Categories
Aircraft Aviation Dayton Ohio

The Gravity of Wright Hall

Thereโ€™s a building in Carillon Historical Park in Dayton, Ohio, that I walked into as a child and never entirely walked out of.

Itโ€™s called Wright Hall, and it was designed by Orville Wright himself โ€” his last major project before he died in January 1948, two years before the park even opened. He didnโ€™t live to see anyone walk through the doors he helped design. But he had a very specific idea about what the experience should feel like when they did.

He wanted you to look down at the plane.

Not up at it, the way the Smithsonian would later hang the 1903 Flyer from the ceiling. Down. The 1905 Wright Flyer III sits low in that room, close to the ground, positioned so a visitor can lean over and see exactly how the pilot lay across it โ€” stomach-down, nestled into a hip cradle, with a joystick-like lever in one hand and a paddle in the other. No seat. No cockpit. Just a man flat on a machine made of spruce and muslin and wire, trusting himself to the sky.

I didnโ€™t understand any of that when I was a kid. What I understood was that you didnโ€™t talk loudly in that room.

The feeling was immediate and hard to name then, though I can name it now: it felt like a church. The building had been made for one thing and one thing only โ€” to hold this object โ€” and that specificity of purpose had given it a kind of sanctity. Other museums have artifacts behind glass with plaques. Wright Hall had a presence at its center, the same way a cathedral has an altar. Everything in the room was organized around the plane. The light. The silence. The way adults moved more carefully than they did outside.

The Flyer III is the one the Wright brothers themselves considered their most important aircraft. Not the famous 1903 machine at Kitty Hawk โ€” the one that made the front pages, that answered the question of could it be done. This one. The one that asked what came next. By October 1905, Wilbur flew it for nearly forty minutes before running out of gas. It could bank, turn, circle, come back and land where it started. It became the first practical airplane โ€” the proof that flight wasnโ€™t just a stunt, but a technology, the first tentative sketch of the world weโ€™d build on top of it.

Eighty percent of the materials in that plane are original. The rest were made to replace parts lost or borrowed. The 1905 engine is in there. Orville oversaw every detail of the restoration and then, before it was finished, died. The plane was completed without him. It opened to the public on June 3, 1950, and the crowds swarmed in.

What I keep thinking about, decades later, is the deliberateness of Orvilleโ€™s final act โ€” the decision to spend his last years not flying, not inventing, but making sure one specific machine would be seen correctly by people who hadnโ€™t been born yet. He chose the building. He chose the angle. He chose to put the plane on the ground so youโ€™d have to lean over it, so the mechanics of it โ€” the hip cradle, the geometry of control โ€” would be legible rather than merely impressive.

He was trying to explain something.

Growing up in Dayton meant growing up in the long shadow of a thing that had happened there before you were born. The Wright Brothers were not myth in Dayton the way they might be elsewhere. They were local โ€” specific, biographical, connected to real streets. The bike shop where they worked the figures out. The cow pasture at Huffman Prairie where they practiced. The house where Orville lived until he died. All of it still there, or mostly there, embedded in the ordinary geography of a mid-sized Ohio city.

But Wright Hall was different. Wright Hall was where the thing itself lived. And the thing itself, seen up close, was smaller than I expected and more fragile and more terrifying. Two pusher propellers driven by chains. A twelve-horsepower engine. Gaps in the ribs of the wing you could see daylight through.

The altar, when you finally stood over it, turned out to be the most improbable thing in the world: a contraption that barely looked like it could stay together, let alone in the air. And that, I think, is exactly what Orville wanted you to feel. Not awe at the achievement from a safe distance. Proximity to the audacity.

He made a room for it. I walked in as a child and it got into me somehow, that room, that plane, that deliberate act of making something matter. Iโ€™ve been thinking about it ever since.

Categories
AI Anthropic Business Google

The Weight of the Bill

Jordi Visser has been making the case for months โ€” in his weekly YouTube commentary and on his Substack โ€” that we are living through an exponential transition that most people are measuring with the wrong instruments. I think he’s right. I found two data points this week that suggest why.

