Monday, June 16
About My Career
Perpendicular Planet: A 90° Orbit Over Twin Suns Leaves Scientists Stunned
A Bizarre New System in Space
Astronomers have uncovered one of the strangest planetary systems ever seen. Nicknamed 2M1510, this system appears to include a planet that loops far over the poles of two brown dwarfs—mysterious celestial bodies that are too heavy to be planets but not quite massive enough to ignite like stars. These two brown dwarfs orbit each other closely, while a third one drifts even farther out, orbiting the pair from a great distance.
In most star systems, including our own solar system, planets typically orbit in the same flat plane as their parent star’s equator. The star’s spin also lines up with this orderly layout, creating a calm, pancake-like structure in space where everything moves together. Everyone is “coplanar:” flat, placid, stately.
Sunday, June 15
Speaking Out
What amazes me on a day like today (Father's Day), many of the memes and jpegs I see, depict a father with a son, instead of a daughter or a son and daughter. Not sure what the meaning of this might be, but there is clearly a subtle message being sent.
I used to speak out a lot but cut back after realizing nobody really gave a damn about what I thought because I was not a celebrity or rich and famous. It seems like those are the one we only want to listen to while at the same time, those are the ones that are putting us in the situation we are currently in. Americans never learn their lessons unless they are veterans.
Is our world much better off TODAY than it was YESTERDAY... with the understanding that yesterday is not really yesterday but years ago???
The ways in which we are better are offset by the ways in which we have remained the same or gotten worse... like:
- education
- healthcare
- quality of life
- the American dream
- wealth distribution
- value of the dollar
- global respect
- purchasing power
- national debt
Why some companies are rethinking the use of AI
Mario Tama/Getty Images
AI in most workplaces is here to stay. But several businesses bought into the early hype that generative AI would eliminate the need for hiring people and help trim payrolls, only to learn the hard way that robots aren’t yet ready to replace humans.
AI-ers’ remorse: A recent survey from Orgvue noted that more than half of business leaders said they regretted laying off employees as a result of an AI deployment. The research also found that 40% of executives reduced staffing in order to implement AI, and 55% of those robot-lovers regretted that decision. Per S&P Global, 42% of companies abandoned their generative AI pilot projects in 2025, up from 17% last year.
To err is human, to rehire divine
Several companies quickly embraced AI as the employee of the month only to find themselves like Rose in the freezing cold Atlantic, blowing her whistle after the Titanic sank. Here are some of the companies that want people to come back:Klarna: CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski said his push to use AI in a customer service role was a mistake because people would prefer to talk to humans than robots, something that eluded him even though that’s been true since the first automated voice on the other end of a phone call said, “To speak to an operator, press 0.” Siemiatkowski is not above AI replacing himself, though: You can call a hotline to give feedback to his AI-generated clone.
IBM: After laying off 8,000 people, including many people in human resources roles who were replaced with the AskHR AI service, the company reversed course upon realizing humans may be better equipped for a job with “human” in the title.
McDonald’s: Using AI to take orders at drive-thrus turned out to be a clown show, with the tech adding bacon to an ice cream order (among other issues).
Duolingo: CEO Luis von Ahn made a big statement that the company was going “AI-first” and replacing contractors with AI, but he walked back that plan after facing backlash from customers.
Zoom out: The rush to get up to speed with a hot new technology was partly due to fear of falling behind competitors welcoming it with open arms, like Apple being left in the dust by its rivals on the AI front. But according to a report from The Economist, most companies aren’t clamoring for AI that’s more clever—they need tech that’s more applicable to their businesses.—DL
Robert Reich
Sunday Thought
We the People
Friends,
Yesterday’s demonstrations across the nation in favor of democracy and against Trump’s dictatorship revealed the power of the people.
The energy, exuberance, and solidarity of those demonstrations stood in sharp contrast to Trump’s noxious display of tanks and military equipment on Constitution Avenue in Washington, D.C. While Trump continues to politicize the military, hundreds of thousands of us are saying no to his usurpation of power that belongs to the people.
We will not be intimidated by the violence he has stirred up — not by the shootings of state legislators and their spouses in Minnesota, nor by the death threats against federal judges, nor by the thuggish removal of a United States senator from a Trump official’s news conference, nor by the arrest of a judge who didn’t cooperate with ICE, nor by the abductions of people from our streets and places of work.
The origins of Father's Day.
A wire around Manhattan allows observant Jews to carry things on the Sabbath.
Is it safe to microdose Ozempic?
The wildest sports moments of the last 25 years.
The era when Earth was ice-covered and inhabited with life.
Visualizing the highest-earning films since 1979.
The US tried to ban fake photos in 1912.
Defining the latest in slang: from "aura farming" to "clock it."
The unique franchise economics of Chick-fil-A.
How the death of a whale feeds the seafloor ecosystem for centuries.
Steps for buying your first hearing aids.
The origins of the Rolling Stones.
How reusable rocket boosters actually work.
Why "The Phantom of the Opera" lasted for decades on Broadway.
Hosting the World Cup is exciting—and extremely costly.
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