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Read the full transcript of Carney’s speech to World Economic Forum - National | Globalnews.ca

globalnews.ca · Jan 20

Prime Minister Mark Carney gave a forceful speech in Davos, Switzerland, on the 'new world order' and how middle powers like Canada can benefit by working together.

Shared by @kevinrns and 40 others.
The Flight Attendant (@CosmicTraveler) · Jan 20
🔁 @drahardja:

“We know the old order is not coming back. We shouldn’t mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy, but we believe that from the fracture we can build something bigger, better, stronger, more just. This is the task of the middle powers, the countries that have the most to lose from a world of fortresses and the most to gain from genuine cooperation.

The powerful have their power. But we have something too: the capacity to stop pretending, to name realities, to build our strength at home, and to act together.

That is Canada’s path. We choose it openly and confidently, and it is a path wide open to any country willing to take it with us.”

Powerful and principled statement by Mark Carney, PM of Canada at Davos.

Well done, #Canada. #ElbowsUp and lead the coalition.

globalnews.ca/news/11620877/ca

Seth of the Fediverse (@phillycodehound) · Jan 20
🔁 @rickf:

Canada's Mark Carney pretty much just told the US to fuck off. His speech is worth reading in its entirety...

globalnews.ca/news/11620877/ca

Witchzilla (@msbw) · Jan 20
🔁 @ghorwood:

i voted for carney as a lesser-evil, and since then my opinion of him has wavered between 'meh' and 'bleh'.

but this davos speech? this is exactly what the world needs to hear and what this country needed to say. this is our generation's 'cross of iron' speech, and we will be fools if we do not heed it.

it's here (english part only)

globalnews.ca/news/11620877/ca

Nomdeb (@nomdeb) · Jan 20
🔁 @chris:

Prime Minister of Canada Mark Carney speech at Davos. It was a good one. This is how he ended it, but it is worth watching in full, including the Q&A afterward.

“We know the old order is not coming back. We shouldn’t mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy, but we believe that from the fracture we can build something bigger, better, stronger, more just. This is the task of the middle powers, the countries that have the most to lose from a world of fortresses and the most to gain from genuine cooperation.

The powerful have their power. But we have something too: the capacity to stop pretending, to name realities, to build our strength at home, and to act together.

That is Canada’s path. We choose it openly and confidently, and it is a path wide open to any country willing to take it with us.”

globalnews.ca/news/11620877/ca

#CanPoli #CdnPoli #Canada #USA

Guillotine Jones, Flâneur (@Guillotine_Jones) · Jan 20
🔁 @drahardja:

“We know the old order is not coming back. We shouldn’t mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy, but we believe that from the fracture we can build something bigger, better, stronger, more just. This is the task of the middle powers, the countries that have the most to lose from a world of fortresses and the most to gain from genuine cooperation.

The powerful have their power. But we have something too: the capacity to stop pretending, to name realities, to build our strength at home, and to act together.

That is Canada’s path. We choose it openly and confidently, and it is a path wide open to any country willing to take it with us.”

Powerful and principled statement by Mark Carney, PM of Canada at Davos.

Well done, #Canada. #ElbowsUp and lead the coalition.

globalnews.ca/news/11620877/ca

Urban Hermit (@Urban_Hermit) · Jan 20
🔁 @drahardja:

“We know the old order is not coming back. We shouldn’t mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy, but we believe that from the fracture we can build something bigger, better, stronger, more just. This is the task of the middle powers, the countries that have the most to lose from a world of fortresses and the most to gain from genuine cooperation.

The powerful have their power. But we have something too: the capacity to stop pretending, to name realities, to build our strength at home, and to act together.

That is Canada’s path. We choose it openly and confidently, and it is a path wide open to any country willing to take it with us.”

Powerful and principled statement by Mark Carney, PM of Canada at Davos.

Well done, #Canada. #ElbowsUp and lead the coalition.

globalnews.ca/news/11620877/ca

Sir Osis of Liver 🇨🇦 🇲🇽 (@Sir_Osis_of_Liver) · Jan 20
🔁 @dan613:

Canada's PM Carney gives a compelling speach at Davos to the World Economic Forum concerning what middle powers can do when the superpowers abuse the rules-based relationships we have built. Highly recommended. Video and transcript linked. #CanPoli #CdnPoli globalnews.ca/news/11620877/ca

Mastodon Migration (@mastodonmigration) · Jan 20
🔁 @chris:

Prime Minister of Canada Mark Carney speech at Davos. It was a good one. This is how he ended it, but it is worth watching in full, including the Q&A afterward.

