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var import_index_10ac95e2 = require("./index-10ac95e2.js");
const metadata = {
"title": "Things I learned this week #34",
"author": "Thomas Wilson",
"date": "2021-04-02T00:00:00.000Z",
"slug": "2021-04-02-things-i-learned-34",
"draft": false,
"imageUrl": "preview-images/34.png",
"tags": ["things-i-learned"]
};
const _2021_04_02_things_i_learned_34 = (0, import_index_10ac95e2.c)(($$result, $$props, $$bindings, slots) => {
return `<h1>Things I Learned #34</h1>
<p>We\u2019ve made it to the Easter weekend. Spring has arrived here in London, which is to say it was 20 degrees C earlier this week and this morning it was 0, windy, and overcast. This time a year ago, my mental state was dominated by COVID-19 (something I barely even think about now), but that also lead me to notice the beauty of spring for the first time. I\u2019m normally more of an autumn person. My wildflower seeds have started to come up, my tomatoes have been sown, and I made an asparagus risotto this week (largely so I could drink white wine while cooking, <em>al la</em> my middle-aged housewife dream).</p>
<ul><li><strong>This product search duopoly</strong>: I try and keep things pretty fun and light hearted here. Find some irreverent fact about a victorian butterfly hunter, you know. But I\u2019m also interested in tech and business as a force for good and change (and therefore also as a point of stagnation of source of moral evil). The past couple of years have seen increasing calls for big tech firms, like Amazon and Google, to be disassembled. They have so many resources available to them that they stifle market forces and creativity by being able to undercut any competitor, and subsidise initially unprofitable efforts in some areas (e.g. logistics) through their massive profits in others (e.g. cloud computing and advertising). As a case-in-point, approximately 60-70% of people who need to find a product online will start their search at either Amazon or Google. The problem for small businesses then becomes about discoverability and visibility: how do people find them. So they go to advertisers. Who are the advertisers: Google &amp; Facebook (and most commonly, Amazon). Amazon will allow businesses to advertise on their platform, and compete against their own products. This hardly seems fair or right, but it does sound hella profitable. (<a href="${"https://www.emarketer.com/content/do-most-searchers-really-start-on-amazon"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">source</a>).</li>
<li><strong>This Victorian butterfly collector</strong> Margaret Fountaine (1862\u20131940) lived in England and was a wealthy and independent woman who amassed a collection of some twenty-two thousand butterflies, and a million pages of personal journals. Despite her immense contribution to entomology (the study of insects) and lepidopterology (the study of butterflies) her contributions are largely noted as an assistant or amateur. This is, of course, entirely unrelated to the fact that she was a woman, and therefore unable to participate in the meetings of these societies. In 1897 Fontaine became a member of The Royal Society, though her contributions to science remain largely under-appreciated and rarely spoken about, namely because they are neither professional nor amateur. If you get the chance, read about the life Fontaine read: travelling across Europe (and the British Empire) to collect samples and view other butterfly collections. (<a href="${"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4321127/"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">source</a>)</li>
<li><strong>This imaginary designer</strong> Nikolay Ironov is a Russian designer but is also an AI. Ironov had created static and animated logos and logos for various clients (here\u2019s their <a href="${"https://www.artlebedev.com/nikolay-ironov/"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">portfolio of work</a>): they\u2019re a real mix of geometry and typography. I quite like them. The AI was created and maintained internally within the Art. Lebedev Studio, but kept completely isolated. That\u2019s why it was given a human name, and was introduced to the team as a remote employee - even getting its own employee page. It\u2019s quite a cool concept but also a little terrifying - I\u2019m sure all of Ironov\u2019s colleagues weren\u2019t super pleased to find their work has been outsourced to an AI. (<a href="${"https://www.rbth.com/science-and-tech/332370-russian-ai-graphic-designer-fooled"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">source</a>)</li></ul>
<h2>What I\u2019ve had on rotation</h2>
<p>-<strong>Something New</strong> <em>Justice</em> by Justin Bieber (pop, 2021). After 2020\u2019s frankly insulting <em>Changes</em>, this new album from Bieber is a breath of humanity and honesty. The album doesn\u2019t rush but it\u2019s poppy, it\u2019s perhaps a bit laboured in its expression of love and gratitude for his wife but it\u2019s a good album. (<a href="${"https://songwhip.com/justin-bieber/justice"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">links</a>) -<strong>Something Old</strong> <em>Ocean Avenue</em> by Yellowcard (pop punk, 2003). I went back this week to try and find some good grunge and rock from the \u201890s but ended up getting stuck on this album. I\u2019m not regretful, and Nirvana can wait for me. Probably related to my We The Kings re-listen that I mentioned last week. I\u2019m not even really sorry, early \u201800s emo music is in my bones. (<a href="${"https://songwhip.com/yellowcard/oceanavenue"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">links</a>)</p>
<h2>Cool articles</h2>
<ul><li><a href="${"https://squarknotes.substack.com/p/squarknote-7"}" title="${"Squark Notes #7"}" rel="${"nofollow"}">Squark Notes #7 (newsletter)</a> by Susan Fowler Rigetti. Rigetti is a writer and refugee from tech (she\u2019s the woman who ousted allegations of sexual abuse from Uber\u2019s CEO). She posts a newsletter every six-to-eight weeks, and it\u2019s worth a subscribe. This edition contained the advice to write more than one thing at once. Or, if you\u2019re any kind of creative: always have multiple songs, poems, paintings, side hustles, whatever. I can butcher her sentiment, but she does it far more justice: \u201Cwhen someone has <em>one</em> thing and only one thing is that nothing ever happens with it. Sometimes it\u2019s because that one thing simply isn\u2019t good. Sometimes that one thing is really amazing, but it\u2019s not the right time or place and things just don\u2019t come together in the right way\u201D</li></ul>`;
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