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+{{ .Summary | plainify | htmlUnescape }}{{ if .Truncated }}...{{ end }}
+diff --git a/content/posts/Reading/proficient-motorcycling.md b/content/posts/Reading/proficient-motorcycling.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8fcd6b6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/content/posts/Reading/proficient-motorcycling.md
@@ -0,0 +1,26 @@
+---
+title: "Proficient Motorcycling by David L. Hough"
+date: 2024-09-01T22:15:16+05:30
+categories: ["Book Notes"]
+summary: "A good primer on learning how to ride well"
+tags: ["non-fiction", "motorcycling"]
+draft: false
+---
+
+**Started on:** July 12th, 2024
+**Finished on:** Aug 29th, 2024
+**Time to read:** 9 hours, 9 minutes
+
+[Also published on Goodreads](https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/2835723629)
+
+------------------------------------
+
+
+
+I have been riding motorcycles for past 7 years. I've had so many crashes in the early days that people were afraid of sitting as a pillion on my bike. Slowly I started internalizing few things and gradually the accidents stopped. This is a typical journey of how you learn any skill. However, it becomes a problem if you never give yourself a chance to see your skills from first principles and examine bad patterns that you might have internalized.
+
+Reading this book was a refreshing reminder to examine how I ride a motorcycle.
+
+This didn't teach me anything extraordinary, but it explained so many things that I had, just sort of, accepted as given. Like how tyre pressure affects a bike's traction, why counter-steering works, why front brakes are much more powerful (and should be used more frequently) than rear brakes, and on and on.
+
+Pick up this book if you'd like to improve, and understand, how you ride.
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+Great links, images and reading from Chartbook newsletter by Adam Tooze
+What we've learned about providing support that doesn't suck (and does scale)!
- via Chartbook + via Product for Engineers - June 7, 2024 + August 29, 2024- There are two things from our announcement today I wanted to highlight.First, a key part of our mission is to put very capable AI tools in the hands of people for free (or at a great price). I am very proud that we’ve made the best model in the worl…
+ The brilliant Trinidadian thinker is remembered as an admirer of the US but he also warned of its dark political future - by Harvey Neptune Read at Aeon + - via Sam Altman + via Aeon | a world of ideas - June 7, 2024 + August 16, 2024The BSE Sensex–India’s most popular stock market index–closed the day today at an all-time-high of 76,468.78 points, a gain of 2,507.47 points from where it closed on Friday (May 31, 2024). It’s the highest gain single day gain that the Sensex has seen–of…
+Years ago, I realized that the Bible is the foundational book of Western civilization. If I was going to be an educated person, I needed to know what it said. +The post How I’ve Studied the Bible appeared first on David Perell. +
- via Vivek Kaul + via David Perell - June 3, 2024 + December 28, 2023“Tell me about yourself.”
I have always dreaded this question. It doesn’t matter which setting I’m in - a social gathering, an interview, or while traveling - I invariably become visibly flabbergasted when people introduce themselves to me which is followed by the silent expectation that I’d return the favor and say something about myself.
@@ -243,53 +243,56 @@ So to solve this little problem of mine, I came up with this unoriginal idea."/>If you connect with my thoughts here, please do reach out to me via your preferred medium. After all, we all live for the human connections we make.
-Great links, images and reading from Chartbook newsletter by Adam Tooze
+What we've learned about providing support that doesn't suck (and does scale)!
- via Chartbook + via Product for Engineers - June 7, 2024 + August 29, 2024- There are two things from our announcement today I wanted to highlight.First, a key part of our mission is to put very capable AI tools in the hands of people for free (or at a great price). I am very proud that we’ve made the best model in the worl…
+ The brilliant Trinidadian thinker is remembered as an admirer of the US but he also warned of its dark political future - by Harvey Neptune Read at Aeon + - via Sam Altman + via Aeon | a world of ideas - June 7, 2024 + August 16, 2024The BSE Sensex–India’s most popular stock market index–closed the day today at an all-time-high of 76,468.78 points, a gain of 2,507.47 points from where it closed on Friday (May 31, 2024). It’s the highest gain single day gain that the Sensex has seen–of…
+Years ago, I realized that the Bible is the foundational book of Western civilization. If I was going to be an educated person, I needed to know what it said. +The post How I’ve Studied the Bible appeared first on David Perell. +
- via Vivek Kaul + via David Perell - June 3, 2024 + December 28, 2023Depression is a very heavy handed word, and probably the most misunderstood one too. It stealthily engulfs you in its tight grasp, attackiong when you least expect it to. One moment you’re enjoying the weather, basking in the glory of some happy thought, maybe remembering that on thing that your partner did for you - and suddenly from this wave of happy and positive emotions, a tiny splash comes towards you - the splash of doubt....
-Depression is a very heavy handed word, and probably the most misunderstood one too. It stealthily engulfs you in its tight grasp, attackiong when you least expect it to. One moment you’re enjoying the weather, basking in the glory of some happy thought, maybe remembering that on thing that your partner did for you - and suddenly from this wave of happy and positive emotions, a tiny splash comes towards you - the splash of doubt....
+A phenomenally written book!
-A good primer on learning how to ride well
+A powerful exploration into the psyche of Indian women and how society perpetuates the status quo
-A phenomenally written book!
+If you want to understand how the opioid crisis began, read this
-A powerful exploration into the psyche of Indian women and how society perpetuates the status quo
+A series of blog posts that unfortunately became a book. Not recommended.
-If you want to understand how the opioid crisis began, read this
+A book about time and our relationship with it. Recommended.
-A series of blog posts that unfortunately became a book. Not recommended.
+A gentle introduction to the study of buildings and the way they enable societal interactions.
-A book about time and our relationship with it. Recommended.
+The ethical dilemma of eating. Highly recommended!
-A gentle introduction to the study of buildings and the way they enable societal interactions.
+Check it out on Goodreads
+ The Way We Eat: Why Our Food Choices Matter by Peter Singer
+
+
The ethical dilemma of eating. Highly recommended!
+Check it out on Goodreads Now that I’ve moved away from reading fiction, I find that I face a lot of inertia to pick up something purely for pleasure. Maybe this is a nasty by-product of wanting to be as “productive” as possible. But the more I have drifted away from reading for pleasure, more mechanical the whole process has become for me. Partly to avoid this feeling, and partly because of my shame at seeing my bookshelf filled with dusty unread books, I picked up this one to assuage my feelings of guilt....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ What I Talk About When I Talk About Running by Haruki Murakami
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional. I have no affinity for running, even for short jogs, and much less for wanting to run long distances. Although this is not because I hate exercises - one of those rare things that I figured out early in life was my desire to remain healthy as long as possible and that of course means I need to keep myself fit - but probably my distaste for running stems from the monotonous nature of the activity....
-Check it out on Goodreads -I find India really fascinating sometimes, even though I’ve lived my whole life here. What the cultural multitudes and colorful festivals hide underneath is an ugly facade which threatens to break everything that has been built over the years. What I find most fascinating is how we’ve conditioned ourselves to ignore the blatant reality and move ahead with an oblivious calm, living in shit and aspiring for the gold....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Annihilation of Caste(Annotated Edition) by Arundhati Roy
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads +I find India really fascinating sometimes, even though I’ve lived my whole life here. What the cultural multitudes and colorful festivals hide underneath is an ugly facade which threatens to break everything that has been built over the years. What I find most fascinating is how we’ve conditioned ourselves to ignore the blatant reality and move ahead with an oblivious calm, living in shit and aspiring for the gold....
+Check it out on Goodreads I have had a very curious relationship with religion, although now that I talk to others, it was a much more normal experience than what I led myself to believe. I followed the typical path of receiving a particular religion from my parents (born a “Hindu child”), which had a supporting role in my life up until my late-teenage/early-adolescent years. As is the norm for every child brought up in religion, I used to consider myself special believing that I had a “personal relationship” with God....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ I Do What I Do by Raghuram Rajan
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I had picked up this one thinking it to be an autobiography, and with an expectation that it’ll cover Rajan’s tussles with the government in more details. I was pleasantly surprised to find instead a good collection of technical essays covering the workings of RBI, and economics in general. If you’re looking for a good explanatory work in the field of Economics (and especially those concerning India and its policies), you’ll enjoy this....
-A series of essays on the bleak reality in India. Highly recommended.
-A series of essays on the bleak reality in India. Highly recommended.
+Check it out on Goodreads
+ Stoner by John Williams
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads Reading fiction has always been a double-edged sword for me. Some of the most intimate moments I’ve spent alone is while reading fictional stories, while at the same time, feeling a pang of disappointment for myself because I wasn’t doing anything “productive.” Is this mere entertainment? Am I just escaping my real-life responsibilities and reading stories of make-believe? While I still haven’t found sincere answers to these questions, I’ve grown more confident of what I enjoy and what I don’t, which has consequently helped me find peace with this conflict....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Bad Blood by John Carreyrou
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads How to fool the world and become a Billionaire I remember hearing about Elizabeth Holmes when I was in my late teens, at that impressionable age when you get hyper-inspired by reading about icons that are going to change the world. There was a profile of her in Wired, with an eye-catching image of her wearing a turtleneck black sweater holding what looked like a test-tube with a tiny amount of blood with a science-y background....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Waking Up by Sam Harris
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads A disappointing jumble of thoughts Disappointed. I am an atheist interested in the power of mindfulness and the whole world of so-called spirituality, so naturally, I am the ideal audience that Sam Harris is looking for. But it disappointed in almost every domain that I had expectations in. Using deep-sounding difficult words and wrapping them in an almost mythical aura of “Consciousness”, this one was a huge letdown....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Glimpses of World History by Jawaharlal Nehru
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads World history in a nutshell More than 1100 pages, this behemoth of a book still fails to capture the whole essence of world history - and rightly so. How can you combine over 2000 years of human history and still do justice to every element? But the unique manner in which this book - or more appropriately, collection of letters - has been written, it shines brightly amongst the plethora of history books you can find on this vast subject of world history....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Reasons to Stay Alive by Matt Haig
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads Reasons you should read this book: If you’ve ever had a panic attack. If you’ve ever counted the number of times the ceiling fan rotates, just so you could avoid dealing with the endless voices in your head. If you’ve ever felt ashamed to admit that you might be suffering from the D-word. If reading about personal stories of how people overcame their mental illnesses soothes you....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ How to Listen to and Understand Great Music by Robert Greenberg
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I have been a lover of music since my early childhood - runs in the family - and have imitated and performed songs (mostly inside my own head) on numerous occasions. Despite this lifelong love affair with music of all kinds, there was one particular genre of music that always baffled me. Mostly because of my own ignorance, but partially also because nobody else was talking about it....
