Last 24 hours

[DREAM] The missing ticket

 I was at an airport and I was late to board my plane. I had my phone out and I was frantically looking for my airplane ticket. Every time I thought I found it I would show it to the clerk who invariably proceeded to tell me that what I was showing them wasn't a valid ticket, which threw me again into a panic as I looked for it. I was flustered and stressed that I wouldn't be able to get to my flight in time. I felt like an idiot for not having had my boarding pass ready beforehand.


I think all of this happened in the check-in part, so before I was actually inside the gates area. I get the impression that I was going to travel by myself for work reasons, and losing my flight meant I had to explain to my boss why, since the company had paid for it; though I wasn't really that worried about this as I was about not finding the ticket.

It's an interesting dream. Airplanes take you places, and I interpret them to be a symbol of growth. The check-in booth is important since it is a liminal area, representing the threshold between normal life and access to the mechanisms of change and travel.

My misplacing of the tickets is strange, since I'm usually quite well organized in these matters, not to mention that technology makes most of the work for us nowadays. This means that perhaps this is an important symbol here. The ticket is sort of my authorization to undergo the process of transformation. Maybe the fact that I thought I had it but can't find it suggests I'm not yet internally convinced that I'm actually ready to undergo this transformation, even though I desire it?

Another interesting symbol is the clerk. He stoutly keeps rejecting my attempts at authentication, over and over. Maybe he can be seen as a king of critic here? I wonder though if he's being a protector (protecting me from something I'm not ready to experience), or whether he's a negative influence (sabotaging my attempt at self-growth). Maybe he can actually be both at the same time? The strict, unfriendly attitude seems to suggest the latter, but the fact that I don't view him as the enemy (I'm my own enemy here) suggests it can also be a bit of the former. Though I think it's more negative than positive, as the attitude does seem to be saying You're probably not good enough.

A core conclusion that comes to mind here is that I might be stuck in some sort of loop. I know I have the tickets, but my standards for allowing myself to grow are impossibly high.

Meadow

24 Jul 2025 at 16:06
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Found via Loura, A Small Web July, spending time away from big social media:

Beefing up my RSS feed with content I want to see, both big-and-small web. YouTube isn’t a problem for me until I go onto the website itself and get sucked into a hole, but subscribing to a channel on RSS isn’t a problem for me.

Manton Reece

03 Jul 2025 at 20:44
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We are still planning an Android update soon. I worked on a couple minor tweaks this morning, to go along with other recent improvements brought over from iOS. Actually feels good to tinker in Android Studio again since my world is mostly Xcode.

Manton Reece

03 Jul 2025 at 17:41

I’d rather be a fake millionaire

 I heard on the Swedish news that our dear neighbors in Norway had a bit of a bummer the other day.

About 40,000 Norwegians received an official message from Eurojackpot (a big lottery game across Europe) saying they were millionaires. Turns out, there was a sliiight miscalculation. The winnings had been calculated 10,000 times too high.

Some people posted their million-dollar smiles on social media, only to be told later that they’d actually won just $11. For about 15 glorious minutes, though, they truly believed they were rich.

On the bright side, the joy they felt was just as intense as if it had been real.

Funny thing is, we often do the same thing — but in reverse.

We imagine worst-case scenarios about things that haven’t even happened yet. That upcoming job interview, tomorrow’s presentation, next week’s doctor’s appointment…

In our minds, we multiply the fear by 10,000 and slap on a million-dollar frown. It’s not real. It hasn’t happened. But the dread we feel? That part is very real.

And unlike those “lucky” Norwegians, it doesn’t always last just 15 minutes. It can go on for hours, even days.

We tell ourselves it’s smart to be prepared for the worst, that it won’t hurt as much if we’ve already imagined it. But honestly, we’re hurting ourselves more with that kind of thinking.

And if we look back and compare our imagined disaster to what actually happened, our version is almost always blown way out of proportion. Afterwards, we often think, “What was I even so worried about?”

So next time something scary is coming up, pretend you’re a Norwegian millionaire instead. It’s healthier — and a lot more fun.

