Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas
Understand how much the brain can and cannot change.
Ray Dalio • Principles: Life and Work
Eugenio Culurciello
@culurciello
Computing History
Matt Mower • 5 cards
# scheduling workloads to run on humans
Some computational workloads in human organizations are best "run on a CPU": take one single, highly competent person and assign them a task to complete in a single-threaded fashion, without synchronization. Usually the best fit when starting something new. Comparable to "building... See more
Andrej Karpathyx.comhow to write algorithms that could change their code and get smarter as they develop. We now call this evolutionary programming.
W. Brian Arthur • Complexity Economics: Proceedings of the Santa Fe Institute's 2019 Fall Symposium
the open-source mantra "so fix it!"
Audrey Tang • ⿻ 數位 Plurality: The Future of Collaborative Technology and Democracy
transaction cost theory or new institutional economics.
Cesar Hidalgo • Why Information Grows: The Evolution of Order, from Atoms to Economies
We know that life’s remarkable robustness, in large part, is dependent on variation; systems that suppress or lose their diversity are prone to collapse.
