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#finding-out — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #finding-out, aggregated by home.social.

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  1. A quotation from Twain

    A sin takes on new and real terrors when there seems a chance that it is going to be found out. This gives it a fresh and most substantial and important aspect.

    Mark Twain (1835-1910) American writer [pseud. of Samuel Clemens]
    Story (1899-12), "The Man That Corrupted Hadleyburg,” ch. 4, Harper’s Monthly, Vol. 100, No. 595

    More about this quote: wist.info/twain-mark/59026/

    #quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #twain #marktwain #discovery #findingout #guilt #offense #scandal #secret #shame #sin #vice

  2. Seeing Around Corners

    The phrase “seeing around corners” gets tossed around boardrooms and strategy meetings as though it were a compliment, a kind of secular beatification for the executive or thinker who got there first. But the phrase deserves closer scrutiny, because what it actually describes is a discipline, and one that most people refuse to practice because the conclusions it produces are uncomfortable.

    The spatial metaphor is simple enough. Walking down a city street, you cannot see what waits beyond the next corner. A person who could would hold an obvious tactical advantage, whether the thing around the bend is an opportunity or a threat. When we apply that metaphor to business, politics, or creative life, we are talking about pattern recognition operating at a high level: the ability to read weak signals in the present and extrapolate them into likely futures before those futures become obvious to everyone else.

    Andy Grove understood this better than most. When he recognized in the mid-1980s that Intel’s commodity memory chip business was dying, the financial data had not yet made the case undeniable. Competitors in Japan were undercutting prices, margins were thinning, and the trajectory pointed toward irrelevance. Grove asked his colleague Gordon Moore a question that has since become famous in business history: “If we got kicked out and the board brought in a new CEO, what would he do?” The answer was clear. He would get out of memory chips. So Grove and Moore did exactly that, pivoting Intel toward microprocessors and building the foundation for decades of dominance. Grove did not predict the future. He read the present more honestly than his peers were willing to, and then followed the logic to its conclusion.

    That distinction matters. Seeing around corners is a discipline of interpretation, not a form of prophecy. Prophecy implies access to information no one else possesses. What Grove had was the same data available to every other semiconductor executive in the industry. The difference was his willingness to accept what the data meant rather than constructing reasons to ignore it. Most strategic failures originate in interpretation, or more precisely, in nerve. The signals were there. The pattern was legible. Someone chose not to read it.

    In publishing, the same principle applies with brutal regularity. The collapse of the traditional bookstore model did not arrive without warning. Independent booksellers had been losing ground to chains for years, and the chains were losing ground to online retail long before Borders filed for bankruptcy in 2011. The warning signs were visible a decade earlier to anyone who cared to look: declining foot traffic, rising real estate costs, a consumer base increasingly habituated to the convenience of clicking rather than browsing. Publishers who saw around that particular corner had time to build direct relationships with readers, to invest in digital infrastructure, to rethink distribution. Those who waited for the crisis to arrive in full view found themselves scrambling with no lead time and fewer options.

    Lead time is the currency that seeing around corners produces. The insight itself has limited value if it does not convert into action, and action requires time. Recognizing a collapsing market six months before it collapses gives you six months to prepare. Recognizing it three years out gives you three years to build alternatives, test them, and refine them before the pressure arrives. The earlier the recognition, the wider the range of possible responses. Wait too long and the range narrows to one: react.

    This is why the phrase carries an implicit warning whenever someone says it is “important” to see around corners. The word “important” is doing real work in that sentence. It signals that reactive thinking is insufficient for the situation at hand, that the stakes are high enough to demand anticipation rather than response. A doctor who sees around corners catches the early indicators of a disease before it presents with symptoms. A playwright who sees around corners recognizes that audience expectations are shifting before the box office receipts confirm it. In each case, the advantage belongs to the person who treats the present as evidence rather than as a settled condition.

    The discipline has a cost, though. Seeing around corners often means arriving at conclusions that no one else shares, and defending those conclusions against people who are emotionally or financially invested in the current arrangement. It also means accepting the risk that your reading of the signals is wrong, that you are abandoning a viable position based on a pattern that never materializes. Grove faced enormous internal resistance when he proposed abandoning memory chips, a product line that had defined Intel since its founding. The resistance was not irrational. People had built careers around that business. Factories were tooled for it. Customers expected it. Telling an organization that the thing it does best is the thing it needs to stop doing requires a tolerance for isolation that most people do not possess, and a willingness to own the consequences if the foresight proves mistaken.