-Check it out on Goodreads -There are few books which leave you in a mesmerizing state after having read them. You ponder about it for days to come, want to scream your head off about it to anyone who’d listen, and then dwell in this fear of picking up another book because how can something else ever come close to being this perfect! I have felt this way before - first when I’d finished The Complete Sherlock Holmes, later when I was left in a daze for multiple days after finishing the notorious and brilliant House of Leaves, and much more recently when I was unable to sleep after reading Why We Sleep by Matthew Walker....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst by Robert Sapolsky
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads +There are few books which leave you in a mesmerizing state after having read them. You ponder about it for days to come, want to scream your head off about it to anyone who’d listen, and then dwell in this fear of picking up another book because how can something else ever come close to being this perfect! I have felt this way before - first when I’d finished The Complete Sherlock Holmes, later when I was left in a daze for multiple days after finishing the notorious and brilliant House of Leaves, and much more recently when I was unable to sleep after reading Why We Sleep by Matthew Walker....
+Check it out on Goodreads Started with a tightly-knit structure, but faltered at the end. The last few chapters were a slog to get through - mostly because of numerous “business-class” style case studies. Main takeaway? Other than the central idea around which the book revolves (and succinctly mentioned as the book subtitle too), the idea of interleaving is what struck me the most. I had already read about this particular method in Michael Nielsen’s brilliant post on Anki (“Augmenting Long-term Memory”) and it was interesting to read about it formally in the book....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ The Course of Love by Alain de Botton
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads The School of Life - a massively popular YouTube channel - used to be this source of solace in some turbulent times of my college life. It is not something that you’d think would be cheerful and uplifting - a quick glance at some of the most popular videos of the channel would include titles such as “Why we go cold on our partners”, “Why you will marry the wrong person” etc....
-Preamble Philosophy has always been one of those baffling things that entice you at first by its simplicity, but as you get sucked into it more and more, you find yourself searching for the end of this labyrinthine landscape. I had my first exposure to anything related to philosophy in my second year of college when I stumbled upon The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. At the time, it was one of the fascinating books I had ever read....
-Preamble Philosophy has always been one of those baffling things that entice you at first by its simplicity, but as you get sucked into it more and more, you find yourself searching for the end of this labyrinthine landscape. I had my first exposure to anything related to philosophy in my second year of college when I stumbled upon The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. At the time, it was one of the fascinating books I had ever read....
+An interesting take on life, seen through the lens of afterlife. Highly recommended!
-An interesting take on life, seen through the lens of afterlife. Highly recommended!
+A film where everything is conveyed through glances.
-A film where everything is conveyed through glances.
+Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd
+ Winter Sleep (2014) by Nuri Bilge Ceylan
+
+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd Over the years, I have increasingly gravitated towards films where supposedly “nothing happens”. Characters talk, no attempt is made to instill a moral point into the minds of the audience, which is usually accompanied with long, patient shots of people existing in their environments. This was an excellent specimen of the same dish. I had watched Once Upon a Time in Anatolia from the same director previously and much like films by Wes Anderson, I could immediately tell this was Ceylan’s film right from the start, although these two directors could not be any more different....
-Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ Check it out on Letterboxd
+ Once Upon a Time in Anatolia (2011) by Nuri Bilge Ceylan
+
+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ Check it out on Letterboxd A slow, methodical display of patience and absurdity juxtaposed on the vast landscape, this film has something else going for it. When you read the synopsis or look at the posters, you expect a certain police procedural drama - the kind of which you’ve been accustomed to till date. What you get is a completely different take on the trope....
-Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd
+ Riding Solo to the Top of the World (2006) by Gaurav Jani
+
+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd Motorcycling community is laden with fist-pumping-muscle-bulging-neckbeardy-speed-ninjas-Harley-fans, and it usually gets a bad rap all across the world. Gaurav Jani is none of these things. His passion and humility and curious nature reminded me why I loved biking in the first place. This is a must-watch for anyone fascinated with two wheels and the places they enable you to visit.
-Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆ Check it out on Letterboxd
+ Waking Life (2001) by Richard Linklater
+
+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆ Check it out on Letterboxd There are films which you wish you had watched earlier in life, and there are others which don’t make sense until you have had your fair share of world experiences. Waking Life falls in the former category. The college sophomore me would have been really excited about discussing vague notions of self and freedom and free will and morality and dreams - and don’t get me wrong, mid-twenties me is equally as excited about these things as my former self, if not more so - but the problem lies in the superficiality of it all....
-Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ Check out this review on Letterboxd
+ Oslo, August 31st (2011) by Joachim Trier
+
+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ Check out this review on Letterboxd Anhedonia. The Wikipedia entry for this word says: a diverse array of deficits in hedonic function, including reduced motivation or ability to experience pleasure. At one point or another, we have all experienced some version of this phenomenon - may be characterized by an oversaturation of love, or caused by a prolonged mediocrity in life, or as in the case of our protagonist here, the complete loss of will and motivation to feel anything....
-Wes Anderson and his colorful quirks
-Wes Anderson and his colorful quirks
+I don’t know why, but I liked the eyes-only version more. Linked below is the work-in-progress sketch:
-I don’t know why, but I liked the eyes-only version more. Linked below is the work-in-progress sketch:
+I used to be obsessed with Sherlock (the HBO show) during the time it aired, and part of my fascination was with Martin Freeman here, who so brilliantly played the role of Watson.
-I used to be obsessed with Sherlock (the HBO show) during the time it aired, and part of my fascination was with Martin Freeman here, who so brilliantly played the role of Watson.
+I have a particular affinity towards this sketch as I was very apprehensive about attempting Einstein, his face had much more complexity than what I usually dealt with, but it turned out good enough in the end.
-I have a particular affinity towards this sketch as I was very apprehensive about attempting Einstein, his face had much more complexity than what I usually dealt with, but it turned out good enough in the end.
+Completely botched this drawing, but it reminds me of the drawing streak I used to have back when I was in my hometown during college vacations.
-Completely botched this drawing, but it reminds me of the drawing streak I used to have back when I was in my hometown during college vacations.
+I was either on acid or I had watched a sad movie before attempting this piece. A strange juxtaposition of Chaplin and Hitler.
-I was either on acid or I had watched a sad movie before attempting this piece. A strange juxtaposition of Chaplin and Hitler.
+My first attempt at drawing after dabbling in caricature pieces in my childhood :)
-My first attempt at drawing after dabbling in caricature pieces in my childhood :)
+My fascination with the visual media brought me closer to seeing the world through a different lens. This is an ongoing effort to capture what I see and share it with the world.
+ Photography
+
+
My fascination with the visual media brought me closer to seeing the world through a different lens. This is an ongoing effort to capture what I see and share it with the world. You can browse the images below using left/right keys. All the images are hosted on flickr, I’d recommend navigating to my photostream if you want to see them in full size. You might need to enable Javascript if you're unable to see the images properly....
-Check it out on Instagram
+ Fear
+
+
Check it out on Instagram I’m scared. No, not because there’s a pandemic going on, even though that itself is enough @@ -181,18 +181,18 @@ Slowly eating away at my sanity, feasting on my thoughts, mutating inside my head as if a colony of ants was given an open invitation to a room full of sugary syrup....
-(See this picture on Flickr)
+ Deference vs. Indifference
+
+
(See this picture on Flickr) Deference vs. Indifference There used to be a time when things used to be simple. I’d wake up, rub my eyes, sit up straight, close my eyes, @@ -202,9 +202,9 @@ There used to be a time when I used to love the aroma of the stick when it burned, lighting up my day with the secret enchantments,...
-Recently when my mom got a new phone, I wanted to remove some system applications from the phone which are bloatware. Now doing this with a laptop is fairly easy, we can just use adb to uninstall, however the task becomes difficult if you cannot use a PC.
+ Freezing Apps on Non Rooted Phones (Without a PC)
+
+
Recently when my mom got a new phone, I wanted to remove some system applications from the phone which are bloatware. Now doing this with a laptop is fairly easy, we can just use adb to uninstall, however the task becomes difficult if you cannot use a PC. Found a way to do this via Shizuku + Hail: Install Shizuku Starting with android 11, you can use ADB on the device without using a PC....
-Recently when my mom got a new phone, I wanted to remove some system applications from the phone which are bloatware. Now doing this with a laptop is fairly easy, we can just use adb to uninstall, however the task becomes difficult if you cannot use a PC.
+ Proficient Motorcycling by David L. Hough
+
+
A good primer on learning how to ride well
+Recently when my mom got a new phone, I wanted to remove some system applications from the phone which are bloatware. Now doing this with a laptop is fairly easy, we can just use adb to uninstall, however the task becomes difficult if you cannot use a PC. Found a way to do this via Shizuku + Hail: Install Shizuku Starting with android 11, you can use ADB on the device without using a PC....
-A phenomenally written book!
-A phenomenally written book!
+A powerful exploration into the psyche of Indian women and how society perpetuates the status quo
-A powerful exploration into the psyche of Indian women and how society perpetuates the status quo
+If you want to understand how the opioid crisis began, read this
-If you want to understand how the opioid crisis began, read this
+A series of blog posts that unfortunately became a book. Not recommended.
-A series of blog posts that unfortunately became a book. Not recommended.
+A book about time and our relationship with it. Recommended.
-A book about time and our relationship with it. Recommended.
+An interesting take on life, seen through the lens of afterlife. Highly recommended!
-An interesting take on life, seen through the lens of afterlife. Highly recommended!
+A gentle introduction to the study of buildings and the way they enable societal interactions.
-A gentle introduction to the study of buildings and the way they enable societal interactions.
+A film where everything is conveyed through glances.
-The ethical dilemma of eating. Highly recommended!
-A film where everything is conveyed through glances.
+Check it out on Goodreads -Now that I’ve moved away from reading fiction, I find that I face a lot of inertia to pick up something purely for pleasure. Maybe this is a nasty by-product of wanting to be as “productive” as possible. But the more I have drifted away from reading for pleasure, more mechanical the whole process has become for me. Partly to avoid this feeling, and partly because of my shame at seeing my bookshelf filled with dusty unread books, I picked up this one to assuage my feelings of guilt....
-The ethical dilemma of eating. Highly recommended!
