Full Width [alt+shift+f] Shortcuts [alt+shift+k]
Sign Up [alt+shift+s] Log In [alt+shift+l]

Improve your reading experience

Logged in users get linked directly to articles resulting in a better reading experience. Please login for free, it takes less than 1 minute.

More from Castles in the Sky

We don't have time, we are time. | Friday Footnotes #4

Footnote #4 is based on a passage from 4,000 weeks by Oliver Burkeman.

3 weeks ago 17 votes
Sonder, Sobriety, and Abstractions | Friday Footnotes #3

Friday Footnotes is a weekly newsletter where reading and reflection meet real life.

a month ago 18 votes
To Discard, To Preserve, To Bury, To Build | Friday Footnotes #2

Friday Footnotes is a weekly newsletter where reflection meets real life.

a month ago 20 votes
Vikings, Origami, and New Mexico | Friday Footnotes #1

What are the things that enrich your life?

a month ago 23 votes
Orson Welles as Falstaff on Late Night TV

This post is in the Notebook - my digital workshop for anecdotes, links, excerpts, sketches, lists, and anything else I want to explore in brief, revisit later, or post for reference.

2 months ago 24 votes

More in life

For Keith Jarrett's 80th Birthday: 10 Key Tracks from His Early Career

I celebrate the pianist's milestone birthday by sharing my favorite music from his first decade as a recording artist

20 hours ago 2 votes
Adolf Hitler and the zio-imperialist mafia

A book review

14 hours ago 2 votes
we laugh so that we do not cry but we end up crying anyway

a recap + recording of BATWRITE #001

18 hours ago 2 votes
Why new when?

When we make something new, people often ask "why don't you just add that to Basecamp?" There are a number of reasons, depending on what it is. But, broadly, making something brand new gives you latitude (and attitude) to explore new tech and design approaches. It's the opposite of grafting something on to a heavier, larger system that already exists. The gravity of existing decisions in current systems requires so much energy to reach escape velocity that you tend to conform rather than explore. Essentially you're bent back to where you started, rather than arcing out towards a new horizon. New can be wrong, but it's always interesting. And that in itself is worth it. Because in the end, even if the whole new thing doesn't work out, individual elements, explorations, and executions discovered along the way can make their way back into other things you're already doing. Or something else new down the road. These bits would have been undiscovered had you never set out for new territory in the first place. Ultimately, a big part of making something new is simply thinking something new. -Jason

8 hours ago 1 votes
Dear Bear: on the far side of fear is surrender

+ weekly recs

12 hours ago 1 votes