Quote of the Day
If you enjoy programming, philosophy, math, or any number of geeky topics, you're in the right place. Every day, I'll post a random quote from my extensive collection of Kindle highlights. Quotes do not necessarily reflect my views or opinions. In fact, part of my epistemic process is to consume a wide variety of contradictory material.
03/25/2026
First, virtually every sentence that a person utters or understands is a brand-new combination of words, appearing for the first time in the history of the universe. Therefore a language cannot be a repertoire of responses; the brain must contain a recipe or program that can build an unlimited set of sentences out of a finite list of words.
— Steven Pinker, The Language Instinct
03/24/2026
Components are how people solve problems above a modest scale; it’s one thing that separates us from chimpanzees. We invented a way of solving problems by simply making it the other guy’s problem. It’s called specialization of labor, and it’s as simple as that. That’s how the humans differ from chimpanzees: they never invented that. They know how to make tools, they have a language, so for most of the obvious things there are no differences between chimps and humans. We discovered how to solve problems by making it the other guy’s problem — through an economic system.
— Federico Biancuzzi, Masterminds of Programming
03/23/2026
…the standard to compare your software to is what it could be, not what your current competitors happen to have.
— Paul Graham, Hackers & Painters
03/22/2026
Strategy is that which enables alignment between vision and execution.
— Moe Abdula, Ingo Averdunk, Roland Barcia, Kyle Brown, Ndu Emuchay, The Cloud Adoption Playbook
03/21/2026
The only way you get good at using a debugger is by spending a lot of time debugging. Spending a lot of time debugging implies that there are always a lot of bugs.
— Robert C. Martin, Clean Agile
2164 post articles, 433 pages.