MoreRSS

site iconAtoms vs BitsModify

An online weekly mailing list
Please copy the RSS to your reader, or quickly subscribe to:

Inoreader Feedly Follow Feedbin Local Reader

Rss preview of Blog of Atoms vs Bits

Second Opinion with Dr. Dua Hassan

2026-04-14 19:11:25

James here, the periodic contributor to Atoms vs. Bits. Over the past couple of months, Uri and I have been working with our friend Dr. Dua Hassan on her podcast "Second Opinion with Dr. Dua Hassan".

Dua is a physician at Boston Children's hospital and in the show she takes the time to explain the "Why" behind different medical interventions that a baby or child goes through in a way that you never really have time for in the normal course of business.

The first season of the show is about the first 24 hours of life and the key interventions that most babies have: the Vitamin K shot, the Eye Goop, the PKU test, the Hep B shot, and the first feeding.

I've been through this first 24 hours three times as a father and I like to think of myself as prepared (I read the books before the first baby was born) and I learned a tremendous amount doing the show with Dua, both about the science and about how we decided what the standard protocol for babies should be. The real world is detailed and messy in delightful ways.

Worth checking out if you are a new parent, a soon-to-be parent, or just interested in learning about this corner of the world. You can find it on Spotify here, Apple Podcasts here, or on YouTube here.

💡
[bonus note from uri: this is one of the best things I've been involved with, and if you know any expecting parents please send this their way -- Dua and James are insanely talented, and I feel that they're filling an unbelievably underserved niche for balanced and intelligent discussion that leaves you understanding not just what happens in healthcare but also why]

National Service for 50 Year Olds

2026-04-13 19:11:24

Every so often I'll meet someone who says how the country's problems could be solved if everyone had to do national service at age 18.

My first note is that it (unscientifically) feels to me like these people have never themselves done national service.

My second note is that they're always saying that young people should do national service, and they're always past the age where you'd have to do it.

So here's my proposal: mandatory two year national service, but you do it at age 50.

This would have a large number of benefits versus national service at 18:

1) many people get stuck on their career tracks, and want a "reset" but can't quite get one. Many people say "oh what I'd love to do now is just go become a teacher", but life goes on and you still need to show up at your current non-teacher job and there's never a good moment to retrain and start over. National service for 50 year olds would give an obvious moment for people to switch to a second career.

2) national service for 50 year olds would help disrupt some of our current gerontocracy issues: at a lot of organizations, the younger people never get a chance at management, and (hopefully) this would give some young talent the opportunity to step into bigger roles for a while and prove their capabilities. (I admit that in practice the 50 year olds would just get replaced temporarily by 80 year olds, then come back and reclaim their existing sinecures, but a guy can dream).

3) national service for 50 year olds would allow people to give back to their communities after they've actually developed skills and abilities: imagine how much more service you can serve if you've got 30 years of training and experience under your belt, versus an 18 year old with (at most) enthusiasm.

4) national service is many things, but one of those things is a near-100% tax on selected individuals: while you're doing national service you get paid little-to-nothing, and it's very hard to work elsewhere for money at the same, so it's equivalent to being taxed for almost-all your income for the duration.

Young people generally have less money (on average), and for low-income young people national service can be a really significant burden, delaying their ability to get on a career ladder and earn a reasonable income by multiple years. This is a component that the wealthy older people who (in my experience) advocate national service never seem to acknowledge, and frankly one reason why their blaséness about the whole proposal irks me. But if you believe in progressive taxation, and you're calling for a near-100% tax on anyone, it should obviously be richer people rather than poorer ones paying it.

Imagined Communities

2026-04-10 19:11:44

Many thanks to all of you who kindly responded to my survey earlier this week about communities. Here were the questions:

Maybe I should have phrased the question as "... feel kinship to others who belong to the same group even if you haven't met them"

(An early version of the survey failed to include "no communities", sorry for those who responded early).

The motivation for this survey was a thought that's chased me around for years, namely: In Imagined Communities, Benedict Anderson claims that newspapers created national identity.[^1]

Specifically, the development of print capitalism meant that suddenly people across the country were reading the same words over their tea and coffee in the morning, and (per Anderson) this massive shared ritual created a sense of kinship across millions of people who would never actually meet each other, therefore creating the modern sense of a nation: an imagined community, because most of the members are strangers, but no less real for being constructed.[^2]

If you've existed in the modern discourse sphere over the last 20 years, you've possibly already had the same thought I did: if newspapers are dying, and (supposedly) we each exist in our own social media echo chamber, do we still have that imagined community? Does Anderson's model provide a framework for the fracture of our polities: we stopped reading the same newspapers over breakfast, so we stopped feeling kinship with our fellow citizens?

