Donald Knuth

Donald Knuth

His name was Donald Knuth. And in January 1990, he did something that stunned the academic world.

He got rid of his email address.

Not as a protest. Not as a statement. As a calculation.

Knuth had been one of the most important figures in computer science since 1962, when he began working on what would become The Art of Computer Programming — a multi-volume masterwork that didn’t just teach algorithms, it defined how they should be analyzed, measured, and written. It became one of the most influential technical works of the 20th century. American Scientist named it among the books that shaped a century of science.

He’d had email since 1975. Fifteen years of it. And he’d watched what it did to thought.

So on January 1, 1990, he walked away.

His explanation was precise — the way everything he did was precise:

“Email is a wonderful thing for people whose role in life is to be on top of things. But not for me; my role is to be on the bottom of things. What I do takes long hours of studying and uninterruptible concentration.”

On top of things. On the bottom of things.

In nine words, he described the entire tension of modern intellectual life.

Knuth understood something most people haven’t named yet: there are two fundamentally different relationships to time and attention. One requires breadth — staying current, staying connected, responding fast. The other requires depth — going further down into a problem than anyone has gone before, and staying there long enough to find something true.

You cannot do both simultaneously. The tools that serve one destroy the other.

So he chose.

If someone needed to reach him, they sent a physical letter. He read them. He batched his replies — roughly one day every six months. Slowly. Thoroughly. On his terms.

The cost was real. He became less reachable in a world moving toward instant access. Students had to wait. Colleagues adapted. He accepted the friction completely.

The output tells you why.

In 1977, Knuth received the galley proofs for the second edition of his book. The publisher had switched to a new digital typesetting system. When Knuth opened the package and saw the pages, he wrote one line in his diary: “They look awful… I decide I have to solve the problem myself.”

So he did.

He spent the next several years building TeX from scratch — a typesetting system of such precision that it became the global standard for scientific and mathematical publishing. Today, TeX produces the majority of the world’s physics and mathematics literature. An entire domain of human knowledge is formatted by a tool one man built because a book looked wrong.

That’s who Knuth was. Not someone who complained about problems. Someone who sat down and solved them completely.

And the precision didn’t stop there.

In the preface of every book he published, Knuth offered a standing reward: $2.56 to the first person who found any error — technical, typographical, or historical. He called it “one hexadecimal dollar,” because 256 cents is exactly 100 in base sixteen. A programmer’s joke with a mathematician’s rigor behind it.

He wrote over 2,000 of those checks. The total value exceeded $20,000.

Almost none of them were cashed.

People framed them instead. Because a check from Donald Knuth, for finding a mistake Donald Knuth had missed, was worth more on a wall than in a bank.

That is what a standard looks like when it’s lived rather than stated.

To most people who’ve heard his name, Knuth is the academic who wrote the definitive books on algorithms — a figure from computer science’s past, a footnote in a textbook.

But behind that image is a man who made a single, clear-eyed decision: that the kind of work worth doing requires the kind of attention the modern world is specifically designed to prevent.

He didn’t complain about the noise.

He cut the wire.

He went deep. He stayed there. And from that depth, he reshaped how an entire field thinks.

There is a version of success that requires you to be everywhere, always available, always responding. Knuth rejected it completely — and built something that outlasted everyone who chose the other way.

He simply decided that some work is too important to be interrupted.

Then he proved it.

 

Talking To Yourself

Lev Vygotsky

A Russian psychologist spent 10 years proving that the act of talking to yourself out loud is one of the most powerful cognitive tools the human brain has, and almost nobody outside his field has read the work.

His name was Lev Vygotsky.

He worked in Moscow in the 1920s and died of tuberculosis in 1934 at the age of 37. He had no laboratory, no funding, almost no English readers, and a body of work that the Soviet government suppressed for two decades after he died.

He produced the foundational theory of how human cognition actually develops, and the central piece of that theory was a behavior almost every adult is faintly embarrassed about.

Vygotsky noticed that young children talk to themselves constantly. They narrate their own actions, they argue with imaginary opponents, they instruct themselves through tasks out loud.

The dominant theory at the time, from the Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget, said this was a sign of cognitive immaturity that children would eventually grow out of as they learned to think properly.

Vygotsky said the exact opposite.

He argued that this self-directed speech was the most important cognitive event in the entire developmental window, because it was the moment a child first started to use language as a tool to control their own mind. The child was not failing to think. The child was learning how to think by externalizing the process and listening to themselves do it.

He predicted that as children matured, this out-loud self-talk would not disappear. It would go underground. It would become silent inner speech, which is the running monologue every adult has inside their own head for the rest of their life.

The voice you hear when you read this sentence is the direct descendant of a four-year-old narrating their own block tower.

