Hey, there's an article about subscription fatigue in the Wall Street Journal that mentions Pinboard! Ironically, I can't read it because I cancelled my WSJ subscription (which required filing a dispute with my bank, as WSJ makes it impossible to cancel) wsj.com/articles/subsc…
One thing that surprised me (not sure if it's in the article) is how many people have opted to sign up for a 10 year subscription, to avoid the hassle. I'm proud that people trust the site enough to spring for a decade, and proud that I don't keep anyone's payment info on file
You lose a lot more repeat customers by asking them explicitly to renew, rather than charging them automatically at the end of the period, but given the level of scamminess in auto-renewing subscriptions (the Wall Street Journal among the worst offenders) I feel I have no choice
In theory, you can unsubscribe from the Wall Street Journal by calling them. In practice, they are not reachable by phone—you'll be on hold forever. But they must be very used to credit card disputes; as soon as you file one you get a nice letter saying you've been unsubscribed.
Anyway, if that article says Pinboard is bad or overpriced, ignore it. Fake news! But if it says Pinboard is great and the ten year plan is a phenomenal value, boy is it right.
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Google has spent years and years making significant political donations to legislators working to get Dreamers—including these Google employees—deported.
Martha McSally proposed withholding health care from the same undocumented Google employees that Pichai is now tweeting about. Google gave her the biggest check ($5000) they're allowed to write by law.
There are hundreds of such donations from Google to the most anti-immigrant legislators in Congress. No amount of tweeting in 2021 will undo them. You can search my account for "Google gave" to find a bunch of examples of Google's worst political giving. twitter.com/search?q=from%…
People who can't foresee that anyone under the age of 50 with a pulse is going to go out and party on the first warm day of spring are still deluding themselves about human nature over a year into this pandemic. Too many are vaccinated and have been cooped up for too long to care
People couldn't be scared or shamed away from traveling to see family over the holidays, when the weather was bad, there was no vaccine and infection rates were sky high. We're just a few weeks out now from people behaving as if the pandemic is over. Scolding is not a solution
The idea that people would continue psychologically and economically crippling distancing measures in the absence of high infection rates was ridiculous on its face last spring, I really can't believe it's still being seriously discussed a year later.
The right way to think about GME is that it's a cryptocurrency that happens to have a stock ticker. The fact that it doesn't have to rely on cumbersome blockchain theater is a bonus
The development of purely speculative meme stocks that tap into cryptoculture without having to do all the messy business of hashing is a Copernican breakthrough in modern finance on a level with the invention of the artificial tulip
There's no way yet to use GME or TSLA stock to collect ransomware payment or try to hire a hit man who is really an FBI agent, but these are small and fixable deficits in what is a promising new avenue of investment in nothing
Tried out Clubhouse and the first thing I hear is "this is more of a comment than a question". Reinforces my suspicion that 80% of social media right now can be explained by the fact people are lonely and slowly going nuts after a year of pandemic isolation.
Be sure to sign up for Audio Pinboard, where I slowly read back links you bookmarked in 2009 through a mouthful of cashews
In the Before Times, people hated conference calls even when they were paid to be on them, and avoided meandering conference panels like the plague. Now that there's a real plague, the meandering panel on the unending, unpaid conference call is the hottest app in town
Amazon's post-election PAC filing is out, and it's full of interest. Just like Google, the company gave Darrell Issa $5,000 to retire his campaign debt on December 18, days before Issa voted to overturn the results of the Presidential election.
Amazon gave $5000 to Louisiana Representative Mike Johnson's "American Revival PAC" on December 17. Johnson voted to overturn the election three weeks later.
Amazon gave $5000 to West Virginia representative Carol Miller's "Cut The Bull PAC*" on December 17. She voted to overturn the Presidential election three weeks later.
* A note on these Leadership PACs: each legislator is allowed to run one, and give the money where they want
It is seriously easier to hack and launch the nuclear codes than it is to upload a Safari extension to the app store.
The Xcode signing and upload process makes it clear that the iTunes UX team has been reassigned to doing crypto.
Error footprint is now six times larger than the "app" itself. (For the innocent, Apple demands that you package browser extensions, which are tiny little helper widgets, as full-blown apps through its App Store)