Results for “assorted links”
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Saturday assorted links

1. “In sports, South Korean women generally outnumber men in the stands.” (NYT)

2. Why don’t people talk about fat-tailed sheep more?

3. China-Africa donkey trade wars? (NYT)  Donkey nationalism!

4. “Roosevelt fixed his VP mistake.

5. New Oliver Kim Substack, he is an economist from Berkeley, first piece is on public housing.

6. Small towns building statues to fictional characters.

Thursday assorted links

1. Funny and rude map of Brazil.

2. Did Silicon Valley drive the stagnation problem?

3. Kind > nice.

4. Noah reviews Power and Progress.

5. Caribbean reading list: “You can judge your progress by continually listening to Lee Perry‘s music. If you can comprehend why his music best represents English Caribbean culture, then you are on your way.”

6. Zvi on restaurant types.

7. New Yorker profile of Vaclav Smil.

Wednesday assorted links

1. AI-generated advice doesn’t help lesser performers as much as you might think: data from chess.

2. Incels are slightly left of center on average.

3. How AI is changing the internet (WSJ).  And here is Consensus, which summarizes scientific papers for you.

4. Why isn’t solar scaling in Africa?

5. Counties with the highest life expectancy in the United States.

6. Four individual Beatles movies are coming out, I predict Ringo’s will be best.

Monday assorted links

1. YouTube interview with Brad Mehldau.  Very good.

2. How much can embryonic selection boost IQ?

3. Ukraine drone update.  And Master and Margarita movie is a big hit in Russia (NYT).  Do you recall the final scene of the novel?

4. Cowen’s Second Law.  Good thing there is a replication crisis.

5. Groq — blinding speed, I say bullet chess for LLMs!  Here is one possible explanation for the speed.

6. Drone calculates GPS coordinates without a signal?

Friday assorted links

1. Get feedback on your podcast (not to mention your date!) in real time.

2. “Rare” earths are suddenly not so rare in Wyoming (WSJ).  “Never underestimate the elasticity of supply!”

3. Inside a prison in El Salvador.  And The Telegraph on Bukele.

4. Bad to be bullied.

5. Political donations crowd out charitable donations.

6. Sora and Bishop Berkeley.

7. Marius Schwartz podcast (with transcript) on the Robinson-Patman Act, which sadly is being resurrected by the FTC.

Thursday assorted links

1. Steph Curry full court tunnel shot.

2. Thinking about fire risk (NYT).

3. FTC upset at Coke and Pepsi for offering too-low prices to Walmart.

4. A recent survey on sex differences in intelligence, and here.

5. Markets in everything pay 42k to streak at the Super Bowl.

6. The NYC Print Fair (NYT).

7. Carlson (not Carlsen!) prefers the Russian grocery store.  And he doesn’t like U.S. dollar stores either.

8. Zvi on Gemini.

Wednesday assorted links

1. Profile of Samotsvety forecasting team.

2. Cornered markets in everything: “An auction of the tattooed skin of an Austrian performance artist has been cancelled after all 12 pieces were bought by a collector for “a seven-figure sum” ahead of the event.”

3. Some dating bounties are now at 100k (NYT).  “He is polyamorous now, so the bounty will be paid out to the person who introduces him to his long-term primary partner.”

4. Good Henry Farrell post about Hayek and Mill and women and game theory.

5. Ross D.: “Only elites can keep populism alive.” (NYT)

6. “One study by the German Economic Institute (IW) found the army had been underfunded relative to Nato standards by at least €394bn between 1990 and the early 2020s.” (FT)

Monday assorted links

1. Speculative speculations on how consciousness emerges.

2. The new, forthcoming Neal Stephenson.

3. What Michael Nielsen suggests I ask him.

4. Cousins are disappearing.  I have (had?) four of them?

5. “People in the meeting later told others in frustration that his winding process and irritability were making it more difficult to reach decisions about the border.”  Brutal throughout.

6. Argentina’s political gender gap is widest among young people.

7. Four different Super Bowl ads incorporated UFO themes.  As I once heard from a member of the U.S. military: “Ten years from now, everyone will believe in either demons or aliens.”

Sunday assorted links and stuff

1. Lookism in sentencing decisions.

2. An autonomous vehicle was set on fire by a crowd in San Francisco.  In some alternate universe, a small drone would emerge from the burning vehicle and strike them all down.

3. Have you noticed that Michelle Obama was, less than 24 hours ago, up to #3 in the betting markets for likelihood of being the next U.S. President?  She was at about 7%.  Now it is Gavin Newsom who is #3 at about ten percent.  At the same time, the NYT Editorial page, other MSM sources, and Hillary Clinton all seem to be turning on Biden, on the issue of age of course.  I would not place too much emphasis on that seven percent number, or that ten percent number, as I suspect there is private information at work here — either private information that Biden is toast, or private information that he isn’t toast.  The problem is I don’t know which.  Still, this is a live issue.

It is also a good test of public intellectuals.  Obviously, the issue is not just about Biden’s current competency (which I cannot judge — articulateness is overrated!), but also a) how the public perceives him, b) how his staff and other countries perceive him, and c) how matters will be four to five years from now, when he is still President, if he is still President.  (Start by reading Shakespeare on political leadership.)  If you’re defending Biden, for reasons related to your expected value calculations, I hope at least you are being honest with yourself about your Straussianism here.  But please do add to your calculations the notion that the American public is pretty fed up with this kind of response from our mainstream political institutions.

One possible lesson here is that our political establishment really cannot coordinate on making needed changes.  The other possible lesson is that they can.  I am prepared for Bayesian updates, as my status quo assessments by necessity will be disturbed.

4. Susie Essman is a comic genius (NYT).

5. A three-minute clip on how various top chess players walk into a tournament entrance.  Can you guess who shows up last?