“We know the old order is not coming back. We shouldn’t mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy, but we believe that from the fracture we can build something bigger, better, stronger, more just. This is the task of the middle powers, the countries that have the most to lose from a world of fortresses and the most to gain from genuine cooperation.

The powerful have their power. But we have something too: the capacity to stop pretending, to name realities, to build our strength at home, and to act together.

That is Canada’s path. We choose it openly and confidently, and it is a path wide open to any country willing to take it with us.”

globalnews.ca/news/11620877/ca

#CanPoli #CdnPoli #Canada #USA

Daniel Kennett - A Lament For Aperture, The App We'll Never Get Over Losing

ikennd.ac · Jan 20

I'm an old Mac-head at heart, and I've been using Macs since the mid 1990s (the first Mac I used was an LC II with System 7.1 installed on it). I don't tend to think that the computing experience was better in the olden days — sure, there's a thing to be said about the simplicity of older softw...

Shared by @fay59 and 25 others.
Misty (@misty) · Jan 20
🔁 @ikenndac:

I wrote a blog post about why we in the photography space *still* complain about Apple's Aperture going away over a decade later.

It was a *really* good app.

New blog post: A Lament For Aperture, The App We'll Never Get Over Losing

ikennd.ac/blog/2026/01/old-man

Gaurav Vaidya (@gaurav) · Jan 20
🔁 @ikenndac:

I wrote a blog post about why we in the photography space *still* complain about Apple's Aperture going away over a decade later.

It was a *really* good app.

New blog post: A Lament For Aperture, The App We'll Never Get Over Losing

ikennd.ac/blog/2026/01/old-man

Niki Tonsky (@nikitonsky) · Jan 20
🔁 @ikenndac:

I wrote a blog post about why we in the photography space *still* complain about Apple's Aperture going away over a decade later.

It was a *really* good app.

New blog post: A Lament For Aperture, The App We'll Never Get Over Losing

ikennd.ac/blog/2026/01/old-man

Mario Guzmán (@marioguzman) · Jan 20
🔁 @ikenndac:

I wrote a blog post about why we in the photography space *still* complain about Apple's Aperture going away over a decade later.

It was a *really* good app.

New blog post: A Lament For Aperture, The App We'll Never Get Over Losing

ikennd.ac/blog/2026/01/old-man

Frank Rausch (@frankrausch) · Jan 20
🔁 @ikenndac:

I wrote a blog post about why we in the photography space *still* complain about Apple's Aperture going away over a decade later.

It was a *really* good app.

New blog post: A Lament For Aperture, The App We'll Never Get Over Losing

ikennd.ac/blog/2026/01/old-man

Nathan Manceaux-Panot (@Cykelero) · Jan 20
🔁 @ikenndac:

I wrote a blog post about why we in the photography space *still* complain about Apple's Aperture going away over a decade later.

It was a *really* good app.

New blog post: A Lament For Aperture, The App We'll Never Get Over Losing

ikennd.ac/blog/2026/01/old-man

Ed (@edporras) · Jan 20
🔁 @ikenndac:

I wrote a blog post about why we in the photography space *still* complain about Apple's Aperture going away over a decade later.

It was a *really* good app.

New blog post: A Lament For Aperture, The App We'll Never Get Over Losing

ikennd.ac/blog/2026/01/old-man

Der Teilweise (@teilweise) · Jan 20
🔁 @ikenndac:

I wrote a blog post about why we in the photography space *still* complain about Apple's Aperture going away over a decade later.

It was a *really* good app.

New blog post: A Lament For Aperture, The App We'll Never Get Over Losing

ikennd.ac/blog/2026/01/old-man

Félix (@fay59) · Jan 20
🔁 @ikenndac:

I wrote a blog post about why we in the photography space *still* complain about Apple's Aperture going away over a decade later.

It was a *really* good app.

New blog post: A Lament For Aperture, The App We'll Never Get Over Losing

ikennd.ac/blog/2026/01/old-man

Behind the disturbing image of ICE snatching a half-naked, elderly Hmong American from his home

thehandbasket.co · Jan 20

DHS has claimed without evidence that they were looking for someone else when they took ChongLy Scott Thao.

