Golden Age with Mike Solana (Hyperlegible 008)
Mike Solana is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of Pirate Wires, one of my favorite publications on the whole internet and the only one I read every day. You’ll hear this about a lot of our guests, because this is why I do Hyperlegible, but Mike is one of the best writers doing it today, one of the few whose name in my inbox gives me a little dopamine hit. His writing is unlike anything out there. He’s not afraid to tackle tricky subjects, not afraid to form his own opinion, not afraid to be earnest, and he writes the cover off the ball in a way that feels entirely his. The piece we discuss today, Golden Age, is pure Solana. He starts by copping to having a lovely time in Disney World, before taking us on a tour of Walt Disney’s vision to build a whole futuristic city in the Florida swampland. He talks about why China has been able to execute on Disney’s vision better than America has, and what it would take to build a modern version, what he calls Golden City, a place where houses are cheap and rare earth metals are processed. Go read it: https://www.piratewires.com/p/golden-ageIt makes me nostalgic for this future, and after listening to our conversation and reading Golden Age, I hope you’ll add your voice to the small but mighty chorus calling on President Trump to just give Solana the federal land in California he needs to build this thing. We talked all about this piece and much more, live from The Manhattan Lab in New York City, where Matt Marlinski was nice enough to let us record.At the end of our conversation, Mike makes a couple of recommendations:His favorite of his own essays:Moral Inversion One book everyone should read: There is No Antimemetics Division You can find this and all of the articles we discuss on Hyperlegible in one place thanks to our sponsor, Readwise - Visit readwise.io/hyperlegible for a free trial and get all Hyperlegible articles automatically added to your account. Big thanks to Jim Portela for editing!
50 Things I've Learned Writing Construction Physics with Brian Potter (Hyperlegible 007)
Nobody on the internet writes about all of the complexity involved in actually building things -- from homes to jet engines -- better than Brian Potter, the author of Construction Physics.I am a huge fan of Brian's writing. I use it as a reference for a lot of my pieces. I once tweeted, "Construction Physics is a national treasure and the president should give Brian Potter a medal or czar job or something." So I was thrilled to get the excuse to talk to him about a bunch of his essays by talking to him about this one specific one, 50 Things I've Learned Writing Construction Physics.Here's the one overarching theme he's discovered writing over 600,000 words in Construction Physics: "Things are always more complicated than they seem. Simple explanations very rarely exist." We discuss that and other lessons by digging into pre-fabbed and manufactured homes, jet engines, gas turbines, windmills, nuclear reactors, batteries, Nobel Prizes, skyscrapers, and even Titanium. Just reading that list, you can probably tell why I like Brian's writing so much. He writes in-depth about all of the topics I love, and I learn so much from him each time.What impressed me most is just how humble Brian is. He knows 1000x more about this stuff than I do, but when he's not entirely certain of an answer, he says so. That's probably in part due to his background as a structural engineer, and in part a response to the lesson that everything is more complicated than it seems. I hope you learn as much from our conversation as I did, and that you go back and read everything he's written. To get you started, here are some of the essays we discuss and that Brian recommends, both his stuff and others'.Potter Essays - How to Build 3,000 Airplanes in Five Years- Why It's So Hard to Build a Jet Engine - What Learning by Doing Looks Like - How California Turned Against Growth - Another Day in Katerradise - The Birth of the GridRecommended and Discussed Essays - Reality Has a Surprising Amount of Detail - John Salvatier - Timing Technology: Lessons From The Media Lab - Gwern - 100 Tallest Completed Buildings - Boom: Bubbles and the End of Stagnation - Byrne Hobart & Tobias HuberYou can find this and all of the articles we discuss on Hyperlegible in one place thanks to our sponsor, Readwise - Visit readwise.io/hyperlegible for a free trial and get all Hyperlegible articles automatically added to your account. Big thanks to Jim Portela for editing!
