
‘I wanted to write more than I wanted to have children’: author Sarah Perry on rejecting motherhood | Sarah Perry
Fifteen years ago, having said all my life that I never wanted a baby, that I couldn’t fathom why any free woman would do such a thing to her body and her mind, I suddenly and passionately wanted a child. I remember where I was when this…
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Physicists prove 65-year-old effect of relativity by making an object appear to move at the speed of light
Using ultra-fast laser pulses and special cameras, scientists have simulated an optical illusion that appears to defy Einstein’s theory of special relativity.
One consequence of special relativity is that fast-moving objects should appear…
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CLUDA Posted For Mesa: Gallium3D API Implemented Atop NVIDIA CUDA Driver API
Well, here is a weekend surprise… Red Hat engineer and Rusticl lead developer Karol Herbst has opened a Mesa merge request for “CLUDA” as a compute-only driver that implements the Gallium3D API atop the NVIDIA CUDA driver API. Wow.
Mesa’s…
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The story behind the spy stories: show reveals secrets of John le Carré’s craft | John le Carré
Lamplighters, pavement artists, babysitters – they have taken on whole new meanings thanks to John le Carré. As his fans will know, they are part of tradecraft practised by the spies he wrote about so evocatively. Now, almost five years after…
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Affinity Photo 2, Designer 2 and Publisher 2 for iPad are now free
Serif has made the iPad editions of its Affinity software, image editing app Affinity Photo, vector design software Affinity Designer, and page layout tool Affinity Publisher available for free.
The change comes ahead of a big…
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‘Psychology of Money’ author Morgan Housel follows the same morbid success measure as Warren Buffett—a “reverse obituary”
Material success can be measured in a multitude of ways: cars, luxury items, and followers. But behavioral finance expert Morgan Housel has an unusual exercise to do so: a reverse obituary.
“It’s a little bit morbid, but it’s to write what you want your obituary to say, and then try to live your life up to that,” Housel tells Fortune in discussing his latest book “The Art of Spending Money.”
He isn’t the first to adopt the approach for living a fulfilled life. The sentiment echoes that of Berkshire Hathaway’s legendary investor, Warren Buffett, who says many of his life philosophies were gleaned from his right-hand man, Charlie Munger, who passed away in 2023.
“Early on, write your desired obituary, and then behave accordingly,” Buffett wrote in a previous shareholder letter in 2022.
Now it’s one of Housel’s ways to measure legacy too: if it’s not important enough to take to the grave, it doesn’t matter at all.
“If I were to write what I want my obituary to say, I would want it to hopefully say: ‘Morgan was a good husband, a good dad, a loving friend, helped his community, helped people in need’” he said.
Housel’s new book breaks down spending as an art rather than a science
Housel is known for his bestseller The Psychology of Money, which dissects how people’s previous beliefs, behaviors, and emotions impact finances. Now, he’s unveiling the psychology behind spending.
Housel emphasizes that spending is not about getting things down to a science, it’s an art that shouldn’t have a “one size fits all” approach. How you’re spending it also makes all the difference: Housel says if a majority of your expenditures are material items, you haven’t yet learned the most important life lessons.
Housel says that when he was in his 20s, his aspiration for the material world was at its highest– yearning for things like a new Ferrari or a mansion. Later in life, he realized that family and community took precedence over anything he had wanted to splurge on in his past.
“When you do that exercise [writing your obituary], you immediately realize what you would not care about: your salary, the size of your house, how often you bought a new car, where you went on vacation. That does not matter at all,” Housel added.
Other successful founders have emphasized long-term legacy over short-term spending.
Jeff Bezos famously used a similar approach to decide to leave his cushy financial job and start Amazon, for instance.
“I wanted to project myself forward to age 80 and say, ‘OK, now I’m looking back on my life. I want to have minimized the number of regrets I have,’” Bezos has previously explained.
“50 or 60 years from now, I am not going to say, I wish I earned more and spent more. There’s a very good chance we’re going to look back and say, ‘I wish I was more helpful and more loving to the people who I really cared about in my life’,” Housel said.
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7 ways men in their 20s can boost their testosterone levels | Health News
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Qantas Airways Says Hackers Leaked Data on Its Customers – The New York Times
- Qantas Airways Says Hackers Leaked Data on Its Customers The New York Times
- Hackers leak Qantas data containing 5 million customer records after ransom deadline passes The Guardian
- Salesforce Tells Clients It Won’t Pay Hackers for Extortion Bloomberg.com
- Hacking group claims theft of 1 billion records from Salesforce customer databases TechCrunch
- Qantas says hacker released customer data from July breach The Jerusalem Post
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Are deepfakes of dead people rewriting the past?
OpenAI’s new text-to-video app, Sora, was supposed to be a social AI playground, allowing users to create imaginative AI videos of themselves, friends and celebrities while building off of others’ ideas.
The social structure of the app, which…