I'm not confused. I'm just well mixed.
~ Robert Frost
HTML: the Most Significant Computing Language Ever Developed
Tim Carmody has a great appreciation of HTML in Wired magazine: HTML Is Actually a Programming Language. Fight Me.
HTML is somehow simultaneously paper and the printing press for the electronic age. It’s both how we write and what we read. It’s the most democratic computer language and the most global. It’s the medium we use to connect with each other and publish to the world. It makes perfect sense that it was developed to serve as a library — an archive, a directory, a set of connections — for all digital knowledge.
I love HTML!
Timing so perfect that I wouldn’t dare put it in one of my novels, because no one would believe it.
The most frequently asked question at dinner parties / drinks / work – “What are you watching?”. (The most frequently asked question in homes by families is “What’s for dinner tonight?”.)
Here’s what I’m watching.
- Reruns of Dexter series on Netflix from 2013 to prepare for the December 14 well-reviewed, new series 8 of the Dexter prequel showing how the young Dexter Morgan transitioned into an avenging serial killer.
- Black Doves – my second favourite show of 2024 – Netflix. Just behind Sky’s Day of the Jackal. Ben Whishaw is amazing. Keira Knightly and Sarah Lancashire (a personal favourite) are not bad either.
- The Agency – much of which is shot in a Lovemark of mine – Raffles OWO in London. The English adaptation of the brilliant French series The Bureau (ref KR Connect: March 22 2021, January 25 2019 and August 31 2017). Jodie Turner-Smith (ex Bad Monkey) is stunningly beautiful and Michael Fassbender is gripping on screen.
- Rogue Heroes – the drama (not the documentary) series about the founding of the SAS during Rommel’s North African campaign – based on Ben Macintyre’s book of the same name. Intense, thrilling, very British. Series 1 and 2 on Amazon Prime. Real, good fun.
- Sherwood Series Two. Less fun – but just as British, on Britbox. Based on real life events in post Brexit Nottingham. Gritty and punchy.
- Landman Series 1 wrapped up on Sunday on Paramount+. Billy Bob Thornton (Goliath and Fargo) is a favourite of mine. Deep in the heart of Texas and everything that that entails.
And three honourable mentions:
- Ad Vitam (For Life). A French thriller – nothing new – but typical of the current, gritty French cops / drugs / violence genre that I kinda like (Netflix).
- Subteran. A Netflix series – part of their commitment to taking local shows international. My first experience of Made in Romania. Worth an ‘escapist’ look.
- Red Queen on Amazon Prime. A show from the Basque Country – gritty and gripping like their cuisine, about a woman running a secret police project. Her x-factor – an IQ of 242 – the highest in the world.
From messages of AI note:
There is a supposedly Danish proverb that: “Making predictions is hazardous – especially about the future.” And I’d like to pair it with another quote, often attributed to former IBM Chairman Thomas J. Watson in 1943, “I think there is a world market for maybe 5 computers.”
- “What needs to go is not so much folk psychology (whose commitments are relatively shallow), but the gloss on folk psychology that philosophers have imposed on it” — Tim Bayne on how to best understand Dennett
- “It seems to take about 15-20 years, on average, for a philosopher’s full import to be felt by the field” Was this true in the 1800s? — Eric Schwitzgebel uses the new Ediphy tool to investigate
- “We need to take AI’s ignorance more seriously. The Socialist Calculation Debate and the AI Calculation Debate are the same thing. Like central planners, AI will struggle to make accurate predictions” — Cass Sunstein on AI, the knowledge problem, and justice
- “A friend knows where you are coming from and realizes why you hold certain views” — a good mindset for approaching long-dead philosophers, says Helen De Cruz, is to treat them as friends
- “First, how do we distinguish the purely epistemic senses of should, ought, justification, rationality, etc., from the other senses? Second, why do we draw this distinction?” — Richard Pettigrew (Bristol) on epistemic rationality
- “When the war began, none of us truly believed it would happen. The morning after it started, we had a big philosophy conference scheduled at my university” — interview with Orysya Bila (Ukranian Catholic U.)
- A “legendary philosophers” crossword puzzle — in the Carlmont, California High School newspaper