerely, is how I am starting to feel about Esther Kim Varet.

I don’t care if Lisa Ramirez and Joe Kerr lack Esther’s money and pizzazz. I don’t care if she’s smarter, prettier, taller, more connected, better at gymnastics and trivia and dropping funky beats. Since the CA-40 is a post-Prop 50 uber longshot, I’d rather at least put forward a candidate who represents Democrats well; who speaks with sincerity and authenticity; who … DOESN’T FUCKING FLY OFF THE HANDLE AND RAGE DM PEOPLE EVERY OTHER DAY OF THE WEEK.

Inevitably, in the aftermath of this post, I will receive texts from Esther and her husband.

They will tell me Esther is the only Democrat who can win.

They will tell me I’m ruining things.

They will tell me why the other candidates are hopeless.

They will tell me this and that and that and this and blah and blur and argh and oy and oomph and piss and vinegar.

The thing is, it won’t really matter, for I stopped paying close attention to the buffoonery long again.

Which is great for my sanity.

But awful, if you’re running for office and hope to win.

PS …

March 16, 2026

In early 1775, the people of Boston were bitterly divided. The town was on a peninsula that was almost an island, connected only by a narrow spit of land on which four horses could walk abreast at high tide. There, and on the surrounding lands—Medford, Charlestown, Cambridge, Brookline, Roxbury, Dorchester Heights, Noddle Island, and Governor’s Island—and in the vessels in Boston Harbor and beyond, men, women, and children were weighing their loyalties.

Trouble had been brewing in the town for at least three years. On the one side were British soldiers and the loyalist subjects of the Crown called Tories. Challenging them were the civilians called Patriots. They wanted to restore the traditional rights of Englishmen that were under attack in the colonies. After the Patriots had thrown more than 300 chests of valuable tea into Boston Harbor on December 16, 1773, to protest Parliament’s claim that it had the right to tax the colonists without their consent, officials from the British government had set out to make the Patriots do as they were told.

They sent 10,000 soldiers and their families to Boston, where the lower-class soldiers competed for housing with the locals. Sometimes soldiers deserted and took local jobs, which had grown scarce as the occupation ruined the local economy. There was little love lost between the Boston colonists and the soldiers newly arrived from England.

Loyalties were less clear among the wealthier people in Boston. While poorer Patriots and soldiers jostled in the streets, British officers and loyalist Tories mingled in places like the fashionable London Book Store on Cornhill Street. There the young bookseller, 25-year-old Henry Knox, had on his shelves the latest volumes from the other side of the Atlantic. Knox was well read himself and was fascinated by military strategy and tactics, an interest he fed through his book orders and by chatting with the soldiers who came to his shop.

Knox brought his military knowledge to his support for the Patriot cause. But his political loyalties did not diminish his admiration for Lucy Flucker, the daughter of prominent and wealthy Tories, when she came with the other fashionable young women to his bookshop. She returned his admiration, and the two married in June 1774 despite her parents’ objection to Henry due to his politics. Her parents reluctantly allowed their daughter to marry but disowned her of her inheritance.

The battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775, meant that Bostonians could no longer be neutral in the growing tension between the Tories and the Patriots. They would have to choose where their loyalties lay: with the Patriots trying to protect their traditional rights or with the Tories claiming the king had new, radical powers that override the rights of Englishmen.

Even before the British soldiers made it back down the Battle Road from Concord on April 19, militiamen—both white and Black, free and enslaved—from the Massachusetts countryside, furious that soldiers of their own government had shot at them and killed their neighbors, rushed to surround Boston, laying siege to the soldiers and British officials there. Townspeople like Henry and Lucy Knox had to decide where to place their loyalties.

It was not an easy question. In May the Second Continental Congress sent the Olive Branch Petition asking King George for reconciliation, a petition the king rejected, and in June, British general Thomas Gage declared Massachusetts to be in a state of rebellion but offered amnesty for all who would lay down their arms…except for Patriot leaders Samuel Adams and John Hancock. If the Patriots failed, association with them could mean prison or worse.

With his ties to the town’s Tories—including his wife’s family—and knowledge of artillery, Knox could have found a position with the British. Instead, he chose the Patriots. He escaped Boston to join the men besieging the town, helping his comrades build fortifications around the city. Lucy chose to flee with him, leaving her family behind. While Henry camped near Boston, Lucy moved around, alone and unsettled, from the homes of friends to rented rooms in Worcester.

The standoff in Boston began to force others to take a stand as well. Everyone knew that Fort Ticonderoga, 300 miles away near the confluence of Lake Champlain and Lake George in New York, was fortified with heavy cannons that could make or break a battle, and that they were guarded by only a small detachment of two officers and forty-eight men, most of whom were unfit for regular military service.

In May 1775, British General Thomas Gage warned the governor of Quebec he must fortify the Ticonderoga fort at about the same time the Massachusetts Provincial Congress authorized Benedict Arnold of Connecticut to raise men to capture the cannons. Arnold knew that area well, and he and his men set out. Connecticut also raised militiamen to seize the fort, and Vermont’s Green Mountain Boys, led by Ethan Allan, were already on their way. The forces came together and worked their way through the woods to the fort. At dawn on May 10, nine days before the governor of Quebec received Gage’s letter, the Patriots captured Fort Ticonderoga in a surprise attack that found the defenders asleep in their beds. The Patriots seized more than 180 cannons and other weapons.

While the militiamen repaired and strengthened the fort, lines around Boston were hardening. From England, military reinforcements of 4,500 men, led by three new commanders including Sir William Howe, arrived in Boston. Because ships of the British navy and Tory allies controlled the harbor, protecting the soldiers in the town and bringing in supplies, the Patriots could not advance.

But neither could the British officials. British soldiers seized Charlestown at the Battle of Bunker Hill on June 17, but their victory did not settle anything. The British took heavy casualties and did not break the Patriots’ lines, teaching the Patriots that they could hold off the British Army.

The leaders of the Second Continental Congress in Philadelphia recognized the importance of events in Boston. They took control of the forces surrounding the town and created the Continental Army. Recognizing that the Patriots’ reputation for radicalism worried tentative supporters, Massachusetts leader John Adams proposed appointing George Washington of Virginia “General and Commander in Chief.”

Washington arrived at Cambridge to take command in July. He and Henry Knox became fast friends as the two sides in and around Boston settled down into local skirmishes. As the British restricted guns in the town, most Patriots left, joining the Continental Army growing outside the town. Riflemen and militias arrived from Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey, as well as the New England colonies: Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Connecticut, and the Green Mountains.

Continental soldiers dug trenches and drilled, turning from militia into trained soldiers. At the same time, loyalists from the countryside took refuge in the city, where people went without food or wood for cooking and heating, and horses grew gaunt without enough hay. But because the British could bring in supplies over water, the town held on.

By fall, it was not at all clear that the Patriot cause would survive. The Patriots had allies in the fishermen who harassed British shipping, but while shortages squeezed Boston’s inhabitants, the British soldiers had dug in. There was no sign they could be dislodged, and the enlistments of the Continental soldiers would expire at the end of the year. If the Patriots couldn’t rid Boston of the British soldiers and their Tory allies, the revolution might well die in its cradle.

Knox had developed a plan to retrieve the cannons from Fort Ticonderoga, and in November Washington ordered him to go ahead. Knox made the trip quickly, arriving on December 5 at Ticonderoga, where he selected 59 cannons, mortars, and howitzers to transport back to Boston.

It would not be easy. Some of the cannons weighed more than 5,000 pounds each, and together they weighed about 60 tons. Knox’s men loaded the weaponry on handmade barges to cross 32 miles of Lake George before it turned to ice, then carpenters on Knox’s crew built “42 exceeding strong sleds.” Knox rented horses to drag the sleds, laden with artillery, to Albany. Snow made it easier to move the cannons across the land, but the ice on the rivers was so thin the sleds crashed through it twice. The men recovered all but one of the weapons from the icy water, helped by locals who supported the cause.

What Knox called “a noble train of artillery” continued into Massachusetts and crossed over the Berkshires, into the Connecticut River Valley, and on to Worcester, where Henry got to see Lucy. Finally, after ten grueling weeks, on January 25, John Adams reported seeing the cannons pass through Framingham, where they were outfitted for new service. In early March, Knox delivered the cannons to Washington in Cambridge.

Washington placed some of the cannons at Lechmere’s Point and at high points in Cambridge and Roxbury to fire on the town while the Patriots moved the rest of the cannons to Dorchester Heights. From there, Continental soldiers could threaten not only the soldiers in the Tory town, but also, at last, the warships in Boston Harbor.

On March 2, 3, and 4, the British soldiers and Washington’s men traded fire as Continental soldiers built defenses out of timber and brush out of sight of British spyglasses. And then, on the night of March 5, under cover of darkness, the Patriots moved their guns and defenses into position on Dorchester Heights.

“My God,” General Howe said when he saw the fortifications. “These fellows have done more work in one night than I could make my army do in three months.” The British shot at the defenses, but their shot fell short. Remaining loyalists in town wrote a letter to Washington, promising him that the British would not burn the town if the Patriots would let them leave unmolested. Washington agreed.

General Howe ordered the soldiers to torch the town if anyone disturbed their departure. On March 10, he began to load the British ships with soldiers and the Loyalists who wanted to go with them, including Lucy Knox’s parents, who would never see their daughter again. For a week, March winds battered at the loaded ships, keeping them trapped in the harbor. Finally, at 4:00 am on March 17, 120 ships carrying more than 10,000 soldiers and more than 1,000 Tories weighed anchor and left Boston.

That evacuation, 250 years ago tomorrow, was a major victory for Washington and the Continental soldiers, illustrating that a ragtag bunch of countrymen and women, working together, could beat the military might of the British army and navy when it turned against its own people. Watching the British retreat reinvigorated the Patriots after a discouraging winter and gave them confidence that their determination to protect their rights was not only a just cause, but a winning one.

The ships sailing out of Boston Harbor helped solidify that message. They carried the town’s Tories with them, enabling the Patriots to strengthen their community and spread their principles of independence to previously unaligned neighbors without either British officials or reactionary neighbors silencing them.

What began in Boston spread across the colonies as neighbors brought their carpentry and maritime skills, cooking and medical understanding, military tactics, and endurance to the cause of liberty. The evacuation of Boston had taught them that if they worked together, those skills would be enough to rout the world’s strongest military.

Less than four months after the British ships left Boston Harbor, the Patriots took the extraordinarily daring step of declaring independence from the King. They signed a document pledging to each other that they would dedicate their Lives, their Fortunes and their sacred Honor to creating a brand new nation.

[Map of Boston in 1775, from the Library of Congress, Geography and Map Division]

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Launching an Ill-Thought-Out War

March 15, 2026

Today, as the country enters its third week of war against Iran, President Donald J. Trump was on the golf course, illustrating the observation of journalist E.J. Dionne in the New York Times that “from the very beginning of this war, we got a sense that there wasn’t a great deal of serious thought put into it by the president of the United States about how it might end, what our objectives were, what needed to be done to protect Americans who are in the Middle East, what might happen to oil in the Strait of Hormuz.”

Although the administration appears to be trying to convince Americans that the U.S. military’s destruction of the Iranian military means the U.S. has won the war, Iranian leadership needed simply to continue in power to declare victory. Then, blocking the 20% of the world’s oil that flows through the Strait of Hormuz would give them leverage over the war’s outcome.

On March 10, Helene Cooper and Eric Schmitt of the New York Times reported that senior defense officials told them the Iranian military is adjusting its tactics to strike at the communications and defense systems protecting U.S. troops. Those tactics include drone strikes. The same day, Marc Caputo, Barak Ravid, and Colin Demarest of Axios reported that Ukrainian officials had tried several months ago to sell the U.S. anti-drone technology for downing Iran-made drones as a sign of thanks for U.S. support and as a way to strengthen ties between the U.S. and Ukraine, but the U.S. did not pursue the offer.

White House spokesperson Anna Kelly responded: “This characterization made by these cowardly unnamed sources is not accurate and proves that they are simply outside looking in. [Defense] Secretary [Pete] Hegseth and the armed forces did an incredible job planning for all possible responses by the Iranian regime, and the undisputed success of Operation Epic Fury speaks for itself.”

And yet the fallout from the strikes on Iran by the U.S. and Israel appears to have caught the administration by surprise. Trump told Kristen Welker and Alexandra Marquez of NBC News yesterday that he was “surprised” that Iran attacked other countries after the U.S. and Israeli strikes. He also said strikes on Saturday on Kharg Island, which is about fifteen miles off the Iranian coast and is home to Iran’s primary oil export terminal, “totally demolished” most of the island but that “we may hit it a few more times just for fun.”

President Donald J. Trump posted on social media Saturday morning: “Many Countries, especially those who are affected by Iran’s attempted closure of the Hormuz Strait, will be sending War Ships, in conjunction with the United States of America, to keep the Strait open and safe. We have already destroyed 100% of Iran’s Military capability, but it’s easy for them to send a drone or two, drop a mine, or deliver a close range missile somewhere along, or in, this Waterway, no matter how badly defeated they are.”

Despite what Trump claimed was the utter destruction of Iran’s military, he asked other countries to contribute to the effort to reopen the strait. “Hopefully China, France, Japan, South Korea, the UK, and others, that are affected by this artificial constraint, will send Ships to the area so that the Hormuz Strait will no longer be a threat by a Nation that has been totally decapitated. In the meantime the United States will be bombing the hell out of the shoreline, and continually shooting Iranian Boats and Ships out of the water. One way or the other, we will soon get the Hormuz Strait OPEN, SAFE, and FREE!”

Since he took office more than a year ago, Trump has gone out of his way to antagonize our allies and partners, warning them that the United States will act alone and working to undermine the international alliances the U.S. has shaped since World War II. Now, having sparked a regional war in the Middle East after ignoring what virtually everyone said would be the result of attacking Iran a second time, Trump is begging other countries to come to his aid.

In yesterday’s NBC News interview, Trump told Welker and Marquez that several countries have committed to helping reopen the strait, but he declined to name them. “They’ve not only committed, but they think it’s a great idea,” he said. He also said that “Iran wants to make a deal,” but he has declined “because the terms aren’t good enough yet.” Today Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, said Tehran had not even asked for negotiations, let alone a ceasefire.

That the White House is in turmoil showed this morning first of all in the fact that one of the people making the administration’s case on the talk shows was U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz, the man who added Atlantic editor Jeffrey Goldberg to the Signal messaging app on which members of the administration were making plans to strike Houthi militants in Yemen, a chat that would hide administration discussions from the record-keeping required by public records laws.

On CNN’s State of the Union this morning, over a chyron that read, “OIL PRICES SKYROCKET AS IRAN THROTTLES TRAFFIC IN STRAIT OF HORMUZ,” Jake Tapper noted that while the U.S. has said it would soon send naval escorts through the strait, shipping executives have told CNN “that all their requests for escorts have…been rebuffed. Tapper asked Waltz if Trump is simply hoping other countries will send naval escorts through the Strait of Hormuz or if they had committed to it.

Waltz answered that “we have the energy dominance in place,” then noted that in the past, other countries had worked alongside the U.S. to keep energy flowing through the strait, and Trump is calling on the world to do the same thing again. Waltz said: “We certainly welcome, encourage, and even demand their participation to help their own economies.”

On Face the Nation, another odd salesperson for Trump’s war, National Economic Council director Kevin Hassett, told host Margaret Brennan that “you have to understand that America is not going to have its economy harmed by what the Iranians are doing.” Hassett implied that because the U.S. produces more oil now than it did in the 1970s, it doesn’t really need oil from the Persian Gulf. The Iranians “think that they’re gonna harm the U.S. economy and get President Trump to back down,” he said. “There couldn’t be anything that was a stupider thing to say. ‘Cause the bottom line is that our economy has got all this momentum in the world, and we’ve got lots and lots of oil.”

The U.S. does indeed produce more oil and natural gas than it consumes, but it cannot use much of what it produces. The key is prices and refineries. The U.S. tends to produce light, sweet crude oil, a term for oil that flows easily and has low sulfur content. Because it is easy to refine and more valuable than heavy, sour crude, U.S. producers have an incentive to sell it on the open market. Even if they wanted to keep it at home, U.S. refineries are set up to refine the cheaper heavy crude oil, so the U.S. does not have the refining capacity to process the oil it currently produces and must buy what it needs from elsewhere. This means the U.S. is inextricably tied to the international oil markets.

The administration appears to be taking the position that the problem is not Trump’s launching an ill-thought-out war, but rather the media outlets’ reporting on that war. Although Trump has been conversing freely with reporters by cell phone since the war broke out, yesterday morning he posted on social media: “The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal (in particular), and other Lowlife “Papers” and Media actually want us to lose the War. Their terrible reporting is the exact opposite of the actual facts! They are truly sick and demented people that have no idea the damage they cause the United States of America. Fortunately, as proven by our Great and Conclusive Election Win in 2024, the People of our Country understand what is happening far better than the Fake News Media!”

Less than two hours later, Trump posted an image titled “PRESIDENT TRUMP IS RESHAPING THE MEDIA,” with three categories: “GONE,” “REFORMS,” and “WINNING.” Under “gone” was the defunding of PBS and NPR, as well as a list of reporters who have been fired since Trump took office in 2025. Under “reforms,” the image claimed Trump was the “Most Accessible POTUS Ever,” boasted that under CBS’s new ownership by Trump ally David Ellison the station has a “News Bias Ombudsman,” and suggested that CNN would soon be under “New Ownership” as well. Under “winning” was a quotation from The Guardian that “Trump is waging war against the media—and winning.”

Hours later, Federal Communications Commission chair Brendan Carr threatened the broadcast licenses of media stations. He quoted Trump when he posted: “Broadcasters that are running hoaxes and news distortions—also known as the fake news—have a chance now to correct course before their license renewals come up. The law is clear. Broadcasters must operate in the public interest, and they will lose their licenses if they do not…. It is very important to bring trust back into media, which has earned itself the label of fake news.” Then Carr slipped in his own fake news, suggesting that Trump won “a landslide election victory” when in fact he received less than 50% of the vote, and concluded: “Time for change!”

The Framers of the U.S. Constitution understood that a free press is imperative for a democracy. They established the right to a free press in the First Amendment that begins the Bill of Rights. Silencing critics is the refuge of those who know what they are doing is unpopular and unjustifiable.

Jim Acosta, who left CNN, noted that while the administration is attempting to establish a state media, the American people increasingly have the option of reading independent journalism. “Yes,” Acosta wrote, “Trump put me on his media hit list. I regret to report to the notoriously thin-skinned, twice elected, yet soon to be thrice-impeached president that I am still here, loving the freedom of independent media…. Living rent free in the mind of the president of the United States is indeed liberating, especially when you are coloring outside the lines of corporate media.”

Yesterday evening, the official White House social media account on X tried to reassure Americans that Trump knows what he’s doing. It posted an image of the American flag over a stealth bomber with the words “PEACE THROUGH STRENGTH” and “NO PANICANS!”

And yet, in what seemed to be panicked comments tonight, Trump on social media appeared to take on the rifts showing up among MAGA leaders over the Iran war, saying of isolationist America First MAGAs: “THEY ARE NOT MAGA, I AM, and MAGA includes not allowing Iran, a Sick, Demented, and Violent Terrorist Regime, to have a Nuclear Weapon to blow up the United States of America, the Middle East and, ultimately, the rest of the World.”

Another post blamed Iranian AI and disinformation for stories that he said are “FAKE and, in a certain way, you can say those Media Outlets that generated it should be brought up on Charges for TREASON for the dissemination of false information.” He reiterated support for Carr’s attack on the media and insisted he won the presidential election “IN A LANDSLIDE.”

In yet another post, the president’s account attacked the U.S. Supreme Court for declaring his tariffs unconstitutional, then blamed the justices for ruining the nation by permitting Democrat Joe Biden to be inaugurated rather than “call out The Rigged Presidential Election of 2020.”

In an interview with Financial Times published this evening, Trump warned that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) would have a “very bad” future if allies don’t help open the Strait of Hormuz. And tonight, on Air Force One, Trump told reporters: “Really, I’m demanding that these countries come in and protect their own territory, because it is their territory. It’s the place from which they get their energy, and they should come and they should help us protect it. You could make the case that maybe we shouldn’t even be there at all, because we don’t need it. We have a lot of oil.”

Notes:

https://www.politico.com/news/2026/03/13/oil-iran-trump-price-messaging-00826428

https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=54199

https://www.fuelstreamservices.com/why-the-u-s-cant-use-the-oil-it-produces/

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/14/opinion/trump-iran-war-midterms-voters.html

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/10/us/politics/iran-military-tactics.html

https://www.axios.com/2026/03/10/us-ukraine-anti-drone-offer

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/iran-negotiate-ceasefire-deal-trump-kharg-hormuz-oil-rcna263474

https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2026/mar/15/iran-war-news-live-updates-us-israel-middle-east-crisis-latest-kharg-island

The Jim Acosta Show
Trump Put Me on His Media Hit List
I spent some time Saturday thinking about what Trump posted about the media on his “Truth Social” account this weekend. At first, I blew it off as simply more Trump nuttiness. But, there is more going on here. Beyond the reference to yours truly…
Read more

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2026/03/14/kharg-island-iran-war/89152969007/

https://www.reuters.com/world/china/trump-warns-nato-faces-very-bad-future-if-allies-fail-help-us-iran-ft-reports-2026-03-16/

X:

WhiteHouse/status/2032948006949966247

BrendanCarrFCC/status/2032855414233047172?s=20

Bluesky:

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A Bit of Gray on an Emerald Isle

A detailed view of folded limestone in the Burren. The limestone forms swirling, layered patterns of gray rock separated by thin green bands of vegetation.
May 16, 2025

Today’s story is the answer to the March 2026 puzzler.

Though Ireland is known for the many shades of green that grace its grassy pastoral landscapes, there’s one corner of the Emerald Isle where gray reigns supreme. In the Burren region, on the island’s west coast, what geologists describe as limestone pavement covers much of the rocky, treeless landscape.

The OLI (Operational Land Imager) on Landsat 8 captured this view of the Burren on May 16, 2025. The fossil-rich limestone that makes up the gray outcrops was deposited about 325 million years ago during the Carboniferous Period, when what is now Ireland lay near the equator beneath warm, shallow seas. Although the limestone was initially deposited in flat, horizontal layers on the seafloor, it later buckled into gentle arch- and trough-shaped folds as tectonic plates collided during a mountain-building episode known as the Variscan Orogeny.

These folds in the tilted rock layers and differences in their rate of erosion produced the terraced appearance that defines the Burren’s hills, with more erosion-resistant layers of rock persisting as ledges. Glacial activity also played a role in sculpting the landscape, scraping away soil and sediment to expose the limestone pavement and smoothing the region’s hills.

A satellite view of the Burren in western Ireland shows gray limestone hills arranged in curved, concentric bands surrounded by green farmland and small towns.
May 16, 2025

Limestone is prone to chemical weathering that produces an irregular terrain known as karst, pockmarked with sinkholes, caves, and fissures called grikes. Many grikes in the Burren collect soil and have become footholds where vegetation grows in the otherwise rocky landscape.

Individual grikes are too small to see in Landsat imagery, but networks of them have aligned along the rock layers, contributing to the concentric vegetation patterns visible in the image. Among the plants that you might find growing in them is the shamrock, the three-leaved clover that has become a symbol of Ireland.

With some luck, Trifolium dubium or Trifolium repens may even be found amidst the shamrock-shaped contours of Moneen Mountain, a 262-meter (860-foot) limestone hill visible in the image above. While there’s hardly consensus about what species is the true inspiration for shamrocks, these two clover species were among the favorites when Irish botanists were surveyed about the topic in the 1880s, according to the Carnegie Museum of Natural History.

NASA Earth Observatory images by Lauren Dauphin, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey. Story by Adam Voiland.

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Every layer of review makes you 10x slower

We’ve all heard of those network effect laws: the value of a network goes up with the square of the number of members. Or the cost of communication goes up with the square of the number of members, or maybe it was n log n, or something like that, depending how you arrange the members. Anyway doubling a team doesn't double its speed; there’s coordination overhead. Exactly how much overhead depends on how badly you botch the org design.

But there’s one rule of thumb that someone showed me decades ago, that has stuck with me ever since, because of how annoyingly true it is. The rule is annoying because it doesn’t seem like it should be true. There’s no theoretical basis for this claim that I’ve ever heard. And yet, every time I look for it, there it is.

Here we go:

Every layer of approval makes a process 10x slower

I know what you're thinking. Come on, 10x? That’s a lot. It’s unfathomable. Surely we’re exaggerating.

Nope.

Just to be clear, we're counting “wall clock time” here rather than effort. Almost all the extra time is spent sitting and waiting.

Look:

  • Code a simple bug fix
    30 minutes

  • Get it code reviewed by the peer next to you
    300 minutes → 5 hours → half a day

  • Get a design doc approved by your architects team first
    50 hours → about a week

  • Get it on some other team’s calendar to do all that
    (for example, if a customer requests a feature)
    500 hours → 12 weeks → one fiscal quarter

I wish I could tell you that the next step up — 10 quarters or about 2.5 years — was too crazy to contemplate, but no. That’s the life of an executive sitting above a medium-sized team; I bump into it all the time even at a relatively small company like Tailscale if I want to change product direction. (And execs sitting above large teams can’t actually do work of their own at all. That's another story.)

AI can’t fix this

First of all, this isn’t a post about AI, because AI’s direct impact on this problem is minimal. Okay, so Claude can code it in 3 minutes instead of 30? That’s super, Claude, great work.

Now you either get to spend 27 minutes reviewing the code yourself in a back-and-forth loop with the AI (this is actually kinda fun); or you save 27 minutes and submit unverified code to the code reviewer, who will still take 5 hours like before, but who will now be mad that you’re making them read the slop that you were too lazy to read yourself. Little of value was gained.

Now now, you say, that’s not the value of agentic coding. You don’t use an agent on a 30-minute fix. You use it on a monstrosity week-long project that you and Claude can now do in a couple of hours! Now we’re talking. Except no, because the monstrosity is so big that your reviewer will be extra mad that you didn’t read it yourself, and it’s too big to review in one chunk so you have to slice it into new bite-sized chunks, each with a 5-hour review cycle. And there’s no design doc so there’s no intentional architecture, so eventually someone’s going to push back on that and here we go with the design doc review meeting, and now your monstrosity week-long project that you did in two hours is... oh. A week, again.

I guess I could have called this post Systems Design 4 (or 5, or whatever I’m up to now, who knows, I’m writing this on a plane with no wifi) because yeah, you guessed it. It's Systems Design time again.

The only way to sustainably go faster is fewer reviews

It’s funny, everyone has been predicting the Singularity for decades now. The premise is we build systems that are so smart that they themselves can build the next system that is even smarter, that builds the next smarter one, and so on, and once we get that started, if they keep getting smarter faster enough, then the incremental time (t) to achieve a unit (u) of improvement goes to zero, so (u/t) goes to infinity and foom.

Anyway, I have never believed in this theory for the simple reason we outlined above: the majority of time needed to get anything done is not actually the time doing it. It’s wall clock time. Waiting. Latency.

And you can’t overcome latency with brute force.

I know you want to. I know many of you now work at companies where the business model kinda depends on doing exactly that.

Sorry.

But you can’t just not review things!

Ah, well, no, actually yeah. You really can’t.

There are now many people who have seen the symptom: the start of the pipeline (AI generated code) is so much faster, but all the subsequent stages (reviews) are too slow! And so they intuit the obvious solution: stop reviewing then!

The result might be slop, but if the slop is 100x cheaper, then it only needs to deliver 1% of the value per unit and it's still a fair trade. And if your value per unit is even a mere 2% of what it used to be, you’ve doubled your returns! Amazing.

There are some pretty dumb assumptions underlying that theory; you can imagine them for yourself. Suffice it to say that this produces what I will call the AI Developer’s Descent Into Madness:

  1. Whoa, I produced this prototype so fast! I have super powers!

  2. This prototype is getting buggy. I’ll tell the AI to fix the bugs.

  3. Hmm, every change now causes as many new bugs as it fixes.

  4. Aha! But if I have an AI agent also review the code, it can find its own bugs!

  5. Wait, why am I personally passing data back and forth between agents

  6. I need an agent framework

  7. I can have my agent write an agent framework!

  8. Return to step 1

It’s actually alarming how many friends and respected peers I’ve lost to this cycle already. Claude Code only got good maybe a few months ago, so this only recenlty started happening, so I assume they will emerge from the spiral eventually. I mean, I hope they will. We have no way of knowing.

Why we review

Anyway we know our symptom: the pipeline gets jammed up because of too much new code spewed into it at step 1. But what's the root cause of the clog? Why doesn’t the pipeline go faster?

I said above that this isn’t an article about AI. Clearly I’m failing at that so far, but let’s bring it back to humans. It goes back to the annoyingly true observation I started with: every layer of review is 10x slower. As a society, we know this. Maybe you haven't seen it before now. But trust me: people who do org design for a living know that layers are expensive... and they still do it.

As companies grow, they all end up with more and more layers of collaboration, review, and management. Why? Because otherwise mistakes get made, and mistakes are increasingly expensive at scale. The average value added by a new feature eventually becomes lower than the average value lost through the new bugs it causes. So, lacking a way to make features produce more value (wouldn't that be nice!), we try to at least reduce the damage.