I was somewhere in the middle of an Invest Like the Best episode when Dylan Patel said it โ€” almost as an aside, the kind of thing you drop to establish context before moving on to the point you actually came to make. His firm, SemiAnalysis, analyzes the semiconductor and AI industries for a living. And their usage of Claude, he noted, has been growing. The costs have been growing too.

Exponentially.

He moved on. I didn’t.

I think Patel’s API bill might be one of the more honest documents in the current AI moment โ€” more honest than the analyst reports his firm produces, more honest than the earnings calls where every public company performs its AI fluency for shareholders.

Surveys bend. When you ask someone whether they’re using AI in their work, you’re asking them to self-report on a technology that has become a proxy for relevance, for not being left behind. The incentive to say yes is enormous. And even when the yes is genuine, it tells you nothing about depth โ€” whether AI has become load-bearing in how someone actually works, or whether it’s an impressive thing they do occasionally.

Nobody pays exponentially growing API costs for show. Money is the honest witness.

What makes Patel’s situation quietly strange is the recursion in it. SemiAnalysis exists to help sophisticated investors and technologists understand this industry โ€” and they cannot predict their own consumption curve. They are inside the exponential the same way everyone else is. They just happen to be watching their bill.

Then this morning, a different number arrived. Google announced it will invest up to $40 billion in Anthropic โ€” $10 billion committed now, another $30 billion contingent on performance milestones. This follows a separate $5 billion from Amazon, part of a broader arrangement under which Anthropic is expected to spend up to $100 billion on compute over time.

The temptation with numbers like these is to treat them as spectacle. Forty billion dollars is so large it becomes almost aesthetic โ€” a statement about ambition, about the kind of bets that define eras. You feel the weight of the zeros and move on.

But I keep coming back to Patel’s API bill.

Because Google’s $40 billion and SemiAnalysis’s compounding monthly costs are saying the same thing, expressed at scales so different they almost don’t seem related. One is a research firm noticing that their tool usage has quietly escaped prediction. The other is one of the most sophisticated capital allocators on earth making a bet that strains comprehension. But both are pointing at the same reality: that this technology, wherever it takes hold, does not plateau. It compounds.

We have been waiting, I think, for the moment when AI adoption becomes legibly real โ€” some threshold event that separates the signal from the noise, the press release from the actual change. The surveys were supposed to mark that moment. The enterprise announcements. The benchmark numbers.

Patel’s aside suggests we’ve been waiting for the wrong thing. You don’t arrive at the exponential. You just eventually notice you’re already in it โ€” in an aside on a podcast, before moving on to the point you actually came to make.

Categories
Books Living Quotations

The Smallness of Being Nowhere

Thereโ€™s a sentence I keep returning to from Blue Highways, William Least Heat-Moonโ€™s account of driving the back roads of America after his marriage ended and his teaching job disappeared in the same week:

โ€œIn a hotel room at the geographical center of North America, a neon sign blinking red through the cold curtains, I lay quietly like a small idea in a vacant mind.โ€

Iโ€™ve read it probably a dozen times now and it still does something to me. The question I canโ€™t shake: why does it work so completely?


The setup is all precision and specificity. โ€œThe geographical center of North Americaโ€ โ€” Heat-Moon is actually in Rugby, North Dakota, a place so particular it exists mostly as a fact. You cannot be more specifically somewhere on a continent and also be more nowhere. Thatโ€™s the first compression: location as the opposite of orientation.

Then the neon sign. Red through cold curtains. He doesnโ€™t describe the room โ€” the bed, the low ceiling, the highway sound. He gives you the one sensory detail that pulses, that intrudes. Red blinking through fabric. Thatโ€™s loneliness rendered as light. You donโ€™t need the rest of the room. You already know it.

And then the simile arrives, and itโ€™s the sentenceโ€™s whole reason for existing.

Like a small idea in a vacant mind.

Whatโ€™s strange is that it shouldnโ€™t work. Itโ€™s abstract โ€” ideas, minds โ€” in a sentence thatโ€™s been building toward the physical and concrete. But Heat-Moon has earned the turn. Heโ€™s given us geography, then sensation, and now he cashes both in for something interior. The simile tells you exactly how the previous details felt from the inside: not tragic, not dramatic, not even particularly sad. Just small. A flicker of thought in an empty space.

