Ratings by sethherr

1,380 Matching Ratings

Rated ↑ Article

Plea deal for driver accused of DUI crash that killed cyclist is unjust

The proposed one-year sentence for a driver accused of killing SF cyclist Ethan Boyes in a DUI crash is a shocking injustice, writes Gabriella Wong. #Vision zero

2024-3-15 11:36am SFGATE Gabriella Wong 1,000 words

Rated 2024-5-14 8:33am

Selling 'Ghost in the Shell'

Plus: animation news.

2024-5-5 8:58pm Animation Obsessive Animation Obsessive Staff 4,000 words

Rated 2024-5-14 8:36am

The Hidden-Pregnancy Experiment

Jia Tolentino on an experiment in which she tried to hide her pregnancy from her phone and on how we are increasingly trading our privacy for a sense of security. #Parenthood #Pregnancy #Surveillance

2024-5-4 3:00am The New Yorker Jia Tolentino 2,000 words

Rated 2024-5-14 8:38am

lori's blog - Why I Lost Faith in Kagi

d-shoot.net

Rated 2024-5-14 8:40am

The Berkeley Software Distribution

UNIX is always litigious

2024-2-4 6:32pm Abort Retry Fail Bradford Morgan White 7,000 words

Rated 2024-5-14 8:44am

A Social History of Jell-O Salad

Shaped by the rise of home economics, the industrialization of the food system, World War II, and changing expectations about women's labor, the Jell-O salad—the wobbling jewel of domestic achievement—can teach us about U.S. life in the 20th century as few foods can.

2015-8-19 2:00am Serious Eats Sarah Grey 3,000 words

Rated 2024-5-14 8:44am

Is Justin Timberlake the pop star anyone wants?

Justin Timberlake’s resurfaced scandals involving Janet Jackson and Britney Spears have soured his image. Can he pull off a comeback with Everything I Thought It Was? #Culture #Music

2024-3-14 4:30am Vox Kyndall Cunningham 2,000 words

Rated 2024-5-14 8:45am

All Aboard the Bureaucracy Train—Asterisk

The United States has the most expensive transportation infrastructure in the world. That’s because we refuse to learn from experts, other countries, and our own history.

asteriskmag.com 5,000 words

Rated 2024-5-14 8:45am

Spontaneous Pneumothorax

Spontaneous pneumothorax refers to the abnormal collection of gas in the pleural space between the lungs and the chest wall. Spontaneous pneumothorax occurs without an obvious etiology such as trauma or iatrogenic causes. Spontaneous pneumothorax can be classified as either primary or secondary. Primary spontaneous pneumothorax (PSP) occurs when the patient does not have a history of the underlying pulmonary disease, whereas secondary spontaneous pneumothorax (SSP) is associated with a...

2023-7-24 12:00am PubMed Central (PMC) 2,000 words

Rated 2024-5-14 8:46am

Rails is Not Your Application

Background: The Beginnings of My Obsession with Application Architecture and Domain Modelling Last year I was involved in my most complex Ru...

blog.firsthand.ca 1,000 words

Rated 2024-5-14 11:14am

Think of emails as views delivered through SMTP (DHH)

dhh.dk

Rated 2024-5-14 11:15am

Deconstructing the Monolith: Designing Software that Maximizes Developer Productivity

Designing Software that Maximizes Developer Productivity. Learn how Shopify took its code base from monolith to modular monolith.

Shopify 3,000 words

Rated 2024-5-14 11:24am

How to get 7th graders to smoke

OR: "fuzzy, wet, and unfalsifiable"

2024-5-14 7:01am Experimental History Adam Mastroianni 4,000 words

Rated 2024-5-15 9:15am

Scrabble, Anonymous

“As was the case with alcohol, my first and last thoughts of the day are usually Scrabble related (RELATED anagrams: ALTERED, REDEALT, ALERTED, TREADLE).”

2024-5-15 1:03pm The Paris Review Brad Phillips 3,000 words

Rated 2024-5-20 10:24am

Third Time: a better way to work — LessWrong

HOW CAN you be more productive? Instead of half-working all day, it’s better to work in focused stints, with breaks in between to recover. …

2022-1-7 1:15pm lesswrong.com bfinn 7,000 words

Rated 2024-5-20 10:25am

DeviantArt’s Downfall Is Devastating, Depressing, and Dumb

Once a vibrant platform for artists, DeviantArt is now buckling under the weight of bots and greed—and spurning the creative community that made it great. #Art #Artificial Intelligence #Internet #Law

2024-5-16 8:30am Slate Nitish Pahwa 3,000 words

Rated 2024-5-20 10:57am

The Lunacy of Artemis

For the first time since the 1960's, it looks doubtful whether the US space agency is even capable of getting us to the Moon.

idlewords.com 8,000 words

Rated 2024-5-20 10:58am

Can You Read a Book in a Quarter of an Hour?

