Manton Reece
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  • Stunning quote in this report from The New York Times about Meta’s plans to add facial recognition to their Ray-Bans:

    We will launch during a dynamic political environment where many civil society groups that we would expect to attack us would have their resources focused on other concerns.

    → 10:00 AM, Feb 13
    Also on Bluesky
  • Spark is indeed fast. I don’t think I’ll use it often. I’m not usually in a hurry. I’d rather AI be more thorough.

    I talked to a couple friends last night at Clawstin about the frenetic pace of AI-assisted development. We should probably slow down. It’s harder to be thoughtful at this pace.

    → 9:21 AM, Feb 13
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  • This stuffed animal is my favorite thing to come out of the Mastodon project. Adorable. I want to order one but we already have too much stuff.

    → 8:45 AM, Feb 13
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  • Trailing narrative

    Thinking about how narratives build and collapse this morning. Not sure I can articulate it well, but roughly:

    1. Someone has an idea and shares it; no one notices.
    2. A few news stories pop up around that idea; it becomes the narrative.
    3. Future news that is even remotely related to that idea is judged as confirming the narrative; it is accepted as obvious truth that everyone just knows.

    Mostly fine so far. But here’s where it breaks down:

    1. Something significant changes; no one notices.
    2. The narrative has become a caricature of the original idea; it's barely true anymore.
    3. Everyone carries on as if nothing has changed; sometimes they even fight new ideas that reflect the changed world.

    What happens next is probably wildly different depending on the narrative. I don’t have a specific example to share here. I’ve just seen it play out like this multiple times.

    Sometimes narratives slowly fade. Sometimes they shatter. In either case, the hardest part is noticing.

    → 8:21 AM, Feb 13
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  • Om Malik:

    Some of us are hopeful. Some of us are terrified. Most of us are both, often in the same hour. And into that vacuum of uncertainty there is a torrent of speculation dressed up as prophecy.

    → 10:23 PM, Feb 12
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  • Austin sunset behind buildings, from 26 floors up, at Clawstin. 🦞

    → 8:03 PM, Feb 12
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  • Anthropic has another funding round and highlights their growing revenue for Claude Code. Not surprised. Claude Code was first, people like it, and Opus 4.6 is really expensive. I think Codex 5.3 will continue to slowly peel developers away.

    → 2:57 PM, Feb 12
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  • Leo Laporte:

    It’s so unsettling watching our 250 year-old democracy decay into dictatorship while the most disruptive technology since steam power is evolving at superhuman speed. It’s like watching a locomotive barrel headlong into a tornado. I have a bad feeling about this.

    → 10:12 AM, Feb 12
    Also on Bluesky
  • AI and taste

    Matt Shumer writes that something big is happening. It’s a long post. Some good points and some things that might be framed a little too dramatically. If you are firmly an AI skeptic, I doubt you will be convinced by Matt, but his post is comprehensive and got me thinking.

    I want to focus on this part:

    But it was the model that was released last week (GPT-5.3 Codex) that shook me the most. It wasn’t just executing my instructions. It was making intelligent decisions. It had something that felt, for the first time, like judgment. Like taste. The inexplicable sense of knowing what the right call is that people always said AI would never have. This model has it, or something close enough that the distinction is starting not to matter.

    First of all, I agree with Matt that GPT-5.3 is a great model. Codex has gotten really good. Token limits are so high that usage is effectively unlimited with ChatGPT Pro.

    Let’s think about taste, though. I continue to see proclamations about AI building a complete app in a day with just a few prompts. Technically that’s true — we are going to see a flood of new apps this year — but are they the kind of apps that could be real products?

    Even as AI works its way into everyday life for more developers, one thing that won’t change is the iterative process of building good apps. When I start working on something, I don’t know exactly where it’s going to end up until I’ve built, tested, and thrown out multiple ideas, tweaking the design along the way. It takes weeks or months to get there. AI could build “a” version of something on its own, but not the version I want.

    No amount of up-front prompting can solve this because at the beginning we don’t fully know what the final product should look like. There’s no question that AI will have a profound impact on many jobs. But AI is rarely a replacement for humans. It’s an accelerant. It helps us iterate faster as we apply our own taste along the way.

    → 9:22 AM, Feb 12
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  • I like this post from Justin Jackson about the impact on RSS if browsers remove XSLT support, which some bloggers use to make RSS more accessible. There has never been a good answer to “what do normal people do with an RSS link?”… We really need to solve this.

    → 9:00 AM, Feb 12
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  • Daniel Jalkut blogging a story about getting a job at Apple in the 1990s:

    The moment I got my foot in the door, I let management know that I was really after an engineering job. “I’m going to be the best QA engineer you’ve ever seen, but I really want to write code for the Mac.” Or something like that. Having the gall to say something affected things.

    We’ve talked about Daniel’s time at Apple a bunch over the years on Core Intuition, but there are fun details here I didn’t know about.

    → 8:37 AM, Feb 12
    Also on Bluesky
  • Mark Gurman reports that the new Siri is delayed again, from iOS 26.4 next month to 26.5 or later:

    As recently as late 2025, internal versions of the new Siri were so sluggish that people involved in development believed the company would need to delay the introduction by months.

    Apple is very set in their old processes and release cycles. But OpenAI ships major new features multiple times a month. I don’t see how Apple can be competitive in AI unless they rethink how they work and release software.

    → 4:21 PM, Feb 11
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  • I got the Day One printed journal in the mail. Opted for a boring cover, just wanted to see how everything looks. Love that they provide this service.

    → 3:32 PM, Feb 11
    Also on Bluesky
  • Lately my MacBook Pro has been burning through its battery really quickly. I picked up Apple’s 40W / 60W charger. It’s not a lot of power but I like the size to always have something with me when I’m out of the house.

    A white plug with a cable is inserted into a wall socket on a dark blue wall.
    → 2:53 PM, Feb 11
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  • We’ve gotten some great long-form post submissions via this form. Still putting things together for where and how to highlight these. 🐢

    → 12:38 PM, Feb 11
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  • It’s wild to see the communities that have sprung up around OpenClaw. There are actually two meetups in Austin tomorrow night: MoltUp and Clawstin. Both look fun. I’ll be at Clawstin. 🦞

    → 12:27 PM, Feb 11
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  • From the NetNewsWire blog:

    NetNewsWire 1.0 for Mac shipped 23 years ago today!

    🤯

    I’ve blogged about NetNewsWire many times over the years. I switched to it in 2002, which must’ve been NetNewsWire Lite or a beta of the full version. I wrote:

    It’s good software, and it’s been fun watching how quickly it has matured. I have about 40 RSS subscriptions, but I migrated to NetNewsWire in just a few minutes by dragging the XML links from Radio into NetNewsWire’s subscriptions pane. The app has really embraced interoperability.

    → 11:48 AM, Feb 11
    Also on Bluesky
  • Excellent post about communities:

    When a platform dies or degrades, its community does not simply migrate to the next platform, it fragments, and the ones who do arrive at the new place find that the social dynamics are different, the norms have shifted, and a substantial number of the people who made the old place feel like home are gone.

    → 10:36 AM, Feb 11
    Also on Bluesky
  • Finding that I have a surprising amount of forgotten email replies in my drafts folder. A few need to be deleted. A few maybe sent. ✉️

    → 10:18 AM, Feb 11
    Also on Bluesky
  • It looks like Lex Friedman now has over 1000 episodes of his daily podcast! Congrats @lex, amazing. Hosted on Micro.blog. 🎉

    → 9:24 AM, Feb 11
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Recommendations
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