P.S. You Should Know... | Issue #312
Running experiments.
my story đ
iâve been thinking đ
Animal Experiments. The kids watched Clifford the Big Red Dog this morning. The movieâs villain runs a research lab and intends to run experiments on him. He orders his henchmen to kidnap the dog to advance his scheme. Without a doubt, this is a bad guy. While explaining a scene, Kim told the kids something like: heâs not nice because he wants to run experiments on Clifford. Certainly thatâs true in this case! I recoiled at the statement, though, knowing just how embedded animal testing is in medical research. Iâm always cheering on the research (especially in this newsletter), so implicitly I must be comfortable with the methods. And, while I accept that it is indeed ânot nice,â I also think itâs often worthwhile and appropriate. Curious, I turned to PETA to learn how they view the tradeoff. Not surprisingly, theyâre opposed to it. They make the valid point that in many some cases the animals are poor analogues for the humans we truly want to help via research. They do seem to accept it in cases where itâs ârequired by law.â Mostly, though, they want to promote alternatives like in-vitro testing and computer modeling. Iâm not yet changing my position on the usefulness and ethicalness of animal experimentation. But I am open to learning more about how we might advance medicine without it. And hearing about how to talk about these hairy topics with young kids.
fun facts đ
Emma Willardâs maps of time. If you think infographics are cool, youâll love this! âEmma Willard (1787â1870), a leading feminist educator whose innovative maps of time laid the groundwork for the charts and graphics of today.â ~ learn more
The difference between soil and dirt. Our kid schooled us on this earlier this week. Soil is living; dirt is dead. ~ learn more
How lithium gets from the earth into your electric car. This Washington Post article is an engaging, multimedia, tutorial that covers the entire process. Highly recommended. ~ learn more
Legal loophole legalized ecstasy in Ireland for 48 hours. This is old new from 2015, yet entertaining to me in 2023. âFollowing what appears to be a major oversight, lawmakers in Ireland are scrambling to pass emergency legislation after a Tuesday morning court ruling resulted in the legalization of a number of drugs, including ecstasy, ketamine, and crystal meth in the country.â ~ learn more
oh, chicago đ
28 things that are normal in Chicago but seem weird to outsiders. This one felt like a gut punch: âParking meters that pay private investor but are taxpayer enforced.â ~ learn more
tech, startups, internet âĄ
Ziplineâs next generation delivery drone system. Two comments on this. First, this thread, including videos, is an incredible glimpse into the future. Second, one commentors rightfully calls out the disconnect between the claim of half a million fully autonomous deliveries and the fact that most of the videos are CGI. ~ learn more
What is ChatGPT doing and why does it work? Written by Stephen Wolfram, this is a technical explanation about how ChatGPT and Large Language Models work. He builds up from the ground floor, providing simplified mathematical examples that are somewhat approachable to regular people. But it is Stephen Wolfram, who is out-of-this-world smart, so I wouldnât expect to grok it all on the first try. ~ learn more
Lessons learned from 100+ angel investments. A neighbor in Austin launched a new podcast called Wannabe Angels. In their first interview, they talk to Jack Greco, who has invested in 120 startups and 50 funds. ~ learn more
better doing đŻ
Hemingwayâs warning about habits. I just learned the phrase âgradually, then suddenlyâ was coined by the famous author of The Sun Also Rises. Itâs the response to one character asking another âHow did you go bankrupt?â ~ learn more
Urgency doesnât exist. âThe first and most obvious sense in which urgency isnât what it seems is that virtually none of the things that generate that knot-in-the-stomach feeling are the matters of life-or-death we tend to assume. By the strictest definition of the word âneedâ, they donât actually need doing before anything else.â ~ learn more
How to be a better parent. I listened to this podcast at 1.5x so it was about 30 minutes. Dr. Shefali is promoting her new book and her theory of conscious parenting. One idea that I put into practice right away (see photo caption above) is to show all sides of parenting when sharing online, not just the highlights. The goal is to avoid perpetuating the damaging standard of âperfectâ that we see on social media. ~ learn more
under the microscope đŹ
Studying autism with lab-grown brain organoids. âFor years, the neuroscientist Sergiu PaĹca has been a leader in the use of brain organoids in studies of human neurological disorders. His latest work, in which human cells become working parts of rat brains, carries that effort to new heights.â ~ learn more
Scientists target âbiocomputingâ breakthrough with use of human brain cells. Like the link above, this is also about organoids. A bit farther âout thereâ, these researchers want to turn the lumps of brain cells into fast and efficient computers. Given the revolution happening in artificial intelligence on silicon, this could take things to a new level. ~ learn more
big ideas đ
The unpredictable abilities emerging from large AI models. I suspect âemergenceâ will continue to be a dominant force in human progress in this century. Seems like a safe benefit since itâs also responsible for, well, pretty much everything. âA raft of researchers, detecting the first hints that LLMs could reach beyond the constraints of their training data, are striving for a better grasp of what emergence looks like and how it happens.â ~ learn more
on the blockchain â
LinksDAO is under contract to buy a Scottish golf course. I think this is cool news because it demonstrates that the crypto world can manifest in real life. Itâs not all just a bunch of gamblers trading BS tokens and NFTs back and forth! ~ learn more
Forget HTTP: Ethereum has a new URL standard that canât be blocked. Instead of http:// itâll be web3://. But itâs pretty expensive, so donât expect it to take over most use cases quite yet. ~ learn more



The New Yorker had a recent article related to animal testing and mice. Can be found here - https://www.newyorker.com/culture/annals-of-inquiry/the-case-for-free-range-lab-mice