Mitch's Blog
Newsletter Mitchellaneous About Social Search Also on Micro.blog
  • Is Anthropic’s Mythos a cybersecurity breakthrough, or just ‘criti-hype’? Anthropic claims its Mythos AI model is too dangerous to release widely — but telcos should focus on security fundamentals, not the hype. My latest on Fierce Network.

    → 11:27 AM, Apr 10
    Also on Bluesky
  • Science fiction assumes the universe is impersonal and knowable. Fantasy assumes the universe is governed by gods and other supernatural entities and is fundamentally unknowable by humans.

    Horror is like fantasy but it also assumes the supernatural entities are cruel.

    I’m pretty sure Joe Haldeman gets credit for these distinctions. He noted that by these definitions, the genre closest to science fiction isn’t fantasy — it’s the procedural mystery.

    This was more of a big deal in the 20th Century, but even then, the best writers shrugged it off and were happy to play across genres. Poul Anderson said the biggest fantasy is that our understanding of the laws of the universe would be valid in 1,000 years.

    I love Star Trek but the science and technology of Trek is less plausible than Game of Thrones. The science and technology of Doctor Who is even more implausible than Trek, but I love Who too.

    I prefer science fiction to fantasy but I don’t make a Thing about it, like Some People do (or did — I think perhaps this controversy died in the 90s, and good riddance to it). I literally have friends who are fantasy writers.

    From an excellent Bluesky threadlaunched by John Scalzi.

    → 5:21 PM, Apr 9
  • Trump has been doing everything he can to distract the world away from the Epstein files, even starting a war, and Melania just put the spotlight back. That’s interesting.

    → 1:12 PM, Apr 9
    Also on Bluesky
  • No email is worth reading that contains the phrase “just wanted to follow up.”

    → 10:06 AM, Apr 9
    Also on Bluesky
  • Today I found myself thinking about a science fiction writer named Clifford D. Simak, popular in the 1930s-50s, although he continued publishing until his death in the 80s. He was best known for short stories.

    Somebody said that the archetypal Simak story went like this: An old country coot is settin on his front porch, sippin moonshine and whittling a sharp stick. A flying saucer lands in the front yard and a scary purple alien comes out. The alien admires the old coot’s sharp stick and says he’ll give the old coot the design for an interstellar spaceship drive if the old coot will give the alien the stick in return. The old coot makes the trade and to seal the deal they set on the front porch and sip moonshine together.

    → 9:58 AM, Apr 9
  • To feed my RSS habit, I recent I recently switched from Inoreader to Newsblur, which turned out to be well-timed, because Samuel Clay, the developer who runs Newsblur, has had a sudden burst of activity implementing new features. Among these are daily AI-generated summaries that I find to be quite good, if a bit buggy — like news roundups delivered multiple times daily. He’s also implemented natural language filtering, which I haven’t been able to get working.

    Fellow RSS addict Jason Snell has more thoughts. Like Jason, I want my newsletters and RSS feeds in the same place, which is a major reason I switched away from Inoreader, because Inoreader’s newsletter support just does not work for me. It’s otherwise a great app — worth trying for heavy RSS users.

    → 2:25 PM, Apr 8
    Also on Bluesky
  • Like other Founders, Thomas Jefferson was a contradiction on human rights: He dedicated his life to the United States and individual freedom, and often treated African-Americans with respect, while simultaneously owning 610 people as property. Historian Annette Gordon-Reed collected Jefferson’s own writings about race, both personal and public. “He wrote that all men are born free, but he also enslaved hundreds.”

    → 11:28 AM, Apr 8
  • Author Rachel Hartigan explores the life and disappearance of Amelia Earhart in a new book. “… the most likely thing to have happened, the simplest explanation that matches with most of what we know, it’s that she got lost, ran out of gas, and crashed.”

    → 11:19 AM, Apr 8
    Also on Bluesky
  • Here’s some of what I’ve been writing for Fierce Network lately:

    Q-Day just got closer — you need to be ready by 2029, Cloudflare says.

    Cisco is in the early stages of developing products for space data centers. “I wouldn’t bet against Elon," says CEO Chuck Robbins.

    Akamai Technologies’s AI orchestrator puts inference at the network edge, where latency matters.

    Telcos are picking up the pace to achieve Level 4 autonomous networks, according to a TM Forum study. Asian telcos are in the lead.

