Monday links from assorted social networks, on science, medicine and game development
Tom Forsyth on Mastodon: “Recent discussion about the perils of doors in gamedev reminded me of a bug caused by a door in a game you may have heard of called Half Life 2.” Parallels in biology immediately come to mind.
David Roberts on Blue Sky: “In an era filled with tech dipshits who never developed emotionally past the age of 13 & use their wealth to become odious monsters … listen to Steve Wozniak.” We are where we are in big part because there weren’t enough Steve Wonziaks in key industries when it mattered. Or rather, because they by definition bowed out and gave the sociopaths free space to roam.
Ruxandra Teslo on X: “We should do smth abt this.” The “this” is the threat of clinical trial infrastructure being flooded by the biotech equivalent of AI slop. And many misguided people think that this is a good thing!
Joe Janizek on Substack: The birth of Advanced Radiology. Or: radiology as chess. Radiology and pathology are the few areas of medicine in which AI may be produce immediate benefit.
Nassim Taleb on Substack: Medical Mistakes with Probability, 2. Why the benefit of statins in people with barely elevated cholesterol and no other risk factors is grossly overestimated. Note that this constitutes most of the market for statins! My cynical take: Now that they are all out of patent I don’t think anyone would complain about cutting back.