🐢 George meets snow

Finished reading: A Gathering of Shadows by V. E. Schwab is a fun second book of a great series. I’m looking forward to the next oneπŸ“š

πŸ”— Cross-border Calvinball - Paul Wells

Careful what you wish for. Five minutes ago everyone was calling for a β€œTeam Canada” approach to dealing with Donald Trump. Unfortunately our team would make the Bad News Bears look like Navy SEALs.

Good observations on Canada’s responses, so far, to Trump’s tariff threats

πŸ”— Apple Intelligence in iOS 18.2: A Deep Dive into Working with Siri and ChatGPT, Together

I’m aligned with Viticci here:

I think empowering LLMs to be β€œcreative” with the goal of displacing artists is a mistake, and also a distraction – a glossy facade largely amounting to a party trick that gets boring fast and misses the bigger picture of how these AI tools may practically help us in the workplace, healthcare, biology, and other industries.

I could use the help with reducing busywork and letting me focus on the creative part. That’s what I’m looking forward to

George enjoys the fresh air, even at high speeds

After using the new Reeder for a couple of months I’m going to stick with it.

I like having all of my sources (RSS, Micro.blog, Mastodon, Bluesky, and podcasts) consolidated into one feed with easy gestures to tag as “read later” or open in a native app. The recent addition of folders was helpful, as I’ve created an “Attention” folder for anything I really don’t want to miss. Everything else is part of the river of updates and I don’t worry about completion.

One issue with the consolidation is that I’m following people across multiple services and seeing duplicate posts. I’ve been standardizing to their Micro.blog timelines, when available. This fragmentation across services is a common complaint and I expect I’ll be experimenting with different solutions. Now that we can so easily cross-post, we also need to manage our conversations. Recent updates to Micro.blog have been really helpful for this.

🚴 I’ve been having fun on Zwift

The most productive thing I’ll do all week: Organized the giant box of cables by taking out anything we no longer need, had no idea what is was for, or already had at least three backups. The photo is of the discard pile

A tangled pile of various electronic cables and chargers is spread out on a surface.

🎧 20 album covers that shaped my musical preferences

Last month, I posted a series of album covers for music that shaped my preferences. The gimmick was that there was no context or explanation, just an album cover. Now, I’d like to provide a few notes. As part of the overall framing, these are influential albums for me. They aren’t all necessarily my favourite albums by these artists or ones that I still listen to frequently. Rather, what I listen to and enjoy now, are strongly connected to these albums.

Continue reading β†’

Finished reading: I really enjoyed The Farthest Shore by Ursula K. Le Guin. The Earthsea series is very good πŸ“š

πŸƒβ€β™‚οΈ Simultaneously ridiculous, inspiring, and intriguing

πŸ”— The Problem with Sci-Fi Body Armor // Bret Devereaux

I want to focus on rigid science fiction armors because they offer an interesting lens to consider their design: how to armor a human body in a rigid substance is anΒ exceedinglyΒ solved problem: quite a few cultures have tackled this particular problem with a lot of energy and ingenuity, attempting to balance protection, mobility and weight. And the β€œproblem with sci-fi body armor” begins with the fact that most of these futuristic β€˜hardsuits’ utilize little of any of the design language of those efforts.

Finished reading: Meditations for Mortals by Oliver Burkeman is a great companion to Four Thousand Weeks (my favourite non-fiction book of 2022). I followed the author’s suggestion and read a chapter a day to help the ideas percolate πŸ“š

πŸƒβ€β™‚οΈ New running shoe day!

Finished reading: Fire Exit: A Novel by Morgan Talty is a good book about the importance of knowing your family’s stories πŸ“š

My son and I enjoyed listening to Ryan Holiday elaborate on the importance of stoicism for everyday life.

A promotional poster for "Ryan Holiday: Live in Toronto - The Stoic Life" event on November 20, 2024, at Elgin Theatre.

A fun Mindscape episode with Brandon Ogbunu on Fitness Seascapes and the Course of Evolution

πŸ”— My Experiment to Eliminate Read-It-Later Backlog Stress

Every so often, I audit every information source I’m subscribed to. I ask three simple questions I picked up from the late Jim Rohn:

  1. Who am I allowing to speak into my life?
  2. What effect is that having on me?
  3. Is that ok?

There are a lot of things I subscribed to a long time ago that I just never bothered to unsubscribe to. And every once in a while, I get annoyed and ask myself, β€œWhy am I still consuming this?”

Good advice. Obvious? Perhaps, though we often need reminders to do what’s good for us.

🎧 Having switched back to Albums (again) for music, I’m discovering what a mess my Apple Music library has become. I’ve got duplicate tracks within albums, duplicate albums, incorrect metadata, and all sorts of nonsense. Really tempting to just delete my entire music library and start over!

πŸͺ“ We had great fun at last night’s Axe Pancreatic Cancer event. We started the event ten years ago to raise awareness and funds, after my Mom’s short battle with the disease. So gratifying and amazing to see what the event has become, especially under the stewardship of Pancreatic Cancer Canada.

Four people are smiling and posing together indoors with string lights and a netted background.An axe is embedded in a wooden target with colored rings.