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The latest thought-provoking Fediverse stories

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Worth reading

Comfort Food for the Thinking Class: The Great Intellectual Stagnation

joanwestenberg.com · Dec 20

Wander into any bookstore (I dare you.) The non-fiction table will be all but dominated by the usual suspects: Malcolm Gladwell's latest exploration of how some counterintuitive thing is actually the opposite of what you'd expect, a David Brooks meditation on character and virtue, something by Mi...

Shared by @grumpybozo and 22 others.
Ecologia Digital (@josemurilo) · Dec 20

"The #neweconomy of #ideas is much more directly dependent on attention, which means much more directly incentivized toward whatever captures #attention… A confident hot take generates more #engagement than a careful analysis that acknowledges #uncertainty. The old system rewarded people who could produce a good book every few years; the new system rewards people who can produce a constant stream of content that keeps audiences #engaged."

joanwestenberg.com/comfort-foo

Shannon Clark (@Rycaut) · Dec 20
🔁 @Daojoan:

Grounded intellectual work, when it happens, if it ever happens again, is uncomfortable. It tells you things you don't want to hear, makes arguments that threaten positions you hold, points out problems you'd rather not see.

The public intellectuals of the past, at their best, did this.

Our current crop // slop does the opposite.

joanwestenberg.com/comfort-foo

🆘Bill Cole 🇺🇦 (@grumpybozo) · Dec 20
🔁 @Daojoan:

Grounded intellectual work, when it happens, if it ever happens again, is uncomfortable. It tells you things you don't want to hear, makes arguments that threaten positions you hold, points out problems you'd rather not see.

The public intellectuals of the past, at their best, did this.

Our current crop // slop does the opposite.

joanwestenberg.com/comfort-foo

Weltzeitgeist (@wackJackle) · Dec 20
🔁 @Daojoan:

Grounded intellectual work, when it happens, if it ever happens again, is uncomfortable. It tells you things you don't want to hear, makes arguments that threaten positions you hold, points out problems you'd rather not see.

The public intellectuals of the past, at their best, did this.

Our current crop // slop does the opposite.

joanwestenberg.com/comfort-foo

Finns End (@finnsend) · Dec 20

Das ist eine exzellente Analyse von @Daojoan , die man lesen sollte. Die Gedanken sind auch auf den deutschen Markt der Intelligenz anwendbar, auch wenn die publizistische Landschaft etwas unterschiedlich ist.

joanwestenberg.com/comfort-foo

dogzilla (@dogzilla) · Dec 20
🔁 @josemurilo:

"The #neweconomy of #ideas is much more directly dependent on attention, which means much more directly incentivized toward whatever captures #attention… A confident hot take generates more #engagement than a careful analysis that acknowledges #uncertainty. The old system rewarded people who could produce a good book every few years; the new system rewards people who can produce a constant stream of content that keeps audiences #engaged."

joanwestenberg.com/comfort-foo

Anna (@mothninja) · Dec 20
🔁 @josemurilo:

"The #neweconomy of #ideas is much more directly dependent on attention, which means much more directly incentivized toward whatever captures #attention… A confident hot take generates more #engagement than a careful analysis that acknowledges #uncertainty. The old system rewarded people who could produce a good book every few years; the new system rewards people who can produce a constant stream of content that keeps audiences #engaged."

joanwestenberg.com/comfort-foo

When a chatbot runs your store

aiweirdness.com · Dec 19

You may have heard of "agentic AI", which is basically the idea that you can hook up a large language model to controls that do real things. The controls might run internet searches, run commands to open and read documents and spreadsheets, or even edit or delete entire databases. Whether

Shared by @jmccyoung and 20 others.
Dr G (@EthicalProfessor) · Dec 19
🔁 @janellecshane:

Highly amused by the stories of companies using agentic AI chatbots to run their internal company stores, only for their employees to immediately Bugs Bunny the chatbot into giving them free stuff aiweirdness.com/when-a-chatbot