Forsaking Industrialism with Conrad Bastable (Hyperlegible 006)
In this timely conversation, Conrad Bastable joins Packy to break down his epic essay Forsaking Industrialism and explore why the West has abandoned manufacturing while China built a world-beating industrial platform over decades. Read it here for the full experience: Forsaking Industrialism Conrad has been planning this essay for months, and he couldn't have dropped it at a better time. It's a comprehensive look at what China got right and what real reindustrialization would mean. We dive into how EU regulations inadvertently benefited Chinese manufacturing, why tariffs alone can't solve America's industrial challenges, and what it would take to rebuild America's manufacturing capabilities.Conrad explains the concept of "platform economies" that China has mastered, why capital markets naturally push against long-term industrial investments, and the uncomfortable trade-offs between principles and prosperity that nations must navigate.From electric dirt bikes to BMW's battery dilemma, this wide-ranging discussion offers a fresh perspective on the most urgent debate in America.Conrad's reading recommendations: - Alexander Hamilton's Report on ManufacturesConrad's other essays: - Full Stack of Society - Escalation Theory - Monetization & MonopoliesSponsored by Readwise - Visit readwise.io/hyperlegible for a free trial and get all Hyperlegible articles automatically added to your account.Big thanks to Jim Portela for editing!
Skittle Factory Dementia Monkey Titty Monetization with Parakeet (Hyperlegible 005)
Pseudonymous writer Parakeet joins me to discuss her viral essay "Skittle Factory Dementia Monkey Titty Monetization." I first heard about Parakeet a couple weeks ago when I saw half of my Twitter feed and half of my Substack Notes feed sharing her essay, including a bunch of people I wouldn't expect to share an essay with "Monkey Titty" in the title. I read it immediately, and saw why. Parakeet describes universally applicable ideas with the color turned up to 11 so they stick. We explore the "dementia personality" - how our core thought loops shape who we are and might one day define us. Parakeet shares insights from working at a dementia facility, explains her Skittle Factory metaphor for personality (and researching Skittle Factories), and reveals her unconventional productivity hack that's transformed her writing output. We talk about her writing process, gifs, why more people should read George Orwell's Politics and the English Language, and what she learned from her once-half-paralyzed dance teacher. Plus, hear the bizarre true story behind the "Monkey Titty" portion of the essay title and why Parakeet believes everyone should re-read Atlas Shrugged as an adult.Key moments:(5:35) Origins of the dementia personality concept(10:30) Can we change our core mental loops? (15:18) Skittle Factory Mass Extinction Events(21:50) Rewiring your brain through Luigi Jazz(30:05) Why this essay got shared by so many smart people(31:50) Using gifs(40:31) Parakeet's productivity hackReading Recs from Parakeet:Parakeet: YOUR EYES ARE LEAKING CORPORATE CUM™Parakeet: ALGORITHMIC GROOMING OF YOUR INNER CHILD™George Orwell: Politics and the English LanguageAyn Rand: Atlas ShruggedHyperlegible is sponsored by my friends at Readwise, who build software that helps you get the most out of your reading. If you want to give it a try, go to readwise.io/hyperlegible where you start a free trial and get all the articles discussed here on Hyperlegible automatically added to your account. Thanks to Jim Portela for editing and getting the parakeet animation to work!
Hyperlegible 004: Alex Danco, Scarcity and Abundance in 2025
On Episode 004 of Hyperlegible, I speak with Alex Danco. It was a treat. Alex is on my Mount Rushmore of internet writers. When I’m writing well, his writing has probably had an influence on mine. In this conversation, we talk about his new essay, which is an update to some of his older pieces, Scarcity and Abundance in 2025. If you want to understand how to think about everything that’s going on right now as a result of AI in a really thoughtful, grounded way, read the essay.There’s so much here. What did Clayton Christensen get wrong? How does tech make things that, contra disruption theory, make things that are both cheaper and better? Is Apple in trouble? Will the vibe coding apps maintain their growth and revenue? What has become scarce? We talk about the shift from Code as Capital to Code as Labor, Tokyo zoning regulations, Red Queen’s Races, whether this time is actually different this time, why big company AI products suck because they’re trying to squeeze everything out of their existing assets, Steve Ballmer Trutherism, and why crypto + agents might actually be a thing. This summary just scratches the surface. Just listen. At the end, Alex gives some great essay recommendations:Book/Essay RecommendationsAlex Danco, The Audio RevolutionAlex Danco, Can Twitter Save Science?Simon DeDeo, Information Theory for Intelligent PeopleThomas Mann, The Magic MountainC.S. Lewis, The Inner RingHyperlegible is sponsored by my friends at Readwise, who build software that helps you get the most out of your reading. If you want to give it a try, go to readwise.io/hyperlegible where you start a free trial and get all the articles discussed here on Hyperlegible automatically added to your account. Thanks to Jim Portela for editing!
