Category: Current Events

  • Om

    Om

    Om Malik had a wonderful ability to balance a boy-wonder enthusiasm of new technology with an appreciation of its broader impacts to society. He was an old school blogger who distilled the daily Silicon Valley zeitgeist into posts that inspired the reader to think more expansively about how tech innovation changes the world around us.

    I’ll miss his old-man-on-the-hill perspective on the latest trend and his talent in explaining complex technology in a way we could all understand. 

    Om’s ability to recall moments from the history of technology to point out that today’s chaotic chest-thumping is just the latest shiny object hype. His pattern-recognition fu was strong. Om’s perspective gently reminded us that the complexity of new tech eventually fades into the background where it “just works” and becomes the firmament for the next round of innovations. It is in this phase-shift when the new tech becomes ubiquitous and mundane where the biggest societal impacts are felt. This is where Om wanted us to focus our attention.

    • What happens to business when bandwidth is infinate?
    • What happens to innovation when computing can fit in your pocket?
    • What happens to design when the UI is just your voice?

    These prompts embedded in Om’s essays would lead you to ponder technology’s impact on society.

    I worked for Om at Gigaom where he made a run at building an online media business on Kevin Kelly’s 1,000 True Fans axiom. The free-to-read blog was fiercely independent but was also a funnel into a monetized expert marketplace and events business. The paid sections were designed to subsidize the free so the business could minimize dependence on surveillance advertising. My time there was immensely rewarding as we punched well-above our weight, put out a great product and had a great group of people.

    Casey, Oren, Will, and Jesus

    Sadly, we got out over our skis and short term financial incentives eroded the longer term business and the Gigaom experiment ultimately came to an end.

    Looking back, over the years, Om’s posts inspired me to write as well,

    I also saved a few quotes over the years as keepsakes,

    What will stop growing is the conversation about it. The breathless coverage of each new model announcement has a different texture than it did in 2022. The releases come faster, the benchmarks climb, but the surprise is attenuating. 2026 on AI hype cycle and what comes next

    In the not-too-distant future, these workflows leave the confines of an app wrapper and become executables where our natural language will act as a scripting language for the machines to create highly personalized services (or apps) and is offered to us as an experience. 2023 on how chat+voice UI+AI personalization which spawn a new age of computing

    The algorithm allows us to maintain more relationships with much less effort at almost no cost. 2016 on the tranformative power of tech

    Startups are the atomic unit of innovation. 2013 at the Crunchies

    If someone can become the Dolby of the web — remove the noise and give us clear sound — then they are going to make a lot of money.2008 on intelligent filters

    I’ll miss having Om as a reference point, waypoints for our collective future. His works would make a great training set for an AI chatbot but, without his sharp wit, appreciation of the analog, and humanity, it would ultimately be lacking.

    R.I.P.

  • Refreshingly Human

    Refreshingly Human

    No AI Involved

    The dance sequence at the end of this video directed by Romain Gavras is amazing. Precision chaos is the only way to describe it.

  • Big Sound – Small Space

    Big Sound – Small Space

    Wow. I was really excited to blog about Evan & Luke’s Williamsburg apartment studio based on a May 1st story that just popped up in my feed from Yahoo.

    When I followed some of the links to find out more, I discovered that the video below was from 8 years ago and that the last video in their YouTube channel was from 5 years ago (victim of the pandemic?).

    Curious why Yahoo would revive a story written so long ago and timestamp it from today. I suspect an old RSS feed was reconnected and sprung back to life w/o the proper meta-date to filter it out as old. Yet another case of why good data hygiene is important.

    Nice story anyway – wonder what they’re up to today?


    Once a month, roommates Evan and Luke transform their tiny Brooklyn apartment into a full music studio. Sometimes they manage to cram an entire orchestra complete with brass, strings, and percussion into every nook and cranny and, in the process, spark something rare these days, a uniquely human in the experience.

  • Social Media Marketing

    Social Media Marketing

    I went to a panel yesterday where online retailers spoke about the changes AI has brought to their profession. Ugly Talk: Selling in the World Run by Algorithms. While a well-structured website with lots of meta-data around your catalog have become table-stakes, success or failure can also come from unexpected data layers in your checkout pages. ​Frank Pacheco from Nearly Natural spoke about how one of his SKUs sales dropped 75% overnight because of a shipping issue which extended delivery times beyond the usual Amazon two-day. Your supply chain and logistics is just as important to agentic commerce as your descriptions and prices.

    As AI Agents and atomization of audiences into niche vertical markets will de-emphasize traditional marketing, social media still remains as an important marketing channel. As marketers try and optimize their sites to get mentioned in the AI Answer Engines, social media is one of the last resources to discover broad trends and what people are looking for in your product.

    In this sense, social media marketing has become mainstream and often you’ll see traditional advertising campaigns shot to look like low-budget social media clips to try and emulate the unfiltered and honest perspective of a viral video. It rarely works as audiences can see right through that.

    One of the first rules of social media marketing is that you should have faith in your product such that you can allow the customer to amplify your products and brand and remix and celebrate it.

    There’s a right way

    and a wrong way

    Having your CEO reveal your latest “product” before anyone else can experience it is the antitheses of social media. The bland office, the tiny, tentative bite, not even mentioning that this behemoth has THREE slices of cheese, even the sign over his shoulder that says “petty” – these are all working against him.

    That is, unless the goal is to generate mentions on reddit in which case, they win!

  • The New Yorker archives

    The New Yorker archives

    Went to visit the excellent selection of ephemera on display at the New York Public Library and picked out a few choice pieces to share.

    Harold Ross’ mission statement

    A The Century of The New Yorker is free to the public on the third floor of the main Stephen A. Schwarzman Building on 5th Avenue in Manhattan and well worth the time. The exhibit closes on February 26th.

  • Universal Scale

    Universal Scale

    At the American Museum of Natural History in NYC is the Scales of the Universe. In the center of a large atrium is the Hayden Sphere which serves as a point of reference around which other objects are placed to give you a sense of scale.

    26.5 meters (87 feet) in diameter—represents the size of the Sun, then Jupiter stretches 2.7 meters (9 feet) across, while Earth is a mere 24 centimeters (9.5 inches) in diameter.

    While the Hayden Sphere gives a sense of size, there is another exhibit that

    There’s another globe, 12 feet in diameter so much smaller than the Hayden Sphere, in the lobby of the Daily News Building on 42nd Street, right off 2nd Avenue. This exhibit illustrates scale in another way, distance.

    If the Sun were the size of the globe and placed here then comparitively: The Moon would be 1/3 inch in diameter and placed at the main enterace to Grand Central Terminal.

    Using this as a baseline, I used ChatGPT to work out the distance to the rest of the planets.

    If you use the globe in the first floor of the Daily News building in New York City on 42nd Street. As a scale model of the solar system, how far to the sun?

    1. Size of the lobby globe (Earth)

    The rotating globe in the lobby is 12 feet in diameter.

    2. Scale relative to the real Earth

    Real Earth diameter ≈ 7,917.5 miles

    Scale factor:

    • 7,917.5 miles → 12 feet
    • 1 foot on the model = ~660 miles in reality

    3. Distance to the Sun on this scale

    Real Earth–Sun distance ≈ 93,000,000 miles

    Convert to model distance:

    93,000,000 miles÷660 miles/foot141,000 feet93,000,000 \text{ miles} \div 660 \text{ miles/foot} \approx 141,000 \text{ feet}

    Convert to miles:

    141,000 feet÷5,28026.7miles141,000 \text{ feet} \div 5,280 \approx 26.7 miles

    If the lobby globe is used as a scale model of the Earth, the Sun would be about 27 miles away. I then drew a circle around the Daily News Building with a radius of 27 miles. This put the sun at Morristown, NJ.

    I next asked GPT to generate a Google Maps KML file with all the planets and their approximate distances using the earlier one foot = 660 miles scale.

    Kinda a nerdy thing to do on a day off, but now you know.