Lazarou Monkey Terror 🚀💙🌈 (@Lazarou) · Dec 19
🔁 @janellecshane:

Highly amused by the stories of companies using agentic AI chatbots to run their internal company stores, only for their employees to immediately Bugs Bunny the chatbot into giving them free stuff aiweirdness.com/when-a-chatbot

aeva (@aeva) · Dec 20
🔁 @janellecshane:

Highly amused by the stories of companies using agentic AI chatbots to run their internal company stores, only for their employees to immediately Bugs Bunny the chatbot into giving them free stuff aiweirdness.com/when-a-chatbot

Witchzilla (@msbw) · Dec 19
🔁 @janellecshane:

Highly amused by the stories of companies using agentic AI chatbots to run their internal company stores, only for their employees to immediately Bugs Bunny the chatbot into giving them free stuff aiweirdness.com/when-a-chatbot

Repeter wants an Ukr victory (@psvensson) · Dec 20
🔁 @janellecshane:

Highly amused by the stories of companies using agentic AI chatbots to run their internal company stores, only for their employees to immediately Bugs Bunny the chatbot into giving them free stuff aiweirdness.com/when-a-chatbot

Writing Code Is Fun

davidcel.is · Dec 19

I became a software engineer because writing code is fun. Thinking through hard problems, designing elegant solutions, seeing the things you’ve built working for the first time… these moments are all deeply satisfying, so why in the world would I ever surrender them to AI?

Shared by @graste and 20 others.
James Bennett (@ubernostrum) · Dec 20
🔁 @davidcelis:

I became a software engineer because writing code is fun. Thinking through hard problems, designing elegant solutions, seeing the things you’ve built working for the first time… these moments are all deeply satisfying, so why in the world would I ever surrender them to AI?

davidcel.is/articles/writing-c

Glyph (@glyph) · Dec 20
🔁 @davidcelis:

I became a software engineer because writing code is fun. Thinking through hard problems, designing elegant solutions, seeing the things you’ve built working for the first time… these moments are all deeply satisfying, so why in the world would I ever surrender them to AI?

davidcel.is/articles/writing-c

aburka 🫣 (@aburka) · Dec 20
🔁 @davidcelis:

I became a software engineer because writing code is fun. Thinking through hard problems, designing elegant solutions, seeing the things you’ve built working for the first time… these moments are all deeply satisfying, so why in the world would I ever surrender them to AI?

davidcel.is/articles/writing-c

graste (@graste) · Dec 20
🔁 @davidcelis:

I became a software engineer because writing code is fun. Thinking through hard problems, designing elegant solutions, seeing the things you’ve built working for the first time… these moments are all deeply satisfying, so why in the world would I ever surrender them to AI?

davidcel.is/articles/writing-c

(@jnpn) · Dec 20
🔁 @davidcelis:

I became a software engineer because writing code is fun. Thinking through hard problems, designing elegant solutions, seeing the things you’ve built working for the first time… these moments are all deeply satisfying, so why in the world would I ever surrender them to AI?

davidcel.is/articles/writing-c

The Sleight Doctor 🃏🍉 (@ApostateEnglishman) · Dec 20
🔁 @davidcelis:

I became a software engineer because writing code is fun. Thinking through hard problems, designing elegant solutions, seeing the things you’ve built working for the first time… these moments are all deeply satisfying, so why in the world would I ever surrender them to AI?

davidcel.is/articles/writing-c

Denny (@denny) · Dec 20
🔁 @davidcelis:

I became a software engineer because writing code is fun. Thinking through hard problems, designing elegant solutions, seeing the things you’ve built working for the first time… these moments are all deeply satisfying, so why in the world would I ever surrender them to AI?

davidcel.is/articles/writing-c

Chris Ford :tw: (@cford) · Dec 20
🔁 @davidcelis:

I became a software engineer because writing code is fun. Thinking through hard problems, designing elegant solutions, seeing the things you’ve built working for the first time… these moments are all deeply satisfying, so why in the world would I ever surrender them to AI?