    → 5:09 PM, Apr 7
  • Give me ideas for getting more from my Apple Watch

    How do you use your Apple Watch (or other smartwatch)? I use my Apple Watch heavily, but only for a few purposes:

    • Silent notifications. That’s the big one. If I’m not already using my Mac or my phone, the Watch tells me when I have an incoming text message or phone call, and I can decide based on information on the Watch screen whether to answer immediately or dismiss it for later. The Apple Watch is also my silent alarm clock to wake me up in the morning.
    • Workout tracker. I start it when I start walking the dog, turn around at the 1.6 mile mark, and when I hit 3.2 miles I know I’m done.
    • Telling time and setting timers, of course, but I don’t need a smartwatch for that.
    • Notifications of upcoming appointments.
    • I use a brilliant app called Footpath to map turn-by-turn walking directions when I want to walk an unfamiliar route.

    I don’t have a lot of interest in fitness trackers or health trackers, other than the simple workout tracker users I just described.

    How do you use your Apple Watch (or other smartwatch)? Give me ideas

    → 10:09 AM, Apr 6
  • That moment when you regret buying a frozen food, so you put it in the big chest freezer for future generations of archaeologists to discover.

    → 6:04 PM, Apr 5
    Also on Bluesky
  • Today I learned that Gregg Phillips, the FEMA official in charge of responding to fires and floods, says the hand of God suddenly and mysteriously teleported him to a Waffle House in Rome, Georgia.

    Phillips was named in December to head FEMA’s Office of Response and Recovery, overseeing more than 1,000 employees and a budget of $300 million. Before that, he advocated conspiracy theories about the 2020 election, and used violent language in connection with President Biden.

    “On Wednesday, Mr. Phillips wrote on Truth Social, President Trump’s social media platform, that the incident took place while he was heavily medicated as part of a cancer treatment. But he also described it as a miracle performed by God,” writes Richard Fausset at the New York Times.

    “‘The word “teleportation” was not mine,’ Mr. Phillips wrote. ‘It was used by someone else in the conversation reaching for language to describe something with no easy name. The more accurate biblical terms are “translated” or “transported” — not new ideas for people of faith.’”

    Holy shit, Gregg, the word “teleportation” is not the problem here.

    “Mr. Phillips’s claims are part of a growing trend among high-profile American conservatives to assert the physical presence of beings from the spiritual realm, or from provinces that are often reserved for science fiction novelists. In 2024, Tucker Carlson, the former Fox News host, said that he was ‘mauled,’ while sleeping, by ‘a demon or by something unseen.’ Former Representative Matt Gaetz recently said that a U.S. Army official had told him about ‘hybrid breeding programs, where captured aliens were breeding with humans to create some hybrid race that could engage in intergalactic communication.’

    “Representative Tim Burchett, a Republican from Tennessee, told Newsmax on Wednesday that he had been briefed by government officials about aliens, adding that the country ‘would’ve come unglued, I think, if they would’ve heard all that I’d heard.’”

    The Times’s Fausset interviewed people at all three Waffle Houses in Rome, Georgia, and nobody there had ever seen Phillips. If he arrived by teleportation — or any other form of transportation — nobody saw him.

    “At the Waffle Houses of Rome this week, Mr. Phillips’s assertion of supernatural travel was met with skepticism. At the branch on U.S. Route 411, close to a Quality Inn and a pest control company, Estelle Mandeville, 27, was finishing up breakfast. Ms. Mandeville, a North Carolinian who was traveling for work, described herself as ‘uncomfortably atheist,’ and noted that she, personally, had come to Rome in a 2018 Kia Niro.

    “Grant Sikes, 20, a student at nearby Berry College who hopes to attend an Episcopal seminary one day, said that divine power, from his experience, expressed itself in more subtle ways. He said he felt the presence of God at that moment, as he wrapped up a late, mellow breakfast with his grandfather, Larry Kellogg, 83.”

    Grant is normal! Feeling the presence of God when you’re having breakfast with your grandpa is normal!

    “Austin Spears, 29, a land surveyor, also found Mr. Phillips’s story to be dubious. But he also acknowledged that all human lives are studded with little mysteries.

    “‘I can say I’ve been drunk and ended up in a Waffle House,’ Mr. Spears said. ‘Don’t know how I got there. But I was there.’”

    I always suspected that science fiction would come true. But until Trump, I didn’t think it would be “Idiocracy.”

    → 6:02 PM, Apr 3
    Also on Bluesky
  • An Artemis II astronaut on his way to the moon had to call tech support to troubleshoot a Microsoft Outlook failure. There is no escaping Outlook.

    → 8:40 AM, Apr 3
    Also on Bluesky
  • More than 25,000 self-proclaimed citizens have pledged their allegiance to the southern California micronation of Slowjamastan, where Crocs and reply-all emails are forbidden.

    → 6:35 PM, Apr 2
    Also on Bluesky
  • Donald Trump’s spiritual adviser Paula White-Cain compared the President to Jesus Christ during an Easter lunch at the White House. Good thing we’re not Iran, which is ruled by religious weirdos.