    • the Sun is in Morristown, NJ
    • Mercury orbit takes it over Summit and Montville, NJ.
    • Venus orbits over Newark Airport and Edison and Hacketstown to the West.
    • Earth is at 42nd & 2nd with the Moon at Grand Central. It’s orbit takes it as far south as South Brunswick and Clinton to the West.
    • Mars orbits over by White Plains, NY and Allentown, PA to the West.
    • Jupiter’s orbit takes it over Albany, NY to the North, Springfield, MA to the East, Harrisburg to the West and almost to Baltimore to the South.
    • Saturn is out over the Atlantic, past Boston to the Northeast and into Canada in the Northwest. Down South it orbit is almost to Richmond, VA and Harrisburg, PA to the West.
    • Uranus orbits out past Detroit and almost to Cincinnati in the West and as far south as Myrtle Beach, SC.
    • Neptune’s orbit takes you out to Bermuda to the East, Jacksonville, FL in the South, St. Louis in the West and deep into Canada in the North.
    • Pluto’s orbit takes it as far South as Miami and over Kansas City to the West and into Newfoundland in the Northeast and Winnipeg to the Northwest.

    You can interact with it here.

  • How AI Redefined Access and Ownership in 2025

    How AI Redefined Access and Ownership in 2025

    Tried something different this year, asked ChatGPT to summarize the year for me.

    One benefit of having the entire archive of this blog part of OpenAI’s learning model is that it can spit back what it’s learned, not only in substance but also in tone. It’s uncanny.

    Here’s how ChatGPT responded:

    Absolutely — based on Ian Kennedy’s actual writing on everwas.com (which covers tech policy, AI’s impact on the open web, local NYC issues, and personal essays), a hypothetical 2025 Year-in-Review blog post from him would blend thoughtful analysis of tech trends with sharp local and cultural commentary.

    Here’s how Ian Kennedy of everwas.com might write a “2025: A Year in Review” post:

    2025 felt like the year the internet finally stopped pretending it was the open playground of ideas and began behaving like what it’s actually become: a contested battleground where ownership, access, and value are constantly being negotiated — not just by corporations, but by governments, communities, and the technology itself.


    AI Changed the Web — But Not in the Way We Expected

    At the start of the year, conversations around artificial intelligence were dominated by shiny demos and sci-fi ethics. By year’s end, the conversation shifted to who owns the data and who gets paid for it.

    Policy makers, IAB task forces, and publishers around the world began framing the debate in terms of rights and compensation, not just innovation. The old model where content was indexed freely by search and repurposed by AI is now being replaced by a future where:

    • Publishers insist on licensing and metered access
    • AI crawlers are treated like commercial participants
    • Content is tokenized and monetized rather than scraped for free

    This wasn’t just theory — it became a reality for countless newsrooms and creators struggling to survive in an era where AI can answer queries without sending anyone to click a link.


    Cloud Infrastructure vs. the Power Grid

    Machine learning isn’t just a software problem. The massive energy demands of data centers pushing GPUs to their limit became a real infrastructure challenge this year. We saw:

    • Idle data centers waiting for electricity capacity to catch up
    • Experimental approaches like repurposed jet engines and space-based solar projects
    • Real worries about quality of life when computing giants annex local power grids

    The future of “compute anywhere” suddenly looks a lot more tied to where the electrons actually come from.


    New York Showed the Rest of the Country

    Living in this city means Local often becomes National. In 2025 New York city was a microcosm of the larger cultural and political shifts:

    • A mayoral election turned on cost of living and democracy reform
    • Community voice battled casino development bids on the East River
    • Neighborhood tech events and decentralized meetups flourished alongside big conference circuits

    The city didn’t just make headlines — it embodied the tension between grassroots citizen engagement and centralized power.


    Tech Week, Brand Conversations, and the (Un)Informed Public

    2025 also saw a subtle but unmistakable shift in how technology and culture engage:

    • The growing success of events such as NYC Tech Week and Tech:NYC AI Demos which felt less like corporate showcases and more like community patchwork gatherings
    • Branding in an AI-driven world became less about identity and more about trust and permission
    • Conversations about Google, Perplexity, and discovery technology moved from technologist circles into mainstream debate

    It’s hard to overstate how much that matters. When ordinary people begin arguing about the future of search and discovery, the underlying structure of the web itself has already changed.


