Manton Reece
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  • Inkwell for iOS is now available as a beta! You can join TestFlight here. We’ll be improving a few things this week, getting it ready for an official release on both iOS and Android.

    → 9:30 AM, Apr 14
    Also on Bluesky
  • Sam Altman profile misses the mark

    This profile of Sam Altman in The New Yorker is extremely long. I read it on the train and while standing in line at Disneyland Paris. But for all the research the reporters did, it’s essentially just a rehashing of the “not consistently candid” argument against Sam from over two years ago.

    Last year I put a stake in the ground with my essay on Sam Altman. I’ve yet to see anything to convince me I was wrong.

    I think talented journalists like Ronan Farrow had a chance to do some new reporting on where AI is now, what impact it will have on the economy and society, and they instead wrote an article about personality quirks and office drama. The article is so focused on finding flaws in Sam Altman that it glosses over all the bigger picture themes about what is happening in the AI industry.

    People who already dislike Sam or OpenAI will point to it as confirmation. Yet there is very little new here. The real news in the article feels out of place because it’s framed as a backdrop for this initial narrative about Sam and the blip. And some of the most interesting tidbits in the article — like that Fidji Simo might eventually succeed Sam as CEO — are dismissed as rumor just as quickly as they are introduced.

    The New Yorker is the only journalism I currently pay for. Not everything they publish resonates with me, but at least once a week there is a story that I really enjoy. I don’t think this one comes together in a cohesive way.


    I wrote the above last week, then scrapped the draft, deciding not to publish it. I changed my mind after reading Sam Altman’s blog post where he mentions someone throwing a Molotov cocktail at his house. A couple days later, his home was struck by gunfire.

    The rhetoric around AI is too extreme. People feel very passionately about it, of course. I’ve tried to have a balanced take, with dozens of blog posts that highlight the value of AI while recognizing the risks and potential divisiveness. No personal attacks. No vilifying leaders in the industry.

    But some of the blog posts I’ve read over the last year have taken the debate about AI way too far, twisting it into exaggerations that assume the worst about people. That is at best unhelpful, because it spreads misinformation, and at worst perhaps even dangerous.

    → 8:37 AM, Apr 14
    Also on Bluesky
  • First coffee back in Austin in about a month! Glad to be home. Still miss Europe a little too.

    → 8:11 AM, Apr 14
    Also on Bluesky
  • Internet Archive quietly continues to do great work. TechCrunch reports on digitizing Aadam Jacobs’s personal collection of taped concerts:

    Within the collection, you can also find previously unknown recordings from influential artists like Sonic Youth, R.E.M., Phish, Liz Phair, Pavement, Neutral Milk Hotel, and a whole bunch of other punk groups.

    So cool to see this kind of thing preserved.

    → 3:56 PM, Apr 13
    Also on Bluesky
  • Another very good analysis of the AI market from Ben Thompson. OpenAI has invested heavily in compute, which will help them, but they are also squeezed by Anthropic on the enterprise side and Meta on the consumer side. It’s hard to compete with everyone.

    → 3:15 PM, Apr 13
    Also on Bluesky
  • Back in the United States after my extended trip across the ocean by ship, around Spain and France by train, and back to Malaga for Release Notes. Had an incredible time. I feel very lucky to be able to do this.

    I also got a bunch of work done. Inkwell for mobile is looking great, beta this week.

    → 2:51 PM, Apr 13
    Also on Bluesky
  • Early morning in Madrid. The moon still out and train station on the left.

    A cityscape at dusk features illuminated buildings, a crescent moon, and a dark sky.
    → 12:40 AM, Apr 13
    Also on Bluesky
  • Steve Troughton-Smith posts about Apple’s software quality:

    The story around the decline in software quality around macOS is the same as it’s been for years: Apple doesn’t have the bandwidth to maintain two copies of every app, one for macOS and one for iOS, and keep feature parity. That’s why they embarked down the road of Mac Catalyst and SwiftUI.

    A related question: why does Apple have so many apps? Certainly they should have Safari, Mail, and Pages. But what about Journal, News, and Freeform? A bloated lineup of apps is like an app with too many features — difficult to maintain.

    → 10:38 AM, Apr 12
    Also on Bluesky
  • Optimism by default

    This new essay by JA Westenberg about pessimism comes at just about the perfect time, relating to many things in the current tech world:

    Whoever can list the most reasons something won’t work gets treated as the smartest person in the room. If you say “I think this could go well,” you get ~the look. That slight tilt of the head. Optimism is treated like a belief in astrology.

    And:

    When pessimism becomes the default in public conversation, it starts building the world it claims to be describing. People who believe nothing can be different don’t vote, don’t volunteer, don’t start companies, don’t run for office, don’t build the thing that might have mattered.

    I always want to be the naive optimist who believes in people and believes in ambitious new projects that probably won’t work. Everything good I’ve done is a result of that.

    → 8:37 AM, Apr 12
    Also on Bluesky
  • Another view from Malaga. Had an amazing time here for Release Notes. @DazeEnd has also shared some fun photos from the last couple of days.

    A scenic view of a city square surrounded by buildings under a partly cloudy sky, with mountains in the distance.
    → 5:47 AM, Apr 12
    Also on Bluesky
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