Friday, 20 March 2026

Received Ideas According to George Orwell

 



The other night a barmaid informed me that if you pour beer into a damp glass it goes flat much more quickly. She added that to dip your moustache into your beer also turns it flat. I immediately accepted this without further inquiry; in fact, as soon as I got home I clipped my moustache, which I had forgotten to do for some days.

Only later did it strike me that this was probably one of those superstitions which are able to keep alive because they have the air of being scientific truths. In my note-book I have a long list of fallacies which were taught to me in my childhood, in each case not as an old wives’ tale but as a scientific fact. I can’t give the whole list, but there are a few hardy favourites:

    That a swan can break your leg with a blow of its wing.
    That if you cut yourself between the thumb and forefinger you get lockjaw.
    That powdered glass is poisonous.
    That if you wash your hands in the water eggs have been boiled in (why anyone should do this is a mystery) you will get warts.
    That bulls become infuriated at the sight of red.
    That sulphur in a dog’s drinking water acts as a tonic. 

And so on and so forth. Almost everyone carries some or other of these beliefs into adult life. I have met someone of over thirty who still retained the second of the beliefs I have listed above. As for the third, it is so widespread that in India, for instance, people are constantly trying to poison one another with powdered glass, with disappointing results. 

George Orwell, As I Please, 1944

Kingsley Amis reports that his landlady came into his room to collect his breakfast tray, and started closing the curtains. What are you doing, he asked. The sunlight puts the fire out, she responded. He explained that when the sunlight hit the fire, you could no longer see the flames, and it looked as if it was going out. Oh really? And she closed the curtain.

The full set is here, in my book What You Know that Ain't So.

More here, and links to the rest.

Received Ideas in Dialogue


"Nobody can MAKE you feel anything, YOU control your feelings" oversimplifies human emotional response and overlooks the impact of conditioning and coercion – often in the service of a fantasy that we can "control" our feelings if we just "try hard enough." (@DrDoyleSays)

Nobody can make you feel inferior without your permission. (Eleanor Roosevelt)


The French occupied the Netherlands in 1811 and forced the Dutch to give surnames. They didn’t use them, so made up Dodeman (dead man), Niemand (nobody), Tabaksblatt (cigarette paper) etc. 

Apparently, when the French took a census of the Dutch in 1811 many didn't have last names so they made them up, thinking it was temporary, but some of them are quite common today... Some are quite normal like Pereboom (pear tree) or Lachman.


I was today years old when I found out "newspaper" means North, east, west, south, past and present.
(@0xleegenz)

No. (@MerriamWebster)

Was it Notices Entertainment Weather & Sport = NEWS? (@flowergirl_lon)

Never. (@MerriamWebster)


1,000-year-old Viking church built without a single nail is mind-blowing. (@wakenminds)

They always say “built without a single nail”, but that’s the least interesting thing about this church. Guys, every barn frame in America was built without a single nail. They’re pegged together. It’s not a miracle or anything.
(@nealjclark1)

Did you know the roof of the Royal Albert Hall is not actually attached to the rest of the building – its enormous weight is all that holds it in place without any bolts or screws. (@The_East_End) 

The full set is here, in my book What You Know that Ain't So.

More here, and links to the rest.

Received Ideas in Quotes 41


 Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation.
 (Oscar Wilde)

One has to belong to the intelligentsia to believe things like that: no ordinary man could be such a fool. (George Orwell)

Museum curators describing literally any portrait of a woman: She boldly meets the viewer's eye, confronting our gaze. (@molochofficial)

The premise that the “popular kids” in high school would go on to be failures has never been true. (@OliverJia1014)

"It was a received idea that all Frenchmen were undersized and lived on frogs." John Henry Newman, The Grammar of Assent. (@lazarusatgate)

My doctor grandfather used to say he would know what phase the moon was in without having to look based on what patients would come in and what they would complain about. (@itinerantfog)

Experience showed good and evil fortunes fall to the lot of pious and impious alike; still they would not abandon their inveterate prejudice, for it was [easier] for them to class such contradictions among other unknown things than start afresh. (Spinoza, paraphrase)

You cannot have original thoughts if you only read writing and ideas from within the 100 years you were born. Read very old books and see how they thought, reasoned, what they believed. You'll see how many of your ideas were thoughtlessly downloaded from your environment. (@megha_lilly)

A lot of “ancient tradition” is just 19th-century nation-building. (@marcportermagee)

In 1917 journalist H.L. Mencken published an article in the New York Evening Mail claiming that the bathtub had been invented in 1828 and the first bath was introduced to the US in 1842. Although this is obviously nonsense and was debunked almost immediately, the story refused to die and was mentioned on television unironically as recent as 2008. (@Fakehistoryhunter.net)

The final 12cm diameter of the CD was a compromise during 1979–80 negotiations between Sony and Phillips. One popular story credits Sony with pushing for enough capacity to hold Beethoven's Ninth Symphony uncut. (My theory – they were made to fit men’s hands and are just too large for a woman to pick up easily.)

