Filt Flit

Those who say AI is not useful just don’t know how to use it. Simple as that. I wrote the below filtering and search improvement tool for our internal search engine’s web interface mostly using AI. Not even an agent — just plain ChatGPT.

None of what you see above save the search box existed prior to me and the AI constructing it. It’s all local CSS and JavaScript, by the way, but it provides advanced filtering and some additional search capabilities to an application that had zero of that before. It even uses local browser storage to remember the state of whether the filter bar is hidden or not (button not pictured). In other words, this isn’t some trivial application. Though they are not the most efficient, there are over 1,000 lines of code that allows the above to function, including some UI improvements not shown in this screenshot. (The “Quote” button toggles the result between quoted search and not, and the filters and chips filter the results returned. There are also dropdowns that do the same. The tool detects file extensions and file types dynamically and counts them.)

And sure, I could’ve written all this myself. With the LLM, I did it in 4-5 hours between its code, my own, and tweaking the outputs. If I’d attempted to it all myself sans LLM assistance I think it would’ve taken me minimum 80 hours and more likely 150-ish. That said, I am not a good programmer; a decent one could’ve probably done it in 20-30 hours from scratch.

In short, this is something extremely useful to me that I probably would not have attempted without LLM assistance. The time investment simply would’ve been too large. This will be true for wide swathes of the economy. Expand in your mind on the possibilities from there.

studies have found that educating people about “white privilege” does very little to change anyone’s attitudes or behaviors toward African Americans or other minorities. Instead, the training primarily leads white elites to hold poorer whites in even lower esteem–it convinces them that struggling whites deserve their suffering and are unworthy of help (apparently, for failing to make good use of their “privilege”).

We Have Never Been Woke: The Cultural Contradictions of a New Elite by Musa al-Gharbi

250MWh ‘Sand Battery’ to start construction in Finland, for both heating and ancillary services.

China’s BEV Trucks and the End of Diesel’s Dominance.

Physicists drive antihydrogen breakthrough at CERN with record trapping technique.

Secret behind Temple of Venus’s resilient construction uncovered.

How ‘Stranger Things’ Defined the Era of the Algorithm.

Russians Are Starting to Feel Real Economic Pain From Putin’s War.

Europe Fears It Can’t Catch Up in Great Power Competition.

How Sociotropic Aesthetic Judgments Drive Opposition to Housing Development.

A comprehensive list of 2025 tech layoffs.

We Can’t Diet and Exercise Our Way Out of the Next Pandemic.

Stress-induced sympathetic hyperactivation drives hair follicle necrosis to trigger autoimmunity. (In mice.)

The housing crisis is pushing Gen Z into crypto and economic nihilism.

Europe thinks the unthinkable: Retaliating against Russia. About damn time.

Git Up

I like open source, but if often spawns absolutely atrocious technology. For instance, Docker, Kubernetes and Git. All of them are poorly-designed and overly complex. None of them are all that well-suited for the use cases to which they are typically applied. Only Git works better than the tech that preceded it, and that’s only because it’s just shitty instead of incredibly shitty. The bar there was so low that anyone with reasonable coding skills and project management capabilities could exceed it.

These three technologies were adopted heavily because of their complexity, rather than in spite of it. That’s what developers are attracted to and that is who — largely — runs the tech world now. When it was more my type in charge (systems people), we gravitated to simpler, better-specified tech that was constrained, well-specified, focused and fast.

Those days are long gone now, and the world is much worse for it.

PPI Inflation Bounces Back.

Pentagon contractors want to blow up military right to repair. Evil.

Solar’s growth in US almost enough to offset rising energy use.

Dramatic irony.

OpenAI needs to raise at least $207bn by 2030 so it can continue to lose money, HSBC estimates.

53 Hours and No Wi-Fi: Why I Loved Amtrak’s Slow Train to San Francisco.

Germany’s Secret Plan for War With Russia.

The US is deregulating banks. Will the rest of the world follow? I hope not.

AI Ayo

MIT report: AI can already replace nearly 12% of the U.S. workforce.

I agree with that assessment. No matter what you’ve read — particularly if you’re on the left and predisposed to hate tech and any form of knowledge advancement that doesn’t relate to a new, innovative gender — the newest AI models are quite good at many things. Certainly they could replace most of the juniors in my own field that I’ve worked with over the years and many of the mid-level folks too.

No one is reckoning with how quickly this fact is being weaponized by the MBA class or that it’s already demonstrably occurring. Predictably, economists are and will be in denial about this at least a decade after it is already happening.