When I follow a link to X or another social network, I inevitably see people slinging abuse at one another in the comments, and think: You’re still doing this? After all these years? I left Twitter a decade ago to escape all the sniping. I guess the people still doing it must like it. I can’t even.

Hard to think of a cooler nickname in all of history than the Finnish farmer-turned-sniper known as the White Death.

Why Am I Left-Handed? | Natalie Wolchover:

Being left-handed is mostly no big deal. It is annoying how ink smudges under my hand. And I did once have to jump out of the way of a circular saw that I was holding backward; indeed, left-handers have more accidents while operating machinery. That aside, overall, I enjoy being left-handed. It grants entry into a smug little club, whose members โ€” 10% of the human population โ€” carry the secret knowledge that we are overrepresented among U.S. presidents, famous artists and musicians, and top athletes.

But our difference hasnโ€™t always been welcome. My 91-year-old Texan grandmother remembers starting out left-handed โ€ฆ before being forced to switch, a common practice in much of the world until about the 1970s.ย 

I too was pressed to use my right hand to write, though if my memories are accurate I was originally wrote and drew with either hand, indiscriminately. But itโ€™s noteworthy that all the things that people notice (writing, throwing, swinging a baseball bat, shooting a basketball) I do right-handed, but the things they donโ€™t notice (combing my hair, brushing my teeth, shooting pool, drawing a bow) I do left-handed. I am not, strictly speaking, ambidextrous, because the things I do one way I canโ€™t do the other: handling a bow and arrow right-handed is extremely awkward for me, as is throwing lefty. In any case, Wolchoverโ€™s essay wonderfully explores the difficult question its title asks.ย 

My hope for the World Cup final: that it also ends 6-4, with four goals for Messi and goals by six different Spaniards. โšฝ๏ธ ๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡ท ๐Ÿ‡ช๐Ÿ‡ธ

Dear Me, England - by Ian Leslie:

To be a longstanding England supporter is to glimpse life inside Nietzcheโ€™s concept of eternal recurrence: โ€œThis life as you now live it and have lived it, you will have to live once more and innumerable times more; and there will be nothing new in it, but every pain and every joy and every thought and sigh and everything unutterably small or great in your life will have to return to you, all in the same succession and sequence.โ€

The pattern with which weโ€™re most familiar, having seen it in tournament after tournament, is the siege defence. Itโ€™s as if our players are unconsciously drawing on collective memories of Mafeking and Dunkirk; on stories of an island people repelling invaders. The wonder is that each generation of players seems to absorb the English script and to perform it convincingly.

About five years ago I stopped using Overcast as my podcast player because it would not play more than one show at a time. I could set up a queue, but it would not play the queue. (Many users were complaining about this at the time.) I just downloaded it again to give it a try andโ€ฆ It will only play one show at a time. (Many users are still complaining about this.) I really donโ€™t want to use Apple Podcasts because it defaults to promoting crappy shows it likes rather than just letting me see my own libraryโ€ฆ but I may be stuck with it.

Revised this post to point out that the most crucial difference between Thomas Pynchon and Terrence Malick is that the former has been on The Simpsons while the latter hasn’t โ€” but hey, Terry, it’s not too late!

WSJ:

Vibe slop happens when coders replace the hard work of designing and testing a system with the shortcut of prompting AI to whip it up โ€ฆ and the resulting software wonโ€™t stand the test of time. Itโ€™s become a big enough problem that the worldโ€™s main repository of open-source code โ€” GitHub โ€” has instituted new policies and features to combat it. [โ€ฆ]ย 

These systems are supposed to make senior engineers so productive that companies can lay off junior engineers, but in reality, many companies are trading near-term productivity for long-term woes. Not only does the pipeline of junior talent dry up, but residual effects include buggy software, service outages, security vulnerabilities and mounting technical debt.

Finished reading (for the first time in 30 years): Encounters with the Archdruid by John McPhee. If you’re new to McPhee, this might be the ideal place to start. It’s the book in which he perfects the narrative method he would follow for the rest of his career, and the first one in which he explores the geological themes that would later become his obsession. Nobody is better than McPhee at illuminating difficult questions by showing how real peropla engage those questions, and engage each other. ๐Ÿ“š