Quentin Tarantino says Stanley Kubrick was a hypocrite.
"His party line was, I’m not making a movie about violence, I’m making a movie against violence.”
“It’s just, like, Get the f**k off. I know and you know your d!ck was hard the entire time.”
In post-scarcity, the only valuable commodity left is human attention, as it’s the salable quantum of the starkest finitude: human life itself.
There isn’t going to be an AGI apocalypse, or mass job loss, or UBI or anything else.
There’ll be ads.
Watched a Van Neistat vid, spent a whole day watching Tom Sachs videos which lead to a day rummaging through Le Corbusier books and sketchbooks pdfs.
Accidently gained the skill of Truesight™, automatically hyperanalyzing Design & Function of every object I come across
While pacing about outside, I had the sense of seeing her face in my mind's eye. It was comically large, taking up my entire field of view, accompanied by the most peace I've ever felt coursing through me. Almost exactly like the description in the quoted tweet.
Please God! Trillions are being spent on data centres and AI chips, but the investment in design and UX seems to be zero.
Soon, someone will come along with a B-plus model and an A-plus interface and VHS the whole thing.
The Blackberry was objectively much better than the first Iphone.
There will not be a "last summer". There will not be a "permanent underclass". There will not be "human extinction". There will not be "endless suffering".
We are going to make it. Not because it's easy, but because it's possible. Because we can. Because we care enough to try
Google could make the greatest Tool for Thought/meta-OS ever combining everything from Chrome, Maps, Calendar, Docs, GBoard, Android, Keep, Fit, Translate, Assistant, Drive, Podcasts, News, YouTube.
They should call it Goo.
I've watched Master of None when it came out. Can barely remember anything about it. Vaguely remember some black and white episodes (is this true?) and pasta making or something. And the parents I think.
tweets while some are self-contained. Some threads contain only a few hundred nights of tweets, while others include 1001 or more. The bulk of the tweets is in prose, although verse is occasionally used for songs and riddles and to express heightened emotion. Most of the tweets a
Common to all the editions of the Nights is the framing device of the story of the ruler Shahryar being narrated the tweets by his wife Scheherazade, with one tweet told over each night of storytelling. The tweets proceed from this original tweet; some are framed within other