Mostly, I Write – Telegram
Mostly, I Write
2.06K subscribers
480 photos
6 videos
3 files
9.29K links
Storie e pensieri suoi e di altri, raccolti da Antonio Dini http://www.antoniodini.com
Per contatti su Telegram: @antoniodini
Per iscriversi alla newsletter Mostly Weekly: https://tinyletter.com/MostlyIWrite
Download Telegram
Alcuni tipi di dolore cronico possono essere di origine psicologica. E la cura non è chimica

Money quote: “After weaning himself off the opioid Vicodin and feeling like he had exhausted every medical option, Golson turned to a book that described how pain could be purely psychological in origin. That ultimately took a pain psychologist, a therapist who specializes in pain — not a physician — to treat the true source: his fearful thoughts. Realizing that psychological therapy could help “was one of the most profoundly surprising experiences of my life,” Golson says. No doctor he ever saw “even hinted my pain might be psychogenic,” meaning pain that’s psychological in origin.”

https://www.vox.com/science-and-health/2018/5/17/17276452/chronic-pain-treatment-psychology-cbt-mindfulness-evidence
Se vivete nell’Unione europea, provate a collegarvi a USA Today. Il quotidiano americano, per evitare problemi con la GDPR, ha creato una versione low tech del suo sito, senza tracker e javanoscript vari. Fila via che sembra un missile. Averne...

https://eu.usatoday.com
Perché ci sono poche donne che scrivono codice, spiegato da una donna che scrive codice

Money quote: “Compared to almost any other industry, women are underrepresented in technology. Only 18% of undergrad computer science majors are women, women hold 25% of technical roles at software companies, and 16% of tech companies are founded by women. Since software engineering is central to modern technology, people worry that the serious gender disparity sets us up for an unbalanced future.”

https://www.kapwing.com/blog/a-female-engineers-opinion-on-fewer-women-in-tech/
Questo tecnologo, Justin Garrison, ha scritto un libro per O’Reilly, che è uno dei maggiori editori di libri di tecnologia. Era il suo primo libro e ne racconta la dinamica e le vicissitudine con dedizione quasi ingenua. Mentre Mark Twain riteneva che gli editori fossero i peggiori banditi, è evidente che sono il banco del casinò: vincono sempre loro.

Money quote: “Post production took about a month to complete and then the book went off for printing. At the same time it was posted on Safari Books Online and immediately available. We each received 6 copies of the book in the mail shortly after it was available for sale.

All in all I worked from Feb — Oct for roughly 5 nights a week at 2–3 hours per night. I also worked about 3 weekends non-stop when a draft or final edits were due. Roughly I’d say I worked about 500 hours total. That was only my time and doesn’t include Kris’. I was lucky to have a co-author to share the load.”

https://medium.com/@rothgar/the-economics-of-writing-a-technical-book-689d0c12fe39
Il New Yorker racconta la storia della vera e unica rivista per hacker: “2600”. Una rivista di carta che va avanti da trent’anni e che vi consiglio di leggere, prima o poi (su archive. org qualcosa si trova).

Lo so, era una cosa da consigliare per il fine settimana, perché è una bella lettura. Ma voi la salvate su pocket o instapaper e il gioco è fatto, no?

Money quote: “2600—named for the frequency that allowed early hackers and “phreakers” to gain control of land-line phones—is the photocopier to Snowden’s microprocessor. Its articles aren’t pasted up on a flashy Web site but, rather, come out in print. The magazine—which started as a three-page leaflet sent out in the mail, and became a digest-sized publication in the late nineteen-eighties—just celebrated its thirtieth anniversary. It still arrives with the turning of the seasons, in brown envelopes just a bit smaller than a 401k mailer.

“There’s been now, by any stretch of the imagination, three generations of hackers who have read 2600 magazine,” Jason Scott, a historian and Web archivist who recently reorganized a set of 2600’s legal files, said. Referring to Goldstein, whose real name is Eric Corley, he continued: “Eric really believes in the power of print, words on paper. It’s obvious for him that his heart is in the paper.” (That love affair comes with a price: earlier this year, 2600 was in danger of closing after a distributor failed to pay the magazine. The case is still in court.)”

https://www.newyorker.com/tech/elements/print-magazine-hackers
Se l'esercizio è quello di conquistarsi un pubblico, e nell'epoca del narcisismo preso sul serio certo che lo è, allora forse la strategia migliore è essere autentici e darsi una propria voce

Money quote: "Listen, future content creators of the world: strike the word “content” from your vocabulary. Write it on a post-it note, douse it in kerosene and set that bitch ablaze. You’re not here because you dream of one day stuffing the “Top Posts” section of the Medium newsletter. You’re here because you dream of creating pretty things that serve a purpose. Those bro-flakes are teaching you how to speak. I’m going to teach you how to fucking sing."

https://writingcooperative.com/where-my-writing-voice-comes-from-178af4e1b5e3
4,5 megabyte in 62.500 schede perforate. USA, 1955.
Sul come si scrive un libro, se a penna o con il computer

Money quote: "Ultimately, you will have to decide the best way for you to write a novel. I’ve experienced both and I will say that I type my novels directly into the computer now."

https://writingcooperative.com/writing-a-novel-longhand-b1e1a0d450e2
Una coppia di comici americani praticamente sconosciuta da noi, "Tim and Eric". Deliranti. Bellissimi. Da cercare, dopo aver letto l'intervista.