The more checks and controls we put in place, the slower we go, but the more monotonically the quality increases. And isn’t that the basis of continuous improvement?

Well, sort of. Monotonically increasing quality is on the right track. But “more checks and controls” went off the rails. That’s only one way to improve quality, and it's a fraught one.

“Quality Assurance” reduces quality

I wrote a few years ago about W. E. Deming and the "new" philosophy around quality that he popularized in Japanese auto manufacturing. (Eventually U.S. auto manufacturers more or less got the idea. So far the software industry hasn’t.)

One of the effects he highlighted was the problem of a “QA” pass in a factory: build widgets, have an inspection/QA phase, reject widgets that fail QA. Of course, your inspectors probably miss some of the failures, so when in doubt, add a second QA phase after the first to catch the remaining ones, and so on.

In a simplistic mathematical model this seems to make sense. (For example, if every QA pass catches 90% of defects, then after two QA passes you’ve reduced the number of defects by 100x. How awesome is that?)

But in the reality of agentic humans, it’s not so simple. First of all, the incentives get weird. The second QA team basically serves to evaluate how well the first QA team is doing; if the first QA team keeps missing defects, fire them. Now, that second QA team has little incentive to produce that outcome for their friends. So maybe they don’t look too hard; after all, the first QA team missed the defect, it’s not unreasonable that we might miss it too.

Furthermore, the first QA team knows there is a second QA team to catch any defects; if I don’t work too hard today, surely the second team will pick up the slack. That's why they're there!

Also, the team making the widgets in the first place doesn’t check their work too carefully; that’s what the QA team is for! Why would I slow down the production of every widget by being careful, at a cost of say 20% more time, when there are only 10 defects in 100 and I can just eliminate them at the next step for only a 10% waste overhead? It only makes sense. Plus they'll fire me if I go 20% slower.

To say nothing of a whole engineering redesign to improve quality, that would be super expensive and we could be designing all new widgets instead.

Sound like any engineering departments you know?

Well, this isn’t the right time to rehash Deming, but suffice it to say, he was on to something. And his techniques worked. You get things like the famous Toyota Production System where they eliminated the QA phase entirely, but gave everybody an “oh crap, stop the line, I found a defect!” button.

Famously, US auto manufacturers tried to adopt the same system by installing the same “stop the line” buttons. Of course, nobody pushed those buttons. They were afraid of getting fired.

Trust

The basis of the Japanese system that worked, and the missing part of the American system that didn’t, is trust. Trust among individuals that your boss Really Truly Actually wants to know about every defect, and wants you to stop the line when you find one. Trust among managers that executives were serious about quality. Trust among executives that individuals, given a system that can work and has the right incentives, will produce quality work and spot their own defects, and push the stop button when they need to push it.

But, one more thing: trust that the system actually does work. So first you need a system that will work.

Fallibility

AI coders are fallible; they write bad code, often. In this way, they are just like human programmers.

Deming’s approach to manufacturing didn’t have any magic bullets. Alas, you can’t just follow his ten-step process and immediately get higher quality engineering. The secret is, you have to get your engineers to engineer higher quality into the whole system, from top to bottom, repeatedly. Continuously.

Every time something goes wrong, you have to ask, “How did this happen?” and then do a whole post-mortem and the Five Whys (or however many Whys are in fashion nowadays) and fix the underlying Root Causes so that it doesn’t happen again. “The coder did it wrong” is never a root cause, only a symptom. Why was it possible for the coder to get it wrong?

The job of a code reviewer isn't to review code. It's to figure out how to obsolete their code review comment, that whole class of comment, in all future cases, until you don't need their reviews at all anymore.

(Think of the people who first created "go fmt" and how many stupid code review comments about whitespace are gone forever. Now that's engineering.)

By the time your review catches a mistake, the mistake has already been made. The root cause happened already. You're too late.

Modularity

I wish I could tell you I had all the answers. Actually I don’t have much. If I did, I’d be first in line for the Singularity because it sounds kind of awesome.

I think we’re going to be stuck with these systems pipeline problems for a long time. Review pipelines — layers of QA — don’t work. Instead, they make you slower while hiding root causes. Hiding causes makes them harder to fix.

But, the call of AI coding is strong. That first, fast step in the pipeline is so fast! It really does feel like having super powers. I want more super powers. What are we going to do about it?

Maybe we finally have a compelling enough excuse to fix the 20 years of problems hidden by code review culture, and replace it with a real culture of quality.

I think the optimists have half of the right idea. Reducing review stages, even to an uncomfortable degree, is going to be needed. But you can’t just reduce review stages without something to replace them. That way lies the Ford Pinto or any recent Boeing aircraft.

The complete package, the table flip, was what Deming brought to manufacturing. You can’t half-adopt a “total quality” system. You need to eliminate the reviews and obsolete them, in one step.

How? You can fully adopt the new system, in small bites. What if some components of your system can be built the new way? Imagine an old-school U.S. auto manufacturer buying parts from Japanese suppliers; wow, these parts are so well made! Now I can start removing QA steps elsewhere because I can just assume the parts are going to work, and my job of "assemble a bigger widget from the parts" has a ton of its complexity removed.

I like this view. I’ve always liked small beautiful things, that’s my own bias. But, you can assemble big beautiful things from small beautiful things.

It’s a lot easier to build those individual beautiful things in small teams that trust each other, that know what quality looks like to them. They deliver their things to customer teams who can clearly explain what quality looks like to them. And on we go. Quality starts bottom-up, and spreads.

I think small startups are going to do really well in this new world, probably better than ever. Startups already have fewer layers of review just because they have fewer people. Some startups will figure out how to produce high quality components quickly; others won't and will fail. Quality by natural selection?

Bigger companies are gonna have a harder time, because their slow review systems are baked in, and deleting them would cause complete chaos.

But, it’s not just about company size. I think engineering teams at any company can get smaller, and have better defined interfaces between them.

Maybe you could have multiple teams inside a company competing to deliver the same component. Each one is just a few people and a few coding bots. Try it 100 ways and see who comes up with the best one. Again, quality by evolution. Code is cheap but good ideas are not. But now you can try out new ideas faster than ever.

Maybe we’ll see a new optimal point on the monoliths-microservices continuum. Microservices got a bad name because they were too micro; in the original terminology, a “micro” service was exactly the right size for a “two pizza team” to build and operate on their own. With AI, maybe it's one pizza and some tokens.

What’s fun is you can also use this new, faster coding to experiment with different module boundaries faster. Features are still hard for lots of reasons, but refactoring and automated integration testing are things the AIs excel at. Try splitting out a module you were afraid to split out before. Maybe it'll add some lines of code. But suddenly lines of code are cheap, compared to the coordination overhead of a bigger team maintaining both parts.

Every team has some monoliths that are a little too big, and too many layers of reviews. Maybe we won't get all the way to Singularity. But, we can engineer a much better world. Our problems are solvable.

It just takes trust.

Rotational Gravity

I don't get it. The peak acceleration for passengers was WAY lower than in the giant-waterslide-loop-the-loop incident the other cruise line fired me for.

How to Turn Sports Knowledge Into Serious Betting Profits

Watching games, studying stats, and following teams for years builds a specific kind of intelligence. You know when a quarterback struggles against zone coverage. You notice when a pitcher’s velocity drops in late innings. You understand how back-to-back road games affect basketball teams. This accumulated knowledge has real monetary potential when applied correctly to sports betting.

Americans legally wagered $147.91 billion on sports in 2024, a figure that climbed over 23% from 2022. The money flowing through this market creates opportunities for bettors who approach wagering as a skill-based activity rather than entertainment. Turning what you already know into consistent profits requires structure, discipline, and a willingness to treat betting like a second job.

Football coach teaching his students
Photo: Freepik via their website.

Finding Value in the Numbers

Profitable betting starts with identifying lines where the implied probability differs from your assessed probability of an outcome. A sportsbook might price a team at +150, implying roughly a 40% chance of winning. If your analysis suggests that team wins 50% of the time in similar situations, you have found positive expected value.

This gap between the market’s assessment and yours is where profits live. Building accurate models takes time. Start with sports and bet types you understand deeply. Focus on specific leagues or conferences where your knowledge exceeds that of casual bettors and sometimes even the bookmakers themselves.

Track every wager in a spreadsheet. Record the odds, your assessed probability, the stake, and the result. After a few hundred bets, patterns emerge. You see where your analysis performs well and where it fails. This data becomes the foundation for improvement.

Stretching Your Bankroll With Sign-Up Offers

Most sportsbooks provide bonuses to new users, and stacking these across multiple platforms adds real value to your starting funds. Promotion codes like Stake’s welcome offer: COVERSBONUS, DraftKings first-bet insurance, and FanDuel’s bonus bet credits let you place wagers with reduced risk during your first days on each site. Registering with several books also gives you access to line shopping, which matters more than any single promotion over time.

Treating bonus funds as part of a disciplined bankroll prevents reckless betting. Apply the same stake sizing and value calculations to promotional dollars as you would to your own deposit.

Managing Your Bankroll With the Kelly Criterion

The Kelly Criterion is recognized as one of the most mathematically sound approaches to stake sizing. It calculates the optimal percentage of your bankroll to wager based on your perceived edge and the odds offered. The formula prevents overbetting when your edge is small and encourages larger stakes when you hold a substantial advantage.

Full Kelly can produce volatile swings in bankroll size. Many sharp bettors use fractional Kelly, wagering 25% or 50% of the calculated amount. This reduces variance while still maximizing long-term growth. Most value bettors achieve 2-10% return on turnover through disciplined positive expected value approaches, according to industry data.

Set aside a specific amount as your betting bankroll. Never add money impulsively after losses. If you lose your initial stake, step back and reassess your approach before depositing again.

Shopping Lines Across Multiple Books

Odds vary between sportsbooks. One platform might offer the Bills at -110 while another posts -105 on the same game. Over thousands of bets, these small differences compound into substantial profit increases.

Maintain funded accounts at several licensed operators. Before placing any wager, check odds at each book. This takes a few extra minutes but directly impacts your bottom line. A half-point difference in spread or a nickel in juice adds up faster than most bettors realize.

Line shopping also reveals market inefficiencies. When books disagree substantially on a line, it often indicates uncertain outcomes where value exists for informed bettors.

Specialization Beats Generalization

Trying to bet every sport spreads your attention thin. Profitable bettors tend to specialize. Pick 1 or 2 sports where your knowledge runs deep. Study them obsessively. Learn how different coaches adjust game plans. Track injury reports from reliable beat writers. Understand how weather affects totals in outdoor sports.

Specialization allows you to spot information the general market misses. A college basketball bettor who watches mid-major conferences closely will notice lineup changes and team dynamics that casual bettors overlook.

Responsible Betting Practices

The gaming industry commits nearly half a billion dollars annually to responsible gaming initiatives. All 38 U.S. jurisdictions with legal sports betting require operators to maintain self-exclusion programs. These resources exist for a reason.

Set strict loss limits before you start. Never chase losses with larger bets. Treat betting as a long-term endeavor where short-term results carry minimal meaning. If gambling stops being enjoyable or causes financial stress, use the tools available to take a break.

Profitable betting requires emotional control. Bad beats happen. Variance is real. The best bettors process losses without adjusting their strategy impulsively.

Building Systems That Last

Consistent profits come from repeatable processes. Document your handicapping methods. Create rules for which games you bet and which you skip. Stick to your system even during losing streaks.

Review your results monthly. Calculate your return on investment by sport, bet type, and book. Identify leaks and fix them. Profitable bettors constantly refine their approach based on evidence rather than hunches.

Your sports knowledge gives you a starting advantage. Converting that advantage into serious profits requires treating betting with the same rigor you would apply to any business venture. The money is there for bettors willing to do the work.

Photo: creativeart via Freepik.


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The Hidden Forces That Threaten Your Home’s Structural Integrity

Most folks view their houses as immovable objects that provide a permanent shield against the outside world. The foundation seems like a solid block of concrete that will last forever without any real effort or maintenance. However, the ground beneath the floor is actually a dynamic environment.

Soil exerts thousands of pounds of force against residential walls every single day of the year. This pressure is invisible but persistent, slowly pushing against the masonry and looking for any tiny weakness. Over time, even the strongest materials can begin to bow under this immense weight.

Staying ahead of these natural forces requires a proactive approach to home maintenance and site drainage. It helps to have an expert eye evaluate the subtle signs of stress before they turn into major failures. Professional diagnostic services from U.S. Waterproofing help identify these invisible stressors today.

The Mechanics of Hydrostatic Pressure

Water is incredibly heavy, weighing about sixty two pounds per cubic foot as it saturates the ground. During heavy rainstorms, the soil surrounding a foundation becomes a giant sponge that holds a massive volume of liquid. This weight creates what engineers call hydrostatic pressure against the exterior.

This pressure is especially problematic in areas with high clay content because clay doesn’t drain well. Instead of moving through the earth, the water sits against the concrete and builds up immense force. This is often why basements develop leaks or damp spots during the wet months.

The force can eventually become so great that it pushes water through the tiny pores of the concrete itself. It can also cause the floor slab to heave or crack as the water tries to find a way inside. Managing this liquid weight is a critical priority.

How the Clay Bowl Effect Collects Runoff

When a house is first built, a large hole is excavated to make room for the foundation walls. Once the concrete is poured and cured, the space around the exterior is filled back in with loose soil. This creates an area of earth that’s less dense.

This loosely packed area acts like a giant bowl that naturally collects any water running off the roof or the yard. Instead of flowing away from the house, the rain sinks deep into this artificial pocket. This concentrates all the moisture right against the building structure.

Over the years, this cycle of saturation and drying can cause the soil to settle and shift in unpredictable ways. This lack of stability leads to uneven support for the footings that hold up the house. Breaking this cycle requires a plan to redirect water.

Seasonal Shifting from Frost and Heat

Thermal expansion is a powerful force that affects almost every building material used in modern construction. As temperatures rise during the summer, the ground and the foundation materials expand slightly due to the heat. When winter arrives, the opposite happens, causing the structure to contract again.

This constant cycle of growing and shrinking puts a high level of stress on the mortar joints and bricks. Over several years, these tiny movements can weaken the bond between the masonry components. This leads to the hairline fractures that many homeowners notice in their basement walls.

Frost heave adds another layer of complexity as the moisture in the soil freezes and expands with incredible power. This upward and inward force can lift entire sections of a patio or a sidewalk if they aren’t properly drained. Protecting the masonry from these shifts is vital.

Gutter Systems and Perimeter Saturation

Gutters and downspouts are the first line of defense against the thousands of gallons of water that hit the roof. If these systems are clogged with leaves or debris, the water has nowhere to go but over the side. This results in liquid falling on the foundation.