Hyperlegible 003: Julian Lehr
After almost two years, Julian Lehr is BACK to writing. He wrote a piece called The case against conversational interfaces, arguing that we're not going to be talking to our computers instead of using graphical user interfaces. GUIs work pretty well! Instead, he thinks that conversational interfaces are going to be a complement to existing workflows. We'll talk to our AI while doing what we do now, to do things like tell other apps to start doing things while we stay in flow.Julian shares his writing process -- chat through a draft with AI, write ~60% of it by hand, and then pull it together in Figma, or sometimes, Google Docs. He said that like some people need a change of scenery to write, he needs a change of tools. So why did he come back after two years in the wilderness? Simply: too many people were too consistently wrong on the internet. After seeing one too many "we're all going to be chatting with our computers" takes, he had to write the other side. And he delivered. We cover a lot, from why he keeps coming back to Kevin Kwok’s Arc of Collaboration to how he uses his "thanks to" section to status signal. For this essay, he thanked Blake Robbins, Chris Paik, Jackson Dahl, Johannes Shickling, Jordan Singer, and Signulll -- an absurdly high signal roster. Conversations like this one - where I get to nerd out with the people I've read for so long - is exactly why I'm doing Hyperlegible. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.
Hyperlegible 002: Utsav Mamoria
Utsav Mamoria recently wrote How to Live an Intellectually Rich Life (https://utsavmamoria.substack.com/p/h...) on his Substack, Tumse Na Ho Paayega. It blew up, breaking out of containment in India and spanning the globe to the tune of 1,100 likes at the time of recording. For good reason: Utsav combines philosophy, mathematics, biographies, personal experience, and hand-drawn sketches to create a map – quite literally – for living an intellectually rich life. He takes us on a journey through Moradoom, Igamor, and Evermore, before arriving at Luminspere, the Mountains of Knowledge. His one sentence takeaway: Consistency trumps everything. I loved reading the essay, and was pleasantly surprised to enjoy our conversation even more. You can find Utsav on X at @utsavmamoria (https://x.com/utsavmamoria) and subscribe to Tumse Na Ho Paayega here: https://utsavmamoria.substack.com/ I asked Utsav for some recommendations. Substack to Follow: Ted Gioia’s The Honest Broker (https://www.honest-broker.com/) Favorite of his own pieces other than this one: Why we understand time wrong (https://utsavmamoria.substack.com/p/w...) If you enjoy Hyperlegible, subscribe and leave us a rating. We have some great conversations scheduled and I want to bring this to as many people as we can.
Hyperlegible 001: Tina He
For the first episode of Hyperlegible, I talked to my friend Tina He (@fkpxls on twitter) who writes the excellent Fakepixels, which she recently brought back to life after a four year hibernation and on which she’s dropped gems each week since. Last week, Tina wrote an essay called Jevons Paradox: A personal perspective about something surprising she’s noticed: AI is causing a lot of people to work more, not less. Since you can now do more with each hour, the opportunity cost of each hour not worked is higher! The treadmill spins faster and faster. Read it, and subscribe to Fakepixels while you’re there: https://fakepixels.substack.com/p/jevons-paradox-a-personal-perspective If you're wondering how (or whether) to compete in the age of AI, Tina's personal perspective will help. Please let us know what you think and share your favorite essays with me @packym on twitter. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.notboring.co
December 19, 2024: Germany, Gemini, CR Funding
Today is December 19, 2024, and here's all the news that's fit to predict: 1. SPD % of Vote in German Election? 2. Top AI Model on December 31? (Gemini is leading ChatGPT) 3. Will the first House Vote on the Continuing Resolution Funding Bill Pass? These stories are live. For updated odds, check polymarket.com.