For 50 years almost nobody outside Russia had access to his work, and the few researchers who did pick it up could not get funding to test it. Then in the early 2000s the experiments finally started to pile up, and what they found was that Vygotsky had been right about something even more important than he knew.

The first major study came from Gary Lupyan at the University of Wisconsin and Daniel Swingley at the University of Pennsylvania in 2012. They ran a simple visual search experiment. Participants were shown 20 images at once and asked to find a specific object, like a banana or a chair. In one condition they searched silently. In the other condition they were told to say the name of the object out loud to themselves while looking for it.

The participants who spoke the target name out loud found the object significantly faster, with higher accuracy, than the participants who searched in silence. The effect was strongest when the spoken word matched a familiar object the brain already had a strong category for.

Saying the word out loud literally tuned the visual system to detect that thing better. The researchers called it the label feedback effect, and the implication was that the act of vocalizing a goal physically changes how the brain processes the world while pursuing it.

The second major study came out of the University of Michigan and Michigan State in 2017. The lead researchers were Ethan Kross and Jason Moser, and they used both EEG and fMRI to record what happens inside the brain when people talk to themselves while emotionally upset.

They asked participants to recall painful autobiographical memories and reflect on them in two different ways. Some used the first person, saying things like “why am I feeling this way.” Others used the third person, referring to themselves by their own name, saying things like “why is John feeling this way.”

The brain scans showed that the simple act of switching from first person to third person, even silently, decreased activity in the medial prefrontal cortex, the region responsible for rumination and self-referential pain. Within a single second of using their own name instead of the word I, participants showed measurably lower emotional reactivity. The shift required no extra cognitive effort. It cost the brain nothing. And it worked.

Kross described the mechanism in his interviews. Talking to yourself by name creates a small amount of psychological distance from your own experience. Your brain processes the situation more like a problem belonging to someone else, which means it can analyze it instead of drowning in it.

What Vygotsky had intuited in 1934 turned out to be even more powerful than the developmental theory he built it into. The voice you use to talk to yourself is not background noise. It is one of the most precise cognitive tools the brain has, and you can change how it works just by changing the pronoun you use.

People who talk through problems out loud are not anxious or unstable. They are running an externalized version of a process the rest of us are running silently and worse. The kindergartener narrating their block tower, the surgeon muttering through a procedure, the engineer pacing a hallway describing a bug to nobody, the athlete repeating a cue to themselves before a free throw, they are all using the same ancient mechanism that builds and steers human thought.

You can run the experiment yourself the next time you are stuck on something hard. Stop trying to solve it silently in your head. Say it out loud. Describe what you are seeing. Walk yourself through the steps as if you were explaining it to a colleague who is not in the room.

And when something genuinely upsets you, switch to your own name. Ask why this person is feeling this way, instead of why I am feeling this way.

The voice you have been told to keep quiet your entire life is one of the oldest pieces of cognitive technology you own.

Most people are still embarrassed to use it.

Finish reading: https://x.com/ihtesham2005/status/2063266105733615647?s=20

Quote of the Day

“Don’t ever become a pessimist… a pessimist is correct oftener than an optimist, but an optimist has more fun, and neither can stop the march of events.” – Robert A. Heinlein, Writer (1907 – 1988)

Mats Järlström

Mats Järlström

In 2017, a highly determined Swedish electrical engineer named Mats Järlström successfully fought an absolutely massive legal and mathematical battle against the entire state of Oregon, fundamentally changing modern traffic laws.

Järlström’s wife had previously received a highly expensive automated red-light camera ticket for driving through a specific intersection. Instead of simply paying the annoying fine, he actively mathematically analyzed the intersection and discovered that the timing of the yellow light was fundamentally, scientifically flawed and entirely too short for drivers making right-hand turns.

When he publicly presented his highly detailed mathematical research to the state engineering board, they actively fined him five hundred dollars for practicing engineering without a local license and tried to silence him.

Refusing to back down, he filed a massive federal civil rights lawsuit arguing that basic mathematical physics cannot be legally censored.

A federal judge completely agreed with him, striking down the state's fine and forcing the traffic light formulas to be officially updated nationwide.

His brilliant victory proved that sheer mathematical stubbornness can completely defeat a corrupt system.

Christoph Meili and the Ledgers

Christoph Meili and the Ledgers

(Tom: This is what integrity look like. Extreme integrity.

It also illustrates how international bankers are on par with big pharma and second only to psychiatrists on the list of evil doers.)

A night security guard caught the richest bank in Switzerland shredding the proof that murdered Holocaust families were owed their money. He was nobody. Union Bank of Switzerland was one of the most powerful banks on Earth. He took the files anyway. And it cost him everything.

His name is Christoph Meili. January 8, 1997. Zurich. He was 28. A night guard for an outside firm, walking empty halls at UBS. Steady paycheck. Nothing special.