    Personal Notes from the Year

    Beyond the geopolitical and technological, 2025 was also a year of small perspectives — hikes, travel, and moments that reveal a deeper truth about why culture still matters even when platforms shift.

    Whether it was a hike near Kamakura or a rumination on a slow waterfall (ed. this is a pretty funny interpretation of this post), these personal essays reminded readers that tech is not just code — it’s lived experience.


    Looking Ahead to 2026

    If 2025 taught us one thing, it’s this:

    • The open web is not going quietly into the night — it’s being re-defined.
    • Access now has a price tag, and that price is up for negotiation.
    • The people using the technology are just as important as the companies building it.

    The next year won’t be about whether the web changes — it’ll be about who gets to shape that change.

    Here’s to the debates, the fights, and the small stories that make it all worth caring about.

  • AI Energy Suck

    AI Energy Suck

    The AI industry’s demand for electricity has outstripped the power industry’s capacity to deliver. Bloomberg says two data centers sit idle, waiting for more power to come online. To meet their growing need for power, AI companies are taking power generation into their own hands.

    One data center in Texas is bolting old jet engines to racks and spinning them up to generate additional power.

    Google announced that they are blasting racks of AI chips into space to harness solar energy from satellites with a project they are calling Suncatcher.

    These massive data centers are noisy so there is a very real “quality of life” concern when a big data center moves into town.

    I remember visiting an NTT data center in silicon valley during the mid-2000s. It was in one of the many low slung, nondescript office park buildings you see on the side of the highway in places like San Bruno or Millbrae. You wouldn’t even notice anything different until you realized there are no windows.

    We checked in and went through a high-security revolving door and then greeted the single employee who was on duty and gave us a tour of the racks of blinking CPUs. Everything was on a raised floor and the lighting was harsh florescent. There was no way to tell whether it was night or day. It was as if we were boarding a spaceship, completely detached from the world around it.

  • Mamdani’s Victory Speech – annotated

    Mamdani’s Victory Speech – annotated

    Inspired by Anil’s hope for an “easter egg breakdown” of the mayor-elect’s victory speech, I spent some time digging in. I know there’s more that I’ve missed, add your own in the comments below.


    [walks out to Ja Rule’s New York]

    The sun may have set over our city this evening, but as Eugene Debs once said: “I can see the dawn of a better day for humanity.

    For as long as we can remember, the working people of New York have been told by the wealthy and the well-connected that power does not belong in their hands.

    Fingers bruised from lifting boxes on the warehouse floor, palms calloused from delivery bike handlebars, knuckles scarred with kitchen burns: these are not hands that have been allowed to hold power. And yet, over the last 12 months, you have dared to reach for something greater.

    Tonight, against all odds, we have grasped it. The future is in our hands. My friends, we have toppled a political dynasty.

    I wish Andrew Cuomo only the best in private life. But let tonight be the final time I utter his name, as we turn the page on a politics that abandons the many and answers only to the few. New York, tonight you have delivered. A mandate for change. ​​A mandate for a new kind of politics. A mandate for a city we can afford. And a mandate for a government that delivers exactly that.

    On 1 January, I will be sworn in as the mayor of New York City. And that is because of you. So before I say anything else, I must say this: thank you. Thank you to the next generation of New Yorkers who refuse to accept that the promise of a better future was a relic of the past.

    You showed that when politics speaks to you without condescension, we can usher in a new era of leadership. We will fight for you, because we are you.

    Or, as we say on Steinway, ana minkum wa alaikum.

    Thank you to those so often forgotten by the politics of our city, who made this movement their own. I speak of Yemeni bodega owners and Mexican abuelas. Senegalese taxi drivers and Uzbek nurses. Trinidadian line cooks and Ethiopian aunties. Yes, aunties.