+Check it out on Goodreads
+ Shame by Salman Rushdie
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads +Now that I’ve moved away from reading fiction, I find that I face a lot of inertia to pick up something purely for pleasure. Maybe this is a nasty by-product of wanting to be as “productive” as possible. But the more I have drifted away from reading for pleasure, more mechanical the whole process has become for me. Partly to avoid this feeling, and partly because of my shame at seeing my bookshelf filled with dusty unread books, I picked up this one to assuage my feelings of guilt....
+Check it out on Goodreads Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional. I have no affinity for running, even for short jogs, and much less for wanting to run long distances. Although this is not because I hate exercises - one of those rare things that I figured out early in life was my desire to remain healthy as long as possible and that of course means I need to keep myself fit - but probably my distaste for running stems from the monotonous nature of the activity....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Annihilation of Caste(Annotated Edition) by Arundhati Roy
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I find India really fascinating sometimes, even though I’ve lived my whole life here. What the cultural multitudes and colorful festivals hide underneath is an ugly facade which threatens to break everything that has been built over the years. What I find most fascinating is how we’ve conditioned ourselves to ignore the blatant reality and move ahead with an oblivious calm, living in shit and aspiring for the gold....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Parenting Beyond Belief by Dale McGowan
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I have had a very curious relationship with religion, although now that I talk to others, it was a much more normal experience than what I led myself to believe. I followed the typical path of receiving a particular religion from my parents (born a “Hindu child”), which had a supporting role in my life up until my late-teenage/early-adolescent years. As is the norm for every child brought up in religion, I used to consider myself special believing that I had a “personal relationship” with God....
-Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd
+ Winter Sleep (2014) by Nuri Bilge Ceylan
+
+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd Over the years, I have increasingly gravitated towards films where supposedly “nothing happens”. Characters talk, no attempt is made to instill a moral point into the minds of the audience, which is usually accompanied with long, patient shots of people existing in their environments. This was an excellent specimen of the same dish. I had watched Once Upon a Time in Anatolia from the same director previously and much like films by Wes Anderson, I could immediately tell this was Ceylan’s film right from the start, although these two directors could not be any more different....
-Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ Check it out on Letterboxd
+ Once Upon a Time in Anatolia (2011) by Nuri Bilge Ceylan
+
+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ Check it out on Letterboxd A slow, methodical display of patience and absurdity juxtaposed on the vast landscape, this film has something else going for it. When you read the synopsis or look at the posters, you expect a certain police procedural drama - the kind of which you’ve been accustomed to till date. What you get is a completely different take on the trope....
-Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd
+ Riding Solo to the Top of the World (2006) by Gaurav Jani
+
+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd Motorcycling community is laden with fist-pumping-muscle-bulging-neckbeardy-speed-ninjas-Harley-fans, and it usually gets a bad rap all across the world. Gaurav Jani is none of these things. His passion and humility and curious nature reminded me why I loved biking in the first place. This is a must-watch for anyone fascinated with two wheels and the places they enable you to visit.
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ I Do What I Do by Raghuram Rajan
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I had picked up this one thinking it to be an autobiography, and with an expectation that it’ll cover Rajan’s tussles with the government in more details. I was pleasantly surprised to find instead a good collection of technical essays covering the workings of RBI, and economics in general. If you’re looking for a good explanatory work in the field of Economics (and especially those concerning India and its policies), you’ll enjoy this....
-Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆ Check it out on Letterboxd
+ Waking Life (2001) by Richard Linklater
+
+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆ Check it out on Letterboxd There are films which you wish you had watched earlier in life, and there are others which don’t make sense until you have had your fair share of world experiences. Waking Life falls in the former category. The college sophomore me would have been really excited about discussing vague notions of self and freedom and free will and morality and dreams - and don’t get me wrong, mid-twenties me is equally as excited about these things as my former self, if not more so - but the problem lies in the superficiality of it all....
-A series of essays on the bleak reality in India. Highly recommended.
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Azadi by Arundhati Roy
+
+
A series of essays on the bleak reality in India. Highly recommended.
+Check it out on Goodreads Reading fiction has always been a double-edged sword for me. Some of the most intimate moments I’ve spent alone is while reading fictional stories, while at the same time, feeling a pang of disappointment for myself because I wasn’t doing anything “productive.” Is this mere entertainment? Am I just escaping my real-life responsibilities and reading stories of make-believe? While I still haven’t found sincere answers to these questions, I’ve grown more confident of what I enjoy and what I don’t, which has consequently helped me find peace with this conflict....
-I don’t know why, but I liked the eyes-only version more. Linked below is the work-in-progress sketch:
-I don’t know why, but I liked the eyes-only version more. Linked below is the work-in-progress sketch:
+I used to be obsessed with Sherlock (the HBO show) during the time it aired, and part of my fascination was with Martin Freeman here, who so brilliantly played the role of Watson.
-I used to be obsessed with Sherlock (the HBO show) during the time it aired, and part of my fascination was with Martin Freeman here, who so brilliantly played the role of Watson.
+I have a particular affinity towards this sketch as I was very apprehensive about attempting Einstein, his face had much more complexity than what I usually dealt with, but it turned out good enough in the end.
-I have a particular affinity towards this sketch as I was very apprehensive about attempting Einstein, his face had much more complexity than what I usually dealt with, but it turned out good enough in the end.
+Completely botched this drawing, but it reminds me of the drawing streak I used to have back when I was in my hometown during college vacations.
-Completely botched this drawing, but it reminds me of the drawing streak I used to have back when I was in my hometown during college vacations.
+I was either on acid or I had watched a sad movie before attempting this piece. A strange juxtaposition of Chaplin and Hitler.
-I was either on acid or I had watched a sad movie before attempting this piece. A strange juxtaposition of Chaplin and Hitler.
+My first attempt at drawing after dabbling in caricature pieces in my childhood :)
-My first attempt at drawing after dabbling in caricature pieces in my childhood :)
+Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ Check out this review on Letterboxd
+ Oslo, August 31st (2011) by Joachim Trier
+
+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ Check out this review on Letterboxd Anhedonia. The Wikipedia entry for this word says: a diverse array of deficits in hedonic function, including reduced motivation or ability to experience pleasure. At one point or another, we have all experienced some version of this phenomenon - may be characterized by an oversaturation of love, or caused by a prolonged mediocrity in life, or as in the case of our protagonist here, the complete loss of will and motivation to feel anything....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Bad Blood by John Carreyrou
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads How to fool the world and become a Billionaire I remember hearing about Elizabeth Holmes when I was in my late teens, at that impressionable age when you get hyper-inspired by reading about icons that are going to change the world. There was a profile of her in Wired, with an eye-catching image of her wearing a turtleneck black sweater holding what looked like a test-tube with a tiny amount of blood with a science-y background....
-Check it out on Instagram -I’m scared. -No, not because there’s a pandemic going on, -even though that itself is enough -to make one lose their mind. -There’s another deadly virus crawling -its way into my whole being. -Slowly eating away at my sanity, -feasting on my thoughts, -mutating inside my head as if a colony of ants was given -an open invitation to a room full of sugary syrup....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Fear
+
+
Check it out on Instagram +I’m scared. +No, not because there’s a pandemic going on, +even though that itself is enough +to make one lose their mind. +There’s another deadly virus crawling +its way into my whole being. +Slowly eating away at my sanity, +feasting on my thoughts, +mutating inside my head as if a colony of ants was given +an open invitation to a room full of sugary syrup....
+Check it out on Goodreads A disappointing jumble of thoughts Disappointed. I am an atheist interested in the power of mindfulness and the whole world of so-called spirituality, so naturally, I am the ideal audience that Sam Harris is looking for. But it disappointed in almost every domain that I had expectations in. Using deep-sounding difficult words and wrapping them in an almost mythical aura of “Consciousness”, this one was a huge letdown....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Glimpses of World History by Jawaharlal Nehru
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads World history in a nutshell More than 1100 pages, this behemoth of a book still fails to capture the whole essence of world history - and rightly so. How can you combine over 2000 years of human history and still do justice to every element? But the unique manner in which this book - or more appropriately, collection of letters - has been written, it shines brightly amongst the plethora of history books you can find on this vast subject of world history....
-Wes Anderson and his colorful quirks
-Wes Anderson and his colorful quirks
+Check it out on Goodreads
+ Reasons to Stay Alive by Matt Haig
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads Reasons you should read this book: If you’ve ever had a panic attack. If you’ve ever counted the number of times the ceiling fan rotates, just so you could avoid dealing with the endless voices in your head. If you’ve ever felt ashamed to admit that you might be suffering from the D-word. If reading about personal stories of how people overcame their mental illnesses soothes you....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ How to Listen to and Understand Great Music by Robert Greenberg
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I have been a lover of music since my early childhood - runs in the family - and have imitated and performed songs (mostly inside my own head) on numerous occasions. Despite this lifelong love affair with music of all kinds, there was one particular genre of music that always baffled me. Mostly because of my own ignorance, but partially also because nobody else was talking about it....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst by Robert Sapolsky
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads There are few books which leave you in a mesmerizing state after having read them. You ponder about it for days to come, want to scream your head off about it to anyone who’d listen, and then dwell in this fear of picking up another book because how can something else ever come close to being this perfect! I have felt this way before - first when I’d finished The Complete Sherlock Holmes, later when I was left in a daze for multiple days after finishing the notorious and brilliant House of Leaves, and much more recently when I was unable to sleep after reading Why We Sleep by Matthew Walker....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Range by David Epstein
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads Started with a tightly-knit structure, but faltered at the end. The last few chapters were a slog to get through - mostly because of numerous “business-class” style case studies. Main takeaway? Other than the central idea around which the book revolves (and succinctly mentioned as the book subtitle too), the idea of interleaving is what struck me the most. I had already read about this particular method in Michael Nielsen’s brilliant post on Anki (“Augmenting Long-term Memory”) and it was interesting to read about it formally in the book....
-(See this picture on Flickr)
+ Deference vs. Indifference
+
+
(See this picture on Flickr) Deference vs. Indifference There used to be a time when things used to be simple. I’d wake up, rub my eyes, sit up straight, close my eyes, @@ -275,41 +297,31 @@ There used to be a time when I used to love the aroma of the stick when it burned, lighting up my day with the secret enchantments,...
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ The Course of Love by Alain de Botton
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads The School of Life - a massively popular YouTube channel - used to be this source of solace in some turbulent times of my college life. It is not something that you’d think would be cheerful and uplifting - a quick glance at some of the most popular videos of the channel would include titles such as “Why we go cold on our partners”, “Why you will marry the wrong person” etc....