On his rounds he passed the shredding room and saw two huge bins of documents waiting to be destroyed. He looked closer. The papers were old. German names. Account records. Property lists from the 1930s and 40s.

Then it hit him. These were Holocaust records.

In 1997 the whole world was asking one question. What happened to the fortunes Jewish families hid in Swiss banks before the Nazis murdered them? Survivors’ children had come looking for decades. The banks said the same thing every time. Sorry. No records. Can’t help you.

And Christoph was standing over those exact records. Going into a shredder.

Here’s what made it a crime. Switzerland had banned the destruction of these documents just weeks earlier. The bank was feeding them to the shredder anyway.

Christoph had watched Schindler’s List. The story of one ordinary man who acted when everyone else looked away. He thought about that movie standing in that room.

Then he made his choice.

He grabbed the ledgers. Stuffed them under his coat. And walked the evidence out of one of the most powerful banks in the world.

He handed them to a Jewish organization in Zurich. They took them to the police. Then to the press. January 14, 1997. The story detonated across the planet. A Swiss bank caught shredding Holocaust victims’ records.

UBS fired him that same day.

Then his own country came after him. Not the bank. Him. In Switzerland, handing bank papers to outsiders breaks banking secrecy. It’s a crime. Prosecutors opened a case. They wanted to arrest the guard who saved the proof.

Let that sink in. The man who ordered the shredding kept his job. The man who stopped it was facing prison.

Then came the death threats. Phone calls. Letters. People who wanted him dead. His wife was terrified. His kids weren’t safe. His own country had turned on him.

So Christoph did something no Swiss citizen had ever done. He fled Switzerland. And begged America for asylum.

The US Senate took up his case. A senator stood up and called him a hero — and pointed out that the official who ordered the shredding still had his job while the guard who stopped it was being hunted. In 1997 Congress passed a special law to take him in. He is believed to be the only Swiss national ever granted political asylum in America.

A Swiss man. Fleeing Switzerland. To be safe.

His evidence changed everything. It proved the banks had been lying. It turned the Swiss banking giants into global villains overnight.

August 1998. They broke. The Swiss banks agreed to pay $1.25 billion to Holocaust survivors and their families. The largest settlement of its kind. Money that should have reached those families fifty years earlier — finally moving. Because one night guard refused to feed the proof into a shredder.

Christoph was owed $750,000 of that settlement. A reward for what he did.

He barely saw it. The money crawled. One lawyer handling Holocaust funds was later disbarred for stealing from survivors. The people who once called him a hero stopped calling. He started over in California. Went to college in his 30s. Became a US citizen. And quietly slid into minimum-wage work, an ocean from home. His marriage didn’t survive it.

In 2009 he went home to Switzerland. Broke. Every cent of the reward gone. And his country still couldn’t decide what he was. Hero? Or traitor?

Now look at where everyone ended up.

The families got their billion. Good. But the bank that shredded the evidence? UBS is still standing. Bigger than ever — today it’s the giant that swallowed Credit Suisse, one of the most powerful banks on the planet. The official who ordered the shredding kept his job. And the night guard who risked everything to stop them came home with nothing.

So ask yourself one thing. You’re alone in that room at 2 AM. Steady job. Two kids asleep at home. A shredder full of stolen history in front of you. Do you walk away? Or do you pick up the files?

Christoph picked up the files. He lost his job, his country, his savings, and his marriage for it. Years later a documentary crew asked if he regretted it.

He said four words.

“I would do it again.”

Christoph Meili. The night guard who beat the richest banks in the world — and the world let him go broke.

Mikala Sposito

Mikala Sposito

At 10 years old, she tried a welding simulator at a museum, thought it was the coolest thing she’d ever seen, and decided right then that she would be a welder. Eleven years later, she’s going to the world stage — and no American woman has ever done what she’s about to do.

Mikala Sposito grew up in Dexter, Michigan.

She wasn’t supposed to find her calling at a museum exhibit. But in 2014, the American Welding Society set up a virtual welding simulator at the Henry Ford Museum — the kind of thing most kids try once and forget. Mikala tried it with her parents and felt something click.

“I thought it was the coolest thing ever,” she said. “I soon made it my thing. Whenever an adult would ask, ’What do you want to be when you grow up?’ I would say with excitement: A welder.”

Most kids say things like that. Mikala meant it.

Welding camps followed. Then high school classes. Then competitions — and with each one, it became clearer that this wasn’t just enthusiasm. It was talent, backed by the kind of work ethic that most adults never develop.

She arrived at Washtenaw Community College in Ann Arbor and met her coach, Alex Pazkowski — a former WorldSkills silver medalist who had walked the exact same path from that same program. He didn’t sugarcoat what the road ahead looked like.

“He explained to me that it was going to be far from easy, and arguably the hardest thing I’d ever go through,” Mikala said. “But I was up for the challenge.”