Positioning downspout extensions is just as important as keeping the channels clear of sticks and dirt. A downspout that empties right at the corner of the house is essentially feeding the clay bowl effect. The water should be carried at least ten feet away from the walls.

Oversaturating the ground near the base of the home leads to a softened soil structure that can’t support the weight. This often results in the house tilting or settling deeper into the earth. Simple maintenance of the drainage system prevents many of the most expensive repairs.

Maintaining a healthy foundation requires a combination of external and internal strategies to counteract the environment. No single solution can address every type of pressure that the ground exerts on a residential building. A comprehensive plan looks at the entire site from roofline to the footings.

External mitigation focuses on keeping the soil dry and stable through better grading and efficient drainage systems. Internal strategies involve managing any moisture that does find its way through the walls with drain tiles and pumps. Together, these methods create a dry environment for the whole family.

The goal is to create a predictable and controlled environment regardless of what the weather is doing outside. Addressing these invisible forces early prevents the type of catastrophic damage that ruins property values. Investing in structural health today ensures the home remains a solid sanctuary forever.

Photo: ArtPhoto_studio via Freepik.


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 ★ 

‘The Last Quiet Thing’

Another crackerjack essay on design and attention from Terry Godier. (Note that the Casio in the essay not only shows the actual time, but has functional buttons.)

 ★ 

Apple Introduces AirPods Max 2

Apple Newsroom today:

Apple today announced AirPods Max 2, bringing even better Active Noise Cancellation (ANC), elevated sound quality, and intelligent features to the iconic over-ear design. Powered by H2, features like Adaptive Audio, Conversation Awareness, Voice Isolation, and Live Translation come to AirPods Max for the first time. The new AirPods Max also unlock creative possibilities for podcasters, musicians, and content creators, with useful features like studio-quality audio recording and camera remote.

AirPods Max 2 will be available to order starting March 25 in midnight, starlight, orange, purple, and blue, with availability beginning early next month.

Seemingly no change to the Smart Case for the Max, which I know some people were hoping for. (I only use AirPods Pro, not Max, but when I tested the original AirPods Max I thought the case was fine.) Here’s a link to Apple’s Compare page showing all the differences between the Max 2 and original Max, with AirPods Pro 3 in the third slot. (Archived for posterity here.) One neat new feature: the Max 2 will support using the Digital Crown button as a remote camera shutter button for a paired iPhone or iPad.

 ★ 

★ Apple Exclaves and the Secure Design of the MacBook Neo’s On-Screen Camera Indicator

Some camera-equipped Apple devices have dedicated camera indicator lights. E.g. recent MacBook Pros and MacBook Airs have them in the notch, next to the camera itself. The Studio Display has one in the bezel, next to its camera. Other devices — like iPhones and, now, the MacBook Neo — render a green indicator dot on the device’s display. One might presume that the dedicated indicator lights are significantly more secure than the rendered-on-display indicators. I myself made this presumption in the initial version of my MacBook Neo review last week. This presumption is, I believe, wrong.

Later last week Apple published, and I linked to, a small update in their Platform Security Guide, which states:

MacBook Neo combines system software and dedicated silicon elements within A18 Pro to provide additional security for the camera feed. The architecture is designed to prevent any untrusted software — even with root or kernel privileges in macOS — from engaging the camera without also visibly lighting the on-screen camera indicator light.

The reason it’s tempting to think that a dedicated camera indicator light is more secure than an on-display indicator is the notion that hardware is more secure than software. With hardware, a dedicated hardware indicator light can be connected to the camera hardware such that if the camera is accessed, the light must turn on, with no way for software running on the device, no matter its privileges, to change that. With an indicator light that is rendered on the display, it’s not foolish to worry that malicious software, with sufficient privileges, could draw over the pixels on the display where the camera indicator is rendered, disguising that the camera is in use.

If this were implemented simplistically, that concern would be completely valid. But Apple’s implementation of this is far from simplistic. Friend of the site and renowned developer and low-level-OS spelunker Guilherme Rambo texted me a note, which, with his permission, I’ll quote:

Tidbit: the software-based camera indicator light in the MacBook Neo runs in the secure exclave¹ part of the chip, so it is almost as secure as the hardware indicator light. What that means in practice is that even a kernel-level exploit would not be able to turn on the camera without the light appearing on screen. It runs in a privileged environment separate from the kernel and blits the light directly onto the screen hardware. All of that applies to the mic indicator as well, which is a bonus compared to the camera-only hardware indicator.

¹ Exclaves run on a completely isolated realtime operating system that communicates with the kernel and userspace using a very limited API surface. Not to be confused with Secure Enclave, that’s a different thing.

(That’s right, his text message had a footnote. Like I said, he’s a friend of the site. Also: blitting.)

Exclave was the word I needed. Once I read that, it came back to me, and I recalled Random Augustine’s “On Apple Exclaves”, which I linked to almost exactly one year ago and described as “a splendidly nerdy but very approachable overview of the evolution of Apple’s XNU kernel over the last decade”. As Augustine documents, secure exclaves are something Apple had been building toward for a decade, but which only became enabled with the M4 and A18 generations of Apple Silicon.

If you’re curious, I encourage you to read (or re-read) Augustine’s “On Apple Exclaves”, which should disabuse you of any concerns that these on-display camera indicators on the MacBook Neo and recent iPhone models are anything less than very secure designs.

Monday 16 March 1662/63

Up very betimes and to my office, where, with several Masters of the King’s ships, Sir J. Minnes and I advising upon the business of Slopps, wherein the seaman is so much abused by the Pursers, and that being done, then I home to dinner, and so carried my wife to her mother’s, set her down and Ashwell to my Lord’s lodging, there left her, and I to the Duke, where we met of course, and talked of our Navy matters. Then to the Commission of Tangier, and there, among other things, had my Lord Peterborough’s Commission read over; and Mr. Secretary Bennet did make his querys upon it, in order to the drawing one for my Lord Rutherford more regularly, that being a very extravagant thing.

Here long discoursing upon my Lord Rutherford’s despatch, and so broke up, and so going out of the Court I met with Mr. Coventry, and so he and I walked half an hour in the long Stone Gallery, where we discoursed of many things, among others how the Treasurer doth intend to come to pay in course, which is the thing of the world that will do the King the greatest service in the Navy, and which joys my heart to hear of. He tells me of the business of Sir J. Minnes and Sir W. Pen, which I knew before, but took no notice or little that I did know it. But he told me it was chiefly to make Mr. Pett’s being joyned with Sir W. Batten to go down the better, and do tell me how he well sees that neither one nor the other can do their duties without help. But however will let it fall at present without doing more in it to see whether they will do their duties themselves, which he will see, and saith they do not. We discoursed of many other things to my great content and so parted, and I to my wife at my Lord’s lodgings, where I heard Ashwell play first upon the harpsicon, and I find she do play pretty well, which pleaseth me very well. Thence home by coach, buying at the Temple the printed virginal-book for her, and so home and to my office a while, and so home and to supper and to bed.

Read the annotations

Live coverage: SpaceX to launch a Falcon 9 rocket on St. Patrick’s Day morning

File: A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket stands at Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) ahead of the launch of the Starlink 8-11 mission on Sept. 4, 2024. Image: Adam Bernstein/Spaceflight Now

SpaceX is kicking off the St. Patrick’s Day holiday on Tuesday with a Falcon 9 rocket launch, flying from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.

The Starlink 10-46 mission will add another 29 Starlink V2 Mini Optimized satellites to the low Earth orbit megaconstellation.

Liftoff from Space Launch Complex 40 is scheduled at 7:28 a.m. EDT (1128 UTC). The rocket will fly on a north-easterly trajectory upon leaving the pad.

Spaceflight Now will have live coverage beginning about an hour prior to liftoff.

The 45th Weather Squadron forecast a 75 percent chance for favorable weather during the launch opportunity. Meteorologists are watching for impacts from strong liftoff winds and the presence of cumulus clouds as well as a “moderate” risk to the booster recovery zone on a low-moderate-high scale.

SpaceX will launch the mission using the Falcon 9 rocket first stage booster with the tail number 1090. This will be its 11th flight following missions that include Crew-10, Bandwagon-3 and CRS-33.

Nearly 8.5 minutes after liftoff, B1090 will target a landing on the drone ship, ‘A Shortfall of Gravitas’, positioned in the Atlantic Ocean. If successful, this will be the 147th landing on this vessel and the 587th booster landing to date for SpaceX.

SpaceX reaches 10,000 simultaneous Starlink satellites in orbit following Falcon 9 launch from California

A batch of SpaceX’s 25 Starlink V2 Mini Optimized satellites are shown in low Earth orbit ahead of deployment during the Starlink 17-24 mission on March 16, 2026. Image: SpaceX

Update March 17, 3:10 a.m. EDT (0710 UTC): SpaceX confirms satellite deployment.

SpaceX crossed the threshold of having more than 10,000 Starlink satellites in low Earth orbit simultaneously for the first time. The milestone comes less than seven years after launching its first batch of satellites in May 2019.

Coincidently, the Monday night launch also coincided with the 100th anniversary of Robert Goddard’s launch of the first liquid-propelled rocket, which was fueled by gasoline. A century later, SpaceX’s Monday night launch of a Falcon 9 rocket was the 615th flight of this kerosene-fueled rocket.

Liftoff of the mission that put SpaceX over the 10,000-satellite threshold, dubbed Starlink Group 17-24, happened at 10:19:09 p.m. PDT (1:19:09 a.m. EDT / 0619:09 UTC on Tuesday, Mar. 17).

The Falcon 9 rocket flew on a southerly trajectory upon leaving Space Launch Complex 4 East. This was the 17th orbital launch from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California so far this year.

SpaceX launched the mission using the Falcon 9 first stage booster with the tail number of 1088. This was its 14th flight, following the launches of NASA’s SPHEREx, Transporter-12, two missions for the National Reconnaissance Office and nine previous Starlink missions.

A little more than eight minutes after liftoff, B1088 landed on the drone ship, ‘Of Course I Still Love,’ positioned in the Pacific Ocean. This was the 184th landing on this vessel and the 586th booster landing for SpaceX to date.

The 25 Starlink satellites deployed a little more than an hour after liftoff.

10,000 and counting

The sheer volume of SpaceX’s Starlink constellation puts it in a league of its own. The company has been averaging a launch every 2.3 days in 2026, with 26 out of its 33 Falcon 9 rocket launches this year sending Starlink satellites into orbit.

As of February 13, 2026, SpaceX said its Starlink service had more than 10 million active customers “across 160 countries, territories and many other markets.” In the month since reaching that milestone, it announced the activation of Starlink connectivity in Niue, Kuwait, and the Central African Republic.

Back in October 2025, after SpaceX crossed the threshold of 10,000 Starlink satellites launched to date — it had about 8,600 satellites concurrently in orbit at the time — expert orbital tracker and X-ray astronomer Dr. Jonathan McDowell described reaching that milestone as “truly remarkable.”

“The number of avoidance maneuvers, 10s of thousands of avoidance maneuvers a year that the system is making to avoid running into itself is just so far beyond what anyone was doing in the 2010s, much less earlier,” McDowell said. “I think, whatever your feelings are about SpaceX or the people involved with it, it’s a remarkable technical achievement.”

This year, SpaceX publicly announced its own Space Situational Awareness (SSA) system, which it named ‘Stargaze’. The system uses the multiple star trackers onboard each satellite to help crate a map of objects in low Earth orbit to expedite the process of identifying and avoiding potential collisions.

Spaceflight Now also spoke with Caleb Henry for our story last October. The Director of Research for Quilty Space, a research firm focused on the space industry, pointed to five lenses through which SpaceX was able to establish its dominance among satellite operators.

“Four of them are technological. One of them financial. Financial first. Starlink has been able to raise, or SpaceX has been able to raise significant sums of money,” Henry said. “They easily raised more than any other constellation venture that wasn’t either internally funded, like Amazon, or government funded, like the SDA or perhaps some Chinese constellations. So, having access to billions of dollars in capital really helped. The money along is not the solution. It’s not the reason that they were able to do this and others hadn’t by itself.”

Henry said the technological lenses revolve around SpaceX’s vertical integration of launch, satellites, gateways and user terminals.

“Starlink is building (user terminals) for an order of magnitude, maybe two orders of magnitude above what anyone else is doing,” Henry said. “And that allows them to reach a price point for their equipment that is so low that they basically make the consumer market explode.”

This year, SpaceX is expected to start launching its much larger Starlink Version 3 satellites, using its massive Starship rocket. There’s no public launch date for when that first deployment will happen since the company is still testing out its Starship Version 3 rocket to launch for the first time.

Back in October, Henry said that Quilty forecast as many as eight Starship launches with Starlink satellites during 2026. 

“The V3 version of Starship is supposed to be able to lift 100 metric tons to orbit and we see that as really unlocking the V3 version of the satellite, which is going to be heavier, which is going to have a terabit of capacity, just by far and away more than any other low Earth orbit satellite out there,” Henry said.

Links 3/16/26

Links for you. Science:

Despite U.S. pull out from WHO, reps were (virtually) at the table for big flu confab
White House stalls release of approved US science budgets
Finally! An Ancient Fish That Understood Life’s Terrors
The Mournful Ballad Of Punch The Monkey
Neanderthal Men Preferred Human Women, Study Finds
Discovery in Israel Rewrites the Story of Humanity’s First Exodus From Africa

Other:

A professor challenged the Smithsonian. Security shut the gallery.
A litmus test Democrats should face in the midterms and 2028
Most Americans say they can only afford the basics, poll finds
Life expectancy for Bostonians is increasing, but not for Black residents, new report shows
D.C. students walk out of school and fill the city’s streets to protest ICE
How Israel Lost Americans
D.C. families can now get thousands of dollars more for college through this program
Elite Doctors Served Jeffrey Epstein While Treating His ‘Girls’
In tragedy-torn Uvalde, it’s a scandal-ridden incumbent or ‘the AK Guy’
Candace Owens spun conspiracy theories about Charlie Kirk’s death. Now she’s targeting his widow.
Prerogative Powers and Presidential Self Care
DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin’s replacement is even worse
The Good Rich Man?
Most Conservative Students Don’t Feel Persecuted on Campus
Government Insiders Concerned by Musk’s Erratic and Sycophantic Grok Being Deployed for Incredibly Sensitive Purposes
Conservatives cried voter fraud long before Trump
“Massive” War Launched by a Man With No Plan. Again.
Billionaires Gone Wild
Exalted Victors
Marco Rubio’s New Loyalty Oath
Manosphere podcasters have second thoughts
It’s His Turn. Gavin Newsom sets his sights on the Oval Office
Fairshake 451: The crypto-backed super PAC Fairshake is on a bipartisan search-and-destroy mission to take out congressional critics this cycle, starting in the Democratic primaries. “They are becoming really, really organized,” one strategist said. And they’ve got nearly $200 million in cash on hand.
No, We Definitely Knew How Bad It Would Be
Can Trump Claim His Live Nation Scalp? Next week’s looming government trial against Live Nation is driving settlement chatter to new heights, while raising questions about just how badly the White House wants an antitrust trophy.
Gravitas
Seneca Boston, a Nantucket legend whose 18th century home still stands
‘I Just Stood Up’: The Stunning Arrest Of Aliya Rahman At The State Of The Union
The Abundance Gang Has a Big AI Problem. The faddish political movement’s ties to industry figures may help attract funding, but it comes with a political cost.
Crypto super PACs have hundreds of millions ready to spend on the midterms

Investing in student programs is essential for America’s lead in space

photo of the international space station

The University of Illinois’ Space Entanglement and Annealing Quantum Experiment (SEAQUE) is a compelling success story in the global race to develop quantum communication networks in space. The experiment’s success was enabled by a novel collaboration approach across academia, industry and government. As such, SEAQUE is more than a physics experiment. It’s a demonstration of […]

The post Investing in student programs is essential for America’s lead in space appeared first on SpaceNews.