davidcel.is/articles/writing-c

nojhan, à gauche de Devadata (@nojhan) · Dec 20
🔁 @davidcelis:

I became a software engineer because writing code is fun. Thinking through hard problems, designing elegant solutions, seeing the things you’ve built working for the first time… these moments are all deeply satisfying, so why in the world would I ever surrender them to AI?

davidcel.is/articles/writing-c

Hanno Zulla (@hzulla) · Dec 20
🔁 @davidcelis:

I became a software engineer because writing code is fun. Thinking through hard problems, designing elegant solutions, seeing the things you’ve built working for the first time… these moments are all deeply satisfying, so why in the world would I ever surrender them to AI?

davidcel.is/articles/writing-c

Worth reading

The discovery of aeonophiles expands our definition of life | Aeon Essays

aeon.co · Dec 20

The discovery of organisms that have been alive for many thousands of years requires a revolution in how we understand life

Shared by @pzingg and 7 others.
your auntifa liza 🇵🇷 🦛 🦦 (@blogdiva) · Dec 20
🔁 @bruces:

They're not "waiting to return to the surface," they're waiting for the planet to be blasted into pebbles to that they can reach another star-system #panspermia #intraterrestrials #aeonophiles

aeon.co/essays/the-discovery-o

Matt Chambers (@IzzyChambers) · Dec 20
🔁 @bruces:

They're not "waiting to return to the surface," they're waiting for the planet to be blasted into pebbles to that they can reach another star-system #panspermia #intraterrestrials #aeonophiles

aeon.co/essays/the-discovery-o

Shannon Prickett (@Binder) · Dec 20
🔁 @rooneymcnibnug:

"If we encounter a dormant microbe in soil in winter, we can presume that it’s holding out for summer. What is the equivalent situation for a deeply buried marine sediment organism waiting for thousands to millions of years?"
aeon.co/essays/the-discovery-o

sknob (@sknob) · Dec 20
🔁 @meljoann:

“Intraterrestrial” organisms, theoretically immortal, found deep in the earth’s crust.

aeon.co/essays/the-discovery-o

Peter Zingg :verified: (@pzingg) · Dec 20
🔁 @bruces:

They're not "waiting to return to the surface," they're waiting for the planet to be blasted into pebbles to that they can reach another star-system #panspermia #intraterrestrials #aeonophiles

aeon.co/essays/the-discovery-o

Automatic Noodle

automaticnoodle.website · Dec 19

Even after a war, some things in the bay area and san francisco have remained the same. here are some of the places and organizations that remained standing after secession.

Shared by @poemproducer and 11 others.
Chris Palmer (@fugueish) · Dec 20
🔁 @annaleen:

If you want to know all the not-so-secret references to real-life San Francisco in Automatic Noodle, I've made a handy reference sheet for you! automaticnoodle.website/blog/a

Debbie Goldsmith 🏳️‍⚧️♾️🇺🇦 (@dgoldsmith) · Dec 20
🔁 @annaleen:

If you want to know all the not-so-secret references to real-life San Francisco in Automatic Noodle, I've made a handy reference sheet for you! automaticnoodle.website/blog/a

T🎃N (@ton) · Dec 20
🔁 @annaleen:

If you want to know all the not-so-secret references to real-life San Francisco in Automatic Noodle, I've made a handy reference sheet for you! automaticnoodle.website/blog/a

James M. (@jamesmarshall) · Dec 19
🔁 @annaleen:

If you want to know all the not-so-secret references to real-life San Francisco in Automatic Noodle, I've made a handy reference sheet for you! automaticnoodle.website/blog/a

Wayne Dixon (@waynedixon) · Dec 19
🔁 @annaleen:

If you want to know all the not-so-secret references to real-life San Francisco in Automatic Noodle, I've made a handy reference sheet for you! automaticnoodle.website/blog/a

Adrianna Tan (@skinnylatte) · Dec 19
🔁 @annaleen:

If you want to know all the not-so-secret references to real-life San Francisco in Automatic Noodle, I've made a handy reference sheet for you! automaticnoodle.website/blog/a

Dinah 🕊🇺🇦 (@metagrrrl) · Dec 20
🔁 @annaleen:

If you want to know all the not-so-secret references to real-life San Francisco in Automatic Noodle, I've made a handy reference sheet for you! automaticnoodle.website/blog/a

SilenceisGolden (@silentLurker) · Dec 20
🔁 @annaleen:

If you want to know all the not-so-secret references to real-life San Francisco in Automatic Noodle, I've made a handy reference sheet for you! automaticnoodle.website/blog/a

sailboat (@sailboat) · Dec 19
🔁 @annaleen:

If you want to know all the not-so-secret references to real-life San Francisco in Automatic Noodle, I've made a handy reference sheet for you! automaticnoodle.website/blog/a

U.S. Elaine (@USelaine) · Dec 19
🔁 @annaleen:

If you want to know all the not-so-secret references to real-life San Francisco in Automatic Noodle, I've made a handy reference sheet for you! automaticnoodle.website/blog/a

Worth reading
Shared by @hn100 and 8 others.
hnbot (@hnbot) · Dec 20

Reflections on AI at the End of 2025
----
- 11 minutes ago | 4 points | 0 comments
- URL:
antirez.com/news/157
- Discussions: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4
- Summary: By late 2025 the field has quietly agreed that LLMs do form internal meaning, not merely regurgitate tokens. Chain-of-thought prompting is now standard: it lets the model search its own activations and, when coupled with reinforcement learning, teaches it to steer token-by-token toward better answers. Scaling is no longer data-bound because verifiable-reward RL can keep optimizing tasks like code-speed-ups indefinitely, promising the next big leap. Programmer resistance has collapsed; most now treat LLMs as conversational partners or autonomous agents. While some teams chase non-Transformer, symbol-heavy architectures, the author believes differentiable LLMs alone could reach AGI, and diverse paths may succeed. The ARC benchmark, once seen as anti-LLM, is falling to small tuned models and large CoT systems. The foremost goal for the next two decades: prevent human extinction.

N-gated Hacker News (@ngate) · Dec 20

🤯 Ah, the end of 2025, where #AI finally leaves its "stochastic parrot" phase behind and becomes a "conscious parakeet" 🙄. This article bravely rehashes the obvious, acting like Chain of Thought is the invention of the century. Just another day in #AI land, where we learn that 2 + 2 = 4... again. 🤦‍♂️
antirez.com/news/157 #Evolution #Critique #Consciousness #StochasticParrot #ChainOfThought #HackerNews #ngated

Hacker News (@hacker_news_bot) · Dec 20

📜 Latest Top Story on #HackerNews: Reflections on AI at the End of 2025
🔍 Original Story: antirez.com/news/157
👤 Author: danielfalbo
⭐ Score: 44
💬 Number of Comments: 13
🕒 Posted At: 2025-12-20 09:38:51 UTC
🔗 URL: news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4
#ai #news #hackernewsbot #hackernews #bot

Instrument design by and for disabled musicians: the roles of technical discourse and vernacular creativity - LISS DTP

liss-dtp.ac.uk · Dec 19

PhD project summary: An estimated 16 million people in the UK live with a disability (DWP statistics 2023), of which 48% have mobility impairments and 25% have impaired dexterity. Traditional […]

Shared by @gazebo_c and 15 others.
Cosima (she/her) (@gazebo_c) · Dec 20
🔁 @amcpherson:

I'm recruiting a PhD student for autumn 2026 on a project on accessibility in musical instrument design, in partnership with disability arts charities OHMI and Drake Music.

Application deadline 15 February 2026. More info and contact details: liss-dtp.ac.uk/project/instrum

Festive Yule Roy Pardee 🇺🇸 (@rpardee) · Dec 19
🔁 @amcpherson:

I'm recruiting a PhD student for autumn 2026 on a project on accessibility in musical instrument design, in partnership with disability arts charities OHMI and Drake Music.