The word โ€œquietlyโ€ is doing more than it announces. He doesnโ€™t lie there awake or restless or afraid, all the words that would have been available and true and insufficient. He lies quietly, which is a posture, not an emotion. It places him in the scene without claiming too much about what the scene means.

This is what I find myself most drawn to: the sentence doesnโ€™t reach for profundity. It doesnโ€™t tell you this moment is significant, doesnโ€™t linger on the loss that brought him there. It just describes, precisely, what itโ€™s like to be a self that has temporarily lost its weight โ€” to exist at the center of something vast while feeling like an afterthought in your own head.


Thereโ€™s another line from the same book that works entirely differently, and I keep it nearby as a kind of corrective:

โ€œLife doesnโ€™t happen along interstates. Itโ€™s against the law.โ€

The first sentence is a philosophy. The second sentence is a joke about highway regulations that somehow confirms the philosophy. The gap between those two moves โ€” the microsecond where you process that he means both things โ€” is where the humor lives.

Whatโ€™s funny is also true: the interstate is literally designed to prevent you from stopping, from turning off, from being anywhere specific. You are processed through the landscape like freight. Heat-Moon understood that the road you take isnโ€™t a neutral choice. The blue highways of the title โ€” the old two-lane routes, drawn in blue on gas station maps โ€” were the ones where you might actually arrive somewhere, talk to someone, become something other than your destination.

The joke earns its keep because it doesnโ€™t explain itself. He trusts you to feel the absurdity and then sit with the fact that absurdity is sometimes just accuracy.


What strikes me, holding both sentences together, is how much range lives in a single book. The hotel room passage asks you to feel the weight of smallness. The interstate line asks you to laugh at the systems we build to keep life at a safe distance. Both are true. Both are, in their different registers, about the same thing: what you miss when you move through the world without stopping.

Thatโ€™s what the geographical center does. At the exact middle of a continent, you are as far from every edge as you can be. You are equidistant from significance. The neon blinks anyway. And you are there, small, in the dark โ€” on a blue highway, not an interstate. Which means, at least according to Heat-Moon, that something might still happen.

I donโ€™t know why I find this more moving than sentences that try harder. Maybe because precision, applied to the right details, is its own kind of tenderness.

Or maybe itโ€™s just that Iโ€™ve been that small idea in a vacant mind, and itโ€™s a relief to find it named.

Categories
Living Serendipity

Why Comfort Zones Block Serendipity and Growth

Serendipity used to be the default setting of my days, but recently I find myself having a quiet, losing negotiation with the front doorknob every time I try to step outside. There is a specific, invisible weight to the handle on a quiet eveningโ€”a subtle, undeniable gravitational pull that recommends I simply stay inside. My favorite reading chair feels less like comfort these days and more like an anchor.

I have been writing in this space since 2001. If you look back through the archives of my lifeโ€”both the digital ones and the memories filed away in my headโ€”you will find a younger version of myself who frequently and willingly threw himself into the unknown. Back then, I assumed serendipity would always just be there, waiting for me to stumble into it on a diverted commute or during a late, unplanned dinner.

Lately, Iโ€™ve noticed a subtle shift. As Iโ€™ve gotten older, my comfort zone has hardened from a permeable boundary into a brick wall. The things that once sparked a quiet thrill of spontaneityโ€”a sudden change of travel plans, an unfamiliar route home, saying yes to an event where I know absolutely no oneโ€”now often trigger a low-grade exhaustion before they even begin. I find myself pre-calculating the energy cost of every deviation from the routine. I weigh the known comfort of my home against the unpredictable variables of the outside world, and the home usually wins.

But I have been sitting with a growing realization lately: when we meticulously optimize our lives for comfort, we inadvertently foreclose on serendipity.

Serendipity requires a loose grip. It demands a willingness to be occasionally inconvenienced. You cannot schedule a chance encounter, and you cannot algorithmically generate a moment of sudden, blinding clarity. Those things only happen in the messy, unmapped spaces between our planned destinations. They live in the friction of the unexpected.

I often think about the writers and thinkers who deliver sentences with such compression and weight. Their most profound insights didn’t arrive because they stayed perfectly insulated from the world. They arrived because they allowed themselves to be interrupted by it.

