Mostly, I Write – Telegram
Mostly, I Write
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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
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Tutto sulla metropolitana di New York. Denso e poco spettacolare. Fondamentale, però. (E, per chi fosse interessato, sono a New York)

Money quote: "From the original 28 stations built in Manhattan and opened on October 27, 1904, the subway system has grown to 472 stations, most of which were built by 1940. Their design represents three distinct styles since two private companies – the Interborough Rapid Transit Company (IRT) and the Brooklyn-Manhattan Transit Corporation (BMT) – and the city-owned Independent Rapid Transit Railroad (IND), built them. The more ornate IRT and BMT stations were largely open by 1928, while the newer IND, which mostly opened between 1932 and 1948, used a more streamlined, Machine-Age design. The primary difference among the three types of stations is platform lengths. IRT stations have platforms that are generally 525 feet long; most BMT platforms are around 615 feet long, and some IND platforms are 660 feet."

http://web.mta.info/nyct/facts/ffsubway.htm
Storia (triste) di un giornalista scientifico e della sindrome da affaticamento cronico che lo ha azzerato, pur non essendo una malattia, secondo la scienza americana.

Money quote: “For a man who had once churned out breaking news stories in minutes, it had taken four days, with frequent breaks, to compose the 1600-word piece”

https://www.theatlantic.com/amp/article/409534/
Viviamo tutti all’ombra della crisi di dieci anni fa. Ma pare che molti economisti non siano riusciti a cogliere l’occasione per far evolvere i propri strumenti interpretativi. Non hanno ancora capito come e perché sia successo quel che è successo.

Money quote: “To lots of people, it seems obvious that the 2008 crisis was long in the making — the product of years of financial and regulatory folly. In general, the notion that economic booms cause busts, instead of being random unrelated events — an idea advanced by the maverick economist Hyman Minsky — seems to have much more currency beyond the ivory tower than within it.”

https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2018-07-29/what-economists-still-don-t-get-about-2008-crisis
La stampa, oggi
A quanto pare c’è una distribuzione di Linux con una interfaccia che fa la differenza. Ma c’è sempre il solito problema dietro: la mancanza di coerenza.

Money quote: "There is a very real problem in the GNU/Linux ecosystem but it’s not the App Menu in Gnome 3. The problem is lack of consistency. Or maybe, more precisely, a culture that celebrates lack of consistency as a feature, confusing it with “choice”.

Beautiful, consistent defaults are not mutually exclusive with choice. Choice is about having the option of diverging from the defaults, not whether or not those defaults mandate a certain cultural cohesion or consistency."

https://ar.al/2018/07/26/popos-18.04-the-state-of-the-art-in-linux-on-desktop/
Una analisi molto interessante del mercato del lavoro americano, che ha raggiunto la quasi occupazione ma a prezzo di una sistematica precarizzazione dei lavoratori. Insomma, a piena occupazione non ha fatto seguito un innalzamento dei salari (per la ricerca di nuovi lavoratori) ma una loro eccessiva possibile mobilità.

Money quote: “The typical American worker now earns around $44,500 a year, not much more than what the typical worker earned in 40 years ago, adjusted for inflation. Although the US economy continues to grow, most of the gains have been going to a relatively few top executives of large companies, financiers, and inventors and owners of digital devices.

America doesn’t have a jobs crisis. It has a good jobs crisis”

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/jul/29/us-economy-workers-paycheck-robert-reich
C’è una vera e propria epidemia di narcisismo collettivo e c’è un nuovo libro, Selfie, che racconta quel che succede negli Usa. Il tema è rilevante se non altro per l’impatto della cultura americana. La domanda però è un’altra: da noi chi racconta queste cose? Chi ci aiuta a guardarci da fuori per capirci meglio?

Money quote: “Storr, a British novelist and journalist, has previously written about human credulity and how the stories we tell ourselves about the world color our beliefs about what’s true. A book like Selfie seems like a departure from this, but it’s not. This, too, is a book about beliefs and their consequences. And it’s not merely a snapshot of internet culture; it’s really a survey of the history of individualism in the Western world, and how it contrasts with the more community-minded cultures in the East.”

https://www.vox.com/science-and-health/2018/7/19/17518086/selfie-will-storr-book-psychology-west
Il mondo dei colori. E soprattutto dei loro nomi. Come “orange”, che in inglese è sia colore che frutto. Ma quando nasce? Purtroppo la nostra Accademia della Crusca non è più in grado (se mai lo è stata) di parlare a dei lettori più giovani dei novecentenni suoi abituali fruitori.

