11770
Adam

@adam- #11770

off & onchain operations <---> Sharing ideas over at /workflow <---> Problem solving is my jam😎 🎩 seemore.tv/free/fc/adam-
3888 Follower 831 Following
The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function.

- F. Scott Fitzgerald
Fan Token auction incoming. A vote for me is a vote for Kodos...or Kane. Whichever one you find to be more palatable. I'm taxed 20% for your benefit either way
cc @betashop.eth @airstack.eth
Even though I already have skin in the game, participate frequently and have kept most of my moxie within the ecosystem, it looks like I'm forced to launch a token if I'm to be part of this economy going forward. So here I am @betashop.eth prepping to launch. Tried to do this via the main moxie frame, but not sure if this is the right way since it wasn't that clear.
Can't think of a better banner to represent /parenting than the legendary Patagonia baby toss cover, from their 1995 spring catalogue.

Risk, faith, trust, skill. The rollercoaster of parenthood is all right here.
"Man is disturbed not by things, but by the views he takes of them." - Epictetus
"Throughout the decades, MITI’s playbook was to give their domestic champions some money and a popular product. MITI told those companies to reverse-engineer the product and figure out how to make more of it cheaper than anyone else can. Such products would then be sold abroad. This worked well for industrial items like steel or automobiles, but software can already be easily copied.

What makes one software package more successful than another isn't "replication economics" but rather, widely held standards, networks of applications or users, and consumer familiarity."

https://youtu.be/ky1nGQhHTso?feature=shared
Aspiring to live the Murakami arc where after spending a lifetime of doing what I love, I return to my roots and open a jazz bar, while sipping Laphroaig in a slick jacket.
Thinking about Benjamin Franklin's 200-year trust experiment.
*Correction, there are 52 quintillion possible versions of this film. Not the measly million I initially quoted
Still coming down from the experience of seeing the first generative documentary with over a million variations.
I was jotting notes in the dark, knowing that what I was witnessing would never be seen in the same way again.
Even without that aspect, Brian Eno is such an interesting artist that to spend time and see his creative process is worth taking in.
A good middle ground would be if you can batch select a bunch of people/invites and then send/accept based on your own criteria as opposed to an all or nothing option.

Tagging @dwr.eth for possible inclusion in the /warpcast channel
My prediction is that in a week or two channel invites will be seen as the new spam. People will care less about accepting them/ ignore them outright due to volume saturation.

That’s not to say invites aren’t worth accepting, but I see this as the honeymoon period. People will approach them differently sooner than later
Can't post this in the channel I want to, so I guess it's time to embrace my own timeline.

Megalopolis is essentially Coppola's attempt at a live action Satoshi Kon film.

It's a staccato mess, but once I accepted the shit show that it was, I had a really good time watching it jump all over the map.

Pairs well with an edible and an open mind.
"mastery has less to do with pushing leverage points than it does with strategically, profoundly, madly, letting go and dancing with the system."- Dennis Meadows, via Thinking in Systems
Experimenting with Notion's recent charts feature gives off Close Encounter vibes

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZj7gUIO-2k

cc: @limone.eth
As the Biden administration tries to bring chip manufacturing back domestically, it's worth revisiting the lessons US Memories learned when they tried to do the same thing in the late 80's/early 90s
https://youtu.be/2E4qAZW6RYg?si=VcJzso4rTBIchN_4
Reflection is a door to another world, right?
One of the most frustrating aspects of learning an older, established language like SQL is that you have to disregard the advances that have come since. i.e: The ability to link dbs has streamlined the ability to join tables. However, you can't use those advancements in a direct way. You have to use an archaic way to achieve the same outcome. Maybe this is a common gripe when learning a new language, but to those who consider themselves proficient in SQL, how have you modify your approach/tool set to expedite your workflow?

I'm getting more into Tableau and I like how they approach things, but I'm curious to hear what other tools people use to filter, join and surface things from databases?
Over 100 years after his passing, Dostoevsky's only living descendant would take this excerpt to heart, exploiting his namesake to pursue his own ridiculous dream, while leveraging it to bag a white E class Mercedes.

Pawel Pawlikowski captured this absurdity in his film, Dostoevsky's Travels
https://vimeo.com/307839240

Highly recommended