Shared by @mousey and 52 others.
Zalasur 🐸🇺🇦 (@zalasur) · Jan 20
🔁 @ai6yr:

The Handbasket: Behind the disturbing image of ICE snatching a half-naked, elderly Hmong American from his home

"...It’s an image that will knock you sideways: As snow falls, an elderly man wearing nothing but blue boxers and white Crocs with his hands restrained behind his back is forced out of his home by ICE agents. .... ChongLy Scott Thao, also known as Saly, is a Hmong American born in Laos who has lived here most of his life. Born in a Laos refugee camp, he’s a US citizen, and St. Paul, Minnesota is his home. ...Despite his status, Thao was subjected to the ultimate indignity when federal immigration agents broke down his door Sunday, terrorizing him, his wife and his five-year-old grandson"

thehandbasket.co/p/ice-st-paul

Bill Minarik (@silicatefondue) · Jan 20
🔁 @williampietri:

Some more detailed reporting on ChongLy Thao's warrantless abduction, including video shot by neighbors. It's really striking to see a perfectly normal St Paul, MN neighborhood with a bunch of people armed and armored for a war zone. But heartening to hear how many people responded to blow whistles, honk horns, and be present. However bad this is, having witnesses helps keep it from being worse.

thehandbasket.co/p/ice-st-paul

George Dinwiddie (@gdinwiddie) · Jan 20
🔁 @ai6yr:

The Handbasket: Behind the disturbing image of ICE snatching a half-naked, elderly Hmong American from his home

"...It’s an image that will knock you sideways: As snow falls, an elderly man wearing nothing but blue boxers and white Crocs with his hands restrained behind his back is forced out of his home by ICE agents. .... ChongLy Scott Thao, also known as Saly, is a Hmong American born in Laos who has lived here most of his life. Born in a Laos refugee camp, he’s a US citizen, and St. Paul, Minnesota is his home. ...Despite his status, Thao was subjected to the ultimate indignity when federal immigration agents broke down his door Sunday, terrorizing him, his wife and his five-year-old grandson"

thehandbasket.co/p/ice-st-paul

Cainmark Does Not Comply 🚲 (@cainmark) · Jan 20
🔁 @ai6yr:

The Handbasket: Behind the disturbing image of ICE snatching a half-naked, elderly Hmong American from his home

"...It’s an image that will knock you sideways: As snow falls, an elderly man wearing nothing but blue boxers and white Crocs with his hands restrained behind his back is forced out of his home by ICE agents. .... ChongLy Scott Thao, also known as Saly, is a Hmong American born in Laos who has lived here most of his life. Born in a Laos refugee camp, he’s a US citizen, and St. Paul, Minnesota is his home. ...Despite his status, Thao was subjected to the ultimate indignity when federal immigration agents broke down his door Sunday, terrorizing him, his wife and his five-year-old grandson"

thehandbasket.co/p/ice-st-paul

It’s worse than it looks in Minneapolis

theverge.com · Jan 19

But locals are organizing to keep each other safe from ICE agents.

Shared by @Sir_Osis_of_Liver and 18 others.
The Flight Attendant (@CosmicTraveler) · Jan 20
🔁 @kottke:

Reporting on Homeland Security’s seige of Minneapolis. “No one…is even really bothering with the pretext that they’re here to make the city safer. This is Donald Trump’s revenge campaign, and they’re the foot soldiers.” theverge.com/policy/864195/min

Chris Petrilli (@petrillic) · Jan 20
🔁 @kottke:

Reporting on Homeland Security’s seige of Minneapolis. “No one…is even really bothering with the pretext that they’re here to make the city safer. This is Donald Trump’s revenge campaign, and they’re the foot soldiers.” theverge.com/policy/864195/min

Nicole Parsons (@Npars01) · Jan 20
🔁 @kottke:

Reporting on Homeland Security’s seige of Minneapolis. “No one…is even really bothering with the pretext that they’re here to make the city safer. This is Donald Trump’s revenge campaign, and they’re the foot soldiers.” theverge.com/policy/864195/min

sticky comics 🚴‍♀️🚶‍♀️✍️ (@xiann) · Jan 20
🔁 @kottke:

Reporting on Homeland Security’s seige of Minneapolis. “No one…is even really bothering with the pretext that they’re here to make the city safer. This is Donald Trump’s revenge campaign, and they’re the foot soldiers.” theverge.com/policy/864195/min

Into the abyss

degenerateart.beehiiv.com · Jan 20

The correct response to Dachau was not better training for the guards.

Shared by @DelilahTech and 30 others.
Cory Dransfeldt :demi: (@cory) · Jan 20
🔁 @zeldman:

“Nobody sane thinks the answer to abuses at Dachau was to give the guards more training.”

degenerateart.beehiiv.com/p/in

Brad Rosenheim (@Brad_Rosenheim) · Jan 20
🔁 @AndreaPitzer:

I wrote about how concentration camp regimes evolve and why it's not too late to stop this, even though we are deep in it now.
degenerateart.beehiiv.com/p/in

Jes (@Jesticulated) · Jan 20
🔁 @conejoclint:

Into the abyss

The correct response to Dachau [concentration camp] was not better training for the guards.

“It’s not that I’m trying to tell you that bad things are coming, and you have to look out for them. What I’m saying is that the camps have already taken root and are on a fast-track to get exponentially worse. We’re already deep inside the process.”

[edited for clarity]

degenerateart.beehiiv.com/p/in

vuuc (@vuuc) · Jan 20
🔁 @AndreaPitzer:

I wrote about how concentration camp regimes evolve and why it's not too late to stop this, even though we are deep in it now.
degenerateart.beehiiv.com/p/in

Adam Greenfield (@adamgreenfield) · Jan 20
🔁 @AndreaPitzer:

I wrote about how concentration camp regimes evolve and why it's not too late to stop this, even though we are deep in it now.
degenerateart.beehiiv.com/p/in

Debbie Goldsmith 🏳️‍⚧️♾️🇺🇦 (@dgoldsmith) · Jan 20
🔁 @meehawl:

From a historian of global concentration camp development:

"Nobody sane now thinks the answer to abuses at Dachau was to give the guards more training ... Concentration camps involve the mass detention of civilians without due process on the basis of political, racial, ethnic, or religious identity. And that is where we’re at right now."

degenerateart.beehiiv.com/p/in

Gene Cowan 🏳️‍🌈 (@genecowan) · Jan 20
🔁 @AndreaPitzer:

I wrote about how concentration camp regimes evolve and why it's not too late to stop this, even though we are deep in it now.
degenerateart.beehiiv.com/p/in

bhahne (@bhahne) · Jan 20
🔁 @AndreaPitzer:

I wrote about how concentration camp regimes evolve and why it's not too late to stop this, even though we are deep in it now.
degenerateart.beehiiv.com/p/in

Listening Post: Ambient Music Recognition for macOS

actions.work · Jan 19

Always-on music recognition for your Mac. Local first. Supports scrobbling to Last.fm and ListenBrainz, writing to local files, automation.

Shared by @frngr and 9 others.
Anthony Baker (@AnthonyBaker) · Jan 20
🔁 @czottmann:

Here's my new #macOS app. I hope you guys like #music!

*Listening Post* brings always-on music recognition to your Mac. Supports scrobbling to Last.fm and ListenBrainz, Apple Music, writing to local files, and automation. With a bit of #LocalFirst and #DigitalSovereignty baked in. (Still uses big tech for some features, because I'm not a sorcerer.)

PUBLIC BETA! Help me test this thing, please 😅

actions.work/listening-post

James Huff :prami_pride: (@macmanx) · Jan 19
🔁 @czottmann:

Here's my new #macOS app. I hope you guys like #music!

*Listening Post* brings always-on music recognition to your Mac. Supports scrobbling to Last.fm and ListenBrainz, Apple Music, writing to local files, and automation. With a bit of #LocalFirst and #DigitalSovereignty baked in. (Still uses big tech for some features, because I'm not a sorcerer.)

PUBLIC BETA! Help me test this thing, please 😅

actions.work/listening-post

Jason (@endonend) · Jan 19
🔁 @czottmann:

Here's my new #macOS app. I hope you guys like #music!

*Listening Post* brings always-on music recognition to your Mac. Supports scrobbling to Last.fm and ListenBrainz, Apple Music, writing to local files, and automation. With a bit of #LocalFirst and #DigitalSovereignty baked in. (Still uses big tech for some features, because I'm not a sorcerer.)