    → 6:32 PM, Apr 2
  • Michael Chabon writes an open letter thanking his seventh grade English teacher, Ms. Goode, who changed his life. Chabon describes how she assigned the class to write a story. Chabon had just read the Sherlock Holmes pastiche “The Seven Percent Solution,” by Nicholas Meyer, and was inspired to write his own Holmes pastiche.

    “I decided that Holmes and Watson would take on Professor Moriarty, who had built an ironclad warship to terrorize the seas, and that they would naturally be helped in this mission by Captain Nemo, from ‘Twenty-Thousand Leagues Under the Sea.’”

    That sounds like a pretty damn good idea for a story.

    Chabon endears himself to me by namechecking Philip Jose Farmer in a footnote — Farmer is one of a couple of dozen writers who had a prominent reputation in 20th Century science fiction/fantasy and who seem to have been largely forgotten today. Farmer was one of my favorite writers — particularly his Riverworld series — and Chabon reminds me that there are still a few of Farmer’s books that I have not read.

    → 6:27 PM, Apr 2
    Also on Bluesky
  • ServiceNow claims a salesman “overachieved” and is not entitled to commissions on more than $27 million sales, according to a lawsuit filed by the salesman.

    I’m inclined to withhold judgment on who’s right here. The lawsuit has excessive truthiness.

    → 8:56 AM, Mar 31
    Also on Bluesky
  • Christian Nationalism Is Thriving, and “We Should Be Concerned." By Hamilton Nolan

    → 9:38 PM, Mar 30
    Also on Bluesky
  • JD Vance says aliens are ‘demons’ — With war escalating in Iran, gas and grocery prices soaring, and U.S. airports in chaos amid a partial government shutdown, Vance thought it was a good use of his time to appear on a podcast to share his deranged UFO theories and obsession.

    → 1:17 PM, Mar 30
    Also on Bluesky
  • Market participation is exhausting

    Society is optimized for people who love to haggle and think you should haggle for everything, says Cory Doctorow.

    “For these people, cheating is just bargaining by another means. They embrace bizarre concepts like ‘revealed preferences,’ the idea that if you say you’re dissatisfied with a bargain, but you accept it anyway, you have a ‘revealed preference’ for the deal. In other words, if someone sells their kidney to Sheryl Sandberg in order to make the rent, they have a ‘revealed preference’ for having only one kidney – and if they sell their privacy to Sheryl Sandberg in order to stay in touch with the people they love, they have a ‘revealed preference’ for having their data extracted and exploited by Facebook.”

    → 1:10 PM, Mar 30
    Also on Bluesky
  • ‘I Think That MAGA Is Dying’: Inside the Youth Movement at CPAC. “At a sparsely attended Conservative Political Action Conference, young Republicans were eager to start the post-Trump era.” By Nathan Tyler Pemberton at the New York Times

    Maybe MAGA is dying — but will be replaced by something worse. These young Republicans still seem attached to nativism and LGBTQ-phobia, with resurgent anti-Semitism added to the brew.

    → 1:02 PM, Mar 30
    Also on Bluesky
  • On The Enshittification of Audre Lorde: “The Master’s Tools” in Tech Discourse

    The enshittification story, at its most powerful, describes a process by which platforms that once served users well came to exploit them. But this framing assumes a prior state of genuine service, a golden age of the open internet, that was for many people never particularly golden. The early internet was structured around the assumptions of its architects: predominantly white, male, Western, educated, and abled.

    — Tara Tarakiyee.

    → 10:25 PM, Mar 29
    Also on Bluesky
  • The Edmund Fitzgerald Teaches Men How to Feel

    Michael Sebastian writes about the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald (the historical event), “The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald” (the seven-minute folk ballad that somehow climbed to the top of the charts in the disco era), his lifelong and life-changing fascination with the song and ship, and men’s love of shipwrecks.

    → 7:55 PM, Mar 29
    Also on Bluesky
  • You’re being rude. Put away your phone.  “Log off, tune in, go out.” By Robinson Meyer

    → 7:37 PM, Mar 29
    Also on Bluesky
  • I am posting this because it’s clever and also because it’s illustrative of the variety of the podcast universe. Indeed, I listen to 90+ minutes of podcasts daily and the only one of these types that I listen to with any regularity is the “recapping the movie but it’s longer than the movie” type. And it’s usually TV shows rather than movies and I quite enjoy those. And that reminds me — I need to find a good “For All Mankind” recap podcast.

    And I know that listening to 90+ minutes of podcasts daily makes me sound like a weirdo — but I’m always doing something else while listening to podcasts, mainly walking the dog, and also driving and chores around the house.

    → 11:45 AM, Mar 29
    Also on Bluesky
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