There’s a lot of Internet misinformation about white ravens being social pariahs or eaten by their mothers at birth. (@BluebellRaven)

Islam is the only religion on earth who has addressed cleanliness as special mention no other religion even has of concept of bathing, washing, wearing clothes, nail cutting, shaving, dental cleaning etc. Muhammad Bath invented the bathroom. (@Syed22549150 and others. Rests on dubious accounts by rotten historians from 100 years ago and more.)

It seems that the sophistication of French cuisine arose from the need to mask the lack of freshness of the ingredients – much as perfume came from the need to compensate for bad hygiene. In contrast, Italian and East Med cuisines make salient the freshness of the ingredients. (@TalebWisdom)

When the masses were able to afford spices, haute cuisine became about "the simplicity of the dish" and only using a few ingredients. (@wtflanksteak)

‘Japanese’ tempura comes from the Latin ad tempora quadragesima: ‘during the time of Lent’.  (@robbertleusink)

When a Christian missionary  gave a sermon to the Pitjantjatjara people of Central Australia, he mistranslated the phrase ‘tongues of fire’, instead saying the Holy Spirit would descend on them in a deluge of wallabies. (@qikipedia)

Every year on Ash Wednesday some Europeans pretend that ashes on the forehead are an American thing, which is just… a lie. (@pegobry_en. In my memory the cross was faint, and faded during the day.)

Sitting in Almaty, the city of apples, I fondly recall the Kazakh (or was it Kyrgyz?) scholar who once claimed that Adam and Eve were Kazakhs because in Kazakh the word for apple is "alma"--and the word for "don't take" is also "alma," so they must have spoken Kazakh in paradise. (@BeilinsonOrel)

“Romance” is white supremacy, black studies professor says. (2026)

Is romantic love a Western invention perpetuated by Hollywood movies, pop songs, and Valentine’s Day cards?
(@SteveStuWill)

In the Southern States of the US, porch ceilings are painted “haint blue” (sky blue). It discourages insects like wasps and spiders from nesting (they mistake the ceiling for open sky), says Grok. Black residents think the blue will deter ghosts and spirits.

When New College Oxford was built in the 14th century, the builders planted trees that would be mature by the time the roof rotted – in the 18th century – ready to repair it. (@joelmiller, paraphrase.) Another authority says that the college had owned forests since 1441, and the oak trees used to repair the roof came from there.

Reminds me of the story I read where there is a forest of oak trees managed by the US navy that exist solely to replace boards on the USS Constitution as needed. (@collins_daman)

You need  to learn and forget something 7 times before you know it permanently. (@alex451g)

The old church recipe compilation books? Full of missing secret ingredients because of gatekeeping. When I would go through those books with my nana, she would tell me who left stuff out of their recipe. (@korinreid)

The Museum of London’s collection of codpieces was originally classified by the Victorians as ‘shoulder pads’. (@qikipedia)

Buddy Holly was born Charles Hardin Holley. Buddy was his school nickname. He adopted Holly as his stage surname after his real name was incorrectly spelled on a recording contract. (@FXMC1957)

Darin took his stage name, Bobby Darin, when he began recording. One version of how Darin got the name is that the first three letters on a Mandarin Chinese restaurant were burned out. According to another version, he adapted it from the first name of actor Darren McGavin, TV's Mike Hammer. (Wikipedia)

Deaf people are super strong. (@wallywooyeah)

It's strange how things used to go viral with nothing but Chinese whispers. It was seven blokes' worth down in Hampshire. (@bloodykingghost)

The Swan with two Necks, Stockport. Not a myth: The name is not a reference to a mythical creature but is a corruption of "The Swan with Two Nicks". "Nicks" refers to the notches made on a swan's beak to denote ownership. Two nicks traditionally identified swans belonging to the Worshipful Company of Vintners. (@PubMaverik)

This belief – that the world would be better if the population was reduced by 90% – is alarmingly popular among boomer social engineers & technocrats. The belief goes back to the 1920s & "utopian" eugenics. It resurfaced in the 1970s w/the debunked book "the population bomb". (@MrEwanMorrison. Espoused by Jane Goodall. This week someone's saying it would be better for the human race if it went extinct. The book was by Paul Ehrlich who died recently.)