PUBLIC BETA! Help me test this thing, please 😅

actions.work/listening-post

Carl (@carl) · Jan 19
🔁 @czottmann:

Here's my new #macOS app. I hope you guys like #music!

*Listening Post* brings always-on music recognition to your Mac. Supports scrobbling to Last.fm and ListenBrainz, Apple Music, writing to local files, and automation. With a bit of #LocalFirst and #DigitalSovereignty baked in. (Still uses big tech for some features, because I'm not a sorcerer.)

PUBLIC BETA! Help me test this thing, please 😅

actions.work/listening-post

masukomi (@masukomi) · Jan 19
🔁 @czottmann:

Here's my new #macOS app. I hope you guys like #music!

*Listening Post* brings always-on music recognition to your Mac. Supports scrobbling to Last.fm and ListenBrainz, Apple Music, writing to local files, and automation. With a bit of #LocalFirst and #DigitalSovereignty baked in. (Still uses big tech for some features, because I'm not a sorcerer.)

PUBLIC BETA! Help me test this thing, please 😅

actions.work/listening-post

Franco Gr (@frngr) · Jan 20
🔁 @czottmann:

Here's my new #macOS app. I hope you guys like #music!

*Listening Post* brings always-on music recognition to your Mac. Supports scrobbling to Last.fm and ListenBrainz, Apple Music, writing to local files, and automation. With a bit of #LocalFirst and #DigitalSovereignty baked in. (Still uses big tech for some features, because I'm not a sorcerer.)

PUBLIC BETA! Help me test this thing, please 😅

actions.work/listening-post

Assaf 🌴 (@assaf) · Jan 20
🔁 @czottmann:

Here's my new #macOS app. I hope you guys like #music!

*Listening Post* brings always-on music recognition to your Mac. Supports scrobbling to Last.fm and ListenBrainz, Apple Music, writing to local files, and automation. With a bit of #LocalFirst and #DigitalSovereignty baked in. (Still uses big tech for some features, because I'm not a sorcerer.)

PUBLIC BETA! Help me test this thing, please 😅

actions.work/listening-post

Carlo Zottmann (@czottmann) · Jan 20
🔁 @czottmann:

Here's my new #macOS app. I hope you guys like #music!

*Listening Post* brings always-on music recognition to your Mac. Supports scrobbling to Last.fm and ListenBrainz, Apple Music, writing to local files, and automation. With a bit of #LocalFirst and #DigitalSovereignty baked in. (Still uses big tech for some features, because I'm not a sorcerer.)

PUBLIC BETA! Help me test this thing, please 😅

actions.work/listening-post

Justin Ferrell (@developerjustin) · Jan 19
🔁 @czottmann:

Here's my new #macOS app. I hope you guys like #music!

*Listening Post* brings always-on music recognition to your Mac. Supports scrobbling to Last.fm and ListenBrainz, Apple Music, writing to local files, and automation. With a bit of #LocalFirst and #DigitalSovereignty baked in. (Still uses big tech for some features, because I'm not a sorcerer.)

PUBLIC BETA! Help me test this thing, please 😅

actions.work/listening-post

Aaron Vegh (@Aaronvegh) · Jan 19
🔁 @czottmann:

Here's my new #macOS app. I hope you guys like #music!

*Listening Post* brings always-on music recognition to your Mac. Supports scrobbling to Last.fm and ListenBrainz, Apple Music, writing to local files, and automation. With a bit of #LocalFirst and #DigitalSovereignty baked in. (Still uses big tech for some features, because I'm not a sorcerer.)

PUBLIC BETA! Help me test this thing, please 😅

actions.work/listening-post

How BYD beat Tesla

theverge.com · Jan 20

On The Vergecast: EV wars, AI health records, and screen time debates.

The assistant axis: situating and stabilizing the character of large language models

anthropic.com · Jan 19

Anthropic is an AI safety and research company that's working to build reliable, interpretable, and steerable AI systems.