    To every New Yorker in Kensington and Midwood and Hunts Point, know this: this city is your city, and this democracy is yours too. This campaign is about people like Wesley, an 1199 organizer I met outside of Elmhurst hospital on Thursday night. A New Yorker who lives elsewhere, who commutes two hours each way from Pennsylvania because rent is too expensive in this city.

    It’s about people like the woman I met on the Bx33 years ago who said to me: “I used to love New York, but now it’s just where I live.” And it’s about people like Richard, the taxi driver I went on a 15-day hunger strike with outside of City Hall, who still has to drive his cab seven days a week. My brother, we are in City Hall now.

    This victory is for all of them. And it’s for all of you, the more than 100,000 volunteers who built this campaign into an unstoppable force. Because of you, we will make this city one that working people can love and live in again. With every door knocked, every petition signature earned, and every hard-earned conversation, you eroded the cynicism that has come to define our politics.

    Now, I know that I have asked for much from you over this last year. Time and again, you have answered my calls – but I have one final request. New York City, breathe this moment in. We have held our breath for longer than we know.

    We have held it in anticipation of defeat, held it because the air has been knocked out of our lungs too many times to count, held it because we cannot afford to exhale. Thanks to all of those who sacrificed so much. We are breathing in the air of a city that has been reborn.

    To my campaign team, who believed when no one else did and who took an electoral project and turned it into so much more: I will never be able to express the depth of my gratitude. You can sleep now.

    To my parents, mama and baba: You have made me into the man I am today. I am so proud to be your son. And to my incredible wife, Rama, hayati: There is no one I would rather have by my side in this moment, and in every moment.

    To every New Yorker – whether you voted for me, for one of my opponents or felt too disappointed by politics to vote at all – thank you for the opportunity to prove myself worthy of your trust. I will wake each morning with a singular purpose: to make this city better for you than it was the day before.

    There are many who thought this day would never come, who feared that we would be condemned only to a future of less, with every election consigning us simply to more of the same.

    And there are others who see politics today as too cruel for the flame of hope to still burn. New York, we have answered those fears.

    Tonight we have spoken in a clear voice. Hope is alive. Hope is a decision that tens of thousands of New Yorkers made day after day, volunteer shift after volunteer shift, despite attack ad after attack ad. More than a million of us stood in our churches, in gymnasiums, in community centers, as we filled in the ledger of democracy.

    And while we cast our ballots alone, we chose hope together. Hope over tyranny. Hope over big money and small ideas. Hope over despair. We won because New Yorkers allowed themselves to hope that the impossible could be made possible. And we won because we insisted that no longer would politics be something that is done to us. Now, it is something that we do.

    Standing before you, I think of the words of Jawaharlal Nehru: “A moment comes, but rarely in history, when we step out from the old to the new, when an age ends, and when the soul of a nation, long suppressed, finds utterance.”

    Tonight we have stepped out from the old into the new. So let us speak now, with clarity and conviction that cannot be misunderstood, about what this new age will deliver, and for whom.

    This will be an age where New Yorkers expect from their leaders a bold vision of what we will achieve, rather than a list of excuses for what we are too timid to attempt. Central to that vision will be the most ambitious agenda to tackle the cost-of-living crisis that this city has seen since the days of Fiorello La Guardia: an agenda that will freeze the rents for more than 2 million rent-stabilized tenants, make buses fast and free, and deliver universal childcare across our city.

    Years from now, may our only regret be that this day took so long to come. This new age will be one of relentless improvement. We will hire thousands more teachers. We will cut waste from a bloated bureaucracy. We will work tirelessly to make lights shine again in the hallways of NYCHA developments where they have long flickered.

    Safety and justice will go hand in hand as we work with police officers to reduce crime and create a department of community safety that tackles the mental health crisis and homelessness crises head on. Excellence will become the expectation across government, not the exception. In this new age we make for ourselves, we will refuse to allow those who traffic in division and hate to pit us against one another.

    In this moment of political darkness, New York will be the light. Here, we believe in standing up for those we love, whether you are an immigrant, a member of the trans community, one of the many Black women that Donald Trump has fired from a federal job, a single mom still waiting for the cost of groceries to go down, or anyone else with their back against the wall. Your struggle is ours, too.

