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You're Worse at Your Job Because You Care Too Much

Yes, it’s a clickbaity title, but if you read this as an essay about what to care about at work, it has some good reminders like this:

“Care less” is directionally right, but let’s get more specific. The real shift is learning to place your care deliberately — to get good at telling the difference between what’s strategically important and what’s just noisy. A lot of what happens inside companies is frustrating without being important. Reacting to a messy call that you personally wouldn’t have made as if it’s a strategic risk is what drains you. So is holding on to every detail as if it’s existential. Not everything deserves to be treated with equal importance. A gut check that helps: Will this matter in a year? If not, it probably doesn’t deserve much energy now. What’s the worst-case scenario? Often, it’s not that bad.

Meet the Sad Wives of AI

I sent this essay to my wife because doing self-owns is kind of my brand. It’s about husbands who can’t stop talking about AI, and despite how uncomfortable it made me, it’s not wrong and also wonderful writing. This is so good:

I should also say I didn’t bother speaking to any of the actual husbands for this story. I’m sick of hearing from the men of AI. So many of us are. They have podcasts and Senate hearings and magazine profiles and probably a group chat with the president. They’ve been talked to—and I can’t stress this enough—enough.

I Left Port 22 Open for 54 Days: An SSH Honeypot Study

This post is a fascinating look at how botnets actually work. I don’t want to spoil the takeaways so I’ll just quote this (but you should read the whole thing):

Your server isn’t special. Nobody is “targeting” it. Every IP address on the internet is being continuously probed by automated systems. Within seconds of exposing port 22, you will receive login attempts. This isn’t a question of “if” but “when” — and the answer to “when” is “immediately.”

Release: Discrobble v1.0.2 — Free on the App Store

Project
Discrobble
Summary
iOS app — track plays of your Discogs collection on Last.fm.
URL
elezea.com/discrobble

My first iPhone app is live! Discrobble is now on the App Store, free. It connects to your Discogs collection and your Last.fm account so you can track your physical music listening in two taps: pick an album, hit “Scrobble,” and the tracks land in your Last.fm history. There’s more on the product page about how it works.

Song of the Day: May 6, 2026

This song is all over my Instagram Reels for some reason and it is such a vibe I can’t get enough of it.

Release: discogs-mcp v3.3.0 — Background sync, instant search

Project
discogs-mcp
Summary
Discogs MCP server.
URL
github.com/rianvdm/discogs-mcp

The first search of the day is now instant. discogs-mcp pre-fetches your collection in the background every hour and keeps it in a snapshot, so search_collection doesn't have to paginate the Discogs API from cold any more.

The server also tells your LLM client how to navigate it — every tool response ends with a "Next steps" block listing the most likely follow-up calls and the exact arguments to use, so chained queries like "find me a mellow jazz album, then expand the top hit" don't make the model guess.

And if you've been putting off deploying your own copy, there's now a Deploy to Cloudflare button in the README — one click, three secrets, done.

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Why Did Hollywood Stop Making Dramas?

I guess this shows just how old I am because I loved every single one of the “Oscar-bait” movies in this list (I do agree on TCM though)…

When I was a kid, I would watch Turner Classic Movies and try to appreciate films from the 1940s, only to find the exercise strangely difficult. I could admire them—in theory—but I struggled to experience these stories the way their original audiences did.

I feel similarly about many Oscar-bait dramas of the 1990s, including but not limited to: Chocolat, American Beauty, Shakespeare in Love, Scent of a Woman, The English Patient, and Life Is Beautiful. I simply don’t understand what contemporary audiences saw in these films.

That aside, as usual Daniel makes an interesting larger point, about why we don’t see as many dramas as we used to:

Action and horror, meanwhile, have visceral elements that translate across generations: big dinosaurs, jump scares, campy set pieces, and other straightforward pleasures. The first ten minutes of Raiders of the Lost Ark are timeless and feature almost no dialogue.

Release: lastfm-mcp v2.4.0 — Top tracks and 8K fewer lines

Project
lastfm-mcp
Summary
Last.fm MCP server.
URL
lastfm-mcp.com

The big shifts in this release: three new tools, a glassmorphism-redesigned landing page, timezone-aware day boundaries on get_recent_tracks, and a 8,300-line cull of the original session-based worker now that the OAuth path has been the only one in production for a while.

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Output isn’t design

The hard part of design is rarely generating the form. It is understanding the problem well enough to know what and how something should exist at all. There is use and place for these tools, but tools are not the design process.

Christopher Alexander came closer than anyone to naming this clearly. In Notes on the Synthesis of Form, he describes design as the search for a good fit between a form and its context. Context, in his sense, is not a background condition. It is the full set of forces that make a problem what it is: human needs, technical constraints, conflicting requirements, habits, edge cases, and relationships that are easy to miss until you spend time with them. Bad design appears where those forces remain unresolved. Good design appears where those misfits have been worked through carefully.

— Karri Saarinen, Output isn’t design

Release: tldl v2.4.0 — Broadsheet redesign

Project
TL;DL
Summary
Your favorite podcasts, summarized.
URL
tldl-pod.com

TL;DL has a new look. Inspired by classic broadsheet newspapers, the redesigned site puts episode summaries in a layout that's calmer to read and easier to scan — with proper typography, a featured "lead" episode, and a cleaner detail page for every summary.

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