New Moog Innovations for the Satellite Market on Full Display at SATELLITE 2026 Conference

East Aurora, NY — Moog Inc. (NYSE: MOG.A and MOG.B), a worldwide designer, manufacturer and systems integrator of high-performance precision motion and fluid controls and control systems will highlight its […]

The post New Moog Innovations for the Satellite Market on Full Display at SATELLITE 2026 Conference appeared first on SpaceNews.

China launches new highly retrograde Yaogan satellite, KZ-11 rideshare deploys 8 satellites

China conducted a pair of launches Sunday, sending a second Yaogan-50 satellite into a highly retrograde orbit and completing a Kuaizhou-11 solid rocket rideshare mission.

The post China launches new highly retrograde Yaogan satellite, KZ-11 rideshare deploys 8 satellites appeared first on SpaceNews.

Starcloud files plans for 88,000-satellite constellation

Starcloud

An orbital data center startup is seeking approval from the Federal Communications Commission for a constellation of as many as 88,000 satellites.

The post Starcloud files plans for 88,000-satellite constellation appeared first on SpaceNews.

Melagen Labs and Satlyt Announce Joint ISS Mission to Demonstrate Radiation-Resilient In-Orbit Computing and Next-Gen Shielding

melagen labs logo

NEW YORK, March 2026 — Melagen Labs and Satlyt today announced a joint technology demonstration aboard the International Space Station (ISS) through the AEGIS MISSE platform. The mission will generate […]

The post Melagen Labs and Satlyt Announce Joint ISS Mission to Demonstrate Radiation-Resilient In-Orbit Computing and Next-Gen Shielding appeared first on SpaceNews.

Kepler Communications: Call for Live-Stream Payload Concepts

Kepler is issuing a call for payloads seeking persistent, real-time data streaming in Low Earth Orbit. Integration starts soon for the limited number of hosted payload slots remaining available across […]

The post Kepler Communications: Call for Live-Stream Payload Concepts appeared first on SpaceNews.

ONCE (Again)

The original concept for ONCE sought to sell self-hostable web apps for a one-time fee. That didn't work. Sure, we recouped the investment on Campfire, our chat app, but that was it. You gotta listen when the market tells you what it wants! And it didn't seem to want to pay for self-hosted web apps in a one-off way.

So we set Campfire, Writebook, and now Fizzy free by releasing them all as open source with a permissive license. That worked! Tons of people have been running these apps on their own servers, contributing code back, and learning how we build real production applications at 37signals.

Now we're doubling down on the gift and adding an integrated way to run all these apps, and your own vibe-coded adventures too, on a brand-new application server we're also calling ONCE.

If you twist my arm, I can make that spell "Open Network Container Executor", but we don't even have to go there. Once is just a cool word, we already own the domain, and it's running all the original applications released under that banner as free and open-source installations. That's good enough!

The pitch here is that installing a whole suite of applications on your own server should be dead easy. The original ONCE model wanted a dedicated box or VM per app, which was just cumbersome and costly to maintain. Now you can use a single machine — even your laptop! — to run everything all at once.

ONCE gives you a beautiful terminal interface to track application metrics, like RAM + CPU usage, as well as basic visitor + request/second counts. It also gives you zero-downtime upgrades and scheduled backups. It's meant to be able to run all the infrastructure apps you'd need, like our full suite and all the ones your AI agents will soon be building for you.

Give it a spin. It's just a single command to install. I can show you how with this YouTube video tour. Enjoy!

screenshot-2026-03-16_18-32-42.png

SPARCS CubeSat ‘First Light’ Images

2 Min Read

SPARCS CubeSat ‘First Light’ Images

This pair of images shows stars observed Feb. 6, 2026, by the SPARCS space telescope simultaneously in the near-ultraviolet, left, and far-ultraviolet, right. The fact that one star is seen in the far-UV while multiple are seen in near-UV offers insights into the temperatures of these stars, with the one visible in both colors being the hottest.
PIA26731
Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU

Description

This pair of images shows stars observed by the SPARCS (Star-Planet Activity Research CubeSat) space telescope simultaneously in the near-ultraviolet, left, and far-ultraviolet, right. These observations were recorded on Feb. 6, 2026, three weeks after the cube satellite, or CubeSat, launched aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 on Jan. 11. The fact that one star is seen in the far-UV while multiple are seen in near-UV offers insights into the temperatures of these stars, with the one visible in both colors being the hottest.

Roughly the size of a large cereal box, SPARCS will monitor flares and sunspot activity on low-mass stars — objects only 30% to 50% the mass of the Sun. These stars are among the most common in the Milky Way and host the majority of the galaxy’s roughly 50 billion habitable-zone terrestrial planets, which are rocky worlds close enough to their stars for temperatures that could allow liquid water and potentially support life.

The SPARCS spacecraft is the first dedicated to continuously and simultaneously monitoring the far-ultraviolet and near-ultraviolet radiation from low-mass stars. Over its one-year mission, SPARCS will target approximately 20 low-mass stars and observe them over durations of five to 45 days. 

Filters for the spacecraft’s camera, SPARCam, were made using a technique that improves sensitivity and performance by enabling them to be directly deposited onto the specially developed UV-sensitive “delta-doped” detectors. The approach of detector-integrated filters eliminated the need for a separate filter element, resulting in a system that is among the most sensitive of its kind ever flown in space.

The filters, detectors, and associated electronics were designed, fabricated, and tested at the Microdevices Laboratory (MDL) at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. Inventors at MDL harness physics, chemistry, and material science, including quantum, to deliver first-of-their-kind devices and capabilities for our nation.

Funded by NASA and led by Arizona State University in Tempe, SPARCS is managed under the agency’s Astrophysics Research and Analysis program. The agency’s CubeSat Launch Initiative (CSLI) selected SPARCS in 2022 for a ride to orbit. The initiative is a low-cost pathway for conducting scientific investigations and technology demonstrations in space, enabling students, teachers, and faculty to gain hands-on experience with flight hardware design, development, and building.

Blue Canyon Technologies fabricated the spacecraft bus.

The post SPARCS CubeSat ‘First Light’ Images appeared first on NASA Science.

The hyper-NIMBY of earlier Cape Town and South Africa

The most controversial of the forced removals occurred in the second half of the 1960s, with the expulsion of 65,000 coloureds from District Six, a vibrant inner-city ward of Cape Town, where whites, many of the slumlords, owned 56% of the property.  Against their will, District Six residents were moved out to the sandy townships of the Cape Flats.  In Johannesburg, the inner-city suburb of Sophiatown, where blacks could own freehold property, was another notorious site of forced removals.  Often long-established community institutions such as churches and schools had to be abandoned.

That is from the very good book by Hermann Giliomee The Afrikaners: A Concise History.

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Contraption Mansion

Back in 2020, just before Covid hit, I briefly started doing a bit about mansions and how we all ought to get a Universal Basic Mansion as a basic human right. It started out as a joke retort to yet another wealthy-ish reader-friend thanking me for some bit of my writing being helpful in their lives. I think I said something like “words are cheap; when …

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Monday assorted links

1. Interview with Ding Liren.

2. Germany attacking free speech.

3. Sunstein on Habermas.

4. What do robot demos and videos show?

5. How WWI damaged British innovation?

6. Social media is more of a habit than an addiction.

7. The rise of popcorn at the movies (WSJ).

8. Hartley on Chris Sims.

The post Monday assorted links appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

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International statistics on plasma donation show that it is quite safe

 Peter Jaworski collects the statistics from Europe and North America:

Plasma donation is safe
And commercial plasma donation is not less safe than non-commercial donations

Peter Jaworski
Mar 16, 2026 

"Source plasma donation (also called “plasmapheresis”) is inordinately safe (so is whole blood donation). And the best publicly-available donation safety data give us no reason to think that commercial plasma collection is less safe than non-commercial plasma collection.

That claim may be surprising in light of the recent heartbreaking deaths reported after plasma donations in Winnipeg. These tragedies have raised questions about the safety of plasma donation in general, with some critics suggesting that commercial plasma donation is inherently less safe than non-commercial plasma donation.


"The evidence for the claim that plasmapheresis, including commercial plasmapheresis, is safe can be found in countries with the largest plasmapheresis programs, which publish annual reports on serious donor adverse events. Some of these countries have exclusively non-commercial plasma collection, while others have predominantly commercial systems. "

Understanding Demonic Policies

Matt Yglesias has a good post on the UK’s Triple Lock, which requires that UK pensions rise in line with whichever is highest: wages, inflation, or 2.5 percent. Luis Garicano calls this “the single stupidest policy in the entire Western world” — and I’d be inclined to agree, if only the competition weren’t so fierce.

The triple lock guarantees that pensioner incomes grow at the expense of everything else, and the mechanism bites hardest when the economy is weakest. During the 2009 financial crisis wages fell and inflation declined, for example, yet pensioner incomes rose by 2.5 percent! (Technically this was under a double-lock period; the triple lock came slightly later — as if the lesson from the crisis was that the guarantee hadn’t been generous enough.)

Now, as Yglesias notes, if voters were actually happy with pensioner income growing at the expense of worker income, that would be one thing. But no one seems happy with the result. The same pattern is clear in the United States:

As I wrote in January, there is a pattern in American politics where per capita benefits for elderly people have gotten consistently more generous in the 21st century even as the ratio of retired people to working-age people has risen.

This keeps happening because it’s evidently what the voters want. Making public policy more generous to senior citizens enjoys both broad support among the mass public and it’s something that elites in the two parties find acceptable even if neither side is particularly enthusiastic about it. But what makes it a dark pattern in my view is that voters seem incredibly grumpy about the results.

Nobody’s saying things have been going great in America over the past quarter century.

Instead, the right is obsessed with the idea that mysterious forces of fraud have run off with all the money, while the left has convinced itself that billionaires aren’t paying any taxes.

But it’s not some huge secret why it seems like the government keeps spending and spending without us getting any amazing new public services — it’s transfers to the elderly.

The contradictions of “Elderism” are an example of rational irrationality. Individual voters bears essentially no cost for holding inconsistent political beliefs — wanting generous pensions and robust public services and low taxes is essentially free, since no single vote determines the outcome. The irrationality is individually rational and collectively ruinous. Voters are not necessarily confused about what they want; they simply face no price for wanting incompatible things. Arrow’s impossibility theorem adds another layer: even if each voter held perfectly coherent preferences, there is no reliable procedure for aggregating them into a coherent social choice. The grumpiness Yglesias documents may not reflect hypocrisy so much as the incoherence of demanding that collective choice makes sense — collective choice cannot be rationalized by coherent preferences and thus it’s perfectly possible that democracy can simultaneously “choose” generous pensions and “demand” better services for workers, with no mechanism to register the contradiction until the bill arrives.

The post Understanding Demonic Policies appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

       

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Possible New Result in Quantum Factorization

I’m skeptical about—and not qualified to review—this new result in factorization with a quantum computer, but if it’s true it’s a theoretical improvement in the speed of factoring large numbers with a quantum computer.

Unbounded

Old black and white photo of a smiling person on a boat with the sea in the background.

In the early 20th century, Emmy Noether’s mathematics transcended the physical world. She longed to do the same herself

- by Julia Ravanis

Read on Aeon

Henri Bergson: Creative Evolution

Abstract art with neon-coloured ovals on a black background, featuring red, green and pink lights in a digital photo.

How do we develop our sense of space? Henri Bergson questioned the very fabric of our reality in his revolutionary work

- by Aeon Video

Watch on Aeon

To see the feathered serpent To see the feathered serpent


Why you should work much harder RIGHT NOW

If strong AI will lower the value of your human capital, your current wage is relatively high compared to your future wage.  That is an argument for working harder now, at least if your current and pending pay can rise with greater effort (not true for all jobs).

If strong AI can at least potentially boost the value of your human capital, you should be investing in learning AI skills right now.  No need to fall behind on something so important.  You also might have the chance to use that money and buy into the proper capital and land assets.

So…WORK HARDER!

Addendum: From Ricardo in the comments:

Suppose you are the best maker of horse carriages in Belgium around the time the automobile is invented. You might want to take on as many orders as possible for new carriages because you know your future is precarious. Or, maybe you get your hands on one of these new-fangled automobiles as soon as possible and learn how fix them. Both options require you to WORK HARDER but these seem to be the two best options available. Paradoxical but true.

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Costs and Benefits from the New Energy Crisis

Operation Epic Fury, the U.S.-Israeli bombing campaign against Iran, began on Feb. 28. At first, the reaction of energy markets was muted. As the days passed, however, it became clear that the air strike that killed much of the Iranian regime’s top leadership had not broken that regime’s grip on power. It also became clear that despite heavy bombing the regime retained the ability to launch drones and missiles at energy facilities and shipping in the Persian Gulf. More than two weeks after the war began, the Strait of Hormuz, a crucial choke point for world energy supplies, remains effectively closed, and nobody knows when it will reopen.

Inevitably, given these events, the prices of oil, liquefied natural gas, and fertilizer produced from natural gas have soared.

I wrote about the possible economic consequences of such price shocks last week. It has become clear to me, however, that it would be useful to provide a sort of prequel to that discussion: a review of how global energy markets work, the factors determining energy prices, and the distribution of losses and gains — for there are some winners even from bad news — as oil prices soar.

Some of the winners are obvious: Russia and oil producers everywhere except in the Persian Gulf. The losers may come as a surprise: American consumers are being hit hard even though the US produces more oil and natural gas than it consumes, while China, despite its dependence on imported hydrocarbons, is relatively insulated from this shock.

Beyond the paywall I will address the following

1. Tankers, pipelines and the geography of energy

2. How high can energy prices go?

3. Why domestic oil production doesn’t protect consumers

4. The importance of oil intensity

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What is agentic engineering?