    And we will build a City Hall that stands steadfast alongside Jewish New Yorkers and does not waver in the fight against the scourge of antisemitism. Where the more than 1 million Muslims know that they belong – not just in the five boroughs of this city, but in the halls of power.

    No more will New York be a city where you can traffic in Islamophobia and win an election. This new age will be defined by a competence and a compassion that have too long been placed at odds with one another. We will prove that there is no problem too large for government to solve, and no concern too small for it to care about.

    For years, those in City Hall have only helped those who can help them. But on 1 January, we will usher in a city government that helps everyone.

    Now, I know that many have heard our message only through the prism of misinformation. Tens of millions of dollars have been spent to redefine reality and to convince our neighbors that this new age is something that should frighten them. As has so often occurred, the billionaire class has sought to convince those making $30 an hour that their enemies are those earning $20 an hour.

    They want the people to fight amongst ourselves so that we remain distracted from the work of remaking a long-broken system. We refuse to let them dictate the rules of the game any more. They can play by the same rules as the rest of us.

    Together, we will usher in a generation of change. And if we embrace this brave new course, rather than fleeing from it, we can respond to oligarchy and authoritarianism with the strength it fears, not the appeasement it craves.

    After all, if anyone can show a nation betrayed by Donald Trump how to defeat him, it is the city that gave rise to him. And if there is any way to terrify a despot, it is by dismantling the very conditions that allowed him to accumulate power.

    This is not only how we stop Trump; it’s how we stop the next one. So, Donald Trump, since I know you’re watching, I have four words for you: Turn the volume up.

    We will hold bad landlords to account because the Donald Trumps of our city have grown far too comfortable taking advantage of their tenants. We will put an end to the culture of corruption that has allowed billionaires like Trump to evade taxation and exploit tax breaks. We will stand alongside unions and expand labor protections because we know, just as Donald Trump does, that when working people have ironclad rights, the bosses who seek to extort them become very small indeed.

    New York will remain a city of immigrants: a city built by immigrants, powered by immigrants and, as of tonight, led by an immigrant.

    So hear me, President Trump, when I say this: to get to any of us, you will have to get through all of us. When we enter City Hall in 58 days, expectations will be high. We will meet them. A great New Yorker once said that while you campaign in poetry, you govern in prose.

    If that must be true, let the prose we write still rhyme, and let us build a shining city for all. And we must chart a new path, as bold as the one we have already traveled. After all, the conventional wisdom would tell you that I am far from the perfect candidate.

    I am young, despite my best efforts to grow older. I am Muslim. I am a democratic socialist. And most damning of all, I refuse to apologize for any of this.

    And yet, if tonight teaches us anything, it is that convention has held us back. We have bowed at the altar of caution, and we have paid a mighty price. Too many working people cannot recognize themselves in our party, and too many among us have turned to the right for answers to why they’ve been left behind.

    We will leave mediocrity in our past. No longer will we have to open a history book for proof that Democrats can dare to be great.

    Our greatness will be anything but abstract. It will be felt by every rent-stabilized tenant who wakes up on the first of every month knowing the amount they’re going to pay hasn’t soared since the month before. It will be felt by each grandparent who can afford to stay in the home they have worked for, and whose grandchildren live nearby because the cost of childcare didn’t send them to Long Island.

    It will be felt by the single mother who is safe on her commute and whose bus runs fast enough that she doesn’t have to rush school drop-off to make it to work on time. And it will be felt when New Yorkers open their newspapers in the morning and read headlines of success, not scandal.

    Most of all, it will be felt by each New Yorker when the city they love finally loves them back.

    Together, New York, we’re going to freeze the rent together, New York, we’re going to make buses fast and free together, New York, we’re going to deliver universal childcare.

    Let the words we’ve spoken together, the dreams we’ve dreamt together, become the agenda we deliver together. New York, this power, it’s yours. This city belongs to you.

    [Walk off to Dhoom Machale, context]