London cab drivers have an enlarged hippocampus. You lose half your body heat through your head. Mobile phones give you brain cancer/make you sterile. Every glass of water you drink has been through at least seven people. Swimming too soon after lunch gives you cramp. (Via Giles Coren)

Received opinion as late as my childhood (1980s) was that Victorian brick architecture was ugly, tasteless and inefficient. Keble was still derided by my Oxford peers. When Betjeman & Co. started campaigning to save St Pancras in the 70s they were regarded as campy contrarians. (@RichardBratby)

Did anyone else’s parents say you couldn’t shower during a storm because you might get struck by lightning? (@Ughhmantha)

Worryingly, around a third of psychologists still believe in repressed memories. Imagine if a third of physicists still believed in phlogiston! (@SteveStuWill)

What happens to students identified as gifted, highly gifted and profoundly gifted at age 13 by the time they reach 50? They do really well, as you would expect, although for some reason we want to believe the opposite. (@marcportermagee)

The grand staircase of St. Pancras Hotel in London was deliberately designed wide enough to allow two Victorian women in bustles to pass each other comfortably. (@bymortalhand. Bustles stuck out at the back – perhaps you're thinking of crinolines.)

Jaws was the first film where people were queueing round the block, hence “blockbuster”. (Interviewee on BBC. There were blockbuster bombs in WWII, powerful enough to destroy a concrete bunker. In the 20s and 30s all movies were so popular that queues went round the block.)

Europeans wore fur stoles and perfume – the fur stoles were to attract the fleas away from their bodies, and the perfume was designed to cover the stench of unwashed bodies. (@ReasonVsFear)

In 1947, Kix cereal offered the "Atomic Bomb Ring" for just 15 cents and a box top. Shockingly, the toy contained polonium-210, one of the deadliest radioactive substances known to man. (@BiancoDavinci. Toy was safe, say @Grok and others.)

My best friend in my youth was a Russian girl. Her mom would NEVER let her out in the snow in shoes that would make her feet cold because that would make her infertile. She always wore the warmest boots and carried her heels in a bag. (@megha_lilly)

James McNeill Whistler never planned to paint his mother. His model canceled at the last minute, so he turned to the only person available, his 67-year-old mother. She could not stand for long, so Whistler seated her sideways. The result became Arrangement in Grey and Black No. 1. (@CultureExploreX)

Nobody was educated in those days apart from the very, very wealthy. (FB reels)

At my sister’s graduation. Speaker is claiming that “talent is equally distributed, but opportunity is not”. What claptrap! What twaddle! (@captgouda24)

Someone will tell me that a college doesn't have sororities because it counts as a brothel in their state, and I'll be like "OMG actually that's an urban legend", and they'll just go to someone else and be like "Do you know we don't have sororities because it counts as a brothel". I once tried to tell my sister-in-law that the brothel thing is a myth. Turns out her university is the one university where that was actually true. (@LinkofSunshine)

Raymond Cusick was given only an hour to come up with the design for the Daleks and was inspired in his initial sketches by a pepper pot on a table... In 1964, [writer] Terry Nation told a Daily Mirror reporter that the Dalek name came from a dictionary or encyclopaedia volume, the spine of which read  "Dal – Eks". He later admitted that this book and the associated origin of the Dalek name were completely fictitious, and that anyone bothering to check his story would have found him out. (Wikipedia)

It’s impossible to accurately measure intelligence because there are too many variables to consider. Traditional IQ tests don’t really push the boundaries of testing your cognitive skills but rather how well you can conform to rigid structures. (@ihyFawa)

The man who argues merely proves that he is less, that doubt has sapped his vitality. 
(E.M. Cioran) 

Once you commit to nonsense, it's pretty difficult to un-commit, not least when your relationships and job depend on being committed. Enter the West's progressive overclass, which committed to nonsense years ago – and can't just un-commit on discovering it was a bad idea. (@bencobley)

In 14th century Puglia, dry-stacked stone houses (trulli) were designed to be disassembled when the taxman came. When he arrived, there'd be large piles of stone and a lot of "homeless" families standing around. (@shagbark_hick)

The gift of a pair of gloves has long been considered a romantic promise. In the 1800s, ‘glove flirting’ rose to popularity with an entire coded language surrounding it. Turning them inside out meant ‘I hate you,’ but to drop both gloves was a declaration of love. (@Kerria)

A very funny, common belief among normies is that God created a “soulmate” to every living person that he randomly drops into your life as a generated character from his large reservoir of soulmates. (@stundholz)

"The courts are a clumsy means to negotiate social relationships" is an argument men have used to deny the need for women's rights in law so many times. (@glosswitch. Dec 2025 and after an unsatisfactory judgement Sandie Peggie is appealing.)