-Preamble Philosophy has always been one of those baffling things that entice you at first by its simplicity, but as you get sucked into it more and more, you find yourself searching for the end of this labyrinthine landscape. I had my first exposure to anything related to philosophy in my second year of college when I stumbled upon The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. At the time, it was one of the fascinating books I had ever read....
-Started on: July 12th, 2024
+Finished on: Aug 29th, 2024
+Time to read: 9 hours, 9 minutes
+
I have been riding motorcycles for past 7 years. I’ve had so many crashes in the early days that people were afraid of sitting as a pillion on my bike. Slowly I started internalizing few things and gradually the accidents stopped. This is a typical journey of how you learn any skill. However, it becomes a problem if you never give yourself a chance to see your skills from first principles and examine bad patterns that you might have internalized.
+Reading this book was a refreshing reminder to examine how I ride a motorcycle.
+This didn’t teach me anything extraordinary, but it explained so many things that I had, just sort of, accepted as given. Like how tyre pressure affects a bike’s traction, why counter-steering works, why front brakes are much more powerful (and should be used more frequently) than rear brakes, and on and on.
+Pick up this book if you’d like to improve, and understand, how you ride.
+ + +What we've learned about providing support that doesn't suck (and does scale)!
+ + via Product for Engineers + + August 29, 2024 ++ The brilliant Trinidadian thinker is remembered as an admirer of the US but he also warned of its dark political future - by Harvey Neptune Read at Aeon +
+ + via Aeon | a world of ideas + + August 16, 2024 +Years ago, I realized that the Bible is the foundational book of Western civilization. If I was going to be an educated person, I needed to know what it said. +The post How I’ve Studied the Bible appeared first on David Perell. +
+ + via David Perell + + December 28, 2023 ++ Generated by + openring +
+Great links, images and reading from Chartbook newsletter by Adam Tooze
+What we've learned about providing support that doesn't suck (and does scale)!
- via Chartbook + via Product for Engineers - June 7, 2024 + August 29, 2024- There are two things from our announcement today I wanted to highlight.First, a key part of our mission is to put very capable AI tools in the hands of people for free (or at a great price). I am very proud that we’ve made the best model in the worl…
+ The brilliant Trinidadian thinker is remembered as an admirer of the US but he also warned of its dark political future - by Harvey Neptune Read at Aeon + - via Sam Altman + via Aeon | a world of ideas - June 7, 2024 + August 16, 2024The BSE Sensex–India’s most popular stock market index–closed the day today at an all-time-high of 76,468.78 points, a gain of 2,507.47 points from where it closed on Friday (May 31, 2024). It’s the highest gain single day gain that the Sensex has seen–of…
+Years ago, I realized that the Bible is the foundational book of Western civilization. If I was going to be an educated person, I needed to know what it said. +The post How I’ve Studied the Bible appeared first on David Perell. +
- via Vivek Kaul + via David Perell - June 3, 2024 + December 28, 2023Reasons you should read this book:
A lucid, non-linear and a sort of haphazard look at the most personal struggle anyone can go through, give this one a read if you want to know what it feels like to have depression.
-Great links, images and reading from Chartbook newsletter by Adam Tooze
+What we've learned about providing support that doesn't suck (and does scale)!
- via Chartbook + via Product for Engineers - June 7, 2024 + August 29, 2024- There are two things from our announcement today I wanted to highlight.First, a key part of our mission is to put very capable AI tools in the hands of people for free (or at a great price). I am very proud that we’ve made the best model in the worl…
+ The brilliant Trinidadian thinker is remembered as an admirer of the US but he also warned of its dark political future - by Harvey Neptune Read at Aeon + - via Sam Altman + via Aeon | a world of ideas - June 7, 2024 + August 16, 2024The BSE Sensex–India’s most popular stock market index–closed the day today at an all-time-high of 76,468.78 points, a gain of 2,507.47 points from where it closed on Friday (May 31, 2024). It’s the highest gain single day gain that the Sensex has seen–of…
+Years ago, I realized that the Bible is the foundational book of Western civilization. If I was going to be an educated person, I needed to know what it said. +The post How I’ve Studied the Bible appeared first on David Perell. +
- via Vivek Kaul + via David Perell - June 3, 2024 + December 28, 2023
This book has piqued my interest to give running a try and if I ever manage, in future, to enjoy running long distances, Murakami would certainly have a large role to play.
-Great links, images and reading from Chartbook newsletter by Adam Tooze
+What we've learned about providing support that doesn't suck (and does scale)!
- via Chartbook + via Product for Engineers - June 7, 2024 + August 29, 2024- There are two things from our announcement today I wanted to highlight.First, a key part of our mission is to put very capable AI tools in the hands of people for free (or at a great price). I am very proud that we’ve made the best model in the worl…
+ The brilliant Trinidadian thinker is remembered as an admirer of the US but he also warned of its dark political future - by Harvey Neptune Read at Aeon + - via Sam Altman + via Aeon | a world of ideas - June 7, 2024 + August 16, 2024The BSE Sensex–India’s most popular stock market index–closed the day today at an all-time-high of 76,468.78 points, a gain of 2,507.47 points from where it closed on Friday (May 31, 2024). It’s the highest gain single day gain that the Sensex has seen–of…
+Years ago, I realized that the Bible is the foundational book of Western civilization. If I was going to be an educated person, I needed to know what it said. +The post How I’ve Studied the Bible appeared first on David Perell. +
- via Vivek Kaul + via David Perell - June 3, 2024 + December 28, 2023
If it’s not yet clear, I unashamedly loved every part of Shame and I’m excited to dig more into Rushdie’s works!
-Great links, images and reading from Chartbook newsletter by Adam Tooze
+What we've learned about providing support that doesn't suck (and does scale)!
- via Chartbook + via Product for Engineers - June 7, 2024 + August 29, 2024- There are two things from our announcement today I wanted to highlight.First, a key part of our mission is to put very capable AI tools in the hands of people for free (or at a great price). I am very proud that we’ve made the best model in the worl…
+ The brilliant Trinidadian thinker is remembered as an admirer of the US but he also warned of its dark political future - by Harvey Neptune Read at Aeon + - via Sam Altman + via Aeon | a world of ideas - June 7, 2024 + August 16, 2024The BSE Sensex–India’s most popular stock market index–closed the day today at an all-time-high of 76,468.78 points, a gain of 2,507.47 points from where it closed on Friday (May 31, 2024). It’s the highest gain single day gain that the Sensex has seen–of…
+Years ago, I realized that the Bible is the foundational book of Western civilization. If I was going to be an educated person, I needed to know what it said. +The post How I’ve Studied the Bible appeared first on David Perell. +
- via Vivek Kaul + via David Perell - June 3, 2024 + December 28, 2023This book falls into the category of books that I like to call “Fast-food books”. They won’t necessarily make you healthier or your mind sounder, but it’ll feel really good while you’re eating them. There’s only so many anecdotes you can digest. The most common criticism that people have with these kind of books are that they could’ve been summarized in a much shorter format - probably a blog post or two. The same applies here - only the irony is that it is BECAUSE of those blog posts and the reaction it generated that prompted the author to write a whole book about it.
Probably should have let the blogs say it all.
@@ -224,17 +224,17 @@Give this one a read if you haven’t obsessively read all those countless Quora and Medium posts. Otherwise, skip it.
-Great links, images and reading from Chartbook newsletter by Adam Tooze
+What we've learned about providing support that doesn't suck (and does scale)!
- via Chartbook + via Product for Engineers - June 7, 2024 + August 29, 2024- There are two things from our announcement today I wanted to highlight.First, a key part of our mission is to put very capable AI tools in the hands of people for free (or at a great price). I am very proud that we’ve made the best model in the worl…
+ The brilliant Trinidadian thinker is remembered as an admirer of the US but he also warned of its dark political future - by Harvey Neptune Read at Aeon + - via Sam Altman + via Aeon | a world of ideas - June 7, 2024 + August 16, 2024The BSE Sensex–India’s most popular stock market index–closed the day today at an all-time-high of 76,468.78 points, a gain of 2,507.47 points from where it closed on Friday (May 31, 2024). It’s the highest gain single day gain that the Sensex has seen–of…
+Years ago, I realized that the Bible is the foundational book of Western civilization. If I was going to be an educated person, I needed to know what it said. +The post How I’ve Studied the Bible appeared first on David Perell. +
- via Vivek Kaul + via David Perell - June 3, 2024 + December 28, 2023Reading fiction has always been a double-edged sword for me. Some of the most intimate moments I’ve spent alone is while reading fictional stories, while at the same time, feeling a pang of disappointment for myself because I wasn’t doing anything “productive.” Is this mere entertainment? Am I just escaping my real-life responsibilities and reading stories of make-believe? While I still haven’t found sincere answers to these questions, I’ve grown more confident of what I enjoy and what I don’t, which has consequently helped me find peace with this conflict. Over the years, I’ve realized that reading good literature is therapeutic for me - not to be used as an afterthought but essential to keep me functional.
Stoner was another great session in my therapy.
@@ -241,14 +241,14 @@ Reading fiction has always been a double-edged sword for me. Some of the most in -Great links, images and reading from Chartbook newsletter by Adam Tooze
+What we've learned about providing support that doesn't suck (and does scale)!
- via Chartbook + via Product for Engineers - June 7, 2024 + August 29, 2024- There are two things from our announcement today I wanted to highlight.First, a key part of our mission is to put very capable AI tools in the hands of people for free (or at a great price). I am very proud that we’ve made the best model in the worl…
+ The brilliant Trinidadian thinker is remembered as an admirer of the US but he also warned of its dark political future - by Harvey Neptune Read at Aeon + - via Sam Altman + via Aeon | a world of ideas - June 7, 2024 + August 16, 2024The BSE Sensex–India’s most popular stock market index–closed the day today at an all-time-high of 76,468.78 points, a gain of 2,507.47 points from where it closed on Friday (May 31, 2024). It’s the highest gain single day gain that the Sensex has seen–of…
+Years ago, I realized that the Bible is the foundational book of Western civilization. If I was going to be an educated person, I needed to know what it said. +The post How I’ve Studied the Bible appeared first on David Perell. +
- via Vivek Kaul + via David Perell - June 3, 2024 + December 28, 2023The School of Life - a massively popular YouTube channel - used to be this source of solace in some turbulent times of my college life. It is not something that you’d think would be cheerful and uplifting - a quick glance at some of the most popular videos of the channel would include titles such as “Why we go cold on our partners”, “Why you will marry the wrong person” etc. @@ -243,15 +243,15 @@ other person respects and trusts us enough to think we should understand their u -
Great links, images and reading from Chartbook newsletter by Adam Tooze
+What we've learned about providing support that doesn't suck (and does scale)!