Agentic Engineering Patterns >

I use the term agentic engineering to describe the practice of developing software with the assistance of coding agents.

What are coding agents? They're agents that can both write and execute code. Popular examples include Claude Code, OpenAI Codex, and Gemini CLI.

What's an agent? Clearly defining that term is a challenge that has frustrated AI researchers since at least the 1990s but the definition I've come to accept, at least in the field of Large Language Models (LLMs) like GPT-5 and Gemini and Claude, is this one:

Agents run tools in a loop to achieve a goal

The "agent" is software that calls an LLM with your prompt and passes it a set of tool definitions, then calls any tools that the LLM requests and feeds the results back into the LLM.

For coding agents, those tools include one that can execute code.

You prompt the coding agent to define a goal. The agent then generates and executes code in a loop until that goal has been met.

Code execution is the defining capability that makes agentic engineering possible. Without the ability to directly run the code, anything output by an LLM is of limited value. With code execution, these agents can start iterating towards software that demonstrably works.

Agentic engineering

Now that we have software that can write working code, what is there left for us humans to do?

The answer is so much stuff.

Writing code has never been the sole activity of a software engineer. The craft has always been figuring out what code to write. Any given software problem has dozens of potential solutions, each with their own tradeoffs. Our job is to navigate those options and find the ones that are the best fit for our unique set of circumstances and requirements.

Getting great results out of coding agents is a deep subject in its own right, especially now as the field continues to evolve at a bewildering rate.

We need to provide our coding agents with the tools they need to solve our problems, specify those problems in the right level of detail, and verify and iterate on the results until we are confident they address our problems in a robust and credible way.

LLMs don't learn from their past mistakes, but coding agents can, provided we deliberately update our instructions and tool harnesses to account for what we learn along the way.

Used effectively, coding agents can help us be much more ambitious with the projects we take on. Agentic engineering should help us produce more, better quality code that solves more impactful problems.

Isn't this just vibe coding?

The term "vibe coding" was coined by Andrej Karpathy in February 2025 - coincidentally just three weeks prior to the original release of Claude Code - to describe prompting LLMs to write code while you "forget that the code even exists".

Some people extend that definition to cover any time an LLM is used to produce code at all, but I think that's a mistake. Vibe coding is more useful in its original definition - we need a term to describe unreviewed, prototype-quality LLM-generated code that distinguishes it from code that the author has brought up to a production ready standard.

About this guide

Just like the field it attempts to cover, Agentic Engineering Patterns is very much a work in progress. My goal is to identify and describe patterns for working with these tools that demonstrably get results, and that are unlikely to become outdated as the tools advance.

I'll continue adding more chapters as new techniques emerge. No chapter should be considered finished. I'll be updating existing chapters as our understanding of these patterns evolves.

Tags: coding-agents, agent-definitions, generative-ai, agentic-engineering, ai, llms

In Front of Trump's Nose

People in power can keep insisting that things are going great, never mind reality — until they can’t.

Reaching for the stars

The dark sky provides the perfect backdrop for today's Picture of the Week, captured by Chilean astrophotographer Alexis Trigo. The spotlight is on the magnificent Unit Telescope 4, also known as Yepun, part of ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT), reaching for the stars with its laser beams. Behind it, the Milky Way stretches low in the horizon.

The VLT comprises four Unit Telescopes, each with an 8.2 m mirror. All four UT domes are as big as a family house, keeping the telescope safe and sound from all environmental conditions. But despite their similarities, Yepun is special, as it is the only UT with a total of four lasers.

Lasers create an artificial star in Earth's upper atmosphere, allowing astronomers to correct for atmospheric turbulence that blurs their data. Initially, only UT4 had lasers installed, but this changed recently with the completion of the GRAVITY+ upgrade to the VLT Interferometer. Now, a laser has been installed on all the other three UTs. Nevertheless, Yepun remains distinctive with its four lasers, delivering crystal-clear views of the cosmos.

Happy Birthday, Maine

Cañon Fiord’s Whirling Waters

A V-shaped fjord cuts through barren brown land, with one patch of swirling water marked by white sea ice and another one colored turquoise by suspended sediment. Glacial ice flows into the fjord in several places.
August 9, 2022

For most of the year, ice blankets the waterways of the northern Canadian Arctic Archipelago. But during the brief summer melt season, the stark white and gray landscape transforms into a colorful, dynamic environment. On a particularly striking day in 2022, sediment plumes and fractured sea ice traced swirling eddies in a branch of the Nansen Sound fjord system.

These satellite images show a section of Cañon Fiord, located about 115 kilometers (70 miles) southeast of the Eureka research station on west-central Ellesmere Island. Waters from the fjord flow into Greely Fiord, which connects to Nansen Sound and ultimately the Arctic Ocean. The images were acquired by the OLI (Operational Land Imager) on Landsat 8 on August 9, 2022.

Igor Dmitrenko, a physical oceanographer at the Centre for Earth Observation Science at the University of Manitoba, has studied eddies in the fjord system and notes that the water’s turbidity, a measure of its cloudiness, remains low during the ice-covered season. Freshwater runoff—and the sediment it carries—drops sharply this time of year, and the formation of 2-meter-thick sea ice shields the surface from wind, suppressing mixing that would otherwise resuspend particles.

Summer presents a contrasting scenario. The detailed image below (top) shows that the sea ice in this part of the fjord has broken up, free to drift with the currents and wind. Note that some of the pieces are likely icebergs that have broken off from nearby outlet glaciers. The second detailed image shows a similar scenario; however, in this case, it is sediment suspended in the water that is tracing the flow.

Blue fjord waters with white sea ice swirling in a circular eddy.
August 9, 2022
Fjord waters with sediment swirling in a circular eddy, making the water appear light turquoise.
August 9, 2022

Alex Gardner and Chad Greene, glaciologists at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, pointed out that the sediment plume is mostly glacial flour—rock that has been pulverized by a glacier. Surface meltwater that gets under the glacier ultimately flushes the glacial flour into the fjord, making the water appear turquoise. Glacial flour is a critical source of nutrients, specifically iron. Soluble iron is a vital nutrient in marine ecosystems because most phytoplankton—the foundation of marine food webs—depend on it to grow. 

The glacial ice visible in these scenes comes from the Agassiz Ice Cap, one of five major ice caps on Ellesmere Island. Using data from NASA’s ICESat and the DLR-NASA GRACE missions, scientists have shown that glaciers in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago began shrinking rapidly in the mid-2000s and that the trend has persisted.

NASA Earth Observatory images by Lauren Dauphin, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey. Story by Kathryn Hansen.

References & Resources

You may also be interested in:

Stay up-to-date with the latest content from NASA as we explore the universe and discover more about our home planet.

Arctic Sea Ice Ties for 10th-Lowest on Record
3 min read

Satellite data show that Arctic sea ice likely reached its annual minimum extent on September 10, 2025.

Article
Stonebreen’s Beating Heart
3 min read

The glacier in southeastern Svalbard pulses with the changing seasons, speeding up and slowing its flow toward the sea.

Article
Antarctic Sea Ice Saw Its Third-Lowest Maximum
2 min read

Sea ice around the southernmost continent hit one of its lowest seasonal highs since the start of the satellite record.

Article

The post Cañon Fiord’s Whirling Waters appeared first on NASA Science.

Who is a victim?

Moral disagreement across politics revolves around the key question, “Who is a victim?” Twelve studies explain moral conflict with assumptions of vulnerability (AoVs): liberals and conservatives disagree about who is especially vulnerable to victimization, harm, and mistreatment. AoVs predict moral judgments, implicit attitudes, and charitable behavior—and explain the link between ideology and moral judgment (usually better than moral foundations). Four clusters of targets—the Environment, the Othered, the Powerful, and the Divine—explain many political debates, from immigration and policing to religion and racism. In general, liberals see vulnerability as group-based, dividing the moral world into groups of vulnerable victims and invulnerable oppressors. Conservatives downplay group-based differences, seeing vulnerability as more individual and evenly distributed. AoVs can be experimentally manipulated and causally impact moral evaluations. These results support a universal harm-based moral mind (Theory of Dyadic Morality): moral disagreement reflects different understandings of harm, not different foundations.

That is from a recent paper by Jake Womick, Emily Kubin, and Kurt Gray.  Via the excellent, non-victimized Kevin Lewis.

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‘This Is Not the Computer for You’

Sam Henri Gold:

Nobody starts in the right place. You don’t begin with the correct tool and work sensibly within its constraints until you organically graduate to a more capable one. That is not how obsession works. Obsession works by taking whatever is available and pressing on it until it either breaks or reveals something. The machine’s limits become a map of the territory. You learn what computing actually costs by paying too much of it on hardware that can barely afford it.

I know this because I was running Final Cut Pro X on a 2006 Core 2 Duo iMac with 3GB RAM and 120GB of spinning rust. I was nine. I had no business doing this. I did it every day after school until my parents made me go to bed.

What a lovely essay. The best piece anyone has written about the MacBook Neo — because it’s not really about the MacBook Neo.

 ★ 

Blaming AI for Layoffs: ‘It Plays Better’

Resume.org, summarizing their survey of 1,000 U.S. hiring managers:

59% admit they emphasize AI when explaining hiring freezes or layoffs because it plays better with stakeholders than citing financial constraints.

Reminds me of the “Not Me” ghost in Bil Keane’s The Family Circus comic strip.

 ★ 

Horace Dediu on Apple Sitting Out the AI Spending Race

Horace Dediu, under the headline “The Most Brilliant Move in Corporate History?”:

Apple used to be the biggest capex spender, mainly because it paid for most of the property plant and equipment in the factories that made its phones and computers. [...]

But that all changed with AI. Amazon is spending $200 billion this year on AI data centers. Google, $185 billion. Microsoft, $114 billion. Meta, $135 billion. Combined: $650 billion. (Not including OpenAI, Anthropic and SpaceX/XAI.) That is like buying the US Navy every year. And yet Apple’s capital budget is still a modest $14 billion, oscillating with new hardware tooling cycles.

Apple is refusing to transfer its cash flow to Nvidia. Curiously, it believes that its cash flow belongs to its shareholders, not to Nvidia’s.

The hyperscalers are now spending 94% of their operating cash flows on AI infrastructure. Amazon is projected to go negative free cash flow this year with as much as $28 billion in the red. Alphabet’s free cash flow is expected to collapse 90% from $73 billion to $8 billion. These companies used to be the greatest cash machines ever built. Now they’re borrowing money to keep the data center lights on.

It has served Apple very well to guard its free cash flow preciously ever since the company sprung back to growth under Steve Jobs. Are they stuck in the past by sitting this out, or wisely passing on a mania?

If they can make Apple Intelligence a first-class agentic AI by relying on Gemini, paying only $1 billion per year, it sure looks like genius. But given their track record with Apple Intelligence to date, that is an enormous “if”.

 ★ 

Reuters: ‘Meta Planning Sweeping Layoffs as AI Costs Mount’

Katie Paul, Jeff Horwitz and Deepa Seetharaman, reporting for Reuters:

Meta is planning sweeping layoffs ​that could affect 20% or more of the company, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters, as Meta seeks to offset costly artificial intelligence infrastructure bets and prepare for greater efficiency brought about by AI-assisted workers.

No date has been set for the cuts and the magnitude has not been finalized, the people said. Top executives have recently signaled the plans to other senior leaders at Meta and told ​them to begin planning how to pare back, two of the people said. The sources spoke anonymously because they ​were not authorized to disclose the cuts.

“This is speculative reporting about theoretical approaches,” Meta spokesperson Andy Stone said in response to questions about the plan.

This, hot on the heels of a New York Times report that Meta’s in-house AI models are lagging and they’re considering licensing Gemini from Google.

 ★ 

CHM Live: Apple at 50

David Pogue absolutely killed it hosting this live event last week. Glad I saved it to watch on my TV. Special guests include Chris Espinosa, John Sculley, and Avie Tevanian. A legit treat.

 ★ 

Sunday 15 March 1662/63

(Lord’s day). Up and with my wife and her woman Ashwell the first time to church, where our pew was so full with Sir J. Minnes’s sister and her daughter, that I perceive, when we come all together, some of us must be shut out, but I suppose we shall come to some order what to do therein. Dined at home, and to church again in the afternoon, and so home, and I to my office till the evening doing one thing or other and reading my vows as I am bound every Lord’s day, and so home to supper and talk, and Ashwell is such good company that I think we shall be very lucky in her. So to prayers and to bed.

This day the weather, which of late has been very hot and fair, turns very wet and cold, and all the church time this afternoon it thundered mightily, which I have not heard a great while.

Read the annotations

Links 3/15/26

Links for you. Science:

What Happened in Chicago When Science Became the Enemy
How Covid Quietly Rewires the Brain. Researchers keep discovering more about the long-term neurological effects of SARS-CoV-2.
Grievance Is All You Need. Understanding attacks on NIH, CDC and FDA through the lens of COVID revisionists
ACOG Withdraws from CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices
Norway’s Century-Long Watch on the Northern Lights
Leader of Columbia Brain Institute Quits Over Friendship With Epstein

Other:

Actually, the left is winning the AI debate
Trump’s War on the Constitution
FDA takes down page warning of crank autism cures as RFK Jr. nominates people have promoted them
Spin Class Case Study: I Caught POLITICO and the New York Times Laundering Pink Slime “News”
The Grand Illusion: The U.S.-Europe Growth Gap. It turns out the gap in productivity growth is a measurement issue
The U.S. Hockey Men Spoil The Fantasy
New Polling on Ousting Schumer: Necessary Policy and Smart Politics
Jesse Jackson, RIP (missed this good one)
Deep Inside Putin’s War Machine, the Pain Is Starting to Show
Denver mayor orders ICE agents detained if they ‘assault or shoot’ residents
‘Unbelievably dangerous’: experts sound alarm after ChatGPT Health fails to recognise medical emergencies
Judge: IRS broke law ‘approximately 42,695 times’ in giving DHS data
Epstein files contain explicit but unsubstantiated claim that Trump abused minor
Hegseth cancels troop attendance at top-ranked schools
Callers to Washington state hotline press 2 for Spanish and get accented AI English instead
RFK Jr. suggests buying liver or ‘cheap cuts’ instead of steak (even odds Kennedy in the next month argues for eating long pork…)
Senator calls for DEA to provide info on “incredibly disturbing” Epstein drug investigation
“This Is What AI And Greed Does” – Video Game ‘Preservation Service’ Myrient Is Shutting Down
What Anthropic’s fight with the Pentagon tells us about the politics of Silicon Valley
Kash Patel Thinks He’s On The Team
Kash Patel’s girlfriend defends his taxpayer-funded hockey party by yelling about transgender mice (they still think transgenic mice are transgender mice…)
She was fired from the CFPB. Now she’s running for Congress.
Make Trump’s Lying Bad Again
Jesse Jackson Reshaped the Democratic Party
Meta’s Defense In Social Media Addiction Trial Is Basically A Shrug
Leading Lights Of MAGA Dodge Accountability For Epstein Ties — So Far
Internal Schedule Confirms Kash Patel Went To Olympics To Be World’s Most Special Little Guy
DHS Delivers Snark After Video Contradicts Story On Disabled Refugee Who Died
The Winter Olympics’ Sour Ending Was Just A Preview For Summer 2028
Platner sat for lengthy interview with antisemitic conspiracy theorist, said he was ‘longtime fan’ of his show

OSTP taking on space policy coordination work in place of National Space Council

Vice President Kamala Harris convenes the third meeting of the National Space Council under the Biden administration on Dec. 20, 2023. Credit: NOAA

In the absence of the National Space Council, the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) has taken on a lead role in coordinating national space policy.