I am trying to learn how to open the door again. It doesnโ€™t mean manufacturing chaos or pretending I have the boundless, restless energy of my thirties. Acknowledging my own changing capacity (especially physically) is necessary, but using it as an excuse to stop exploring is a mistake.

Overcoming this gravity means making a conscious, deliberate choice to leave the itinerary blank for an afternoon. It means taking the long way home, even when the usual route is faster. It means accepting that the discomfort of stepping outside the routine is the unlock to open a new experience.

The architecture of a well-lived life isn’t built out of safety. The most interesting rooms are the ones we never intended to enter but just happened into.

Categories
Apple Business

The Architecture of Subtraction

Hold an iPhone in your hand, or run your fingers along the cold, machined edge of a MacBook. What you are feeling isnโ€™t just glass and aluminum; you are feeling the physical manifestation of a thousand invisible rejections.

We are conditioned to think of creation as an additive process. But true institutional excellence operates in reverse. It is an act of relentless, unsentimental subtraction.

A few years ago, Tim Cook articulated what became known as the “Cook Doctrine.” It is meant to answer the existential question of what makes Apple, Apple. Reading through it, what strikes me isn’t the corporate ambition, but the brutal, uncompromising geometry of its choices.

We believe that weโ€™re on the face of the Earth to make great products, and thatโ€™s not changing. Weโ€™re constantly focusing on innovating. We believe in the simple, not the complex. We believe that we need to own and control the primary technologies behind the products we make, and participate only in markets where we can make a significant contribution.

We believe in saying no to thousands of projects so that we can really focus on the few that are truly important and meaningful to us. We believe in deep collaboration and cross-pollination of our groups, which allow us to innovate in a way that others cannot. And frankly, we donโ€™t settle for anything less than excellence in every group in the company, and we have the self-honesty to admit when weโ€™re wrong and the courage to change.

The gravity of that doctrine doesn’t live in the pursuit of “great products.” Everyone claims to want that. The gravity lives in the tension between wanting to do everything and having the discipline to do almost nothing.

“Saying no to thousands of projects” is easy to write on a slide. It is agonizing to practice in reality. It means looking at a perfectly good ideaโ€”perhaps even a highly profitable ideaโ€”and killing it because it dilutes the core mission. It is the architectural equivalent of leaving vast amounts of empty space in a room so that the few pieces of furniture inside it can actually breathe.

I think about the times in my own career when I lacked that specific kind of courage. I have held onto projects that had long since lost their spark, simply because of the sunk costs. I have said yes to interesting distractions that slowly eroded my focus on the essential work. We dilute our attention not because we intend to fail, but because the alternativeโ€”staring at a promising path and refusing to walk down itโ€”feels entirely unnatural.

That is where Cook’s point about “self-honesty” becomes the linchpin. You cannot admit you are wrong unless you have created a culture where the truth outranks the ego. The deep collaboration Cook speaks of isn’t just about sharing resources; it’s about sharing the burden of that honesty. It is a collective agreement to not settle, to look at a nearly finished product and have the courage to say, this isn’t right yet.

Ultimately, the Cook Doctrine isn’t a strategy for building computers. It is an observation about human nature. The future is only guaranteed for those who can afford to survive the presentโ€”and survival demands knowing exactly what you are not.

The chaos isnโ€™t an obstacle to the mission; it is the environment in which the mission earns its meaning.

Excellence is not just about what you build. It is also about what you are willing to destroy.

Categories
AI Business Media News

The Lost-Wax Casting of Cable News

I remember the physical weight of a television remote in the late 1990s, clicking through a suddenly expanding universe of 24-hour cable news. It felt like stepping into a river that never stopped moving.

This morning, Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) announced a new 24/7 “news channel” streaming on X, named “MTS” (Monitor the Situation). It joins networks like TBPN and a growing army of individual creators, all vying to fill the endless void of the present moment with non-stop commentary.

It feels like a significant shift in how we consume the present. But I suspect it’s actually just scaffolding.

