Out now!
A Year of Mornings
A collection of fifty love poems that follows a young heart as it finds love, finds the strength to be in love and finally, finds the strength to let go.
Nab your copy:
I am a platform engineer and a writer based in Finland.
I am the author of A Year of Mornings, a collection of poems for young adults.
NordLetter
I send out a newsletter once a week about living in Finland + five interesting things I've found on the open web.
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Re-Designing My Home Screen and the Way I Use My Phone
Focus modes + Shortcuts magic
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How global logistics got me over my fear of personal agents
All of which to say is that, for me, my personal theory is that AI psychosis comes from undermining your intrinsic faith in the workings of your own self.
And that comes from allowing an LLM that speaks in your voice to potentially write into your notes which, for a certain kind of person, is part of cognition itself. The AI doesn’t need to actually change your notes, the potential is enough.
Which eventually makes you go loopy.
The part about not using AI agents for your own writing and notes felt relevant to me. A thing that I agree with.
I believe writing helps me think. If I let AI do that, how would I think?
The Witcher 3 is getting another expansion, more than a decade after launch by Andrew Webster
The fourth Witcher game may be a ways off, but fans won’t be without Geralt of Rivia for long. CD Projekt Red just announced Songs of the Past, the third expansion for The Witcher 3, which will be launching in 2027.
If only I could make some time now.
Meta Wants You to Pay for Instagram, Facebook, and WhatsApp Now by Juli Clover
Instagram Plus is priced at $3.99 per month, Facebook Plus is priced at $3.99 per month, and WhatsApp Plus is priced at $2.99 per month.
Good. When you pay for something, you get to gauge the value it brings. The free plans continue though.
Other than WhatsApp, I don’t think I would ever pay for any Meta app.
About Apple Sports
The literary world isn’t prepared for AI by Gaby Del Valle
None of this, however, explains the uncanny quality of AI-generated work, or what distinguishes bad LLM-produced prose from bad human writing. When I ran Nazir’s story through Pangram, an AI- and plagiarism-detection software, it came back as 100 percent AI-generated. According to Pangram, the most obvious tells were Nazir’s use of triads; the word “stubborn,” which is six times as likely to appear in AI-generated text than that made by humans; and the phrase “as if it had,” whose appearance is five times as likely. But here we have another list of three, written by me, a human.
They run their own writing through Pangram, and it came back as human written. But these tools are not deterministic. You can’t say for sure, that’s the point.
I for example am almost afraid to use em-dashes anymore, lest it be determined that AI wrote these words. It did not.
But it is an exciting time for sure. I read a piece yesterday comparing the SaaS industry to the Music industry, and how the SaaS disruption had already happened to the Music industry. The main point was how music creators are content creators now, who create content with music.
I think a similar point exists for writing as well. It’s all trust. And also, what’s the point. Writing does many things including clearing up your thoughts, if AI does it, you don’t get any benefits.