Robert Birming

03 Jul 2025 at 16:16
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Simon Willison:

Quitting programming as a career right now because of LLMs would be like quitting carpentry as a career thanks to the invention of the table saw.

This analogy works in a couple different ways. You can ignore the table saw if you love the craft of creating with hand tools. You can use the table saw where it saves time and still be proud of the end result.

Manton Reece

03 Jul 2025 at 15:46

Is TikTok banned yet?

 The Verge:

Racist videos that appear to be created with Google’s AI video generation tool Veo 3 have raked in millions of views across TikTok, according to findings from the nonprofit media watchdog Media Matters.

The full report from Media Matters is very disturbing. It’s not just a couple videos that fell through the moderation cracks. It’s many videos and millions of views. TikTok is designed for this.

Infinite content plus viral social platforms is a bad combination. Curation will be nearly impossible as long as social media is designed around likes, reposts, and algorithms. AI is the accelerant to garbage abundance. The best way to stop the spread of hateful content or misinformation is for platform developers to consider that virality is as much a bug as it is a feature.

Manton Reece

03 Jul 2025 at 15:19

Why Substack shouldn't be the future of online publishing

 Why Substack shouldn't be the future of online publishing

I'd like to apologize in advance for the topic of this week's newsletter, which I fear may not interest all (or perhaps even most) of you. It would be nice to think that lots of people care about the nuances of how news and information gets published, and the challenges that the modern web and social media and tech monopolies (among other things) pose to our information ecosystem, but a long career as a journalist writing about tech — including publishing technology like Substack — has convinced me that this is very much not the case! So if you are one of those people for whom this topic induces snoring, please feel free to ignore this week's newsletter and then come back later 😄

If you are reading this newsletter via Substack, the headline might seem a little confusing. Don't I use Substack to publish The Torment Nexus? I sure do, because I want to reach potential readers in as many ways as possible, and lots of people use Substack. However, I also publish this newsletter using Ghost — an open-source platform — and I simultaneously post all of the newsletters to my personal website, which runs on WordPress (a platform that I confess also has some problematic aspects). Unlike many of the people who publish on Substack, I don't have a paywall that kicks in at a certain point, or hides posts or premium options behind a subscription. I rely on donations through both Substack and Ghost to support my newsletters (including my daily newsletter When The Going Gets Weird), and I also have a Patreon portal where you can send money if you want to support my work with a specific amount of your choosing.

As you can probably gather from the above description, I am not backing one specific horse in the web publishing race. If you want to read my writing via Substack that's great, and if you want to read it via Ghost that's also great, but if you'd rather use the old-fashioned open web that's fine too. This makes monetization somewhat more difficult, since people can easily get my newsletter without paying and therefore there isn't a compelling reason for subscribing or donating (apart from just the fact that you like me or my writing). But I am willing to live with that because I think the free and open exchange of information is a crucial aspect of the web — although it is becoming less and less common all the time. And that's part of why I don't think that Substack isn't the real future of web publishing, or at least shouldn't be the future.

There's no question that Substack has built a company and a service that meets the needs of many independent publishers and many users, and for that I congratulate them. I remember getting a phone call from Substack founder Hamish McKenzie many years ago when they were launching, but I confess that I was less than excited by the idea when he finished describing it. Is that because the mechanics of web publishing are less than sexy? Heavens no! 😄 One problem was that it seemed like a difficult business to make money at — even if you did a good job for a specific publisher, and took a cut of the revenue, why wouldn't they just leave as soon as they got successful and take all their subscribers with them? And even with the democratization of publishing, how many high-profile writers could there possibly be who could pull in the numbers of subscribers that would make it financially worthwhile to run a company on them?

