Finished reading: The Tomb of Dragons by Katherine Addison continues the great Cemeteries of Amalo series. Iβm impressed with how casually and simply such a rich and complex world is created in this series π
Finished reading: The Tomb of Dragons by Katherine Addison continues the great Cemeteries of Amalo series. Iβm impressed with how casually and simply such a rich and complex world is created in this series π
New notebook day!
George is recovering well from recent, minor surgery by sleeping at my feet
π Matt Gurney: How Hollywood screwed with our civic expectations
Why do we assume the same government that is, for instance, struggling to fill potholes in my city, or hire enough nurses in my province, or fix a federal payroll system, is going to be more competent when presented with something totally out of the blue? This flies in the face of all of our lived experiences with government. Itβs a generous assumption of state capacity that is, to put it charitably, unearned.
Finished reading: Blindsight by Peter Watts is an interesting mix of sci-fi, horror, and philosophy. I enjoyed it. Vampires in space!π
π§ I enjoyed Season 7 of Strong Songs and am happy to be a Patreon supporter
Glad itβs Friday
πΆ Some good, new albums that fit well together:
π¨π¦ Gloves Off is a thought provoking series (so far) on how Canada could respond to recent geopolitical developments
I was pleased by Glenn Jenkins' invitation to return to his Program on Investment Appraisal and Risk Analysis at Queenβs University and describe an approach to project appraisal and economic assessment. This is my third year participating and I’m consistently impressed by the quality of questions and level of engagement from the participants.
Download: transport-economics-and-appraisal.pdf
π Optimization Culture is Making Us Fragile
For all that we know about human performance, it is still wildly mysterious. A blackbox algorithm cannot predict how youβll perform. If you think you must have full readiness to perform at your best, then you will leave so many of your best days on the table. It is a fragility mindset that creates a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Absolutely something to be careful about. I know Iβve sometimes been influenced by a poor readiness score and have learned to treat it as a general indicator, rather than prediction.
Finished reading: Outlive by Peter Attia is a comprehensive approach to health. Although we need to be careful about influencer nonsense when it comes to health advice, Attiaβs work is carefully considered and researched. My main takeaways are the importance of strength training, monitoring my protein consumption, continuing to prioritize sleep, and carefully considering mental resiliency π
Tall Trees Muskoka. π
Reflecting on yesterdayβs stomach troubles, I have to consider the deep fried butter tart I had the night before the race. A delicious concoction of a butter tart, wrapped in a cinnamon coated churro, topped with vanilla ice cream. Not traditional triathlon nutrition, but Iβve decided it prevented anything worse from happening, rather than contributing to the trouble.
πββοΈπ΄πββοΈ I do these things because theyβre hard. This was was the hardest yet: ridiculous humidity and some bad nausea on the bike made this one a struggle. 45 minutes slower than my last two attempts and every minute was earned. But, this is likely the one Iβll remember most.
Finished reading: Livesuit is a fun short story in the Captiveβs War series by James S. A. Corey. Based on this and the first book in the series, a promising start π
Prioritizing rest and recovery this week has certainly helped my readiness to train. Great to be back in the green
Family Place Restaurant. π
Race fuel
πββοΈπ΄πββοΈ Iβm always worried that Iβm forgetting something. Pictures like these help, plus a packing list in Apple Notes
George letβs me know when Iβve spent enough time with my phone. Leans right up against me and is not shy about using his paw to push the phone away.
But beyond the stunning breadth of the information demand power, there should be serious concern with how the government has crafted a system that is unprecedented in its secrecy and lack of transparency. Simply put, there will be millions of information disclosures every year and Canadians will be kept in the dark on both an individual basis and in terms of the overall scope of warrantless demands.
There’s a lot going wrong in this bill and it absolutely warrants some serious revisions. I find the provisions that prevent firms from communicating with customers about security vulnerabilities particularly troublesome.
Geist’s Law Bytes podcast has a good summary episode on this bill too.