December 18: USPS, Saudi and Israel, Honda and Nissan
Today is December 18, 2024, and this is all the news that's fit to predict: 1. Will Trump privatize USPS in first 100 days? 2. Israel and Saudi Aradbia normalize relations before April? 3. Honda and Nissan merger announced before February? These stories are live. Head to polymarket.com to follow the changing odds.
December 17: Trudeau, Nuclear Drones, AOC Oversight
Today is December 17, 2024, and this is all the news that's fit to predict: 1. Trudeau out before April? 2. Mystery Drones searching for nuclear weapons? 3. Will AOC lead House oversight committee? These stories are all ongoing. Head to polymarket.com for the latest.
December 13, 2024: IDF in Gaza, JFK Files, Astro Bot
Today is December 13, 2024, and here is all the news that's fit to predict: 1. Will Hamas allow IDF to remain in Gaza? 2. Trump declassifies JFK files? 3. Game of the Year 2024 - Announced. Plus, updates on the stories we covered this week, including Mangione's Manifesto, Fed December Rate Cuts, and more. These stories are actively unfolding. To stay up to date, head to Polymarket.com.
December 12, 2024: MSTR, NJ Drones, South Korean Impeachment Vote
Today is December 12, 2024, and here's all the news that's fit to predict: 1. $MSTR added to Nasdaq 100? 2. New Jersey mystery drones from foreign country? 3. # of votes for impeachment in South Korea? All of these stories are ongoing and subject to rapid change. Follow along at polymarket.com for live odds.
December 11, 2024: Syrian Elections, Luigi's Gun, Time POTY
Today is December 11, 2024, and here's all the news that's fit to predict: 1. Will Syria hold national elections by January 31? 2. Fact check: Did Luigi Mangione use a printed gun? 3. Time 2024 Person of the Year? Plus, follow-ups on previous stories: 1. Daniel Penny found not guilty. 2. Assad's regime collapsed on December 8th. Each of the stories we cover is ongoing. Head to polymarket.com for live odds.
December 9: Fed Cuts, TikTok, Syria
Today is December 9, 2024, and here is all the news that's fit to predict: 1. Fed decision in December? 2. TikTok banned in the US before May 2025? 3. Will Israel invade Syria in 2024? These stories are all ongoing and may change dramatically. To stay informed in real-time, head to polymarket.com.
December 6: Roaring Kitty, Thompson Killer, Bitcoin + Weekly Roundup
Today is December 6, 2024. Here's all the news that's fit to predict: 1. Roaring Kitty charged in 2024? 2. When will the Brian Thompson Perp be arrested? 3. What price will Bitcoin hit in December? Plus, we follow up on the stories we covered this week about Pete Hegseth, Daniel Penny, Bashar Al-Assad, and South Korean President Yoon. Odds are volatile. Head to polymarket.com for live updates.
December 5: Barnier, Fauci, Johnson
Today's stories: 1. Michel Barnier out as prime minister of France in 2024? 2. Will Biden pardon Fauci? 3. Bryan Johnson’s average nighttime erection 2h 12m+ in Dec? To follow along live, head to polymarket.com. That's all the news that's fit to predict.
December 4: Yoon, Russia in Syria, US Gov Bitcoin
Boring News December 4, 2024 1. Yoon out as president of South Korea in 2024? 2. Will Russia abandon Syrian naval base before April 2025? 3. Will US gov sell Bitcoin before Trump inauguration?All the news that's fit to predict.
Boring News: December 3, 2024 (Assad, Hegseth, Penny)
Today is December 3, 2024. We cover three stories pulled from Polymarket: 1. Will Bashar Al-Assad remain President of Syria through 2024? 2. Will Pete Hegseth be confirmed as US Secretary of Defense? 3. Will Daniel Penny be found guilty?