The “I forgot to submit my assignment” dreams have been replaced with “I forgot to submit my benefits enrollment” dreams.
I think text autocomplete is low-grade mind control, so I made a little app to try to demonstrate it. I copied a Google RNN tutorial, and I got to use Svelte for the first time!
Taking God at His Word by Kevin DeYoung
This book convinced me that it would be great* if the Bible were innerrant, infallible, complete, and clear from a basic reading. It did not convince me that it actually is.
* for some people
To Save Everything, Click Here: The Folly of Technological Solutionism by Evgeny Morozov.
The first half of the book covers three points:
Not all problems are simply issues of efficiency. Some “problems” are in fact necessary tensions between contrasting philosophies and are not something technologists should try to erase.
There’s nothing about the structure of “the Internet” or “Technology” that’s prescriptive for how we should set up our societies.
Technologies should be evaluated individually, not lumped together as “the Internet” and declared inevitable and therefore good.
Toward the second half of the book, he drills in on a more specific and interesting proposal. Morosov implores technologists to build technologies that make us think more about the complex structures of the world around us, not less. Most design strives to hide complexity and make the mechanics invisible to the user; Morosov proposes the opposite. We could design lamps and toasters that behave erratically when we are using too much power and parking meters that make us choose what to do with the leftover time. Instead, nudges and gamifications guide us into pre-determined paths and rob us of daily opportunities to consider the collective consequences of our actions.
He gives two examples of that last point: