Author: robert.adlington
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Will American soft power triumph through AI? – Marginal REVOLUTION
They reflect Western notions of rationality, discourse, and objectivity—even if they sometimes fall short in achieving those ends. Their understanding of “what counts as winning an argument” or “what counts as a tough question to answer” stems from the long Western traditions, starting with ancient Greece and the Judeo-Christian heritage. They will put on a…
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Mario Vargas Llosa, giant of Latin American literature, dies aged 89 | Mario Vargas Llosa | The Guardian
Nobel laureate, a star of the international boom in Latin American literature, also once ran for president in Peru — Read on www.theguardian.com/books/2025/apr/14/mario-vargas-llosa-dies-aged-89-cause-of-death
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Stevens: a hackable AI assistant using a single SQLite table and a handful of cron jobs
The design is refreshingly simple considering how much it can do. Everything works around a single memories table. A memory has text, tags, creation metadata and an optional date for things like calendar entries and weather reports. — Read on simonwillison.net/2025/Apr/13/stevens/
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Why not inquire together more? – Marginal REVOLUTION
I find that “inquiring together” works best when you are traveling together, and confronted with new questions. They can be as mundane as “do you think the two people at that restaurant table are on a first date or not?” From the point of view of the observers, the inquiry is de novo. And the…
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Writing C for curl
Daniel Stenberg maintains curl – a library that deals with the most hostile of environments, parsing content from the open internet – as 180,000 lines of C89 code. — Read on simonwillison.net/2025/Apr/8/writing-c-for-curl/
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Stop syncing everything
Stop syncing everything — Read on simonwillison.net/2025/Apr/8/stop-syncing-everything/
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My 1979 trip to Oxford and London – Marginal REVOLUTION
The biggest thing I learned from Madsen is that behind each view is a human being who has counterarguments. That may sound deeply stupid, but so many of our most important learnings take that form, namely emotionally internalizing something that ought to be obvious, and thus developing better habits of thought. — Read on marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2025/04/my-1979-trip-to-oxford-and-london.html
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Horseless intelligence | Ned Batchelder
I’m not sure we have a consensus understanding of what “think” means in this context. Airplanes don’t fly in the same way that birds do. Automobiles don’t run in the same way that horses do. The important thing is that they accomplish many of the same tasks. OK, so AI doesn’t think the same way…
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A quote from Colin Fraser
Slop is about collapsing to the mode. It’s about information heat death. It’s lukewarm emptiness. — Read on simonwillison.net/2025/Mar/28/colin-fraser/
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Stab a Book, the Book Won’t Die — by Craig Mod
though a body is still while reading, the mind is active, telepathy is happening, and a sense of self-betterment and hope pervades as we turn the final page. Browsing Netflix is an endless sensation of falling forward into ever more content. Previews auto-play. As soon as one episode in a series ends, the next begins…