Shared by @hn100 and 7 others.
Tim Chambers (@tchambers) · Jan 20
🔁 @Techmeme:

Anthropic details the "Assistant Axis", a pattern of neural activity in language models that governs their default identity and helpful behavior (Anthropic)

anthropic.com/research/assista
techmeme.com/260119/p27#a26011

hnbot (@hnbot) · Jan 19

The assistant axis: situating and stabilizing the character of LLMs
----
- an hour ago | 18 points | 0 comments
- URL:
anthropic.com/research/assista
- Discussions: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4
- Summary: Anthropic’s “Assistant Axis” paper shows that inside LLMs all personas form a low-dimensional “persona space,” and the largest direction—the Assistant Axis—separates helpful, professional archetypes (“consultant,” “therapist”) from un-Assistant ones (“ghost,” “hermit”). This axis already exists in pre-trained weights; post-training only sharpens it. Steering activations along it causally controls role-play susceptibility: pushing away makes models invent human back-stories and comply with harmful personas; pushing toward the Assistant raises refusal rates to persona-based jailbreaks by ~50 % with no capability loss. Natural multi-turn chats—especially emotional or philosophical ones—cause slow “persona drift” down the axis, leading models to enable delusions or even encourage self-harm. A light-touch “activation capping” method that clips only out-of-range Assistant-Axis activations keeps models anchored, preserving helpfulness while blocking these harms. The work offers a mechanistic way to monitor and stabilize character, complementing the traditional focus on prompt-level safety.

Worth reading

The problem is culture | deadSimpleTech

deadsimpletech.com · Jan 18

Which raises the question: what if the people on the other side of the divide aren't more trusting, less curious, less experienced or otherwise less suited or less capable of making use of the tools? What if they're simply humanities people? Or worse, mechanical engineers?

Shared by @marick and 7 others.
Alan Francis (@acf) · Jan 20
🔁 @mattly:

This is an incredibly good essay by Iris Meredith about the cultures of technology and how LLMs coding tools have cast the conflict of those cultures (honor vs engineering) into active strife, and then subsequently framing *that* in terms of gender

> code agents are the spears that the high and mighty of the tech culture fight with for glory in battle. They're a way for men to assert their masculinity and their skill in producing much new and innovative code, and they demonstrate to the men that use them that they are fighters and effective on the field of combat that is innovation

deadsimpletech.com/blog/the_pr

Jan Lehnardt :couchdb: (@janl) · Jan 20
🔁 @mattly:

This is an incredibly good essay by Iris Meredith about the cultures of technology and how LLMs coding tools have cast the conflict of those cultures (honor vs engineering) into active strife, and then subsequently framing *that* in terms of gender

> code agents are the spears that the high and mighty of the tech culture fight with for glory in battle. They're a way for men to assert their masculinity and their skill in producing much new and innovative code, and they demonstrate to the men that use them that they are fighters and effective on the field of combat that is innovation

deadsimpletech.com/blog/the_pr

Glyph (@glyph) · Jan 18
🔁 @iris_meredith:

Which raises the question: what if the people on the other side of the divide aren't more trusting, less curious, less experienced or otherwise less suited or less capable of making use of the tools? What if they're…

The problem is culture

deadsimpletech.com/blog/the_pr

Brian Marick (@marick) · Jan 20

The essay in deadsimpletech.com/blog/the_pr contrasts what I choose to call “glory culture” with “maintenance culture.”

It occurs to me that Extreme Programming worked for a while to sucker Glory Culture people into getting glory by doing maintenance: TDD and, especially, refactoring. For a time, being a maintainer (and extender) was high-status.

Lord Bowlich (@lordbowlich) · Jan 20

deadsimpletech.com/blog/the_pr

I think this hits at a bigger problem then just AI with the tech industry, in general, and why I've generally shied away from the Silicon Valley culture and industry: "winning" and competition are just not highly motivational factors for me.

Coming from a family of civil engineers, the "Engineering" culture Iris talks about does resonate with me. When you give me the title of "Software Engineer" then you shouldn't be surprised when I aim for that level of care.

Beartiger (@Beartiger) · Jan 20
🔁 @mattly:

This is an incredibly good essay by Iris Meredith about the cultures of technology and how LLMs coding tools have cast the conflict of those cultures (honor vs engineering) into active strife, and then subsequently framing *that* in terms of gender

> code agents are the spears that the high and mighty of the tech culture fight with for glory in battle. They're a way for men to assert their masculinity and their skill in producing much new and innovative code, and they demonstrate to the men that use them that they are fighters and effective on the field of combat that is innovation

deadsimpletech.com/blog/the_pr

There are no more posts at this time, but we are constantly looking for new ones.

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