Anthony Lane writes about Blinkist, one of a number of phone apps that aim to boil down entire books into synopses lasting as little as ten minutes.

2024-5-20 3:00am The New Yorker Anthony Lane 4,000 words

Rated 2024-5-29 3:49pm

The Trials and Tribulations of the Boymom

The New Yorker

Rated 2024-5-29 4:53pm

How 3M Discovered, Then Concealed, the Dangers of Forever Chemicals

3M found that many of its products, including Scotchgard and Scotchban, leached toxic chemicals called PFAS. Sharon Lerner reports on why the company kept making them.

2024-5-20 3:00am The New Yorker Sharon Lerner 7,000 words

Rated 2024-5-30 2:40pm

Colorado’s Bold New Approach to Highways — Not Building Them

The state has made it harder to widen highways, and transportation officials are turning their eyes to transit. #Climate Change #Colorado #Global Warming #Transportation

2024-5-31 2:00am The New York Times Megan Kimble 3,000 words

Rated 2024-6-1 5:50pm

The Missionary in the Kitchen

I longed for purpose, meaning, the sense of being found. Then, one summer, I sort of was, Clare Sestanovich writes. #College #Religion

2024-6-1 3:00am The New Yorker Clare Sestanovich 2,000 words

Rated 2024-6-5 9:09pm

UI Density

I speak and write about design, front-end code, leadership, and (occasionally) math.

matthewstrom.com 3,000 words

Rated 2024-6-14 5:17pm

How the Guinness Brewery Invented the Most Important Statistical Method in Science

The most common test of statistical significance originated from the Guinness brewery. Here’s how it works

2024-5-25 5:00am Scientific American Jack Murtagh ($) 2,000 words

Rated 2024-6-14 5:18pm

Parable of the Sofa

ongoing by Tim Bray 2,000 words

Rated 2024-6-14 5:19pm

How Online Privacy Is Like Fishing

News that Microsoft caught hackers using its generative AI tools prompted security experts to guess that it was spying on users. Bruce Schneier and Barath Raghavan argue that the gradual erosion of expectations of privacy has a lot in common with the gradual destruction of fish populations in the ocean. #Microsoft #Privacy

2024-6-3 4:00am IEEE Spectrum Barath Raghavan, Bruce Schneier 3,000 words

Rated 2024-6-14 5:20pm

Why I retired from the tech crusades

When Ruby on Rails was launched over twenty years ago, I was a twenty-some young programmer convinced that anyone who gave my stack a try would accept its universal superiority for solving The Web Problem. So I pursued the path of the crusade, attempting to convert the unenlightened masses by the edge of a pointed argument. And for a l...

world.hey.com 1,000 words

Rated 2024-6-14 5:21pm

#AskTamara: Which mugs are Lead-free? How can I tell if my mug has unsafe levels of Lead? Which mugs do you use?

For those new to this website: Tamara Rubin is a multiple-federal-award-winning independent advocate for childhood Lead poisoning prevention and consumer goods safety, and a documentary filmmaker. She is also a mother of Lead-poisoned children (two of her sons were acutely Lead-poisoned in 2005). Since 2009, Tamara has been using XRF technology (a scientific method ... Read More about #AskTamara: Which mugs are Lead-free? How can I tell if my mug has unsafe levels of Lead? Which mugs do...

2019-12-28 11:17am Lead Safe Mama, LLC Tamara 10,000 words

Rated 2024-6-14 5:22pm

Silicon Valley’s Best Kept Secret: Founder Liquidity

Ask most venture-backed founders why they get 10x more equity than employee #1, 100x more equity than employee #5, and 1000x more equity than employee #15, and you'll get the same answer: "I'M TAKING SO MUCH RISK, IT'S SO HARD TO START A COMPANY, I MADE A BIG MOVE!!!" And then you'll ask, "but why are you yelling?” The narrative of the founder's risk is a cornerstone of Silicon Valley's mythology. Founders are celebrated for leaving stable jobs...

2024-6-8 5:35pm Stefan Theard 1,000 words

Rated 2024-6-14 5:22pm

Why Is Everyone on Steroids Now?

Across the internet and in gyms everywhere, body-modifying drug use has become ubiquitous, effective and... normal. Can this really be a good thing?

2024-6-5 5:00am GQ Rosecrans Baldwin 5,000 words

Rated 2024-6-14 5:23pm

Can Turning Office Towers Into Apartments Save Downtowns?

Nathan Berman has helped rescue Manhattan’s financial district from a “doom loop” by carving attractive living spaces from hulking buildings that once housed fields of cubicles. D. T. Max reports.