In the lost-wax process of bronze casting, an artist sculpts a form in wax, builds a heavy ceramic mold around it, and then pours in molten metal. The heat is absolute. The wax melts away, completely consumed and replaced by the final, permanent structure. The wax was never the destination; it was merely holding the shape until the real material was ready.

Right now, human creators are the wax.

We are building the molds for the 24/7, always-on broadcast of the internet age. Human hosts are sitting in chairs, monitoring the situation, talking into the void, exhausting themselves to maintain the stream. They are doing the grueling, manual labor of defining what a continuous social-first news network looks and feels like.

But human endurance is fragile. We need sleep. We need silence. We eventually run out of words.

The artificial intelligence models currently learning to synthesize news, clone voices, and generate video are the molten bronze. Eventually, the human hosts of these endless streams will melt away. The channel will remainโ€”a fully AI-driven entity that never blinks, never tires, and never needs a coffee break.

Iโ€™ve held on to failing investments for far too long, convinced that if I just put more energy into them, they would eventually stabilize and turn around. We often make this mistake. We mistake the transitional phase for the final destination. We think the current iteration of “monitoring the situation” with exhausted human pundits is the future of media.

It isnโ€™t. Itโ€™s just the awkward teenage years of a medium waiting for its true native technology.

The human commentators are doing the necessary work of teaching the system what a 24-hour news network on a social platform requires. Once the lesson is learned, the teachers will no longer be needed. The future is only guaranteed for those who can afford to survive the present.

Is it ironic that TBPN was just acquired by OpenAI?

Categories
Travel

The Geometry of the Right Question

The heavy brass key lands on the polished mahogany desk with a satisfying clink. The concierge, impeccably dressed and professionally warm, pulls out a crisp, glossy map. With practiced efficiency, a red felt-tip pen circles a restaurant three blocks away.

It is an interaction defined entirely by transaction and expectation. We arrive in a new city carrying the coiled tension of the unfamiliar, desperate for a good experience. So, we ask the professional where we should go, and they give us the answer specifically engineered for people exactly like us. We want to pierce the veil of the tourist economy, to find the authentic pulse of a place, yet we instinctively rely on the very instruments designed to insulate us from it.

Kevin Kelly offers this approach to wayfinding for bypassing the polished veneer of travel:

“Don’t ask the hotel concierge where to eat. Ask almost anyone else, including drivers, and when you ask, donโ€™t ask where is a good place you should eat; ask them where they eat. Where did they eat the last time they ate out?”

Notice the subtle geometry of that shift. When you ask someone “where is a good place to eat,” you are asking them to play the role of a critic. They instantly, often subconsciously, filter their response. They calculate what they think you can afford, what they assume your palate can handle, or what they believe is socially acceptable to recommend to a visitor. They hand you an idealized map.

But when you ask “where did you eat last,” you are asking for a historical fact. You are bypassing the curation of stated preferences and accessing the raw truth of revealed preferences.

I have spent too many evenings in unfamiliar cities eating perfectly fine, entirely forgettable meals at the places circled in red ink. I suspect many of us have. We hold onto the belief that authority figures hold the best secrets.

The architecture of our choices often limits the quality of our experiences. Kellyโ€™s advice isn’t just a clever hack for finding a better dinner.

It is a fundamental truth about how we navigate the world at large.

We constantly ask the wrong people the wrong questions. We ask financial experts for their market projections instead of asking to see their personal portfolios. We ask successful people for their sweeping theories on productivity rather than asking what they actually did between 8:00 AM and 10:00 AM this morning. We ask for recommendations, which are inherently performative, instead of asking for evidence, which is unavoidably real.

The map is never the territory, and the concierge is rarely the guide. The unvarnished truth of a placeโ€”or a lifeโ€”doesn’t live at the polished desk in the lobby. It lives out on the street, in the messy, uncurated reality of what people actually do.

Categories
Authors Books Business

The Whetstone of the Box

Give a team an unlimited budget and no deadline, and you almost guarantee their project will never ship. We spend our careers fighting for more runway, more resources, and a completely clear calendar, convinced that absolute freedom is the prerequisite for great work. Yet, when the walls finally fall away, we usually just freeze.