- via Chartbook + via Product for Engineers - June 7, 2024 + August 29, 2024- There are two things from our announcement today I wanted to highlight.First, a key part of our mission is to put very capable AI tools in the hands of people for free (or at a great price). I am very proud that we’ve made the best model in the worl…
+ The brilliant Trinidadian thinker is remembered as an admirer of the US but he also warned of its dark political future - by Harvey Neptune Read at Aeon + - via Sam Altman + via Aeon | a world of ideas - June 7, 2024 + August 16, 2024The BSE Sensex–India’s most popular stock market index–closed the day today at an all-time-high of 76,468.78 points, a gain of 2,507.47 points from where it closed on Friday (May 31, 2024). It’s the highest gain single day gain that the Sensex has seen–of…
+Years ago, I realized that the Bible is the foundational book of Western civilization. If I was going to be an educated person, I needed to know what it said. +The post How I’ve Studied the Bible appeared first on David Perell. +
- via Vivek Kaul + via David Perell - June 3, 2024 + December 28, 2023Philosophy has always been one of those baffling things that entice you at first by its simplicity, but as you get sucked into it more and more, you find yourself searching for the end of this labyrinthine landscape. I had my first exposure to anything related to philosophy in my second year of college when I stumbled upon The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. At the time, it was one of the fascinating books I had ever read. I distinctly remember sitting down with the book at 9 PM having had my dinner, and as the custom goes, was looking forward to reading anything that could distract me from the mountain load of coursework that I had to finish for the upcoming semester exams. I became so engrossed in the story that when I finished the book and went outside to take in a fresh breath of air - I was startled to discover that the sunlight was already shining throughout the corridor - it was 7 o’clock in the morning!
However, aside from a couple of books here and there, I was pretty ignorant about the whole field of philosophy . It was not until my last year of college when my then-girlfriend introduced me to different sub-fields of philosophy, and consequently, the names like Albert Camus, Bertrand Russell, and Friedrich Nietzsche and their ideas started sounding familiar. From all the ideas out there, Existentialism was something that drew me in the most.
By no means, I’m an expert in any of these matters, and neither do I have any authority to comment on them. This is just an excited rant of a newbie fanboy who just discovered his favorite toy. So please, Reader Discretion is Advised!
@@ -281,16 +281,16 @@ hope that I keep myself motivated enough to finish all these books.I’ll keep you guys posted in the meantime :)
-Great links, images and reading from Chartbook newsletter by Adam Tooze
+What we've learned about providing support that doesn't suck (and does scale)!
- via Chartbook + via Product for Engineers - June 7, 2024 + August 29, 2024- There are two things from our announcement today I wanted to highlight.First, a key part of our mission is to put very capable AI tools in the hands of people for free (or at a great price). I am very proud that we’ve made the best model in the worl…
+ The brilliant Trinidadian thinker is remembered as an admirer of the US but he also warned of its dark political future - by Harvey Neptune Read at Aeon + - via Sam Altman + via Aeon | a world of ideas - June 7, 2024 + August 16, 2024The BSE Sensex–India’s most popular stock market index–closed the day today at an all-time-high of 76,468.78 points, a gain of 2,507.47 points from where it closed on Friday (May 31, 2024). It’s the highest gain single day gain that the Sensex has seen–of…
+Years ago, I realized that the Bible is the foundational book of Western civilization. If I was going to be an educated person, I needed to know what it said. +The post How I’ve Studied the Bible appeared first on David Perell. +
- via Vivek Kaul + via David Perell - June 3, 2024 + December 28, 2023
All in all, I found this to be quite an informative read, albeit a bit dry in places, but would definitely recommend.
-Great links, images and reading from Chartbook newsletter by Adam Tooze
+What we've learned about providing support that doesn't suck (and does scale)!
- via Chartbook + via Product for Engineers - June 7, 2024 + August 29, 2024- There are two things from our announcement today I wanted to highlight.First, a key part of our mission is to put very capable AI tools in the hands of people for free (or at a great price). I am very proud that we’ve made the best model in the worl…
+ The brilliant Trinidadian thinker is remembered as an admirer of the US but he also warned of its dark political future - by Harvey Neptune Read at Aeon + - via Sam Altman + via Aeon | a world of ideas - June 7, 2024 + August 16, 2024The BSE Sensex–India’s most popular stock market index–closed the day today at an all-time-high of 76,468.78 points, a gain of 2,507.47 points from where it closed on Friday (May 31, 2024). It’s the highest gain single day gain that the Sensex has seen–of…
+Years ago, I realized that the Bible is the foundational book of Western civilization. If I was going to be an educated person, I needed to know what it said. +The post How I’ve Studied the Bible appeared first on David Perell. +
- via Vivek Kaul + via David Perell - June 3, 2024 + December 28, 2023
Save yourself the trouble of reading on why to meditate and instead dive into doing the practice itself and judge for yourself.
-Great links, images and reading from Chartbook newsletter by Adam Tooze
+What we've learned about providing support that doesn't suck (and does scale)!
- via Chartbook + via Product for Engineers - June 7, 2024 + August 29, 2024- There are two things from our announcement today I wanted to highlight.First, a key part of our mission is to put very capable AI tools in the hands of people for free (or at a great price). I am very proud that we’ve made the best model in the worl…
+ The brilliant Trinidadian thinker is remembered as an admirer of the US but he also warned of its dark political future - by Harvey Neptune Read at Aeon + - via Sam Altman + via Aeon | a world of ideas - June 7, 2024 + August 16, 2024The BSE Sensex–India’s most popular stock market index–closed the day today at an all-time-high of 76,468.78 points, a gain of 2,507.47 points from where it closed on Friday (May 31, 2024). It’s the highest gain single day gain that the Sensex has seen–of…
+Years ago, I realized that the Bible is the foundational book of Western civilization. If I was going to be an educated person, I needed to know what it said. +The post How I’ve Studied the Bible appeared first on David Perell. +
- via Vivek Kaul + via David Perell - June 3, 2024 + December 28, 2023I’m scared.
No, not because there’s a pandemic going on,
@@ -298,15 +298,15 @@ it has to.
A poem penned down during the Coronavirus pandemic. I see people who are struggling with mental health issues which, I can only imagine, would have exacerbated during these times. Take care of yourself, folks. Don’t forget that you matter. A lot.
-Great links, images and reading from Chartbook newsletter by Adam Tooze
+What we've learned about providing support that doesn't suck (and does scale)!
- via Chartbook + via Product for Engineers - June 7, 2024 + August 29, 2024- There are two things from our announcement today I wanted to highlight.First, a key part of our mission is to put very capable AI tools in the hands of people for free (or at a great price). I am very proud that we’ve made the best model in the worl…
+ The brilliant Trinidadian thinker is remembered as an admirer of the US but he also warned of its dark political future - by Harvey Neptune Read at Aeon + - via Sam Altman + via Aeon | a world of ideas - June 7, 2024 + August 16, 2024The BSE Sensex–India’s most popular stock market index–closed the day today at an all-time-high of 76,468.78 points, a gain of 2,507.47 points from where it closed on Friday (May 31, 2024). It’s the highest gain single day gain that the Sensex has seen–of…
+Years ago, I realized that the Bible is the foundational book of Western civilization. If I was going to be an educated person, I needed to know what it said. +The post How I’ve Studied the Bible appeared first on David Perell. +
- via Vivek Kaul + via David Perell - June 3, 2024 + December 28, 2023Recently when my mom got a new phone, I wanted to remove some system applications from the phone which are bloatware. Now doing this with a laptop is fairly easy, we can just use adb
to uninstall, however the task becomes difficult if you cannot use a PC.
Recently when my mom got a new phone, I wanted to remove some system applications from the phone which are bloatware. Now doing this with a laptop is fairly easy, we can just use adb
to uninstall, however the task becomes difficult if you cannot use a PC.
Found a way to do this via Shizuku + Hail:
Great links, images and reading from Chartbook newsletter by Adam Tooze
+What we've learned about providing support that doesn't suck (and does scale)!
- via Chartbook + via Product for Engineers - June 7, 2024 + August 29, 2024- There are two things from our announcement today I wanted to highlight.First, a key part of our mission is to put very capable AI tools in the hands of people for free (or at a great price). I am very proud that we’ve made the best model in the worl…
+ The brilliant Trinidadian thinker is remembered as an admirer of the US but he also warned of its dark political future - by Harvey Neptune Read at Aeon + - via Sam Altman + via Aeon | a world of ideas - June 7, 2024 + August 16, 2024The BSE Sensex–India’s most popular stock market index–closed the day today at an all-time-high of 76,468.78 points, a gain of 2,507.47 points from where it closed on Friday (May 31, 2024). It’s the highest gain single day gain that the Sensex has seen–of…
+Years ago, I realized that the Bible is the foundational book of Western civilization. If I was going to be an educated person, I needed to know what it said. +The post How I’ve Studied the Bible appeared first on David Perell. +
- via Vivek Kaul + via David Perell - June 3, 2024 + December 28, 2023Recently when my mom got a new phone, I wanted to remove some system applications from the phone which are bloatware. Now doing this with a laptop is fairly easy, we can just use adb to uninstall, however the task becomes difficult if you cannot use a PC.
+ Freezing Apps on Non Rooted Phones (Without a PC)
+
+
Recently when my mom got a new phone, I wanted to remove some system applications from the phone which are bloatware. Now doing this with a laptop is fairly easy, we can just use adb to uninstall, however the task becomes difficult if you cannot use a PC. Found a way to do this via Shizuku + Hail: Install Shizuku Starting with android 11, you can use ADB on the device without using a PC....
-The ethical dilemma of eating. Highly recommended!
-The ethical dilemma of eating. Highly recommended!
+Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆ Check it out on Letterboxd
+ Waking Life (2001) by Richard Linklater
+
+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆ Check it out on Letterboxd There are films which you wish you had watched earlier in life, and there are others which don’t make sense until you have had your fair share of world experiences. Waking Life falls in the former category. The college sophomore me would have been really excited about discussing vague notions of self and freedom and free will and morality and dreams - and don’t get me wrong, mid-twenties me is equally as excited about these things as my former self, if not more so - but the problem lies in the superficiality of it all....
-Recently when my mom got a new phone, I wanted to remove some system applications from the phone which are bloatware. Now doing this with a laptop is fairly easy, we can just use adb to uninstall, however the task becomes difficult if you cannot use a PC.