Tools versus platforms

Why Substack shouldn't be the future of online publishing

As Substack's founders have acknowledged, the service was inspired by the success of Stratechery, a newsletter that technology analyst Ben Thompson launched in 2014 (inspired in turn by long-time Apple blogger John Gruber's website Daring Fireball). Like many others, I have been a fan of Ben's for some time, and I think I was the first to write about his newsletter venture in April of 2014, when I was at Gigaom (RIP). The idea of a writer "going direct" — as blogging pioneer Dave Winer used to call it — and connecting with readers without the need for intermediaries seemed like a promising opportunity to me, as a long-time blogger myself. It was like a manifestation of Kevin Kelly's principle of making a living by connecting with "ten thousand true fans," which he wrote in 2008. However, there is a key difference between what Thompson does with Stratechery and what thousands of writers do with the newsletters they publish on Substack, and it is this: Thompson doesn't use a platform like Substack.

This is where it's useful to distinguish between tools and platforms. Stratechery uses publishing tools to send out emails and handle subscriptions and so on, many of which Ben developed either solely or partly on his own. These tools would be equivalent to Ghost or to Buttondown, two of the other publishing tools that some newsletter writers use. You can even use WordPress to do your own newsletter publishing directly from your blog, by adding a couple of plugins that handle sending out the newsletter via SMTP and keep track of subscriptions, clicks, and so on (I experimented with doing this before I ultimately decided to opt for publishing via Ghost). Substack also handles subscriptions and email publishing, but it is much more of a platform than a simple tool: not only does it take a cut of a publisher's revenue — as opposed to a flat fee — but it also plays an active role in curating content. In other words, it plays favourites.

This has gotten Substack into quite a bit of trouble with both authors and readers, as some of you are probably aware. In 2023 the company was accused of "platforming Nazis" and other reprehensible viewpoints, because it included writers with transphobic and white supremacist views. McKenzie responded by saying the company allowed these accounts to remain because Substack was committed to free speech. As a number of people noted, however, it is one thing to allow speech to occur using your tool, and another to actively recruit, promote, and monetize arguably harmful or hateful speech. To use a popular analogy, if you run a bar and a few neo-Nazis come in for drinks and you don't eject them, you are running a neo-Nazi-friendly bar; if you tell them that Thursdays are neo-Nazi Night, then you are running a full-on neo-Nazi bar.

A number of prominent authors and publishers left Substack as a result of this furore, including Casey Newton's Platformer, Ryan Broderick's Garbage Day, and Rusty Foster's Today In Tabs. Many others remained, however, and some have become significant publications in their own right: The Free Press, which was founded by former New York Times writer Bari Weiss, now has over 500,000 subscribers and brings in an estimated $10 million a year in revenue. Some high-profile journalists have recently moved to the platform as well, including Terry Moran, the former ABC reporter who was fired by the network after calling Donald Trump and his advisor Stephen Miller "world-class haters." Substack also recently created what it calls a $20-million Creator Accelerator Fund, which it says it will use to bring on and support new publications.

On paying the piper

Why Substack shouldn't be the future of online publishing

So that's the good news: Substack has some high-profile authors and is bringing in more of them, and that's presumably good for revenue. But how good — enough to make a living on, or enough to satisfy the company's investors? Those are two very different things. When I wrote about Substack raising funding from venture capital in 2021, I pointed out the difficulties of this business model, one that has torpedoed many promising publishing businesses in the past (including BuzzFeed, Gigaom, Mic, and many others), and I continue to believe that Substack is riding a fine line. The best thing about venture funding is it gives you money to grow your business, and the worst thing about taking venture financing is that you absolutely have to continue to grow at predictable — and in many cases unrealistic — rates forever, or you will be tossed onto the scrap heap.

As former Mother Jones editor Ana Marie Cox pointed out recently, the company is said to be working on a new round of between $50 million and $100 million, at a "post-money" valuation around the $700 million mark — barely any higher than the $650 million valuation it had when it completed its last major financing round in 2021. That is not what you would call impressive growth! And even that valuation implies a multiple of about 16 times revenue, which is arguably up in the stratosphere for an online publishing platform. The only way to satisfy the hopes of those investors is to grow revenues (forget about income) at a ridiculously quick pace, which for a publishing platform requires adding more and more features, regardless of whether users want them. As Cox describes it:

Everything suspect about Substack stems from a desire to be more like a sticky destination and less like a publisher. You can ignore their posturing about free speech and just look at how they’re leaning harder and harder into audience capture and engagement. They’re offering audio, video, short-form posts, “discoverability.” They want to keep readers in their app listening, watching, interacting—anything but reading newsletters in their inbox as God intended. Indeed, Substack is now hunting bigger game than any legacy media creature. In January, they announced a $20M “creator accelerator fund” to lure Tiktokers (or anyone else with at least $2000/mo in existing subscribers). That’s almost half their revenue on a bet that gets them further and further away from a sanctuary for outcycled journalists and closer and closer to the chaos chum bucket that newsletters were supposed to stand out from.