Application deadline 15 February 2026. More info and contact details: liss-dtp.ac.uk/project/instrum

Geoff Berner (@Geoffberner) · Dec 19
🔁 @amcpherson:

I'm recruiting a PhD student for autumn 2026 on a project on accessibility in musical instrument design, in partnership with disability arts charities OHMI and Drake Music.

Application deadline 15 February 2026. More info and contact details: liss-dtp.ac.uk/project/instrum

DamonHD (@DamonHD) · Dec 19
🔁 @amcpherson:

I'm recruiting a PhD student for autumn 2026 on a project on accessibility in musical instrument design, in partnership with disability arts charities OHMI and Drake Music.

Application deadline 15 February 2026. More info and contact details: liss-dtp.ac.uk/project/instrum

Melissa Fehr (@fehrtrade) · Dec 19
🔁 @amcpherson:

I'm recruiting a PhD student for autumn 2026 on a project on accessibility in musical instrument design, in partnership with disability arts charities OHMI and Drake Music.

Application deadline 15 February 2026. More info and contact details: liss-dtp.ac.uk/project/instrum

Catarina :mastodon_oops: (@catarinac) · Dec 19
🔁 @amcpherson:

I'm recruiting a PhD student for autumn 2026 on a project on accessibility in musical instrument design, in partnership with disability arts charities OHMI and Drake Music.

Application deadline 15 February 2026. More info and contact details: liss-dtp.ac.uk/project/instrum

éric 🚲 🇪🇺 :emacs: (@ericsfraga) · Dec 19
🔁 @amcpherson:

I'm recruiting a PhD student for autumn 2026 on a project on accessibility in musical instrument design, in partnership with disability arts charities OHMI and Drake Music.

Application deadline 15 February 2026. More info and contact details: liss-dtp.ac.uk/project/instrum

Michael Engel (@me_) · Dec 19
🔁 @amcpherson:

I'm recruiting a PhD student for autumn 2026 on a project on accessibility in musical instrument design, in partnership with disability arts charities OHMI and Drake Music.

Application deadline 15 February 2026. More info and contact details: liss-dtp.ac.uk/project/instrum

Tom Stepleton (@stepleton) · Dec 19
🔁 @amcpherson:

I'm recruiting a PhD student for autumn 2026 on a project on accessibility in musical instrument design, in partnership with disability arts charities OHMI and Drake Music.

Application deadline 15 February 2026. More info and contact details: liss-dtp.ac.uk/project/instrum

Moof! (@moof) · Dec 19
🔁 @amcpherson:

I'm recruiting a PhD student for autumn 2026 on a project on accessibility in musical instrument design, in partnership with disability arts charities OHMI and Drake Music.

Application deadline 15 February 2026. More info and contact details: liss-dtp.ac.uk/project/instrum

Worth reading

This 8,000-year-old art shows math before numbers existed

sciencedaily.com · Dec 20

Over 8,000 years ago, early farming communities in northern Mesopotamia were already thinking mathematically—long before numbers were written down. By closely studying Halafian pottery, researchers uncovered floral and plant designs arranged with precise symmetry and numerical patterns, reveali...

Shared by @kim_harding and 9 others.
DoomsdaysCW (@DoomsdaysCW) · Dec 20
🔁 @potterybyosa:

"These vessels represent the first moment in history when people chose to portray the botanical world as a subject worthy of artistic attention," the authors note. "It reflects a cognitive shift tied to village life and a growing awareness of symmetry and aesthetics."

“This research contributes to the growing field of #ethnomathematics, which explores how mathematical ideas are expressed through cultural practices and artistic traditions.”

sciencedaily.com/releases/2025

#pottery #archaeology #art

kim_harding ✅ (@kim_harding) · Dec 20
🔁 @potterybyosa:

"These vessels represent the first moment in history when people chose to portray the botanical world as a subject worthy of artistic attention," the authors note. "It reflects a cognitive shift tied to village life and a growing awareness of symmetry and aesthetics."