Of course, you may also have had the thought "wait weren't there multiple competing newspapers, often aligned with different ideologies" and also "when Anderson talks about this imagined community, was he actually just talking about property owning men of the time, really?", two valid questions which Anderson may or may not answer in the book, it's been a really long time since I read it and I don't remember, sorry.

Also, thinking about it, it's not obvious if the implication of going from "each country reads its own newspapers" to "everyone in the world is using five giant websites filled with screenshots of each other" would lead to more fragmentation, rather than less.[^3] Couldn't Twitter in theory bring everyone together, since we're all reading the same platform every day?

Anyhow. I don't actually have a thesis, but I can at least bring you the results of my survey; here's the types of communities ATVBT readers [^4] feel meaningfully a part of:

* as mentioned, "I don't feel part of any community" was added late and some people included it as a text response, so should probably read 10% or so

My main note is that "political/ideological community" has the most votes. Which doesn't really surprise me, because in my circles I would guess some form of political alignment is the strongly-held identity I most commonly encounter.

Here are some selected quotes of what you all had to say about your communities. I made the survey anonymous so everyone could feel at ease, but if you want to follow up by email please do, I would love to hear more about so many of these responses. I don't have any theories from them, but if you do please do throw down in the comments....

People who care about internal experience in a similar way to how I do
My "other" includes two others:
1. Community of visual artists in my local community and also stretching back through history.
2. Community of people with neurodivergence and learning disabilities.
alas, it is effective altruism
Odd that class is missing. Is it too gauche to admit it? Yes, but this is anonymous so: I (unironically) identify with rootless semi-neoliberal globalists.

Separately, I also feel kinship with people trained in quantitative methods (e.g. economists, engineers, physicists). Quants vs non-quants is an under-appreciated cultural divide. I am not a STEMlord*; it just functions like the options above in that we see the world in similar ways. * I am especially not a “rationalist.” They’re mostly quant cosplayers.
I feel kinship toward the Jewish community even though I don’t practice the religion as a result. It’s more a cultural kinship than religious.

I feel a kinship with people from my home state (CT), I think mostly because I don’t live anywhere near it anymore so it’s rare to meet someone else from there. Almost like being an expat.

I also feel kinship toward supporters of some sports teams I support (go Mets!), possibly for similar expat-esque reasons.

It seems to be when I’m in a minority, I feel more kinship with people in that minority with me.
A sober community (alcohol free, other than AA)
Community of literature lovers
Brown Women
Hate to say it but financial or work peer group is also my community because we have the same or similar lived experiences in the past 10-20 years
Well, to be honest, none of the above or any other not in this list! And it’s taken a ton of careful effort to get to this point.

[^1]: Assume all my claims about what Anderson does or doesn't say are kinda rough, it's been 15 years since I read the book. I tried to re-read it in order to write this post, actually about a year ago, and kept failing to do it for so long that I've given up and just decided to write this without re-reading him, sorry.

[^2]: not to get political on you, but one of his claims (as I recall it) is that many national conflicts involve people saying "the other side's national identity is imaginary, and therefore not real!", and Anderson's points are a) just because it's imagined doesn't make it fake, and b) your side's national identity is also imagined in the same way, you just don't realize it. [Of course, I'm sure he wasn't talking about YOUR national conflict!]

[^3]: I do greatly enjoy the "five giant websites filled with screenshots of each other" quote (h/t someone called Tom Eastman, apparently), and think of it often, but I also want to point out that it's not true: this is just the Western/American-sphere internet, and there are at least 2 other parallel ecosystems in the Russosphere and the Sinosphere where they use a different set of websites.

[^4]: or at least, those who filled out the survey, which was about 2/3 of those who clicked the link. Goes without saying that "readers of this blog" is not a representative sample of anything, but, you know what they say, you go to survey with the sample you have.

Marble Run

2026-04-09 19:11:52

Sometimes my life feels like a marble going down a run.

Mostly I am just rolling, rolling onwards. Sometimes faster, sometimes slower; sometimes the angle is steep and I build up momentum, feeling the wind in my marbley hair; sometimes it's so near-flat that I'm barely moving forward.

At the moments of stagnation I fight to propel myself (or so it feels) to the next part where the path gets steep again and I can build some momentum, because I'm some kind of magic marble that can direct itself sometimes, when it gathers all its energies, even if mostly it just goes with the flow.

A handful of times in my life I've mustered all my energies and tried to jump the run entirely, tried to cross into another life.

Is that possible? I'm not sure. So far it's never quite worked – I've always fallen back into the person I was before.

Which, to be clear, is an extremely fortunate marble; if this is my run I'm grateful for it. I just wish I understood if it's possible to choose your own path, at all, or if you're just meant to relax and enjoy the ride.

Make Life Explicable

2026-04-08 19:29:09

I basically believe that humans find most pains and inconveniences more tolerable if they understand why they're happening, and (conversely) that one of the cruelties of the modern world is big institutions not-telling us why things are happening.