Everybody is stupid now because they all had Covid without knowing it
– you may have no symptoms. (Net)

My favorite fact about Jane Austen is that her works were largely popularized because British soldiers serving in World War I read them while away from home. (@cmclymer. Maybe from a Kipling story The Janeites about men in the trenches reading her books and forming a secret society.)

Another old one: “hocus pocus” comes from English Protestants mocking the Latin Mass (“Hoc est corpus”). (@peterawolf)

In the 17th century, Venetian lace was so fashionable that France smuggled 20 Venetian women into the country to teach French lacemakers how to make it. Venice threatened to execute their families for treason if they didn’t return immediately. (@qikipedia)

Do not go after big goals because you think achieving them will make you a happy and fulfilled person. Go after big goals because you think the process of pursuing them will make you a happy and fulfilled person. 99.9 percent of life is the process. (@BStulberg)

We now have to make sure potential teachers haven’t graduated carrying a toolbox full of education myths and misconceptions. Learning styles. Left-brain vs right-brain learners. Cone of learning pyramids with fake percentages. “Discovery first, instruction later” as a default. Brain-based labels with no grounding in cognitive science. The idea that more engagement automatically equals more learning. These ideas are still taught, recycled and assessed in many education programs, often presented as settled science rather than claims that failed to hold up under evidence. (@AmmarMerhbi)

East Asians like ducks because they are believed to mate for life. (Tim Wonnacott, Antiques Road Trip

Traditionally, Navajo rug weavers leave a small mistake in their work to make sure their spirit isn’t trapped in it. (@qikipedia. See Persian rugs, crochet, mosaic floors etc.) 

We are a “bundle of impressions whose existence as a unified self is ontologically uncertain”. 
(@John_Attridge. He is sending up the idea.)

Idk who else needs to check their family pumpkin pie recipe, but apparently my grandmother’s was not passed down from generations as I was led to believe… it’s off the Libby’s pumpkin puree can. (@mandalynns23)

The eye patch associated with pirates was to keep one eye acclimated to the dark so they could read the maps inside the ship. (@DTBERKIS. Ships had windows and lighting.)

Melania Trump destroyed the White House rose garden. “Melania improved the drainage and sunlight (by removing dead infected trees) to the Rose Garden, whose namesake flowers had failed to thrive over the years. Only 12 original rose bushes remained when Melania oversaw the addition, she added 200 new rose bushes, which were the same type as the  original rose bushes, that had died.” Says 
@Likeshesays.

A very good Mothering Sunday to those celebrating (for the record, this is a different day to the American version, so don't panic, and started in Gloucestershire and Herefordshire, as a day when servants visited their mother church). (LW)

The Grand Hotel in Scarborough, designed by Cuthbert Brodrick, opened in 1867 as Europe's largest hotel and brick building at the time. The landmark features a V-shaped plan, four towers symbolizing seasons, 12 floors for months, 52 chimneys for weeks, and originally 365 rooms for days. Built in tawny brick with Baroque/Second Empire influences, it used over 6 million bricks. (@dutchbuildings. The story is also told of Arts and Crafts house Avon Tyrrell, Hampshire. Maybe there was more than one "calendar house".)

Just learned that the Irish name Fearghal is from Virgil. (@TomBFlanagan)

The section of underground between South Kensington and Knightsbridge is long and bendy and loud because it needs to bend around to avoid both a grave of plague victims, and the Harrods cellars, which are layers and layers deep. (@ladygreenkirtle)

The theft of Napoleonic treasures in the Louvre followed  a change in the display cases in 2019. Before then, the Rococo display cases had armoured glass and if disturbed the treasures would drop into a safe. They were later replaced by “modern” displays with normal glass. (@CyberPunkCortes. Modern is always better?)

Pricing everything in a number that ends in .99 is a kind of financial atavism. We tell a story that it was for psychological reasons, but originally it was so that cashiers had to open the register for each transaction, thus recording a sale, so they couldn’t just pocket the cash. (@owenbroadcast. I've only just worked out that they had to open the till to give the customer the penny change.)