2024-4-29 3:00am The New Yorker D. T. Max 5,000 words

Rated 2024-6-14 5:24pm

How to be More Agentic

On a supposedly difficult thing

2024-1-10 12:43pm Useful Fictions Cate Hall 2,000 words

Rated 2024-6-14 5:26pm

Yes, Social Media Really Is a Cause of the Epidemic of Teenage Mental Illness

Two major problems with a review in Nature

2024-4-9 7:55am After Babel Jon Haidt 4,000 words

Rated 2024-6-14 5:26pm

What Does an "Analyst" Do?

Capital Gains

Rated 2024-6-14 5:30pm

Not Your Childhood Library

Paige Williams writes that an ambitious experiment in Minneapolis is changing the way librarians work with their homeless patrons and challenging how we share public space. #Homelessness #Libraries #Minnesota

2024-5-23 3:00am The New Yorker Paige Williams 4,000 words

Rated 2024-6-14 5:50pm

An Unexpected Turn in the Evangelical Culture Wars

A proposal to ban Southern Baptist women from serving as pastors failed a two-thirds-majority vote, signalling that the far right has not yet consolidated its control of the Church. #Christianity #Religion

2024-6-12 1:52pm The New Yorker Eliza Griswold 2,000 words

Rated 2024-6-14 6:02pm

Opinion | What Have We Liberals Done to the West Coast?

Infected with ideological purity, the West Coast is focused more on intentions than on oversight and outcomes. #California #Homelessness #Mental Health #Oregon #Politics

2024-6-15 4:00am The New York Times Nicholas Kristof ($) 2,000 words

Rated 2024-6-21 9:07am

UUID Benchmark War

This month's PGSQL Phriday #015 topic is about UUIDs, hosted by Lætitia Avrot. Lætitia has called for a debate. No, no, no. I say let's have an all-out war. A benchmark war. I have decided to orchestrate a benchmark war between four different methods of storing a primary key: use a text field to store…

2024-2-3 3:54pm Ardent Performance Computing 3,000 words

Rated 2024-6-24 7:55pm

Social. Private. Open. Pick three. – Jake Zimmerman

jez.io

Rated 2024-6-24 8:02pm

It’s Time for Progressives to Recommit to Academic Freedom

The same justifications we’ve used to restrict conservative speech are being used to silence us on Palestine. We need a different approach.

2024-6-25 6:47am The Nation Tascha Shahriari-Parsa ($) 3,000 words

Rated 2024-6-27 10:31am

Opinion | I Study Homelessness. I Wish More Places Looked Like This Shelter.

Matthew Desmond takes you to a shelter designed with residents in mind. #Homelessness #Jobs #Pennsylvania #Poverty

2024-6-26 2:02am The New York Times Matthew Desmond, Jillian Weinberger ($) 1,000 words

Rated 2024-6-27 10:31am

Breath of God: Tripping on Xenon Gas

The more you learn about xenon gas the stranger it gets.

2023-7-13 8:55am Tripsitter Tripsitter, Justin Cooke 🍄 2,000 words

Rated 2024-6-27 10:31am

I Ate Poison Oak To Try to Gain Immunity. Here’s What Happened. - WSJ

The Wall Street Journal

Rated 2024-7-9 9:53am

I Ate Poison Oak To Try to Gain Immunity. Here’s What Happened. - WSJ

archive.ph

Rated 2024-7-9 9:56am

Reliable Sources: How Wikipedia Admin David Gerard Launders His Grudges Into the Public Record

The feud between basilisk-obsessed Wikipedia admin David Gerard and everyone from heterodox news sources to the right wing to rationalists,

2024-7-10 7:31am Tracing Woodgrains 15,000 words

Rated 2024-7-16 1:18pm

Slate Star Codex and Silicon Valley’s War Against the Media

Gideon Lewis-Kraus writes about the tension between Scott Alexander, of the rationalist blog Slate Star Codex, and the New York Times. #Journalism #New York Times #Silicon Valley #Social Media

2020-7-9 8:10am The New Yorker Gideon Lewis-Kraus 5,000 words

Rated 2024-7-16 2:10pm

(20) TracingWoodgrains on X: "In conversations about intelligence, people often take the @charlesmurray approach of emphasizing that intelligence doesn't determine a person's worth. I find myself a bit dissatisfied when I chew on this. It's true, but I suspect it's a bit too easy. Specifically: while I https://t.co/jzo9YEsWRX" / X

x.com 1,000 words

Rated 2024-7-16 3:24pm

Advantages of incompetent management

yosefk.com

Rated 2024-7-16 5:09pm

How to Do Politics: The Political Capital Savings Plan

Get capital, do politics

2023-3-22 10:56am Maximum New York Daniel Golliher 4,000 words

Rated 2024-7-17 10:42pm

Summer Camp and Parenting Panics

Jay Caspian Kang on summer camps’ promises of social improvement, and the reason that upper-middle-class families can’t conceive of an unscheduled moment. #Parenting

2024-5-24 3:00am The New Yorker Jay Caspian Kang 1,000 words

Rated 2024-7-20 12:55pm