Substack, Cox notes, is "utterly dependent on the whims of its investors." Every round of capital it raises deepens the expectation of a big payoff — a public offering, an acquisition, etc. The nightmare scenario, she says, is that Substack limps along long enough for its founders to get desperate for a quick exit, and so they sell the service to someone who sees it as their "personal ideological playpen," much like Elon Musk did with Twitter (Musk has mused in the past about wanting to buy Substack). "Imagine the enshittification of Twitter, but with thousands of journalists locked in because that’s how they hoped to make a living, not just fuck around micro-blogging on company time," Cox writes.

Will Substack continue to be the platform of choice for many authors and journalists who want a platform to handle all of the intricacies and plumbing of web publishing? Perhaps. But I agree with Cox that the future is clear. So what is the alternative? Thankfully, services like Ghost exist (it powers publishers such as the Kyiv Independent, 404Media and Hell Gate) along with other alternatives such as Beehiiv, which recently launched its own multimillion-dollar initiative to attract journalists, known as the Beehiiv Media Collective, which offers health insurance, legal support, and free hosting to a select number of applicants. In March, it rolled out a feature that allows creators themselves to manage ads and invoice advertisers. Ghost, for its part, is close to rolling out full integration with the fediverse, which will allow publishers to make their publications a standalone portal to federated applications and networks such as Mastodon. The open web can be the future of publishing if we put our minds to it!

Got any thoughts or comments? Feel free to either leave them here, or post them on Substack or on my website, or you can also reach me on Twitter, Threads, BlueSky or Mastodon. And thanks for being a reader.

The Torment Nexus

03 Jul 2025 at 14:57
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The inevitable result of what we do today – annie’s blog

Sometimes (okay a lot of the time) (okay all the time) I don’t know what to do. Today or any day. There are both too many options and not enough. Out of all these possibilities, how can I find the ones that are doable and actually helpful?

I guess I can start with doable and go from there.

This is the way.

Rhoneisms

03 Jul 2025 at 13:44
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Wendell Berry: “There are no sacred and unsacred places. There are only sacred and desecrated places.”

jabel

03 Jul 2025 at 12:48
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I may have cut the biscuits a bit thick.

jabel

03 Jul 2025 at 11:56

My June ‘25 in Review

 

June, and with it half of the year, is now over. So it’s time to take a brief look back at the past month.

It’s becoming midsummer, and temperatures are rising significantly. Yesterday was the warmest day of the year so far, but there have already been a few hot days in June. It’s a good thing I bought a portable air conditioner two years ago. It provides me with a little coolness on hot days, although the temperature here in my new apartment is actually quite bearable.

In June, a year after buying my new bike, which I’m still very happy with, I didn’t let the heat stop me from going for a few rides. I cycled to Goslar (in the Harz Mountains) once and to Helmstedt once. And I also did a few short rides through the nearby parks, for example when I couldn’t sleep well again.

But now I’m not only mobile by bike, I’ve also bought a new used car after four years without one. Not so much for myself, as occasional car sharing would still be enough for me, but my fiancée has to get to work from August onwards. It’s a 2025 Hyundai i10 demonstration car. The interior is surprisingly spacious for the small size of the car. The engine isn’t particularly powerful, but it’s more than enough for the flat terrain here. Android Auto is also available. Only finding a parking space will be nerve-wracking again.

Speaking of my fiancée, we have now officially started planning our wedding and are looking for venues. Our schedule is a bit fuller with appointments over the next few weeks.