For two years, she trained 60 to 80 hours a week. Not 60 to 80 hours a month. A week. Friends, family time, ordinary life — she set it all aside and poured everything into the welding booth.

“I’ve had to sacrifice a lot to be here,” she said. “I’ve sacrificed time with friends, time with family. This is my second family.”

In March 2026, she flew to Huntsville, Alabama, for the USA Weld Trials — three grueling qualifying rounds against the best young welders in the country. When it was over, one name sat at the top of the standings.

Mikala Sposito. First overall.

This September, she will represent the United States at the WorldSkills Competition in Shanghai, China — the event known as the Olympics of the skilled trades, where the world’s best young technical professionals compete across dozens of disciplines. She will be the first woman in American history to compete in welding at WorldSkills.

When people bring up the history-making part, Mikala keeps it in perspective.

“I don’t see the gender aspect of it,” she said. “Welding doesn’t take any brute strength or anything. It’s actually very fine and precise.”

She’s right. And that’s exactly the point.

The trades have long been seen as a man’s world not because of what the work demands — but because of who was told to stay away. Mikala never got that message, or if she did, she ignored it at age ten when she picked up a virtual torch in a museum and refused to put it down.

Pazkowski has watched elite competitors come through that program for years. He knows what sets Mikala apart.

“The most impressive thing about her is her work ethic and her ability to overcome the obstacles that you encounter when you’re training at this level,” he said. “That’s inspirational to anybody trying to get into this industry — or any industry, for that matter.”

After Shanghai, Mikala plans to earn a degree in welding engineering. And someday, she says, she’d love to come back and teach — to be the coach for the next Mikala, whoever she turns out to be.

She was ten years old when she found her path. Twenty-one when she reached the world stage.

She just wanted to weld.

And she became a trailblazer anyway.

Stu Hilborn – Fuel Injection

Stu Hilborn

He designed the engine system that changed motorsport forever while sitting on a military base with no way to test it. Just paper, a chemistry background, and calculations done entirely by hand.

Stu Hilborn was born in Calgary in 1917 and grew up in Southern California, a speed-obsessed kid who found his way to the dry lake beds of the Mojave Desert in the late 1930s where hot rodders pushed their cars as fast as they could go. He bought a used Model A with no engine, found a Ford flathead, and started building something fast.

He met Eddie Miller, a former Indianapolis driver who taught him the fundamentals — including how to grind custom camshafts with nothing but a bench grinder and a steady hand. No computers. No CNC machines. Skill and patience.

The car was fast. Hilborn wanted faster.

He found a streamliner and bought it on December 7, 1941. Then heard the news from Pearl Harbor. He stored the car, joined the Army Air Forces, and served as an aerial gunner. And while stationed on a military base with no test equipment and no machine shop, he began designing something no one had yet managed to make work on a racing engine.

A mechanical fuel injection system. On paper. Entirely by hand.

He used his chemistry background to calculate nozzle sizes, fuel pressure, and mixture ratios — everything a dyno and fuel flow measuring equipment would normally tell you — worked out in equations in his spare time between duties.

After discharge, he went back to the streamliner. He ran carburetors first while he refined the injection system. His peers were skeptical. Most told him the concept would never work for a race car. He tested anyway — careful, methodical, fixing what failed and trying again.

In 1948, Howie Wilson drove the Hilborn streamliner through 150 miles per hour at the dry lakes. The first hot rod ever to break that barrier. The superiority over carburetors was undeniable. The streamliner made the cover of Hot Rod Magazine.

Word spread fast.

Hilborn designed an injection system for the Offenhauser engine — the dominant powerplant in midget racing. A dyno test by the Offy makers showed injection boosted power by ten percent. The results in competition were immediate. Starting in 1949, Hilborn-equipped cars began winning at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Within a few years, Hilborn injectors were standard at Indy.

Then drag racing. Then land speed records. Then circle track. Then every form of motorsport that cared about winning.

Over four decades, Hilborn fuel injection powered cars in virtually every major racing discipline. From naturally aspirated gas engines to supercharged fuel dragsters. From dry lake beds to the Brickyard.

The iconic “stacks” — flared tubes rising directly out of each cylinder — became one of the most recognizable sights in American motorsport. You knew a Hilborn car when you saw one.

Many companies eventually entered the fuel injection market. But Stu Hilborn was first. He designed it in the military. Built it in a garage. Proved it on a salt flat. And made carburetors obsolete for anyone serious about speed.

Stu Hilborn died on December 16, 2013, at age 96. He was inducted into the SEMA Hall of Fame and the Hot Rod Magazine Speed Parts Hall of Fame. His systems are still manufactured and raced today.

He started with a Model A that had no engine and a mentor who ground camshafts on a bench grinder.

He ended as the man who changed how engines breathe.