David Epsteinโ€™s upcoming book, Inside the Box, circles this exact paradox. His premise, arriving in early May, is that constraints do not diminish our capabilities; they forge them. We spend so much of our lives trying to escape boundaries, failing to recognize that those very boundaries are what give our efforts shape.

I think about the early days of writing code. We were working with severe memory limitsโ€”kilobytes, not gigabytes. Every line had to justify its existence. There was no room for bloat, no excess capacity to mask sloppy logic. It felt restrictive at the time, like trying to build a ship inside a bottle.

But that unforgiving physical boundary forced a ruthless elegance. You had to understand exactly what you were trying to accomplish. The constraint wasn’t an obstacle to the work; it was the whetstone that sharpened the blade.

We see this everywhere, once we learn to look for it. A photographer framing a shot with a fixed prime lens cannot rely on a zoom ring to find the picture; they have to physically move their feet. The limitation forces engagement with the physical world. Without the walls of a canyon, a river is just a swamp. It is the restriction that creates the momentum.

Epsteinโ€™s focus on how constraints make us better feels like a necessary corrective right now. We live in an era of infinite leverage and boundless digital canvases. The friction has been removed from almost everything we do.

But friction is where the traction lives. When we strip away all our limits, we don’t gain wings; we just lose our footing. We need the edges of the box to know exactly where we stand.

Categories
Living

The Unpadded Saddle

The clatter of the wooden track arrives before the speed does. It starts as a gentle rumble beneath the floorboards, deceptive in its innocence. Then the trumpet fanfare blares, the recorded call of “And they’re off!” echoes across the platform, and suddenly you are caught in a centrifugal force violently pulling you toward the edge.

We are so accustomed to the padded corners of our routines that the Derby Racer at Rye Playland feels almost transgressive. Built in 1928, it is one of the world’s last surviving racing carousels. But the word “carousel” implies a gentle, music-box rotationโ€”a docile circle meant for toddlers and waving parents. The Derby Racer, by contrast, spins at nearly twenty-five miles per hour. You sit astride a hand-carved wooden horse, one of fifty-six crafted by Marcus Illions, that leaps and pitches forward and backward with a startlingly realistic gait.

There are no lap bars. There are no padded shoulder restraints locking you into a prescribed posture of safety. There is no automated sensor to ensure you are seated correctly. There is only a metal hoop, your own grip, and gravity.

I remember taking a ride on the Derby Racer years ago. I climbed into the saddle, wedged my right foot onto the top peg and my left onto the bottom, exactly as the operator instructed. Lean in hard or you’ll fall off, the safety spiel went. As the speed built and the outward pull tried to peel me off the horse, my arms began to burn. My thighs locked against the painted wood. The wind whipped my face, and the track roared beneath us. It was exhilarating, yes, but it was also genuinely demanding.

When the ride finally slowed and I dismounted, my legs were wobbly. Beneath the lingering adrenaline was a profound, quiet relief: I had survived.

In 1928, the world was a less insulated place. The people who first rode those Marcus Illions horses understood that machinery required respect. They didn’t expect the ride to take care of them; they understood the unwritten contract of the saddle. Returning to it now feels like stepping through a portal into an era that trusted individuals to hold their own weight.

We spend so much of our time engineering physical risk out of our days. We build software to prevent errors, algorithms to smooth out our choices, and bumpers to keep us firmly in our designated lanes. We have traded the raw, unrefined thrill of hanging on for the predictable comfort of being strapped in. We assume that a frictionless experience is always a better experience.

But there is something deeply necessary about a machine that demands your active participation just to stay aboard. The Derby Racer doesn’t care if you are distracted; it requires your attention in the present tense. It forces you out of the abstract anxieties of your mind and entirely into the burning muscles of your arms and legs. It reminds you that the physical world still has teeth, and that staying upright requires deliberate, conscious effort.

The padding of the modern world keeps us comfortable, but the raw grip of a 1928 wooden track reminds us we are alive.

Categories
Menlo Park Photography

Sakura

On my morning walk, a great blue heron and a beautiful flowering Japanese cherry tree. Lovely start to the weekend!

Great Blue Heron
Sakura – Flowering Japanese Cherry

Read about a 1,200 year archive of Japanese cherry blossom dates in Japan.