Last month, I also traded in my watch for a newer model with LTE and switched the 5G modem for my home to an outdoor model. In doing so, I realized how easy it is to sell electronics at reasonable prices on eBay.

Last but not least, at the end of the month, I had the opportunity to test the punctuality of Deutsche Bahn once again and ended up having to stay at a hotel in Frankfurt am Main.

Interactions & Comments

Jan-Lukas Else

03 Jul 2025 at 11:00
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Just a quick clarification about JulyReply: it’s not meant to be a daily or even weekly thing — just a gentle nudge to reply to other blog posts when it feels right.

No need to link back to my JulyReply post or create one of your own. It’s all up to you!

Have fun blogging! 🤩

Robert Birming

03 Jul 2025 at 09:36

Lightly Child, Lightly.

 

Ours is a dark and chaotic world. We are all in need of lights to follow. On that island I felt I had met someone who had made a life on her own terms. I was increasingly sure that I, on the other hand, had not… And, as the years passed, I began to feel unmoored, like a piece of timber drifting on the current. The feeling grew. I worked long hours trying to succeed in a modern world I didn’t like very much. I’d doubled my salary, and then doubled it again, but rarely felt any satisfaction or happiness… I began to lose faith in the certainties that had sustained me. I was growing less sure, and more confused. My work took me to places where the world was breaking; places that had, until now, survived. I saw children lying under sheets of tin by roadsides, and hospitals in slums plagued with rats and filth. Despair began to follow me home. Birds like lapwings and curlews were vanishing from the skies above our farm. I could no longer see the point in trying to mend our fields when everything around us was so broken. I had once had endless reserves of hope and self-belief, but they were beginning to run out. Some nights I couldn’t sleep. I’d lie anxiously staring at the ceiling. Part of me just wanted to escape. To run away and hide…

I couldn’t stop thinking about the old woman on the rocks. There was something still alive in her that had died in me. I had seen it in her eyes. I needed to go back and work out what it was – the urge was overwhelming. It was like someone had shown me a few lines of a truly great book and then closed the covers tight shut. I had no idea how I might ever get back there…

Seven years passed. Then, one day, I wrote Anna a letter, and sent it to her via the guide who had taken me. I asked if she was still going out to work on the island and whether she might let me visit her, learn about her work, and maybe write about her. I would keep quiet, work to earn my keep, and try to stay out of the way.

James Rebanks, from the Prelude of “The Place of Tides” (Mariner Books, June 24, 2025)


Notes:

  • Book Review: A warming tale of gathering eiderdown in Norway. Shepherd’s Life author trades the Lake District for a remote island just below the Arctic Circle, where he joins an ‘unbreakable’ septuagenarian keeping an ancient family tradition alive.
  • Book Review in The Guardian: “Duck Tales. The Lakeland shepherd heads to a Norwegian island where eiderdown is harvested to learn lessons about nature and humanity”
  • Post Title & Inspiration: Aldous Huxley: “It’s dark because you are trying too hard. Lightly child, lightly. Learn to do everything lightly. Yes, feel lightly even though you’re feeling deeply. Just lightly let things happen and lightly cope with them.

Live & Learn

03 Jul 2025 at 08:43

The inevitable result of what we do today

 

I’ve been slowly sorting through and cleaning up my disorganized collection of notes. I came across one from a few years ago when I was reading Emergent Strategy by adrienne maree brown.

This quote in particular keeps ringing ringing ringing in my head:

The future is not an escapist place to occupy. All of it is the inevitable result of what we do today, and the more we take it in our hands, imagine it as a place of justice and pleasure, the more the future knows we want it, and that we aren’t letting go.

Hope matters so much. So does a willingness to take responsibility, not for all the things in all the world but for what is ours: The limited but meaningful scope of what we do today.

Sometimes (okay a lot of the time) (okay all the time) I don’t know what to do. Today or any day. There are both too many options and not enough. Out of all these possibilities, how can I find the ones that are doable and actually helpful? 

I guess I can start with doable and go from there. 

Annie

03 Jul 2025 at 05:31



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