- Aidan Walker: now is not the time to ban phones. The Gen Z case against Jonathan Haidt, with whom I generally agree. Walker makes some good, if muddled points. In any debate about children, school and phones it is important to distinguish the extent of a ban (during class — absolutely, at recess — we can discuss the pros and cons), which kind of phones are to be banned (smartphones versus others, and nowdays they all come on a spectrum), and maturity of a child (there are some 12-year-olds who are mature enough to babysit and some who cannot be left alone by themselves, and in the same family!) So it is an issue with some subtetly and since both social media and public policy ale places where subtetly goes to die I do not expect these questions to be answered any time soon.
- Ted Gioia introduces Jared Henderson: The Honest Broker Launches an Interview Series with Our First Guest Cory Doctorow. Henderson being the host of the interview, posted on Gioia’s Substack page. Doctorow’s book Enshittification has just been published and even though I suspect it is one of those that could have been a blog post it is indeed on the pile. Doctorow’s closing recommendation, Letters from an Imaginary Country, will also end up there when it comes out.
- Casey Handmer: Career Development Guide for Job Seekers. Advice for academics and government employees who want to switch to industry, from the perspective of an engineer. Fortunately biotech is more forgiving or else I would never have made the transition but I imagine things are even more competitive now than four years ago so all this is helpful. More boradly, academia and industry have so many “false friends” — conventions and processes that have the same name but are different and in some cases diametrically opposed — and the interview stage is just the tip of the iceberg.
- Scott Sumner: Fat tails. It is more about slippery slopes than fat tails, but Sumner has never been one to write a good headline.