+ Freezing Apps on Non Rooted Phones (Without a PC)
+
+
Recently when my mom got a new phone, I wanted to remove some system applications from the phone which are bloatware. Now doing this with a laptop is fairly easy, we can just use adb to uninstall, however the task becomes difficult if you cannot use a PC. Found a way to do this via Shizuku + Hail: Install Shizuku Starting with android 11, you can use ADB on the device without using a PC....
-A gentle introduction to the study of buildings and the way they enable societal interactions.
-A gentle introduction to the study of buildings and the way they enable societal interactions.
+An interesting take on life, seen through the lens of afterlife. Highly recommended!
-An interesting take on life, seen through the lens of afterlife. Highly recommended!
+A film where everything is conveyed through glances.
-A film where everything is conveyed through glances.
+If you want to understand how the opioid crisis began, read this
-If you want to understand how the opioid crisis began, read this
+Check it out on Goodreads
+ What I Talk About When I Talk About Running by Haruki Murakami
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional. I have no affinity for running, even for short jogs, and much less for wanting to run long distances. Although this is not because I hate exercises - one of those rare things that I figured out early in life was my desire to remain healthy as long as possible and that of course means I need to keep myself fit - but probably my distaste for running stems from the monotonous nature of the activity....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Bad Blood by John Carreyrou
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads How to fool the world and become a Billionaire I remember hearing about Elizabeth Holmes when I was in my late teens, at that impressionable age when you get hyper-inspired by reading about icons that are going to change the world. There was a profile of her in Wired, with an eye-catching image of her wearing a turtleneck black sweater holding what looked like a test-tube with a tiny amount of blood with a science-y background....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ How to Listen to and Understand Great Music by Robert Greenberg
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I have been a lover of music since my early childhood - runs in the family - and have imitated and performed songs (mostly inside my own head) on numerous occasions. Despite this lifelong love affair with music of all kinds, there was one particular genre of music that always baffled me. Mostly because of my own ignorance, but partially also because nobody else was talking about it....
-A series of blog posts that unfortunately became a book. Not recommended.
-A series of blog posts that unfortunately became a book. Not recommended.
+Check it out on Goodreads
+ Range by David Epstein
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads Started with a tightly-knit structure, but faltered at the end. The last few chapters were a slog to get through - mostly because of numerous “business-class” style case studies. Main takeaway? Other than the central idea around which the book revolves (and succinctly mentioned as the book subtitle too), the idea of interleaving is what struck me the most. I had already read about this particular method in Michael Nielsen’s brilliant post on Anki (“Augmenting Long-term Memory”) and it was interesting to read about it formally in the book....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ How to Listen to and Understand Great Music by Robert Greenberg
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I have been a lover of music since my early childhood - runs in the family - and have imitated and performed songs (mostly inside my own head) on numerous occasions. Despite this lifelong love affair with music of all kinds, there was one particular genre of music that always baffled me. Mostly because of my own ignorance, but partially also because nobody else was talking about it....
-Wes Anderson and his colorful quirks
-Wes Anderson and his colorful quirks
+The ethical dilemma of eating. Highly recommended!
-The ethical dilemma of eating. Highly recommended!
+Check it out on Goodreads
+ Reasons to Stay Alive by Matt Haig
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads Reasons you should read this book: If you’ve ever had a panic attack. If you’ve ever counted the number of times the ceiling fan rotates, just so you could avoid dealing with the endless voices in your head. If you’ve ever felt ashamed to admit that you might be suffering from the D-word. If reading about personal stories of how people overcame their mental illnesses soothes you....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ I Do What I Do by Raghuram Rajan
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I had picked up this one thinking it to be an autobiography, and with an expectation that it’ll cover Rajan’s tussles with the government in more details. I was pleasantly surprised to find instead a good collection of technical essays covering the workings of RBI, and economics in general. If you’re looking for a good explanatory work in the field of Economics (and especially those concerning India and its policies), you’ll enjoy this....
-Preamble Philosophy has always been one of those baffling things that entice you at first by its simplicity, but as you get sucked into it more and more, you find yourself searching for the end of this labyrinthine landscape. I had my first exposure to anything related to philosophy in my second year of college when I stumbled upon The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. At the time, it was one of the fascinating books I had ever read....
-Preamble Philosophy has always been one of those baffling things that entice you at first by its simplicity, but as you get sucked into it more and more, you find yourself searching for the end of this labyrinthine landscape. I had my first exposure to anything related to philosophy in my second year of college when I stumbled upon The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. At the time, it was one of the fascinating books I had ever read....
+A series of blog posts that unfortunately became a book. Not recommended.
-A series of blog posts that unfortunately became a book. Not recommended.
+A phenomenally written book!
-A phenomenally written book!
+A powerful exploration into the psyche of Indian women and how society perpetuates the status quo
-A powerful exploration into the psyche of Indian women and how society perpetuates the status quo
+An interesting take on life, seen through the lens of afterlife. Highly recommended!
-An interesting take on life, seen through the lens of afterlife. Highly recommended!
+A film where everything is conveyed through glances.
-A film where everything is conveyed through glances.
+The ethical dilemma of eating. Highly recommended!
-The ethical dilemma of eating. Highly recommended!
+Check it out on Goodreads
+ Shame by Salman Rushdie
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads Now that I’ve moved away from reading fiction, I find that I face a lot of inertia to pick up something purely for pleasure. Maybe this is a nasty by-product of wanting to be as “productive” as possible. But the more I have drifted away from reading for pleasure, more mechanical the whole process has become for me. Partly to avoid this feeling, and partly because of my shame at seeing my bookshelf filled with dusty unread books, I picked up this one to assuage my feelings of guilt....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ What I Talk About When I Talk About Running by Haruki Murakami
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional. I have no affinity for running, even for short jogs, and much less for wanting to run long distances. Although this is not because I hate exercises - one of those rare things that I figured out early in life was my desire to remain healthy as long as possible and that of course means I need to keep myself fit - but probably my distaste for running stems from the monotonous nature of the activity....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Annihilation of Caste(Annotated Edition) by Arundhati Roy
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I find India really fascinating sometimes, even though I’ve lived my whole life here. What the cultural multitudes and colorful festivals hide underneath is an ugly facade which threatens to break everything that has been built over the years. What I find most fascinating is how we’ve conditioned ourselves to ignore the blatant reality and move ahead with an oblivious calm, living in shit and aspiring for the gold....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Parenting Beyond Belief by Dale McGowan
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I have had a very curious relationship with religion, although now that I talk to others, it was a much more normal experience than what I led myself to believe. I followed the typical path of receiving a particular religion from my parents (born a “Hindu child”), which had a supporting role in my life up until my late-teenage/early-adolescent years. As is the norm for every child brought up in religion, I used to consider myself special believing that I had a “personal relationship” with God....
-Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd
+ Riding Solo to the Top of the World (2006) by Gaurav Jani
+
+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd Motorcycling community is laden with fist-pumping-muscle-bulging-neckbeardy-speed-ninjas-Harley-fans, and it usually gets a bad rap all across the world. Gaurav Jani is none of these things. His passion and humility and curious nature reminded me why I loved biking in the first place. This is a must-watch for anyone fascinated with two wheels and the places they enable you to visit.
-A series of essays on the bleak reality in India. Highly recommended.
-A series of essays on the bleak reality in India. Highly recommended.
+Check it out on Goodreads
+ Glimpses of World History by Jawaharlal Nehru
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads World history in a nutshell More than 1100 pages, this behemoth of a book still fails to capture the whole essence of world history - and rightly so. How can you combine over 2000 years of human history and still do justice to every element? But the unique manner in which this book - or more appropriately, collection of letters - has been written, it shines brightly amongst the plethora of history books you can find on this vast subject of world history....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ How to Listen to and Understand Great Music by Robert Greenberg
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I have been a lover of music since my early childhood - runs in the family - and have imitated and performed songs (mostly inside my own head) on numerous occasions. Despite this lifelong love affair with music of all kinds, there was one particular genre of music that always baffled me. Mostly because of my own ignorance, but partially also because nobody else was talking about it....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst by Robert Sapolsky
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads There are few books which leave you in a mesmerizing state after having read them. You ponder about it for days to come, want to scream your head off about it to anyone who’d listen, and then dwell in this fear of picking up another book because how can something else ever come close to being this perfect! I have felt this way before - first when I’d finished The Complete Sherlock Holmes, later when I was left in a daze for multiple days after finishing the notorious and brilliant House of Leaves, and much more recently when I was unable to sleep after reading Why We Sleep by Matthew Walker....
-A powerful exploration into the psyche of Indian women and how society perpetuates the status quo
-A powerful exploration into the psyche of Indian women and how society perpetuates the status quo
+A phenomenally written book!
-A phenomenally written book!
+Check it out on Goodreads
+ Shame by Salman Rushdie
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads Now that I’ve moved away from reading fiction, I find that I face a lot of inertia to pick up something purely for pleasure. Maybe this is a nasty by-product of wanting to be as “productive” as possible. But the more I have drifted away from reading for pleasure, more mechanical the whole process has become for me. Partly to avoid this feeling, and partly because of my shame at seeing my bookshelf filled with dusty unread books, I picked up this one to assuage my feelings of guilt....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Stoner by John Williams
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads Reading fiction has always been a double-edged sword for me. Some of the most intimate moments I’ve spent alone is while reading fictional stories, while at the same time, feeling a pang of disappointment for myself because I wasn’t doing anything “productive.” Is this mere entertainment? Am I just escaping my real-life responsibilities and reading stories of make-believe? While I still haven’t found sincere answers to these questions, I’ve grown more confident of what I enjoy and what I don’t, which has consequently helped me find peace with this conflict....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ The Course of Love by Alain de Botton
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads The School of Life - a massively popular YouTube channel - used to be this source of solace in some turbulent times of my college life. It is not something that you’d think would be cheerful and uplifting - a quick glance at some of the most popular videos of the channel would include titles such as “Why we go cold on our partners”, “Why you will marry the wrong person” etc....
-An interesting take on life, seen through the lens of afterlife. Highly recommended!
-An interesting take on life, seen through the lens of afterlife. Highly recommended!
+A film where everything is conveyed through glances.
-A film where everything is conveyed through glances.
+Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd
+ Winter Sleep (2014) by Nuri Bilge Ceylan
+
+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd Over the years, I have increasingly gravitated towards films where supposedly “nothing happens”. Characters talk, no attempt is made to instill a moral point into the minds of the audience, which is usually accompanied with long, patient shots of people existing in their environments. This was an excellent specimen of the same dish. I had watched Once Upon a Time in Anatolia from the same director previously and much like films by Wes Anderson, I could immediately tell this was Ceylan’s film right from the start, although these two directors could not be any more different....
-Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ Check it out on Letterboxd
+ Once Upon a Time in Anatolia (2011) by Nuri Bilge Ceylan
+
+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ Check it out on Letterboxd A slow, methodical display of patience and absurdity juxtaposed on the vast landscape, this film has something else going for it. When you read the synopsis or look at the posters, you expect a certain police procedural drama - the kind of which you’ve been accustomed to till date. What you get is a completely different take on the trope....
-Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ Check out this review on Letterboxd
+ Oslo, August 31st (2011) by Joachim Trier
+
+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ Check out this review on Letterboxd Anhedonia. The Wikipedia entry for this word says: a diverse array of deficits in hedonic function, including reduced motivation or ability to experience pleasure. At one point or another, we have all experienced some version of this phenomenon - may be characterized by an oversaturation of love, or caused by a prolonged mediocrity in life, or as in the case of our protagonist here, the complete loss of will and motivation to feel anything....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ What I Talk About When I Talk About Running by Haruki Murakami
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional. I have no affinity for running, even for short jogs, and much less for wanting to run long distances. Although this is not because I hate exercises - one of those rare things that I figured out early in life was my desire to remain healthy as long as possible and that of course means I need to keep myself fit - but probably my distaste for running stems from the monotonous nature of the activity....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Glimpses of World History by Jawaharlal Nehru
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads World history in a nutshell More than 1100 pages, this behemoth of a book still fails to capture the whole essence of world history - and rightly so. How can you combine over 2000 years of human history and still do justice to every element? But the unique manner in which this book - or more appropriately, collection of letters - has been written, it shines brightly amongst the plethora of history books you can find on this vast subject of world history....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ How to Listen to and Understand Great Music by Robert Greenberg
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I have been a lover of music since my early childhood - runs in the family - and have imitated and performed songs (mostly inside my own head) on numerous occasions. Despite this lifelong love affair with music of all kinds, there was one particular genre of music that always baffled me. Mostly because of my own ignorance, but partially also because nobody else was talking about it....
-Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd
+ Riding Solo to the Top of the World (2006) by Gaurav Jani
+
+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd Motorcycling community is laden with fist-pumping-muscle-bulging-neckbeardy-speed-ninjas-Harley-fans, and it usually gets a bad rap all across the world. Gaurav Jani is none of these things. His passion and humility and curious nature reminded me why I loved biking in the first place. This is a must-watch for anyone fascinated with two wheels and the places they enable you to visit.
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ I Do What I Do by Raghuram Rajan
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I had picked up this one thinking it to be an autobiography, and with an expectation that it’ll cover Rajan’s tussles with the government in more details. I was pleasantly surprised to find instead a good collection of technical essays covering the workings of RBI, and economics in general. If you’re looking for a good explanatory work in the field of Economics (and especially those concerning India and its policies), you’ll enjoy this....
-A phenomenally written book!
-A phenomenally written book!
+A powerful exploration into the psyche of Indian women and how society perpetuates the status quo
-A powerful exploration into the psyche of Indian women and how society perpetuates the status quo
+Check it out on Goodreads
+ Shame by Salman Rushdie
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads Now that I’ve moved away from reading fiction, I find that I face a lot of inertia to pick up something purely for pleasure. Maybe this is a nasty by-product of wanting to be as “productive” as possible. But the more I have drifted away from reading for pleasure, more mechanical the whole process has become for me. Partly to avoid this feeling, and partly because of my shame at seeing my bookshelf filled with dusty unread books, I picked up this one to assuage my feelings of guilt....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Annihilation of Caste(Annotated Edition) by Arundhati Roy
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I find India really fascinating sometimes, even though I’ve lived my whole life here. What the cultural multitudes and colorful festivals hide underneath is an ugly facade which threatens to break everything that has been built over the years. What I find most fascinating is how we’ve conditioned ourselves to ignore the blatant reality and move ahead with an oblivious calm, living in shit and aspiring for the gold....
-A series of essays on the bleak reality in India. Highly recommended.
-A series of essays on the bleak reality in India. Highly recommended.
+Check it out on Goodreads
+ Glimpses of World History by Jawaharlal Nehru
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads World history in a nutshell More than 1100 pages, this behemoth of a book still fails to capture the whole essence of world history - and rightly so. How can you combine over 2000 years of human history and still do justice to every element? But the unique manner in which this book - or more appropriately, collection of letters - has been written, it shines brightly amongst the plethora of history books you can find on this vast subject of world history....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Bad Blood by John Carreyrou
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads How to fool the world and become a Billionaire I remember hearing about Elizabeth Holmes when I was in my late teens, at that impressionable age when you get hyper-inspired by reading about icons that are going to change the world. There was a profile of her in Wired, with an eye-catching image of her wearing a turtleneck black sweater holding what looked like a test-tube with a tiny amount of blood with a science-y background....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Glimpses of World History by Jawaharlal Nehru
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads World history in a nutshell More than 1100 pages, this behemoth of a book still fails to capture the whole essence of world history - and rightly so. How can you combine over 2000 years of human history and still do justice to every element? But the unique manner in which this book - or more appropriately, collection of letters - has been written, it shines brightly amongst the plethora of history books you can find on this vast subject of world history....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Waking Up by Sam Harris
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads A disappointing jumble of thoughts Disappointed. I am an atheist interested in the power of mindfulness and the whole world of so-called spirituality, so naturally, I am the ideal audience that Sam Harris is looking for. But it disappointed in almost every domain that I had expectations in. Using deep-sounding difficult words and wrapping them in an almost mythical aura of “Consciousness”, this one was a huge letdown....
-A film where everything is conveyed through glances.
-A film where everything is conveyed through glances.
+Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd
+ Proficient Motorcycling by David L. Hough
+
+
A good primer on learning how to ride well
+Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd Motorcycling community is laden with fist-pumping-muscle-bulging-neckbeardy-speed-ninjas-Harley-fans, and it usually gets a bad rap all across the world. Gaurav Jani is none of these things. His passion and humility and curious nature reminded me why I loved biking in the first place. This is a must-watch for anyone fascinated with two wheels and the places they enable you to visit.
-A powerful exploration into the psyche of Indian women and how society perpetuates the status quo
-A good primer on learning how to ride well
+If you want to understand how the opioid crisis began, read this
-A powerful exploration into the psyche of Indian women and how society perpetuates the status quo
+A series of blog posts that unfortunately became a book. Not recommended.
-If you want to understand how the opioid crisis began, read this
+A book about time and our relationship with it. Recommended.
-A series of blog posts that unfortunately became a book. Not recommended.
+A gentle introduction to the study of buildings and the way they enable societal interactions.
-A book about time and our relationship with it. Recommended.
+The ethical dilemma of eating. Highly recommended!
-A gentle introduction to the study of buildings and the way they enable societal interactions.
+Check it out on Goodreads
+ The Way We Eat: Why Our Food Choices Matter by Peter Singer
+
+
The ethical dilemma of eating. Highly recommended!
+Check it out on Goodreads I find India really fascinating sometimes, even though I’ve lived my whole life here. What the cultural multitudes and colorful festivals hide underneath is an ugly facade which threatens to break everything that has been built over the years. What I find most fascinating is how we’ve conditioned ourselves to ignore the blatant reality and move ahead with an oblivious calm, living in shit and aspiring for the gold....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Parenting Beyond Belief by Dale McGowan
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I have had a very curious relationship with religion, although now that I talk to others, it was a much more normal experience than what I led myself to believe. I followed the typical path of receiving a particular religion from my parents (born a “Hindu child”), which had a supporting role in my life up until my late-teenage/early-adolescent years. As is the norm for every child brought up in religion, I used to consider myself special believing that I had a “personal relationship” with God....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ I Do What I Do by Raghuram Rajan
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I had picked up this one thinking it to be an autobiography, and with an expectation that it’ll cover Rajan’s tussles with the government in more details. I was pleasantly surprised to find instead a good collection of technical essays covering the workings of RBI, and economics in general. If you’re looking for a good explanatory work in the field of Economics (and especially those concerning India and its policies), you’ll enjoy this....
-A series of essays on the bleak reality in India. Highly recommended.
-Check it out on Goodreads -How to fool the world and become a Billionaire I remember hearing about Elizabeth Holmes when I was in my late teens, at that impressionable age when you get hyper-inspired by reading about icons that are going to change the world. There was a profile of her in Wired, with an eye-catching image of her wearing a turtleneck black sweater holding what looked like a test-tube with a tiny amount of blood with a science-y background....
-A series of essays on the bleak reality in India. Highly recommended.
+Check it out on Goodreads
+ Bad Blood by John Carreyrou
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads +How to fool the world and become a Billionaire I remember hearing about Elizabeth Holmes when I was in my late teens, at that impressionable age when you get hyper-inspired by reading about icons that are going to change the world. There was a profile of her in Wired, with an eye-catching image of her wearing a turtleneck black sweater holding what looked like a test-tube with a tiny amount of blood with a science-y background....
+Check it out on Goodreads A disappointing jumble of thoughts Disappointed. I am an atheist interested in the power of mindfulness and the whole world of so-called spirituality, so naturally, I am the ideal audience that Sam Harris is looking for. But it disappointed in almost every domain that I had expectations in. Using deep-sounding difficult words and wrapping them in an almost mythical aura of “Consciousness”, this one was a huge letdown....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Glimpses of World History by Jawaharlal Nehru
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads World history in a nutshell More than 1100 pages, this behemoth of a book still fails to capture the whole essence of world history - and rightly so. How can you combine over 2000 years of human history and still do justice to every element? But the unique manner in which this book - or more appropriately, collection of letters - has been written, it shines brightly amongst the plethora of history books you can find on this vast subject of world history....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Reasons to Stay Alive by Matt Haig
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads Reasons you should read this book: If you’ve ever had a panic attack. If you’ve ever counted the number of times the ceiling fan rotates, just so you could avoid dealing with the endless voices in your head. If you’ve ever felt ashamed to admit that you might be suffering from the D-word. If reading about personal stories of how people overcame their mental illnesses soothes you....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst by Robert Sapolsky
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads There are few books which leave you in a mesmerizing state after having read them. You ponder about it for days to come, want to scream your head off about it to anyone who’d listen, and then dwell in this fear of picking up another book because how can something else ever come close to being this perfect! I have felt this way before - first when I’d finished The Complete Sherlock Holmes, later when I was left in a daze for multiple days after finishing the notorious and brilliant House of Leaves, and much more recently when I was unable to sleep after reading Why We Sleep by Matthew Walker....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Range by David Epstein
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads Started with a tightly-knit structure, but faltered at the end. The last few chapters were a slog to get through - mostly because of numerous “business-class” style case studies. Main takeaway? Other than the central idea around which the book revolves (and succinctly mentioned as the book subtitle too), the idea of interleaving is what struck me the most. I had already read about this particular method in Michael Nielsen’s brilliant post on Anki (“Augmenting Long-term Memory”) and it was interesting to read about it formally in the book....
