Vulture is a neat library that funds unused Python code. uvx vulture script.py works fairly well, out-of-box. This helps when cleaning up AI-edited scripts that often have left-over code or imports. #python
One of the lightest alternatives to Google Analytics is GoatCounter. If you just want page views, referrers, browsers, OSes, countries, and devices, it's great. It's privacy-friendly (no cookies), open source, easy to self-host, free for small sites, and the data is exportable.
The number of countries that allow visa-free entries to Indian passports is gently growing in Asia (Kazakhstan, Thailand, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Iran, and Philippines).
Summary: In early days, explore, sample. Then narrow based on interest & fit. Practice hard and persist.
⭐⭐⭐⭐ Range (David Epstein): In changing environments (rules shift, feedback is noisy/late), sample broadly, i.e. generalize. Specialization vs generalization
Nobel laureates have more hobbies. Olympic athletes have less. Shift nurses have same hobbies as non-shift workers. Hobbies help expertise in some areas
Rewarding ONLY what succeeds locks behavior, halts exploration. Vary / delay incentives. Reward AFTER figuring out what works. Reinforcement and rewards
Maybe "orderly" people specialize and creative people generalize? So pick what aligns with personality?
⭐⭐⭐ Peak (Anders Ericsson & Robert Pool): Compounded practice at the edge of competence, with good immediate feedback, helps 14-26%.
But talent (genetics, upbringing, brainpower) differentiates more the expert level.
Slow, effortful practice (spaced recall, interleaving topics, self-testing) builds lasting knowledge - but looks inefficient and doesn't help with exams. Learning and long-term retention
"Easy" 10K hours don't help.
⭐⭐ Grit (Angela Duckworth): predicts roughly the same as conscientiousness (18%). It predicts success in stable paths moderately (but brainpower, etc. matter too).
The attention economy is real. It is designed to capture our mind, and it is winning.
Distractions hurt MUCH more than we think. Batching, focus time helps.
Privilege helps. The rich have more control over these than the poor do.
⭐⭐⭐⭐ Deep Work (Cal Newport, 2016) and ⭐⭐⭐ Digital Minimalism (Cal Newport, 2019): control the tools. Focus time, digital detox, embrace boredom. This helps - when you can afford to.
⭐⭐⭐ Indistractable (Nir Eyal): control yourself. The problem is internal (also true), so build habits, since willpower depletes (hm... not really).
⭐⭐⭐ How to Do Nothing (Jenny Odell, 2019): reject. Embrace boredom as resistance. This helps - when you can afford to.
⭐⭐ Stolen Focus (Johann Hari, 2022): regulate & rebel. The problem is systemic and external (also true). Reclaim your interface.
BTW: Goldfish have excellent attention spans and memory :-)
⭐⭐⭐ The Body Keeps the Score (Bessel van der Kolk, 2014): trauma recall shuts down the speech area. Eye movement desensitization (EMDR) helps. So does CBT, despite what the book says. But does yoga (only a little) or neurofeedback (too little data)?
⭐⭐⭐ What Happened to You? (Bruce Perry & Oprah Winfrey, 2021): calming people down before talking. Strong connections help more than a therapist.
⭐⭐ The Myth of Normal (Gabor Maté, 2022): trauma causes cancer (no), autoimmunity (partly), ALS (?), etc.
⭐ It Didn’t Start with You (Mark Wolynn, 2016): maybe anxiety is epigenetic and heriditary? Unproven. Family Constellation Therapy is wrong
⭐⭐ My Grandmother’s Hands (Resmaa Menakem, 2017): maybe racism is a somatic (body) response to generational (epigenetic) trauma? Too little data
⭐⭐ No Bad Parts (Richard Schwartz): maybe we're not one person but a collection of parts, and interviewing family systems (IFS) helps? Unclear
⭐⭐⭐ Maybe You Should Talk to Someone (Lori Gottlieb): our memory is unreliable and therapy is messy. Connection & compassion help
Most of these are based on the contested Polyvagal Theory: the nervous system scans for danger before the mind can process it. But the specific claims of the theory are wrong and it makes no other falsifiable claims.
The nervous system has hierarchical responses to threat. 🟢 Not unique to PVT
Social connection regulates physiology. 🟢 Not unique to PVT
Mamellian brain (ventral vagal system) is uniquely mammalian. 🔴 Lungfish have it
Reptilian brain (dorsal vagal) "shutdown" causes dissociation. 🔴 No evidence
RSA directly measures vagal tone. 🔴 Contested
Reptiles are "asocial". 🔴 Wrong
Trauma causes body changes too. It's not just the mind.
Childhood trauma persists.
Relationships (connection & compassion) help more than therapy
What constitutes tax residency in India? For an Indian citizen, as I understand it (after 2 hours of research):
If you were in India >= 182 days: Resident*
Else, if you left India this year for employment: NRI.
Else, if you are an Indian Citizen living abroad (visiting or not):
If Indian Income <= ₹15 Lakhs: NRI.
Else if you were in India >= 120 days AND >= 365 days in the last 4 years: RNOR.
Else if you are not liable to tax in any other country: RNOR.
Else, if you left India for non-employment (students, tourism) and were in India >= 60 days AND >= 365 days in the last 4 years: Resident*
Else: NRI.
If you ended up as a Resident*
If you were NRI in 9 of the last 10 years OR in India <= 729 days in the last 7 years: RNOR
Else: ROR (Resident & Ordinarily Resident).
For all practical purposes, RNOR is like an NRI. You pay tax only on Indian income, not global income. It's like a transition status for returning NRIs.