David Shanske: A repost of a Twitter thread attempting to describe the scope of the Israel-Hamas war
The end of podcasting, chapter 62
Well, I haven’t written on this topic for at least a month, but an interesting story appeared on Semafor (via Ben Werdmuller) called “The Incredible Shrinking Podcast Industry”. It seems that Apple releases download counts for shows for Apple Podcasts app users, and that they made a change in their app recently to stop automatic downloads of podcasts if the user had not been listening to a podcast within the last two weeks. This resulted in a big drop for many podcasts that use this data to track listener volume. I guess my comments in chapter 60 (and associated podcast) about Apple controlling the master list of podcasts were incorrect, that they ALSO control the way podcasts track download counts (for their app, which I GUESS is the most used app for listening to podcasts). To echo chapter 60 – WHO CARES!
This Semafor article also referenced the Hot Pod Newsletter from The Verge, which seems to be attempting to cover the “podcasting industry”, in addition to shilling for its own conference. I guess I’ll have to subscribe….yawn…
Nothing Is Simple: Using Org to track mushrooms!
Common Ground Democracy: Don’t Despair—Mobilize for Institutional Change (via Election Law Blog)
Fugue: A CEO’s Guide to Emacs – An interesting “why Emacs?” tale, followed by some specific settings/enhancements – meaty, but not overwhelming – nice!
GNU.org: An Introduction to Programming in Emacs Lisp (links to multiple formats, will look at this sometime)
NBCWashington4: Prince William County admits election tally in 2020 shorted Joe Biden – A Northern Virginia county acknowledged it underreported President Joe Biden’s margin of victory over Donald Trump there in the 2020 presidential election by about 4,000 votes, the first detailed accounting of errors that came to light in 2022 as part of a criminal case. (via Election Law Blog)
Jeffrey Issac/Democracy in Dark Times: Public Safety As Convenient Pretext for Political Repression, From Birmingham 1963 to Bloomington 2024 – essay on how “public safety” was used as an excuse for repressing dissent in the 1960s, and how it is still used today.
Axios: Dems could give Haley a boost in Iowa caucuses – Some Iowa Democrats and independents are planning to crash the state’s Republican caucuses Monday night and become “Republicans for a day” to vote for Nikki Haley — but mostly, against former President Trump. I noticed this on the national news, did not know that was allowed…
The Federalist: Lawsuit Uncovers How Raffensperger Tried To Memory-Hole The Election Law Trump’s Georgia Call Was About – interesting, worth looking into…