    The real question, then, is whether you are willing to act on what you see. Everyone grants that seeing around corners is a useful skill. Fewer people reckon with the fact that the history of failed enterprises is full of leaders who recognized a coming disruption, documented it in internal memos, discussed it in private meetings, and then did nothing because the present was still comfortable enough to justify inaction. Seeing is the first step. Acting on what you see, before the evidence is so overwhelming that everyone else sees it too, is the step that separates foresight from regret.

    #business #corners #fear #findingOut #garden #invention #meaning #meme #philosophy #safety #tech #urban #waiting
  3. If you're a government prosecutor / attorney, and a judge issues a written opinion that specifically refers to you as a "miscreant" in office, is that bad?

    Asking for a friend.

    storage.courtlistener.com/reca

    #JudgeNovak #LindseyHalligan #USPol #contempt #miscreant #FAFO #FindingOut

  4. Y'all enjoying the show?
    Playing now: Smoot-Hawley T-Riff (ElonTrump Remix ft d33pR3d-pr3zz!0n and DJ FAFO)
    #MAGA #FindingOut #Trumpcrash

  5. This is for West Virginia farmer Jennifer Gilkerson. Yes you did vote for this. At least, pretty sure WV farmers voted for this. Would Kamala Harris be cutting U.S. farmers and the children they feed right now? Please reflect on that. #findingout

    rawstory.com/trump-farmers-267

  6. @msnbc @weekends-with-jonathan-capehart-msnbc The #FindingOut begins again. I don't understand how so many forgot what it was like four to eight years ago, but this refresher course will be rough

  7. @PacificNic
    Yeah, and I bet no connection being made to their multiple infections ..
    #FindingOut

  8. @MichaelEMann Wow. Lately the defamation #FindingOut has been going the right way.

    I wonder if we have turned a corner.

  9. Some interesting language usage around specific materials in people's houses available via #3rdPartyRecords searches of new houses. Even clustered houses.

    The #FindingOut the When $_list knew .... is going to be veryyyyy interesting. 📡🛰️🔥📰👁️

  10. I am enjoying the "Speedy Trial" #FindingOut week.

    In related news, #FaniWillis is now my queen.

  11. @darnell

    To #paraphrase our #politicians' #hypocritical #whining about wildfire news being blocked because of bill C-18:

    "Stop making us live with the consequences of our actions! No fair! I'm telling!"

    #FAFO #FindingOut #wah #cry #politics #canada #C18 #consequences

  12. Post Knowles follow up:

    The Niagara Frontier John Brown Gun Club organized a number of people for security and first aid needs at the demonstration for the Knowles event on University at Buffalo North Campus.

    We did not telegraph what we were organizing, in preparation for the event, due to legal concerns on the campus.

    We had no more than 10 individuals that evening who were ready in case fascists decided to try the #FuckAround part, and we were ready to assist them in #FindingOut, if the need arose. Additionally, there were a few who were on standby. Thankfully, the need never arose.

    We had close to 25 people ready to provide first aid skills, which again, were only needed in minor capacities (Cold weather injury prevention and hydration needs, mostly). Not all 25 were affiliated with the NFJBGC, however. We would like to thank the #Buffalo #StreetMedic teams who were on site, as well as several of our #anarchist comrades who are otherwise unaffiliated.

    The fascists ran scared after the event, as they should, and prior to the event, they did their damndest to hide their faces in shame.

    Aside from the fascists being platformed and protected by the State, we think, all around, the #WesternNewYork community can call this a #Win

    Solidarity.

    "Caution, Sir! I am eternally tired of hearing that word caution. It is nothing but the word of cowardice!" - Captain Osawatomie John Brown

  13. "The University of Oregon’s contract with academic publisher Elsevier will be allowed to expire as the two sides have so far failed to reach an agreement on a new deal and negotiations have stalled."

    Elsevier is #findingout ?

    around.uoregon.edu/content/neg