Socrates was killed for not believing in the Greek gods. Plato said Homer and Hesiod should be banned and new myths created. (@romanhelmetguy)

For all my years on this earth... It was only yesterday that I learned that rap stands for "rhythm and poetry" I'm ashamed. (@xAsamoahx)

People move to Denver and get Paris syndrome when they learn it’s not in the mountains and people are not affable and folksy. (@SYNESTHEIZURE)

The "School of Architecture" is ALWAYS the ugliest building on campus. (@aaron_lubeck)

The full set is here, in my book What You Know that Ain't So.

More here, and links to the rest.


Friday, 20 February 2026

221B, by Vincent Starrett

John Atkinson Grimshaw

Here dwell together still two men of note
Who never lived and so can never die;
How very near they seem yet how remote
That age before the worlds went all awry.
But still the game's afoot for those with ears
Attuned to catch the distant view-halloo;
England is England yet for all our fears –
Only those things the heart believes are true.
A yellow fog swirls past the window pane
As night descends upon this fabled street;
A lonely hansom splashes through the rain,
As ghostly gas lamps fail at twenty feet.
Here, though the world explode, these two survive,
And it is always 1895.


1942

 

Sunday, 15 February 2026

Grammar: Pismronunciation

Confusing worms



A medieval monk substituted “mumpsimus” for “sumpsimus” in one prayer. When put straight, he replied that he had said it that way for 40 years and “I will not change my old mumpsimus for your new sumpsimus”.
 

advocado: avocado

Alexander Solzeernitskin, writer of One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovitch: Solzhenitsyn

Andrew Sabitsky, Andrew Sabinsky: Sabisky

Baia, in Italy: Baiae (Bye-eh. Probably means "bays".)

Barnard’s Castle: Barnard Castle

Bayzhing, the Chinese capital: Beijing with a hard J

Beer-route: Beirut in Lebanon (Bay-root)

Bob Geldorf,
musician and fund-raiser: Bob Geldof

Buchi Emencheta, the writer: Buchi Emecheta

Callagan: Prime Minister Jim Callaghan pronounced his name with an aspirate as in loch and Bach

Casa Pupa,
the rug company: The labels clearly read “Casa Pupo”.

Colgate’s toothpaste: Colgate

Colibri, the font: Calibri (Colibri is a brand of cigarette lighter.)

Company House: Companies House

grahtsy, Italian for thank you: grazie (grah-tsee-ay)

Eric Hobsborn, the Marxist historian: Eric Hobsbawm (originally Obstbaum)

folage: foliage

Hailey's comet: Halley's

homogenous: homogeneous

In Chester Cathedral: Winchester Cathedral (song by the Kinks)

jardinère: jardinière

Jeux sans Frontères/Frontiers: Jeux sans Frontières (Likewise Médecins sans Frontières, Doctors without Borders.)

Johann Sebastian Bark: Bach (Especially annoying when spoken by someone who can say “Lough Ness” perfectly well.)

John Hopkins University in the US: Johns Hopkins University (trips up many Americans)

Jungendstil: Jugendstil (Decorative style from the late 1800s.)

juvenalia: juvenilia

Last night I dreamed I went to Mandalay again (More often “Manderlay”.): The first line of Daphne du Maurier’s well-known novel Rebecca mentions the house where most of the action takes place – Manderley. Mandalay features in a poem by Rudyard Kipling.

lines of longtitude and latitude: longitude

Mario Vargas Llosas, writer and politician: Vargas Llosa

Marleen Deartrick, actress and singer: Marlene Dietrich (Marlayna Dee-trich)

Mars tricked, with the accent on the "tricked": Maastricht

mischievious:
mischievous

Miss Haversham, character in Charles Dickens’ Great Expectations: Miss Havisham

Miss Marples, Agatha Christie’s genteel detective: Miss Marple

National Institute of Health in the US: National Institutes of Health (NIMH)

Nora Desmond, character in the film Sunset Boulevard: Norma Desmond

nucular, nuculus: nuclear, nucleus

portères, curtains over doors: portières

protruberant:
protuberant (Protuberant eyes protrude.)

Rekkavik,
Iceland’s capital: Reykjavik

Revelations: The Biblical book is The Revelation of St John the Divine.

Suits you, sir:
Suit you, sir! (From the Fast Show.)

The Forsyth Saga, series of novels by Galsworthy, twice televised: The Forsyte Saga.