For example, calling tech support for most big companies involves a variety of humiliations and aggravations, but one of the big ones is that a customer asking "ok but why did you do this thing?" is so often met with "I understand your frustration and apologize for any inconvenience" or some other non-answer to the basic question.

(I actually want to positively commend Amazon here – for whatever other flaws they have, it's normally possible to reach a human there and when you ask why are you doing this? they'll give you an answer that makes you go hmm, ok, I feel like this could be done better, but at least it's not totally capricious).

I feel this a lot with apartments and other buildings, where I have to live with the consequences of some unknown previous constraints and simply do not understand why. Why is this electrical outlet placed in a spot where you can't actually reach it? Why does this apartment have a random additional wall cutting an otherwise well-sized room into a smaller room and an unnecessary corridor? Why does this otherwise-nice building have hollow metal doors that feel like they belong in a fallout shelter?

There are probably always reasons for these things, either structural or financial or regulatory, and it would be so much easier to live with the weirdness if I knew why it was like this. Relative to the thousands of hours that developers spend on the building, an hour or two to write a Letter To Future Tenants is nothing. When I rent a new apartment, alongside the keys could be a letter from the architect saying "I wanted to put the window at a normal height of course, rather than have it start 1 ft off the ground. But there's actually a regulation that each room must get at least 1.5 hours of sunlight at noon on the day of the equinox, and given the orientation of the building the only way to achieve that was to give you this crazy low-slung window which you can't easily look out of but where the neighbours can see you naked from your knees to your chest. Sorry!"

I fear that in a litigious society this can never happen: providing any kind of explanation for anything gives someone an opening to challenge that explanation, and probably just saying "it is what it is" is always safer. This is why interacting with bureaucracies is like trying to climb a smooth wall with no handholds, and I guess it makes sense but it also drives me nuts. (See! At least it's an explanation).

We Gouged Too Hard

2026-04-06 19:43:17

Recently I went to a convention in a mid-sized city which relies heavily on tourism (from conventions and other events). I was in a cafe eavesdropping on a couple of locals who were clearly in the business, discussing the drop in revenue in the last couples years. "I think we gouged a little too hard," said one to the other.

From my brief experience of the place, this seemed evidently true – the only surprise was to hear someone saying it. At the convention center, no external food was allowed, pizza slices cost $8 and bottles of water were $5. I am truly fine with being gouged a little at a convention, it feels like it's part of the experience, but this felt indecent.

It's generally risky to have opinions about other people's business practices, because they both 1) have a lot more data than I do, and 2) have a much better incentive to get things right. So it's possible that they're making the correct decisions to maximize their profits, which (as local monopolists) inevitably does not align with my interests as a consumer. But I often get the feeling that businesses are miscalculating the long-term impacts of their gouging: overcharging people might maximize your profit-per-customer in the short term, but if you scare away your customers then in the long term it's not worth it.

For example, I often have this suspicion about the rampant inflation in default tips on the little screens at checkouts these days. One barbershop I went to offered default tip options of like 30%, 40% and 50%. I will never go back there, literally because the tip-screen felt so inflated that I just don't want to deal with them any more. And I think this might be where the errors creep in: the proprieters get very good data from their software on how much profit-per-customer has increased thanks to these tip defaults, since most people are too polite or awkward to enter a custom tip amount lower than the options presented on their screen.

But the system doesn't (and can't) give them data on how many customers don't return because the pricing feel exploitative. There is something about it that goes beyond the money and into a primal instinct about justice and fairness, the kind of thing that makes undergrads participating in behavioral economics experiments reject a non-zero payout just because it feels like the other party is being a dick.

There's plenty of other businesses that, from the outside, seem to be overgouging. I've heard it said about movie theaters, that ticket prices are high enough that young people don't get into movie-going, and while this might be profit-maximising for the cinemas in the short term, it's going to cause their ruin in the long run. (I've also heard it about Hollywood, as a film-shoot location: they have so many unnecessary costs and obstacles to shooting films there that they strangled the golden goose).

You might argue that this is a tragedy of the commons, in that the separate theater companies are profit-maximising in the short term and nobody has an incentive to look after the long-term health of the industry. But I've also heard this claim about Disneyland – tickets are no longer affordable for families, which means that Disney makes more money in the short term through affluent childless adults, but might be eating their own seedcorn when the next generation no longer cares about Disneyland-going. And Disneyland seems like a sufficiently unique, market-power-having and long-term planning institution that they ought to be able to strategize for the long-term.

Again, these businesses all have more incentive and more information than I do, so maybe they're indeed doing what's best for them and it's just not best for me. But I suspect that like the people I overheard in the mid-sized convention city, they will eventually come to the realization that they gouged too much, and should have gouged more modestly.