The post OSTP taking on space policy coordination work in place of National Space Council appeared first on SpaceNews.

Strait of Hormuz crisis drives demand for commercial geospatial intelligence

Analysts are relying on tools that fuse satellite imagery, ship data and open-source reporting into real-time insight

The post Strait of Hormuz crisis drives demand for commercial geospatial intelligence appeared first on SpaceNews.

Raytheon contract for protected satellite communications terminals raised by $2 billion

The contract supports communications terminals used in the U.S. nuclear command-and-control architecture

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w/e 2026-03-15

A brief trip to Essex this week via an afternoon and evening in London. It was a sunny Spring-like day and I so enjoyed meandering my way eastwards from Liverpool Street Station, through Spitalfields, up and around Hackney Road and Mare Street to Hackney Picturehouse, then on to Hackney Wick for R’s birthday celebration (I chatted to friends, amazing!), before making my way to Stratford station.

There was so much to see. Being a country mouse now, it’s much easier to enjoy more about London, especially on a sunny day. Parts that might previously have seemed grim and run-down are aren’t as depressing, and neither are the parts that have been “regenerated” into the blandest of new apartment/office blocks.

A photo looking up at a seven storey building clad in grey brick arranged around a sort of courtyard cobbled in grey. It is very austere with the only plants two small bare trees at the far end.

I took one detour near the Hackney Road / Mare Street junction through streets I’d never seen before and it was amazing for touristing: old industrial buildings still in use; empty warehouses with broken windows; lots of colourful graffiti; giant gasometers with cylindrical apartment blocks being constructed within their cages; modern coffee-shops, breweries, cafes and businesses repurposing old buildings; new brick-clad blocks that were as clean and soulless as renderings; two guys sat on the ground in an alley shooting up. All of life, for better or worse.

A photo looking across a canal at old brick buildings on the other side, half covered in colourful graffiti.

By contrast, walking through the old Olympic Park after dark, trying to find the station was maddening, and made the Barbican Estate feel navigable. So many pathways and bridges curving around each other, almost no people anywhere (it was only 9pm) until I reached the horrors of Westfield. I guess it has to be a big enough area to cope with the stadium’s peak crowds but I missed, you know, streets, people, buildings.

A photo taken from a bridge over a canal, around dusk. In the foreground are various canalboats and barges moored by the side. Beyond them is the London Stadium.

After that I spent a couple of nights at the old family home. Sadness. Ferried another couple of loads of books to a charity shop, and took a big bag of old Left Book Club books to a bookshop in Colchester, where I met D for a nice lunch at Patch – such a nice, friendly, tasty place – and another cinema.


§ I’m gradually finding music I actually want to play on the guitar. I’m listening for songs that (a) I like, (b) I could feasibly play (no bar chords yet) and (c) wouldn’t be out of place if I played them at the weekly folk music night. That has a very broad range, from traditional British/Irish folk, through 1960s folk, on to a group of guys who do covers of 1970s/80s pop/rock songs.

But, still, there’s a lot of acoustic songs I like that don’t sound quite “folky” enough, although it’s hard to put my finger on how I’m defining that. Often it’s the lyrics – I feel like anything too specific or personal can seem more like “popular” music than folk. I’m not sure.

Anyway, I’m finding music, buying PDFs, tapping things out in Soundslice, practising… I just need to get better.


§ So, yes, two cinema trips this week, in cinemas with comfy seats, good screens, and tiny weekday daytime audiences:

  • Sound of Falling (Mascha Schilinski, 2025) was very good. Long, slow, gloomy, and the kind of film I might have been distracted away from if I watched it at home rather than captured by a cinema. While I generally dislike flashbacks, I do like films that cover a long period of time, and this one, flitting back and forth between four families who lived in the same house over decades, worked really well. The top Letterboxd review: “They all needed a big hug but all they got was Arbeitsunfälle & Generationstraumata.”
  • The Secret Agent (Kleber Mendonça, 2025) was one of those films that everyone loves but I feel I was missing something. It was still good, only less so than I hoped, and I found myself pretty bored for a while part way through.

§ Part of me wants to write something about how I feel about AI at the moment but I’m not sure we need another opinion piece about that, and I’d also probably end up describing half the people I know as fascist collaborators, which isn’t the most nuanced take, so.


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What should I ask Toby Wilkinson?

Yes I will be doing a Conversation with him.  He is one of the leading historians of ancient Egypt, and he has a recent book out on Ptolemaic Egypt, namely The Last Dynasty: Ancient Egypt from Alexander the Great to Cleopatra.

Here is his Wikipedia page, he also has served as Vice Chancellor of Fiji National University, and worked extensively as a development director for Cambridge.  Here is his personal home page.

So what should I ask him?

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Sunday assorted links

1. Henry Oliver has further thoughts on his CWT.

2. A Canticle for Leibowitz.

3. Building Brasilia.

4. The post-Christian condition.  One of the most interesting essays of this year.  I am glad I started paying for his Substack.

5. The chronology problem.

6. Scott Sumner on the fiscal theory of the price level.

7. Thiel does Rome.

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Congestion in signing your kid up for summer camp

 The WSJ has the story:

Welcome to the ‘Hunger Games’ of Parenting: Summer Camp Sign-Up
Parents set up command centers and practice checking out; ‘You just have to hope you’re not gonna get a pissed-off kid in basket weaving’ By Jesse Newman
 

"Because you cannot sleep on camp sign-ups once they open, parents book spots while boarding planes, hiding in the bushes at surprise parties and on the way to funerals. One doctor said she paused her rounds to register her daughter. 

...

"Lamenting the logistical nightmare, exorbitant costs and strain on working families, they offer tips and tricks for locking in sought-after sessions: Pay attention to countdown clocks. Log in on multiple devices. Assign one adult per child in need of programming.

...

"The only booking process Gerard’s found more stressful is reserving a spot on the summer ferry to Martha’s Vineyard. She had to queue online in February; in a virtual waiting room, she learned she was 10,000th in line. “We got a slot at 9 p.m.,” she said." 

Robert Trivers, RIP

The greats have been falling…

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The future isn't what it used to be

Photo by OKJaguar via Wikimedia Commons

“Imagination/ That’s the way that it seems/ A man can only live in his dreams” — The Flaming Lips

“No future/ No future/ No future for you” — The Sex Pistols

If you have kids — or if you’re planning to have kids in the future — I want you to think about a question: How will you make sure your kids have a successful life?

Obviously, this isn’t a question that anyone can ever answer with certainty. But ten years ago, in 2016, you could have given a pretty good answer. You’d work hard and save money and invest wisely, so you would have enough family wealth to cushion against unexpected shocks. You’d teach your kid good values, make sure they went to a good school, and send them to a good college. You might even encourage them to enter a promising elite professional field, like software engineering, medicine, or law. If you did all of this, you could be reasonably confident that your child would grow up to be at least economically secure, and probably upwardly mobile as well.

What answer would you give now, in 2026? Do you have any confidence that colleges — even top colleges — will actually teach your kid the skills they need to make it in a job market defined by AI? What field of study could you recommend to your child, knowing that there’s a possibility it will be automated by the time they finish studying it? Will even family wealth be enough to protect your descendants, in a world where land and energy are being gobbled up for data centers?

The sudden rise of artificial intelligence has cast a great fog over our future. It may bring wonders beyond our comprehension — the end of aging and disease, material hyperabundance, digital worlds to suit our every desire, expansion into outer space. Or it might bring chaos and destruction, as rogue agents wreak havoc with bioweapons and drones. Or it might become a superintelligence that turns us all into house pets.

Your kids might be chronically unemployed, as the CEO of ServiceNow recently predicted. Or AI tools might turn them into highly paid super-workers, as the founder of Uber recently predicted. The truth is that they don’t know, and I don’t know, and you don’t know either. Financial markets don’t know either. The people actually building AI certainly don’t know. The future is a blank wall of fog, rushing toward us at top speed, and nobody knows what to do.

Plenty of people have predicted this. It’s called a Technological Singularity — a period of accelerated technological change so rapid that it’s impossible to predict what life or society will look like afterwards. You can argue that the Industrial Revolution was a kind of Singularity, moving humanity in today’s developed countries from the edge of starvation to material abundance. Who could have predicted, in 1890, what life in 1990 would look like? And the AI revolution is happening much faster, promising to compress a century’s worth of change into a couple of decades.

AI may be the biggest thing casting a fog of uncertainty over our future, but it’s not the only thing. The political chaos of the last decade, and especially the governing style of the second Trump administration, has swept away much of what we thought we knew about American society. The rise of China has raised the possibility that global power will now reside with totalitarian countries instead of democratic ones. The possibility of another world war looms.

Now here’s the crucial point — even back in 2016, this period of rapid change was on the way. Most people just didn’t see it coming. Everyone who thought their kids would be safe if they just followed the standard 2016 playbook — a good college, a professional career — was wrong. They just didn’t know they were wrong yet.

But because they didn’t see what was coming, they were optimistic. Back in 2016, 69% of Americans expected a good life in the future — a number that’s now down to only 59%:

Source: Gallup

Even during Covid and the Great Recession, American optimism about the future didn’t waver. We “knew” — or at least we thought we knew — that we would recover from those shocks, and be able to live a good life. We might have been wrong, but we thought we could see the future — and it was those extrapolations that comforted us, even as we endured one shock after another.

It occurs to me that this can also explain why Americans are so nostalgic for the 1990s and the early 2000s.

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A New Order of Things

Big infrastructure projects in the developing world for things like water and electricity are under-pressure. Chinese and US funding is down and these projects often fall apart due to corruption and political incentives to build but not maintain. It is possible to break old institutions and establish new ones, but “there is nothing more difficult to take in hand, more perilous to conduct, or more uncertain in its success, than to take the lead in the introduction of a new order of things.” Connor Tabarrok gives a great example. Ek Son Chan in Cambodia:

In 1993, the Phnom Penh Water Supply Authority was a catastrophe. The city was emerging from decades of war and genocide. Only 20 percent of the city had connections at all, and water flowed for just 10 hours a day. 72 percent of the water was non revenue water. It was lost to leaks or stolen through illegal connections.

Into this mess walked Ek Son Chan, a young Cambodian engineer appointed as Director General. Over the next two decades he executed an incredible institutional turnaround.

Chan replaced corrupt managers with qualified engineers. He got rid of unmetered taps. Every single connection received a meter and was billed. The old system of manual billing was replaced with a computerized system, which cut down on low level employees giving out free water and receiving kickbacks. Bill collection rates went from 48 percent to 99.9 percent. These changes were intensely unpopular, and Chan faced fierce resistance from rent seekers, from freeloading customers to his own employees. He established an incentive system based on bonuses among the workers, introduced an internal discipline system with a penalty for violators, and set up a discipline commission for all levels of the organization to deal with corruption

He divided the distribution network into pressure zones with flow monitoring. A 24 hour leak detection team walked the streets at night with listening bars to identify underground leaks.

The institutional change dwarfed the infrastructural change, but was absolutely necessary to make the infrastructure investment worthwhile….

This commitment would not be untested. When Chan tried to enforce bill payment on Cambodia’s elite, and sent his team out to install a water meter on the property of a high ranking general who had been freeloading. The general refused the installation of a meter, so the team attempted to disconnect the water. The general and his bodyguards ran them off the property. When Chan heard of this, he decided not to back down, and mobilized his own team to dig up the pipe and install the meter. Always a leader from the front, Chan jumped in the hole to take a shift at digging. When he looked up, his team had fled, and he was facing down the general himself, pointing a gun at his head. In Cambodia in the 90s, consequences for such a high ranking official were unlikely. CHan didn’t give up. He mobilized the local armed police and returned with 20 men to standoff against the general, disconnected him from service and left him out to dry. Chan said this about the dispute:

”He had no water. My office was on the second floor and the general came in with his ten bodyguards to look for me. I said, “ No. You can come here alone, but with an appointment”. He couldn’t do anything. He had to return. He said, “Okay”! At that time we had a telephone, a very big Motorola. He came in to make an appointment for tomorrow. I said, “ Okay, tomorrow you come alone”. So he comes alone, we talk. “Okay. I’ll reconnect on two conditions. The first condition is that you have to sign a commitment saying that you will respect the Water Supply Authority and second, you need to pay a penalty for your bad behavior and you must allow us to broadcast the situation to the public, or no way, no water in your house”. So he agreed. “

….By 2010, coverage in the city went from 25 percent to over 90 percent with 24 hour service. The utility became financially self sustaining and turned a profit. It was listed on the Cambodia Securities Exchange in 2012. Chan won the Ramon Magsaysay Award in 2006.

By separating the utility company from the low-capacity local government, Ek and PPWSA proved that:

  • Functional infrastructure relies on institutional quality and mechanism design.
  • State capacity need not exist within the state

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Tracing the Genetic Footprints of the UK National Health Service

The establishment of the UK National Health Service (NHS) in July 1948 was one of the most consequential health policy interventions of the twentieth century, providing universal and free access to medical care and substantially expanding maternal and infant health services. In this paper, we estimate the causal effect of the NHS introduction on early-life mortality and we test whether survival is selective. We adopt a regression discontinuity design under local randomization, comparing individuals born just before and just after July 1948. Leveraging newly digitized weekly death records, we document a significant decline in stillbirths and infant mortality following the introduction of the NHS, the latter driven primarily by reductions in deaths from congenital conditions and diarrhea. We then use polygenic indexes (PGIs), fixed at conception, to track changes in population composition, showing that cohorts born at or after the NHS introduction exhibit higher PGIs associated with contextually-adverse traits (e.g., depression, COPD, and preterm birth) and lower PGIs associated with contextually-valued traits (e.g., educational attainment, self-rated health, and pregnancy length), with effect sizes as large as 7.5% of a standard deviation. These results based on the UK Biobank data are robust to family-based designs and replicate in the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing and the UK Household Longitudinal Study. Effects are strongest in socioeconomically disadvantaged areas and among males. This novel evidence on the existence and magnitude of selective survival highlights how large-scale public policies can leave a persistent imprint on population composition and generate long-term survival biases.

