99% of a Machine
We work in one direction. We fail. We give up.
We tell ourselves "this wasn't meant for me, I'd be better off focusing on what I know how to do."
But some machines aren't resilient. A single missing part, wire, or gear, and nothing works. It won't even start, like a device with a blown fuse.
So it's possible to build 80, 90, or even 99% of a machine and, because of one oversight, get 0% of the result. Dead in the water, as if we'd done nothing (or done everything wrong).
It's true: the last few percent are often the hardest to achieve. And many systems aren't linear: they either work or they don't, regardless of how close you are to the result.
That's why there are far fewer "overnight" successes than we imagine. In reality, the creator has been working on it for a long time. They were about to give up. But at the last moment, they thought "what if I replaced this fuse?"
And the machine roared to life.
You Write Too Much
Three well-chosen words pack more punch than a page of fluff.
Who are you trying to reassure with all that text?
Simplify.
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Related:
- The accumulation trap
- Build in Public (TikTok)
Bug Hotel
"A bug hotel is a device that aims to facilitate the survival of insects and arachnids, particularly in ecosystems where pollination and biodiversity are sought..."
– Wikipedia
Guest reviews:
- "My room was full of bugs!" - 1/5
- "Terrible drafts everywhere." - 2/5
- "Couldn't find the bathroom." - 1/5
- "Very pleasant garden" - 4/5
It's Warming Up on the Flowery Coast
You too can verify that climate warming isn't some big joke by looking near your home:
A chart I produced as an exercise to learn how to use the Pandas library (for data processing) in Python (a programming language) from Météo-France's ten-day temperature data at Saint-Arnoult.
You can clearly see the quarter-degree per century increase that climatologists tell us about.
I had already posted it on social media, but I'm taking advantage of being able to publish longer notes to share the code below. If you want to check in your area too, here's how:
Read more
I'm trying to set up a system for longer notes with an introduction that displays here and the rest that displays separately. Does it work?
UPDATE: And now you can even add comments! Click on the post title and then you have a link to sign up or log in. Just like on real websites!
What are the rules?
One note a day, okay, but what counts?
Do I have to post before midnight? Or before going to sleep? If I stay up all night without sleeping, does that still count as just one day?
Am I allowed to post just one word if it's really interesting? (Like "deconstruction" or "guacamole," with a thinking emoji to show it's deep?)
Can I repost a note I've already written? Do I have to write it the same day? Who's gonna check? And if I'm tired, can I invite "guest authors" to write in my place? Do I have to pay them?
Who decides all this stuff?
Oh shit, that's me.
Well then let's say... uh... we'll see.
Good night!
Insult-o-meter
As promised, I'm looking at my video stats less.
But a good way to tell when a video is doing well is when I start getting nasty comments.
My latest little joke about heatwaves and climate has already earned me three insults. Which means the video has spread beyond my tight circle of thoughtful, well-behaved viewers to spill over into the crowds who watch Pascal Praud and Cyril Hanouna.
On social media, insults are a sign of success.
The Grand Mime
Yes, I'm ashamed.
We shot my web series Panic in Space after lockdown in 2021 and I'm still in post-production.
In my defense, all episodes are edited but there are lots of special effects (3D) and I'm doing it all alone. Now AI is giving me a hand but it's still extremely slow.
And the thirty or so actors who participated are waiting...
Here's The Grand Mime, created with Midjourney, who appears in episode 7:
I think I'm going to announce the release soon for October – yes, this year. At least for the first 10 episodes. That way, it'll force me to move forward.
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Related links:
Goodbye stats!
When I redesign a website, like here, one of my first reflexes is to install Google Analytics to get a sense of traffic.
This time, I forgot.
It took the visitor count dropping to zero for me to realize it.
And you know what? I'm not going to install it.
Sure, for a professional site, it might be important. But for a personal site... Do I really need public feedback to know what I want to talk about?
And I'm also making this solemn decision before you all: I'm going to stop checking the views and likes on my daily videos. It's hard because you actually can't access the account without seeing them – especially if I want to keep replying to comments. But I'll try.
To achieve what the Bhagavad Gita calls "fruitless work": doing the work without being attached to the fruit of the work.
Apparently, that's true freedom.