Chris Davies
@crd37.bsky.social
150 followers 400 following 1.8K posts
Complexity, politics, public policy and helping things be better. Welshman in south London.
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And gets to the heart of the problem with centralisation - the more you pull in, the more information you need to make the model work
But there can’t be any more models because they have the S3XY quad that Elon always wanted to make
Reposted by Chris Davies
rkemb.bsky.social
Still can't quite get past this juxtaposition: Tesla is the innovator... its main sales are two models over a decade old. WHAT ABOUT THE NEW MODELS, EH? Oh, we don't talk about that innovation because

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	https://www.ft.com/content/b3d1875f-c2c3-4b9d-86c6-cb20bb94a87b

	Tesla was long regarded as the innovator, while BYD was often cast as the imitator. But now, such comparisons are becoming unavoidable. 

Last year, more than 95 per cent of Tesla’s global deliveries came from the Model 3 and Model Y. These two models have driven the company’s growth for nearly a decade. Yet the market is changing. Demand growth is slowing, competitors are catching up and Tesla’s response has been to cut prices aggressively, in the hope that volume can offset margin.
If you could summarise all classical historical scholarship from the last 30 years, that would be super helpful thanks 👍
You can't come in if you don't have a working critical knowledge of the Great Gatsby

Actually, that's not a bad idea - and, as ever, for people here already
It’s the sort of idea you’d come up with if you played too much Civilization and thought you could terraform your way to libertarian nirvana (pending moving to Mars).
If, like me, you are fascinated by the weird ideas that inhabit the increasingly global right, then Gabriel Gatehouse’s Coming Storm on BBC Sounds is a great listen.

One of my obsessions is Praxis, a Thiel-backed project to set up a libertarian city state. Here’s an episode about it
The Coming Storm - S2: 5. The Photocopier - BBC Sounds
Crypto cowboys plan a meme nation.
www.bbc.co.uk
Ah but have you thought about chapters that are just one long paragraph?
That relies on the guard walking the train
Reposted by Chris Davies
sarahoconnorft.ft.com
Investors are betting big bucks on the idea that AI will create an explosion of leisure time...e.g. it was a key part of the public rationale for the massive $55bn takeover of video games maker Electronic Arts. But are they right?? (short thread linked to my column today www.ft.com/content/4011...)
Plus America-brain, where anything you don’t like is socialist
Not least because the market just moved up, with the top catering for the international market
Can you summarise that in a noise?
A million times this. Exclusivity and protection from the riff raff.
gabrielmilland.bsky.social
Final point. People have tried to sell "low cost, high quality" private education in London. It has never taken off. Because what the addressable market actually wants to buy is secure upper-middle-class status. The posh blazers and the fives courts are the product. Not the actual education.
As someone who studied classical history as an undergraduate in the 90s, this list is excessively exciting.

What do you mean we’ve redefined our understanding of hoplite warfare?!
bretdevereaux.bsky.social
Maybe this is simply a difference in the expected 'rate' of knew knowledge, but this take puzzles me, because there's quite a bit of new data and studies needing to be done that I can see pretty easily in Roman history.

Knowledge creation steady and clearly visible.
A tweet by Theo Nash, which reads, "The problem is that (almost) no one, at least in the humanities, is able to produce ‘new knowledge’ at anything like the rate expected. So scholars grasp at faddish trends and voguish theories to publish books that seem exciting in the moment but have no enduring value."
And I’m enjoying the Lib Dem love for John Major vs the Tory opinion

Though both crackers if they think Cameron is better…surely a candidate for worst PM of recent times given the mess he created
Off topic, I know, but I admired Bernard Jenkins on R4 last night, absolutely committing to referring to him as 'Pole' like his pretentious brother
Knowing mesothelioma, knowing you
Reposted by Chris Davies
cineblah.bsky.social
I swear like 30% of the people moving around central London, be it pedestrian, cyclist or motorist seemingly have some sort of death drive.
Reposted by Chris Davies
huwcdavies.bsky.social
Reading Thiel, Yarvin, Peterson et al. makes you realise what passes for intellectual iconoclasm these days is all absolute bollocks. Why anyone gives any of these people the time of day let alone credibility is baffling.
What next? Graphite production so that kids know where their pencils come from?
Man who does thing says people should value his thing more