Here is the link, via S.

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These Latest Sexual Assault Laws Are Enhancing Protections for Survivors

If you’ve been accused of sexual assault, whether you’re guilty or not, it’s crucial to understand what you’re up against. Laws are changing all the time, which can have a significant impact on your case and its possible outcome in the courtroom. Rest assured, the most experienced lawyer will stay abreast of all key changes to help their clients. By 2026, some of the most recent changes include the following:

The Violence Against Women Act (VAWA)

Talk to any Liberty Law sexual assault lawyer Edmonton or elsewhere, and they will almost certainly be aware of the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA). VAWA is a federal law signed by President Bill Clinton in 1994 that created and supported comprehensive and cost-effective responses to sexual assault, dating violence, domestic violence, and stalking.

Since the law came into place, it has improved federal, tribal, state, and local responses to these crimes. In 2022, President Joe Biden included the VAWA Reauthorization Act of 2022 in his fiscal year spending package. The reauthorization included provisions to strengthen and modernize the law.

Among the most important changes were expanded protections, strengthened housing rights, and increased funding for programs. It also established the right to report, meaning victims can seek law enforcement or emergency assistance without penalty, such as ‘nuisance’ ordinances. As a result, VAWA can be a form of defense against eviction for survivors who are targeted due to incidents of violence or related police calls.

Federal Sexual Abuse Definition

When the VAWA Reauthorization Act of 2022 was enacted, a key definition was expanded. That definition was of sexual abuse surrounding non-consent and coercion. The definition of non-consent now includes scenarios where a victim can’t consent or refuse, such as when they’ve been incapacitated by drugs or alcohol, they’re asleep, or they’re unconscious. It now also explicitly covers engaging in sexual acts through coercion and applies to sex acts within the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States or in federal prison.

The Debbie Smith Act of 2024

According to a Congress report, there were up to 400,000 unsubmitted sexual assault kits between 2014 and 2018. A later study highlighted by Congress also found that an estimated 200,000 untested kits remain in police custody. That means that hundreds of thousands of women were waiting to find out who could be responsible for sexually assaulting them. That’s where the Debbie Smith Act comes in.

The Act was originally passed in 2004 and was named after a rape survivor who advocated for the testing of untested, backlogged DNA evidence. When it was passed, it became a US federal law that grants would be provided to state and local crime labs to reduce the backlogs of untested DNA evidence, particularly from rape kits. It was recently reauthorized in 2024, meaning the program would be extended through until 2029.

Housing Protections (HUD)

When VAWA was reauthorized in 2022, it significantly strengthened housing protections for survivors living in HUD-subsidized programs. A number of key changes were made:

  • Expanded coverage of covered housing programs to include additional HUD programs and Section 202 Direct Loan programs
  • Prohibition on retaliation, which means survivors who exercise their VAWA rights or participate in related proceedings are protected against retaliation.
  • Enhanced confidentiality, with stricter rules for housing providers regarding storing and sharing survivor information.
  • Lease bifurcation, where a lease can be split to evict an abuser, but allow the innocent household members or victims to remain
  • Survivors now have the right to request an emergency transfer if they feel safer elsewhere.
  • Survivors can self-certify their status using Form HUD-5382, which prevents the need to produce court documents or police reports to trigger protections.

Housing protections apply at move-in, upon denial or eviction, and during a tenancy.

Custody and Detention Protections

The new Custody and Detention Protections introduced as part of the VAWA 2022 Reauthorization Act strengthen federal laws against sexual abuse by law enforcement officers.

In particular, 18 U.S.C. § 2242(3) (Sexual Abuse) criminalizes federal law enforcement officers performing sexual acts with individuals under arrest, in detention, or federal custody. It’s a federal crime punishable by up to 15 years in prison. Federal jurisdiction isn’t based on where the crime occurred but rather on who the defendant is, such as a federal law enforcement officer.

Awareness of the latest sexual assault laws is crucial for understanding your rights and obligations if you’re navigating a claim made against you or if you’re a victim yourself. For more information about the latest laws and to understand how they apply to you, consult a trusted sexual assault lawyer for guidance.

Photo: Mika Baumeister via Unsplash.


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Is Germany actually that good at research?

Jannik Reigl writes:

Germany’s remaining research strengths are disproportionately concentrated in fields with limited commercial value. Consider climate science. German institutions co-lead with the United States. The Max Planck Institute in Hamburg, the UK Met Office Hadley Centre, ECMWF in Reading: these are world-class operations. Klaus Hasselmann won the 2021 Nobel Prize in Physics for climate modeling. Genuine excellence. But climate research doesn’t directly generate economic returns. The value lies in technology. And yes, while some of the most important assets of the near future are subsumed under “climate technologies”, they are essentially the product of other research fields. Batteries, solar cells, carbon capture, and grid technology are all technologies stemming from engineering and materials science. These require strength in chemistry, materials science, and engineering. The fields where Germany is losing ground.

The Max Planck Society is Germany’s highest-performing research body in the Nature Index. Its ranking fell from 4th place globally in 2021 to 11th in 2025, an “unusually large” decline according to Nature. Chemistry tells the starkest tale: Max Planck consistently ranked in the top 5 from 2015 to 2021, then dropped to 10th in 2022, and sits at 14th in 2025. Physical sciences show a similar pattern: Max Planck held 2nd place from 2015 to 2022 before falling to 4th, where it has remained.

German patents were cited 14 percent less than comparable US patents in the 1980s, and that this gap widened to 41 percent by the 2000s. This represented a steeper decline than that observed for both the United Kingdom and Japan. More recent studies do not use the same dataset or methodology, but they point in a similar direction.

One reason might be that the top research institutes disincentivise high-risk high-reward R&D by denying young talent scientific independence. In the United States, the system is built on the ‘flat’ Principal Investigator (PI) model. A talented scientist in their early 30s can secure a tenure-track Assistant Professorship, win their own NIH or NSF grants, and run a fully independent lab. They succeed or fail on their own scientific agenda.

Germany, by contrast, operates on a hierarchical ‘fiefdom’ model.

Here is the full essay, via Emma.

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March 14, 2026

March 15 is a crucially important day in U.S. history. As the man who taught me to use a chainsaw said, it is immortalized by Shakespeare’s famous warning: “Cedar! Beware the adze of March!”

He put it that way because the importance of March 15 is, of course, that it is the day in 1820 that Maine, the Pine Tree State, joined the Union.

Maine statehood had national repercussions. The inhabitants of this northern part of Massachusetts had asked for statehood in 1819, but their petition was stopped dead by southerners who refused to permit a free state—one that did not permit human enslavement—to enter the Union without a corresponding “slave state.” The explosive growth of the northern states had already given free states control of the House of Representatives, but the South held its own in the Senate, where each state got two votes. The admission of Maine would give the North the advantage, and southerners insisted that Maine’s admission be balanced with the admission of a southern slave state lest those opposed to slavery use their power in the federal government to restrict enslavement in the South.

They demanded the admission of Missouri to counteract Maine’s two “free” Senate votes.

But this “Missouri Compromise” infuriated northerners, especially those who lived in Maine. They swamped Congress with petitions against admitting Missouri as a slave state, resenting that slave owners in the Senate could hold the state of Maine hostage until they got their way. Tempers rose high enough that Thomas Jefferson wrote to Massachusetts—and later Maine—senator John Holmes that he had for a long time been content with the direction of the country, but that the Missouri question “like a fire bell in the night, awakened and filled me with terror. I considered it at once as the knell of the Union. It is hushed indeed for the moment, but this is a reprieve only, not a final sentence.”

Congress passed the Missouri Compromise, but Jefferson was right to see it as nothing more than a reprieve.

The petition drive that had begun as an effort to keep the admission of Maine from being tied to the admission of Missouri continued as a movement to get Congress to whittle away at slavery where it could—by, for example, outlawing the sales of enslaved Americans in the nation’s capital—and would become a key point of friction between the North and the South.

There was also another powerful way in which the conditions of the state’s entry into the Union would affect American history. Mainers were angry that their statehood had been tied to the demands of far distant slave owners, and that anger worked its way into the state’s popular culture. The opening of the Erie Canal in 1825 meant that Maine men, who grew up steeped in that anger, could spread west.

And so they did.

In 1837, Elijah P. Lovejoy, who had moved to Alton, Illinois, from Albion, Maine, to begin a newspaper dedicated to the abolition of human enslavement, was murdered by a pro-slavery mob, who threw his printing press into the Mississippi River.

Elijah Lovejoy’s younger brother, Owen, had also moved west from Maine. Owen saw Elijah shot and swore his allegiance to the cause of abolition. “I shall never forsake the cause that has been sprinkled with my brother’s blood,” he declared. He turned to politics, and in 1854 he was elected to the Illinois state legislature. His increasing prominence brought him political friends, including an up-and-coming lawyer who had arrived in Illinois from Kentucky by way of Indiana, Abraham Lincoln.

Lovejoy and Lincoln were also friends with another Maine man gone to Illinois. Elihu Washburne had been born in Livermore, Maine, in 1816, when Maine was still part of Massachusetts. He was one of seven brothers, and one by one, his brothers had all left home, most of them to move west. Israel Washburn Jr., the oldest, stayed in Maine, but Cadwallader moved to Wisconsin, and William Drew would follow, going to Minnesota. (Elihu was the only brother who spelled his last name with an e).

Israel and Elihu were both serving in Congress in 1854 when Congress passed the Kansas-Nebraska Act, overturning the Missouri Compromise and permitting the spread of slavery to the West. Furious, Israel called a meeting of 30 congressmen in May to figure out how they could come together to stand against the Slave Power that had commandeered the government to spread the South’s system of human enslavement. They met in the rooms of Representative Edward Dickinson, of Massachusetts—whose talented daughter Emily was already writing poems—and while they came to the meeting from all different political parties, they left with one sole principle: to stop the Slave Power that was turning the government into an oligarchy.

The men scattered for the summer back to their homes across the North, sharing their conviction that a new party must rise to stand against the Slave Power. In the fall, those calling themselves “anti-Nebraska” candidates were sweeping into office—Cadwallader Washburn would be elected from Wisconsin in 1854 and Owen Lovejoy from Illinois in 1856—and they would, indeed, create a new political party: the Republicans. The new party took deep root in Maine, flipping the state from Democratic to Republican in 1856, the first time it fielded a presidential candidate.

In 1859, Abraham Lincoln would articulate an ideology for the party, defining it as the party of ordinary Americans standing together against the oligarchs of slavery, and when he ran for president in 1860, he knew it was imperative that he get the momentum of Maine men on his side. In those days Maine voted for state and local offices in September, rather than November, so a party’s win in Maine could start a wave. “As Maine goes, so goes the nation,” the saying went.

So Lincoln turned for his vice president to Hannibal Hamlin, who represented Maine in the Senate (and whose father had built the house in which the Washburns grew up). Lincoln won 62% of the vote in Maine in 1860, taking all eight of the state’s electoral votes, and went on to win the election. When he arrived in Washington quietly in late February to take office the following March, Elihu Washburne was at the railroad station to greet him.

I was not a great student in college. I liked learning, but not on someone else’s timetable. It was this story that woke me up and made me a scholar. I found it fascinating that a group of ordinary people from country towns who shared a fear that they were losing their democracy could figure out how to work together to reclaim it.

Happy Birthday, Maine.

[Photo of a Maine Island community after a snowstorm by Buddy Poland]

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Matt Mullenweg Documents a Dastardly Clever Apple Account Phishing Scam

Matt Mullenweg:

One evening last month, my Apple Watch, iPhone, and Mac all lit up with a message prompting me to reset my password. This came out of nowhere; I hadn’t done anything to elicit it. I even had Lockdown Mode running on all my devices. It didn’t matter. Someone was spamming Apple’s legitimate password reset flow against my account — a technique Krebs documented back in 2024. I dismissed the prompts, but the stage was set.

What made the attack impressive was the next move: The scammers actually contacted Apple Support themselves, pretending to be me, and opened a real case claiming I’d lost my phone and needed to update my number. That generated a real case ID, and triggered real Apple emails to my inbox, properly signed, from Apple’s actual servers. These were legitimate; no filter on earth could have caught them.

Then “Alexander from Apple Support” called. He was calm, knowledgeable, and careful. His first moves were solid security advice: check your account, verify nothing’s changed, consider updating your password. He was so good that I actually thanked him for being excellent at his job.

That, of course, was when he moved into the next phase of the attack.

What makes this attack so dastardly is that parts of it are actual emails from Apple. And because the attackers are the ones who opened the support incident, when they called Mullenweg, they knew the case ID from the legitimate emails sent by Apple.

One of the tells that alerted Mullenweg that this was a scam was that he knew he hadn’t initiated any of it, so his guard was up from the start. Another is that the scammer texted him a link pointing to the domain “audit-apple.com” (which domain is now defunct). That domain name looks obviously fake to me. But to most people? Most people have no idea that whatever-apple.com is totally different than whatever.apple.com.

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If not perfect, then this If not perfect, then this


Finalist 3.6

My thanks to Finalist for sponsoring last week at Daring Fireball. Finalist is a remarkable, ambitious, and novel app for iPhone, iPad, and the Mac from indie developer Slaven Radic. It’s a planner — a digital take on traditional paper planners — that (with permission) pulls in your calendars, reminders, and health data. Its motto: “Most productivity apps help you organize tasks. Finalist helps you finish them.”

Finalist first sponsored DF back in December, and I wrote quite a bit about it then. You should read that post. I’ve continued using Finalist, day in, day out, since then. It’s open on my Mac and on my first iPhone home screen. I’m even on the TestFlight beta list, using new builds as Radic releases them. Finalist was good enough back in December that I started relying on it, and it’s gotten even better in the three months since. It’s a great app, period, but it’s really fun to use an app that is getting better so quickly. Radic is cooking with gas. It’s just so obvious, just using it, that Finalist is his own dream app for daily productivity. Here’s a fun one-minute video showing what’s new in version 3.6.

Recent features include subtasks, calendar bookmarks, HealthKit data in Finalist’s journal, and a spoken daily briefing you can trigger from your Lock Screen. You can (and I do) run Finalist alongside the apps you already use. E.g., Finalist hasn’t replaced Fantastical for me — they just work great together because they both show me the same calendar events. Same goes for Apple Reminders. If you took a look back in December, you should check out what’s new. If you haven’t tried Finalist yet, you definitely should. Free trial from the App Store, with both subscription pricing and a one-time lifetime purchase.

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Strong to Severe Thunderstorms Continue Tonight in the East; Early Heat Wave in the West