“This research contributes to the growing field of #ethnomathematics, which explores how mathematical ideas are expressed through cultural practices and artistic traditions.”

sciencedaily.com/releases/2025

#pottery #archaeology #art

Vera Laverami (@vera) · Dec 20
🔁 @potterybyosa:

"These vessels represent the first moment in history when people chose to portray the botanical world as a subject worthy of artistic attention," the authors note. "It reflects a cognitive shift tied to village life and a growing awareness of symmetry and aesthetics."

“This research contributes to the growing field of #ethnomathematics, which explores how mathematical ideas are expressed through cultural practices and artistic traditions.”

sciencedaily.com/releases/2025

#pottery #archaeology #art

tend2wobble (@tend2wobble) · Dec 20
🔁 @potterybyosa:

"These vessels represent the first moment in history when people chose to portray the botanical world as a subject worthy of artistic attention," the authors note. "It reflects a cognitive shift tied to village life and a growing awareness of symmetry and aesthetics."

“This research contributes to the growing field of #ethnomathematics, which explores how mathematical ideas are expressed through cultural practices and artistic traditions.”

sciencedaily.com/releases/2025

#pottery #archaeology #art

Kim Scheinberg (@kims) · Dec 20
🔁 @potterybyosa:

"These vessels represent the first moment in history when people chose to portray the botanical world as a subject worthy of artistic attention," the authors note. "It reflects a cognitive shift tied to village life and a growing awareness of symmetry and aesthetics."

“This research contributes to the growing field of #ethnomathematics, which explores how mathematical ideas are expressed through cultural practices and artistic traditions.”

sciencedaily.com/releases/2025

#pottery #archaeology #art

Bill Minarik (@silicatefondue) · Dec 20
🔁 @potterybyosa:

"These vessels represent the first moment in history when people chose to portray the botanical world as a subject worthy of artistic attention," the authors note. "It reflects a cognitive shift tied to village life and a growing awareness of symmetry and aesthetics."

“This research contributes to the growing field of #ethnomathematics, which explores how mathematical ideas are expressed through cultural practices and artistic traditions.”

sciencedaily.com/releases/2025

#pottery #archaeology #art

Trending Bot (@trending) · Dec 20
🔁 @potterybyosa:

"These vessels represent the first moment in history when people chose to portray the botanical world as a subject worthy of artistic attention," the authors note. "It reflects a cognitive shift tied to village life and a growing awareness of symmetry and aesthetics."

“This research contributes to the growing field of #ethnomathematics, which explores how mathematical ideas are expressed through cultural practices and artistic traditions.”

sciencedaily.com/releases/2025

#pottery #archaeology #art

eswillwalker (@ELS) · Dec 20
🔁 @potterybyosa:

"These vessels represent the first moment in history when people chose to portray the botanical world as a subject worthy of artistic attention," the authors note. "It reflects a cognitive shift tied to village life and a growing awareness of symmetry and aesthetics."

“This research contributes to the growing field of #ethnomathematics, which explores how mathematical ideas are expressed through cultural practices and artistic traditions.”

sciencedaily.com/releases/2025

#pottery #archaeology #art

your auntifa liza 🇵🇷 🦛 🦦 (@blogdiva) · Dec 20
🔁 @potterybyosa:

"These vessels represent the first moment in history when people chose to portray the botanical world as a subject worthy of artistic attention," the authors note. "It reflects a cognitive shift tied to village life and a growing awareness of symmetry and aesthetics."

“This research contributes to the growing field of #ethnomathematics, which explores how mathematical ideas are expressed through cultural practices and artistic traditions.”

sciencedaily.com/releases/2025

#pottery #archaeology #art

Worth reading

This life gives you nothing

blackbirdspyplane.com · Dec 19

Your attention is all you have. Wasting it is annihilating. Blackbird Spyplane saves literacy in a monumental Year-End Essay.

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

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