-Preamble Philosophy has always been one of those baffling things that entice you at first by its simplicity, but as you get sucked into it more and more, you find yourself searching for the end of this labyrinthine landscape. I had my first exposure to anything related to philosophy in my second year of college when I stumbled upon The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. At the time, it was one of the fascinating books I had ever read....
-Preamble Philosophy has always been one of those baffling things that entice you at first by its simplicity, but as you get sucked into it more and more, you find yourself searching for the end of this labyrinthine landscape. I had my first exposure to anything related to philosophy in my second year of college when I stumbled upon The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. At the time, it was one of the fascinating books I had ever read....
+Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ Check out this review on Letterboxd
+ Oslo, August 31st (2011) by Joachim Trier
+
+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ Check out this review on Letterboxd Anhedonia. The Wikipedia entry for this word says: a diverse array of deficits in hedonic function, including reduced motivation or ability to experience pleasure. At one point or another, we have all experienced some version of this phenomenon - may be characterized by an oversaturation of love, or caused by a prolonged mediocrity in life, or as in the case of our protagonist here, the complete loss of will and motivation to feel anything....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Parenting Beyond Belief by Dale McGowan
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I have had a very curious relationship with religion, although now that I talk to others, it was a much more normal experience than what I led myself to believe. I followed the typical path of receiving a particular religion from my parents (born a “Hindu child”), which had a supporting role in my life up until my late-teenage/early-adolescent years. As is the norm for every child brought up in religion, I used to consider myself special believing that I had a “personal relationship” with God....
-Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆ Check it out on Letterboxd
+ Waking Life (2001) by Richard Linklater
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+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆ Check it out on Letterboxd There are films which you wish you had watched earlier in life, and there are others which don’t make sense until you have had your fair share of world experiences. Waking Life falls in the former category. The college sophomore me would have been really excited about discussing vague notions of self and freedom and free will and morality and dreams - and don’t get me wrong, mid-twenties me is equally as excited about these things as my former self, if not more so - but the problem lies in the superficiality of it all....
-Preamble Philosophy has always been one of those baffling things that entice you at first by its simplicity, but as you get sucked into it more and more, you find yourself searching for the end of this labyrinthine landscape. I had my first exposure to anything related to philosophy in my second year of college when I stumbled upon The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. At the time, it was one of the fascinating books I had ever read....
-Preamble Philosophy has always been one of those baffling things that entice you at first by its simplicity, but as you get sucked into it more and more, you find yourself searching for the end of this labyrinthine landscape. I had my first exposure to anything related to philosophy in my second year of college when I stumbled upon The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. At the time, it was one of the fascinating books I had ever read....
+Check it out on Instagram
+ Fear
+
+
Check it out on Instagram I’m scared. No, not because there’s a pandemic going on, even though that itself is enough @@ -181,18 +181,18 @@ Slowly eating away at my sanity, feasting on my thoughts, mutating inside my head as if a colony of ants was given an open invitation to a room full of sugary syrup....
-(See this picture on Flickr)
+ Deference vs. Indifference
+
+
(See this picture on Flickr) Deference vs. Indifference There used to be a time when things used to be simple. I’d wake up, rub my eyes, sit up straight, close my eyes, @@ -202,9 +202,9 @@ There used to be a time when I used to love the aroma of the stick when it burned, lighting up my day with the secret enchantments,...
-A series of blog posts that unfortunately became a book. Not recommended.
-A series of blog posts that unfortunately became a book. Not recommended.
+A book about time and our relationship with it. Recommended.
-A book about time and our relationship with it. Recommended.
+If you want to understand how the opioid crisis began, read this
-If you want to understand how the opioid crisis began, read this
+Check it out on Goodreads
+ The Course of Love by Alain de Botton
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads The School of Life - a massively popular YouTube channel - used to be this source of solace in some turbulent times of my college life. It is not something that you’d think would be cheerful and uplifting - a quick glance at some of the most popular videos of the channel would include titles such as “Why we go cold on our partners”, “Why you will marry the wrong person” etc....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Annihilation of Caste(Annotated Edition) by Arundhati Roy
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I find India really fascinating sometimes, even though I’ve lived my whole life here. What the cultural multitudes and colorful festivals hide underneath is an ugly facade which threatens to break everything that has been built over the years. What I find most fascinating is how we’ve conditioned ourselves to ignore the blatant reality and move ahead with an oblivious calm, living in shit and aspiring for the gold....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Parenting Beyond Belief by Dale McGowan
+
+
Check it out on Goodreads I have had a very curious relationship with religion, although now that I talk to others, it was a much more normal experience than what I led myself to believe. I followed the typical path of receiving a particular religion from my parents (born a “Hindu child”), which had a supporting role in my life up until my late-teenage/early-adolescent years. As is the norm for every child brought up in religion, I used to consider myself special believing that I had a “personal relationship” with God....
-The ethical dilemma of eating. Highly recommended!
-The ethical dilemma of eating. Highly recommended!
+I don’t know why, but I liked the eyes-only version more. Linked below is the work-in-progress sketch:
-I don’t know why, but I liked the eyes-only version more. Linked below is the work-in-progress sketch:
+I used to be obsessed with Sherlock (the HBO show) during the time it aired, and part of my fascination was with Martin Freeman here, who so brilliantly played the role of Watson.
-I used to be obsessed with Sherlock (the HBO show) during the time it aired, and part of my fascination was with Martin Freeman here, who so brilliantly played the role of Watson.
+I have a particular affinity towards this sketch as I was very apprehensive about attempting Einstein, his face had much more complexity than what I usually dealt with, but it turned out good enough in the end.
-I have a particular affinity towards this sketch as I was very apprehensive about attempting Einstein, his face had much more complexity than what I usually dealt with, but it turned out good enough in the end.
+Completely botched this drawing, but it reminds me of the drawing streak I used to have back when I was in my hometown during college vacations.
-Completely botched this drawing, but it reminds me of the drawing streak I used to have back when I was in my hometown during college vacations.
+I was either on acid or I had watched a sad movie before attempting this piece. A strange juxtaposition of Chaplin and Hitler.
-I was either on acid or I had watched a sad movie before attempting this piece. A strange juxtaposition of Chaplin and Hitler.
+My first attempt at drawing after dabbling in caricature pieces in my childhood :)
-My first attempt at drawing after dabbling in caricature pieces in my childhood :)
+A gentle introduction to the study of buildings and the way they enable societal interactions.
-A gentle introduction to the study of buildings and the way they enable societal interactions.
+Recently when my mom got a new phone, I wanted to remove some system applications from the phone which are bloatware. Now doing this with a laptop is fairly easy, we can just use adb to uninstall, however the task becomes difficult if you cannot use a PC.
+ Freezing Apps on Non Rooted Phones (Without a PC)
+
+
Recently when my mom got a new phone, I wanted to remove some system applications from the phone which are bloatware. Now doing this with a laptop is fairly easy, we can just use adb to uninstall, however the task becomes difficult if you cannot use a PC. Found a way to do this via Shizuku + Hail: Install Shizuku Starting with android 11, you can use ADB on the device without using a PC....
-Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd
+ Winter Sleep (2014) by Nuri Bilge Ceylan
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+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Check it out on Letterboxd Over the years, I have increasingly gravitated towards films where supposedly “nothing happens”. Characters talk, no attempt is made to instill a moral point into the minds of the audience, which is usually accompanied with long, patient shots of people existing in their environments. This was an excellent specimen of the same dish. I had watched Once Upon a Time in Anatolia from the same director previously and much like films by Wes Anderson, I could immediately tell this was Ceylan’s film right from the start, although these two directors could not be any more different....
-Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ Check it out on Letterboxd
+ Once Upon a Time in Anatolia (2011) by Nuri Bilge Ceylan
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+
Verdict: ★ ★ ★ ★ ☆ Check it out on Letterboxd A slow, methodical display of patience and absurdity juxtaposed on the vast landscape, this film has something else going for it. When you read the synopsis or look at the posters, you expect a certain police procedural drama - the kind of which you’ve been accustomed to till date. What you get is a completely different take on the trope....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst by Robert Sapolsky
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+
Check it out on Goodreads There are few books which leave you in a mesmerizing state after having read them. You ponder about it for days to come, want to scream your head off about it to anyone who’d listen, and then dwell in this fear of picking up another book because how can something else ever come close to being this perfect! I have felt this way before - first when I’d finished The Complete Sherlock Holmes, later when I was left in a daze for multiple days after finishing the notorious and brilliant House of Leaves, and much more recently when I was unable to sleep after reading Why We Sleep by Matthew Walker....
-Check it out on Goodreads
+ Range by David Epstein
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+
Check it out on Goodreads Started with a tightly-knit structure, but faltered at the end. The last few chapters were a slog to get through - mostly because of numerous “business-class” style case studies. Main takeaway? Other than the central idea around which the book revolves (and succinctly mentioned as the book subtitle too), the idea of interleaving is what struck me the most. I had already read about this particular method in Michael Nielsen’s brilliant post on Anki (“Augmenting Long-term Memory”) and it was interesting to read about it formally in the book....
-Check it out on Instagram
+ Fear
+
+
Check it out on Instagram I’m scared. No, not because there’s a pandemic going on, even though that itself is enough @@ -181,18 +181,18 @@ Slowly eating away at my sanity, feasting on my thoughts, mutating inside my head as if a colony of ants was given an open invitation to a room full of sugary syrup....
-(See this picture on Flickr)
+ Deference vs. Indifference
+
+
(See this picture on Flickr) Deference vs. Indifference There used to be a time when things used to be simple. I’d wake up, rub my eyes, sit up straight, close my eyes, @@ -202,9 +202,9 @@ There used to be a time when I used to love the aroma of the stick when it burned, lighting up my day with the secret enchantments,...
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