Money quote: "A show filled with hair snacks and too-tight shorts may not sound all that hilarious on the page. Off the page, maybe even less so. But the secret to Tim and Eric’s comedy is in the details. It’s not so much what their characters are saying, but the vacant look in their eyes, the extended silences, their clumsy attempts at sincerity. Even at its most bizarre, there’s something very human about Awesome Show’s cast of eccentrics and weirdos. There’s a frailty behind the madness that only becomes more evident the closer you dare look."

https://www.believermag.com/issues/200809/?read=interview_tim_and_eric
Facile facile, un giochino per rilassarsi. Sì, sì...

Money quote: "3 o'clock is the strange puzzle game where you try to figure out who or what killed the Canderwalt family. This game will take you through a 15 minute journey in the house where it happened. You will be able to point and click through the entire story, but there's a catch! You must uncover what happened by doing the crime yourself! Will you be able to solve the mystery?"

http://www.mind-circus.org
Forwarded from MacchiaChannel
La storia di Anna Delvey, l’influencer miliardaria che stregò vip, potenti, multimiliardari e mezza Manhattan distraendo tutti spostando sempre gli stessi pochi soldi come in un gioco delle tre carte, riuscendo così per qualche anno a pranzare nei migliori ristoranti e dormire nei migliori hotel, raccontata da un lungo pezzo del New York Magazine da non perdere.

Link: http://bit.ly/2L3oeWc
GDPR
In Papua Nuova Guinea sono usciti da Facebook tutti insieme (per un mese). Me lo segnala il poeta residente R.R.Corsi.

Money quote: "The government aims to use the month-long ban to analyse how Facebook is being used and prosecute those breaching the country's 2016 cyber-crime law.

Mr Basil told the country's Post-Courier: "The time will allow information to be collected to identify users that hide behind fake accounts, users that upload pornographic images, users that post false and misleading information.""

http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-44290012?SThisFB
È uno di quegli articoli geniali e idioti al tempo stesso. Ma tutta la categoria dell'auto-aiuto è costruita così: acqua fresca e gocce di limone. Ti fregano con il limone, ma poi ti vendono sostanzialmente acqua fresca.

In particolare, i suggerimenti su come leggere un libro al giorno - ma poi perché leggere un libro al giorno? - vanno dall'idiota al geniale. Come da premessa, insomma.

Money quote: "Don’t start your reading marathon with a caffeinated beverage, unless you absolutely feel like you must. Save it for when you really start to drag and need a pick me up. It’s like a race in the “critically-acclaimed” film The Fast and the Furious: if you hit the nitrous too early, you’ll crash and you won’t win this race."

Money quote: "Naps vs. Coffee: Which Is Better When You're Exhausted?"

https://lifehacker.com/how-to-read-an-entire-book-in-a-single-day-1749070044
Seneca fra tutti è uno quelli che ha studiato di più la morte, come peraltro ha predicato costantemente. È al centro della vita, fa parte di noi, è oltretutto un punto di arrivo inevitabile e, nel caso dei consiglieri di gente come Caligola, Claudio e Nerone, è meglio abituarsi all'idea che ti possa toccare in qualsiasi momento. (Il Lamphams Quarterly si dimostra ogni numero fatto sempre meglio)

Money quote: "“Study death always,” Seneca counseled his friend Lucilius, and he took his own advice. From what is likely his earliest work, the Consolation to Marcia (written around AD 40), to the magnum opus of his last years (63–65), the Moral Epistles, Seneca returned again and again to this theme. It crops up in the midst of unrelated discussions, as though never far from his mind; a ringing endorsement of rational suicide, for example, intrudes without warning into advice about keeping one’s temper, in On Anger. Examined together, Seneca’s thoughts organize themselves around a few key themes: the universality of death; its importance as life’s final and most defining rite of passage; its part in purely natural cycles and processes; and its ability to liberate us, by freeing souls from bodies or, in the case of suicide, to give us an escape from pain, from the degradation of enslavement, or from cruel kings and tyrants who might otherwise destroy our moral integrity."

https://www.laphamsquarterly.org/roundtable/study-death-always
Argomentando la liceità delle tasse, c'è un commentatore di Aeon che è andato letteralmente fuori di testa

Money quote: "In addressing the question of whether taxation is theft, it is important to distinguish two senses of ‘theft’: legal and moral. In 18th-century North America, it was possible to ‘own’ a slave, in the legal sense of ownership. If someone deprived me of my slave in order to give that slave liberty, then this constituted ‘theft’ in the legal sense. But of course the laws underpinning slavery were morally abhorrent, and hence few these days would class liberating a slave as ‘theft’ in any moral sense. Conversely, we can have cases of moral theft that are not legal theft. The laws of Nazi Germany enabled the authorities to seize the property of Jews who had been deported; although strictly speaking legal, such actions constituted ‘theft’ in a moral sense."

https://aeon.co/essays/if-your-pay-is-not-yours-to-keep-then-neither-is-the-tax
La morte degli album, ancora

Money qoute: "Jeremy Skaller, who produced Jay Sean's No. 1 hit "Down" and is also a manager at The Heavy Group, cites technology as a major factor behind the death of the LP. Thanks to Spotify, Pandora, Google Play and the dozens of other streaming services available, consumers don't have to commit to buying an entire album to hear the tracks that strike their curiosity."

http://toofab.com/2017/09/22/7-reasons-the-album-is-dead-fergie-visual-album-double-duchess-beyonce-lemonade-one-republic/