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When I started blogging again last December I had a backlog of "interesting stuff" to relay. Some of it was interesting at the time, but the interestingness was timeframe specific. Other things are interesting exactly because they provide a point-in-time snapshot. And some things are just interesting!
BTW Indonesia's 280M people are near the top of the third world in most categories. Ahead of China (#1) and India (#2) in many of them. One of those point-in-time things, Sept 2020: VDH: The news as we once knew it is dead. "Why? ... Picture yourself in your 50s in a job where you've spent 30 years working your way to the top, to the cockpit of power … only to discover that you're presiding over a dying industry. The Internet and alternative media are stealing your readers, your advertisers and your top young talent."
Talk about topical, Dec 2020: Matt Ridley: Why mRNA vaccines could revolutionise medicine. Note this article was written before all the Covid vaccines became available in Spring 2021. I remember reading it thinking, hmmm...
timeless, Jan 2021: Matt Ridley: the folly of renewable energy. "If you judge by the images used to illustrate reports about energy, the world now runs mainly on wind and solar power. It comes as a shock to look up the numbers. In 2019 wind and solar between them supplied just 1.5 percent of the world’s energy consumption. Hydro supplied 2.6 percent, nuclear 1.7 percent, and all the rest — 94 percent — came from burning things: coal, oil, gas, wood, and biofuels." Jan 2021: Stephen Wolfram: from Assembly Language to a Nobel Prize. On the calculations which come from Feynman diagrams... Feb 2021: Joshua Newman: how to be lucky. "Most of us think that luck just happens (or doesn't) but everyone can learn to look for the unexpected and find serendipity." I so believe this.
June 2021: Bill Gurley: Customers Love Free Stuff … But That’s Not Your Problem. I love Bill's posts, his vision is truly above the crowd. This was posted at a time of "hot" IPOs, not now, but these times will be back. ---- so yay, we made it halfway from 2020 to today --- July 2021: The Indonesian government announced that they would deliver free telemedicine services for COVID-19 patients with mild symptoms across the country. Via Bercie Mesko, who comments: "It's only possible for them as they have startups that did the hard work."
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