Best of my Twitter, May 31–June 6 (a few days behind, still ironing out the process… For the latest, follow me on Twitter: @jasoncrawford.)
After last time someone suggested embedding the tweets instead of linking to them, but I don’t think I can post embeds here, and for my main blog I don’t like the format as much. I’m sticking with links for now, but let me know if you’d rather scroll through a list of embeds (like this).
Links
A Reddit thread appreciating the engineering of everyday items
Arcadia Science is experimenting with a new way of publishing scientific work
Ryan Petersen of Flexport talks to Tamara Winter about supply chains
Californians Against Pandemics is running a ballot initiative to invest in pandemic preparedness (h/t @NathanpmYoung)
High housing prices are driving low-skilled workers from high-productivity to low-productivity areas (Alex Tabarrok)
The B612 Foundation discovered more than 100 asteroids by analyzing years-old images (NYT)
“Subsidiarity is a principle of social organization that holds that social and political issues should be dealt with at the most immediate (or local) level that is consistent with their resolution.” (h/t Stewart Brand)
Tweets
The original NYC subway was completed faster than the average environmental impact statement
How many of WIRED’s “boom spoiler” scenarios from 1997 came true? (thread)
Some reasons I am skeptical of “harmony with nature” (thread)
But for the US Army Corps of Engineers, the Mississippi would no longer flow through New Orleans
One standard deviation in rule of law is associated with a 6.4-fold difference in per capita income
McCloskey on “the idea that ideas about ideas are unscientific”
19th-century medicine would unabashedly rely on anecdotal evidence
In 1901 the market cap of the largest company was greater than the US national debt
Pixar founder Ed Catmull on how to see randomness as part of the beauty of life
Retweets
Suraj Patel has an abundance agenda (@SurajPatel)
“It seemed to be more a criticism of everything bad phrased as a prediction of doom” (@anderssandberg)
Productivity is the path to equity (@DKThomp)
To learn from mistakes, you have to build at the right pace (@stewartbrand)
I enjoy these posts! Two suggestions:
Open links in a new tab
Just paste screenshots of standalone tweets, or the full text. (Reduces friction vs having to load a new page.)
Doesn’t seem to be a way to have links open in a new tab, but if you click through to the original post, the links on that page will open in new tabs.
I have experimented with embedding, screenshotting, or quoting full tweets but I haven’t liked how it has turned out in practice, so I keep reverting to simple links.
Thanks for the suggestions!