Dennis Forbes

Opinions

Lazy Content

Opinions are the low-hanging fruit for an online presence. To avoid feeling that I haven’t conveyed these ill-considered, probably-shouldn’t-be-expressed thoughts, here are a few opinions and positions.

The content on this page can change at any time. It isn’t deceptive if I prune out a thought or change the wording, even if it wholly changes my position. My positions have changed over time, and I have no compunction adapting to new information or perspectives.

No opinions here are presented as absolutes, but instead these are the laziest expression of a position minus the nuance that every real-world situation and scenario presents. I hold most opinions loosely, and am constantly reassessing based upon new information and situations.

Being a coder — even a great coder — doesn’t make us an expert at all things. We should understand the limits of our knowledge, instead of believing we’re experts on epidemiology, governance, etc. Too often we get caught up in our own hubris and think that we can casually become experts in any domain given an afternoon of Googling.

Coding

Technology Platforms and Social Media Platforms

Food and Drink

Life

Footnotes

  1. This model is now six years old(!), yet it still works superbly. I’ve eagerly awaited every newer variant, but thus far none have offered a compelling story to bother upgrading. If they come out with a variant with a multi-day battery life that isn’t an enormous Ultra, I’ll be first in line

  2. If you’re about to go play three hours of high-intensity soccer or some other high-activity sports, carb loading with simple carbs is perfectly fine. If you’re instead eating a bag of chips while watching a movie, that isn’t great.

  3. Biology is fascinating, and in the case of the human body many things are ideal at certain levels, yet are detrimental above or below those levels. Blood pressure, cholesterol, sodium, potassium, glucose, insulin, and so on, all have a narrow band of ideal, and negative consequences happen outside of them.

    We know sustained high blood glucose is extremely bad for health, and it seems eminently logical that even temporary high levels are suboptimal, even if eventually insulin forces it under control and you aren’t diabetic. It’s notable that a healthy diet avoids such spikes, and the worst culprits are ultra-processed foods.