Minimum verbiage from me this week. I'll leave you with some "bests of the year". Plus some excellent articles as per usual.
Rolling Stone's Best Albums of the Year
Complex Best Albums of the Year
GQ Best Songs of the Year
Slate Best Books of the Year
FT Best Books of the Year
Guardian Best Books of the Year
Vox Best Movies of the Year
Time Best Movies of the Year
NYT Best TV Shows of the Year
Stay Curious,
Onward! - Rahim
PS. Please make some time for this? Isn't it the greatest?
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52 things you'll learn from Tom Whitwell.
Have you ever been in a team meeting where someone has an idea they’re so wedded to that they can’t entertain other options? Some people in the group might agree, while others might disagree and suggest other solutions.
Every year I ask myself 40 questions to ask yourself every year 40 questions that help me make sense of what happened over the past twelve months.
Hard Conversations. Lots of them. Each conversation is different, but depending on the situation, they fall into one a few buckets. The hardest are with founders who are already in your portfolio.
A chat between CEO and co-founder of Coinbase Brian Armstrong; and a16z co-founder Ben Horowitz, who authored the bestselling business books The Hard Things ...
The world isn’t just teetering on the brink of another recession—it is in midst of a profound economic and financial shift, writes Mohamed A. El-Erian.
From exercising regularly to having good friends, these 10 stories from the World Economic Forum are full of tips on living a long and healthy life.
A relatively new innovation in machine learning called diffusion models brought text-to-image generation to maturity.
Disney researchers have created a new neural network that can alter the visual age of actors in TV or film, reports Gizmodo.
Robots were once considered capable only of unimaginative, routine work. Today they write articles and create award-winning art. This is Work in Progress, a newsletter by Derek Thompson about work, technology, and how to solve some of America’s biggest problems. Sign up here to get it every week.
The day when most new drugs will be developed and tested directly using human tissues is right around the corner. A lung-on-a-chip device. Image courtesy of Wyss Institute, Harvard University. Jim Grotberg grew up using his lungs a lot, and later became professionally allured to them.
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