Money quote: “Orange, however, seems to be the only basic color word for which no other word exists in English. There is only orange, and the name comes from the fruit. Tangerine doesn’t really count. Its name also comes from a fruit, a variety of the orange, but it wasn’t until 1899 that “tangerine” appears in print as the name of a color—and it isn’t clear why we require a new word for it. This seems no less true for persimmon and for pumpkin. There is just orange. But there was no orange, at least before oranges came to Europe.”

https://lithub.com/color-or-fruit-on-the-unlikely-etymology-of-orange/
Un editor di codice molto semplice ma nient’affatto banale, che lavora con il Python ed è pensato per chi impara: bambini e non solo. Io con il Python ci sto giocando e trovo Mu ottimo pure per uno zuccone come me.

La frase portatrice sana di valore di questa breve meteora di contenuto su Mostly, I Write, è una citazione che appartiene ad Alan Kay, coioè a una generazione precedente a chi ha fatto questo editor, ma ha ispirato gli autori di Code with Mu.

Money quote: “It’s not a fake version of math. It’s kind of like little league, or even T-ball. In sports they do this all the time. In music, they do it all the time. The idea is, you never let the child do something that isn’t the real thing—but you have to work your ass off to figure out what the real thing is in the context of the way their minds are working at that developmental level.”

https://codewith.mu/
Non so se avete presente i fumetti di Julia Evans, ma sono spettacolari e informativi (su Linux, riga di comando, etc). Adesso sono anche testo universitario. Anche da noi https://jvns.ca/zines/
Parlare in modo critico e cospiratorio di grandi multinazionali del farmaco è come fare gol a porta vuota un mercoledì mattina quando gli avversari sono ancora a casa loro. Però ogni tanto ci vuole. Perché dopotutto capire che il business delle grandi multinazionali de farmaco è avere un pubblico di malatici cronici dipendenti un giorno ci farà capire che l’approccio stile cartello di Medellín all’industria farmaceutica è profondamente da ripensare.

Money quote: “In a private report leaked to news outlets in April 2018, the Goldman Sachs analysts caution against investments in pharmaceutical or biotechnology companies aiming to develop outright cures, and cite Harvoni as a case study. It’s a simple point to make – if profit is your goal, then a product that eradicates its own demand might not be a wise investment”

https://aeon.co/essays/will-medicine-ever-recover-from-the-perverse-economics-of-drugs
Oggi con i social media non è più possibile...
Uno degli effetti della capillarità di internet è la possibilità di connettere le persone. Tutte le persone. E scoprire cose nuove. Ad esempio che, visto da vicino, nessuno è normale.

Money quote: “Every day, millions of people around the world ask Google some variation of the question, “Am I normal?” “

https://medium.com/inc./yale-research-confirms-what-youve-always-suspected-nobody-is-normal-7653dee70b49
La rivoluzione di Condé Nast International e la trasformazione digitale.

Money quote: “This summer, when Condé Nast announced it was merging the United States and international versions of its magazine Condé Nast Traveler onto a new single platform, and that it would be overseen not from its birthplace in New York, but from London, fashion and media heads were turned on both sides of the Atlantic.

After all, the world of the United States publisher and its flagships Vogue, Vanity Fair and GQ had always remained resolutely aloof from its international versions. What could the Traveler decision portend?”

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/09/14/style/conde-nast-international-wolfgang-blau-vogue-runway.html
3D Touch, tempo e risorse sprecate per Apple? - il mio articolo per Macity

Money quote: "È presente sui nuovi iPhone Xs e iPhone Xs Max ma non sull’iPhone Xr. E potrebbe essere il primo segnale che stia scivolando fuori dalle grazie di Tim Cook. Parliamo del 3D Touch, il costoso e complesso meccanismo per dare una dimensione in più al gesto di toccare lo schermo registrando la pressione di chi lo tocca."

https://www.macitynet.it/bye-bye-3d-touch/
Verrà il caos per la troppa acqua e verrà il caos per la troppa poca. E arriverà in modo subdolo e strisciante. Almeno, così ci insegna la storia di Città del Capo.

Money quote: "“The purpose of all this (mis)information is clear: shifting blame from government,” reads an op-ed posted to the Water Crisis Coalition website shortly after the 50-liter household limit was passed by the local government. The Coalition asserted that “in fact, all tiers of Government is complicit through lack of foresight and mismanagement of our water resources.” Through a series of intense protests and heated confrontations with officials in the summer, members of the group stressed that a mobilization of citizens on the order of the old anti-apartheid movement would be required to create the political change necessary to secure the water future of the Western Cape and South Africa. A common refrain in their rallies, marches, and street arguments with Democratic Alliance politicians, the Coalition’s slogan is “water for all or the city must fall.”"

https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2018/09/cape-south-south-africa-water-crisis/569317/