The Narzies: the Nazis (Allegedly Winston Churchill stuck to Narzies because that was how many people pronounced the word.)

Tiananmen Square in Beijing: Tienanmen

Trivial Pursuits, the 80s game: Trivial Pursuit

tumeric: turmeric

When Good King Wenslas last looked out: King Wenceslas looked out.

Some insist it's "an historic" rather than "a historic". This was never a rule, though we used to say "an hospital" and "an hotel", not pronouncing the Hs. 

 
As a child, I had a friend called Adele, pronounced A-dell. My mother insisted on calling her "AD-ell" because she thought it sounded more French. And others on this template: a Giovanni who was called "Yevanney" by one of his teachers. Conversely, the holder of the name tries to make it sound more English: a Radio 3 announcer in the 70s pronounced his name "HOMEstr'm" (Holmstrom). But perhaps he thought the Brits couldn't cope with the correct Swedish sounds.

At a convent boarding school in the 60s, postulants (trainee nuns) were called “apostulants” by everybody.

Every day we recited: “The angel of the Lord appeared unto Mary/And she was conceived by the Holy Ghost”. Wrong theologically and biologically (people also confused conception and contraception, back then). It's "she conceived by the Holy Ghost". (And some are now confusing gender ideology and gender criticism.)

In the school garden there was a beautiful rose-draped pergola (path with columns). The adjacent lawn was the “pergular lawn”.

The Dennehy girls were persistently called "Dennehay" by one nun.  

And designer Laura Ashley was always "Laura Rashley" or just "Laurashley".

And then there's pronounciation versus pronunciation.


 


Saturday, 17 January 2026

Technophobia 15

 

Does your desktop look like this?


 I admit there was a time when I didn't know you could cut and paste text from a web page... About 1993? And for a while I didn’t know you could pause CDs. 
I used to think you had to let your phone run out completely before you charged it, and you couldn’t leave it plugged in once it was at 100% because er er... It wasted electricity?! But now we're putting a woman on the Moon!

A friend told me about a man who runs his entire business through a tablet.

Someone on Twitter asked what the little bumps on the F and J keys of a keyboard were for. Touch typists find them with their forefingers. They keep your fingers on the home keys, ASDF JKL;.

Boggles my mind how many people work from a laptop as their only computer. Not even a plug-in monitor or keyboard or mouse. Just that 15in screen and touchpad in their $200k/year white collar job. The absolute hubris of it all. (@dioscuri)

I have a client who communicates exclusively via Microsoft Word. If she has something to tell me I will receive an email with nothing in the body, but a Word doc attached. That’s where she writes her message. Whenever she wants to email me a photo she does it via an empty Word doc with said photo as its background. But my favourite thing was the first time I witnessed her visiting a website. She had me spell the URL (w w w dot), and with my own two eyes I watched her type it into Word, make it a hyperlink, and Ctrl click to go there. I was so fascinated I didn’t even say anything. (Via Twitter)

It’s 2026, but when I watch a film on a streaming service the sound is so quiet as to be almost inaudible.

Who at Apple was like ‘you know we should make the new iPhone photos app super confusing and random because now it’s too straightforward and easy to use, let’s make it feel like you’ve had a stroke every time you want to find something!’ (@seanonolennon)

Actual interaction I had today, Jan 16:
website rejects bank info
I retype, website rejects info
I refresh and retype, website rejects info
I call support
"Oh, it's a savings account? You need to click the button five times"
I click the button two more times
It works (?!?!)
(@its_bvisness)

Why does it seem like everything has three extra steps now? You can’t just do one thing. You have to log in, check your email for the code, enter the passkey to access password, that isn’t the right password so you enter email AGAIN for password email, then you have to make a new password, then you have to save it to your password saver but first you have to enter the passkey to access your passwords but the username doesn’t automatically update so you have to enter your email AGAIN in your password saver and then you can finally Do The Thing. What is this system? (@parakeetnebula)

I got a new TV after 11 years, and there was a nice simplicity to just turning the old one on. The new one requires a loading screen, logging in and navigating complex menus just to be able to watch. (@ianmackey)

There is a special place reserved in hell for website designers who disable cut and paste in password fields. (@WKCosmo)

Trying to buy something at an actual store, and they’re like, What’s your email? Phone number? Zip code? Blood type? (@kristabellerina)

I am so tired of logging into things. Please stop making me log into things. I don’t want to make an account! Stop texting me codes! (@holy_schnitt)

THE BIG REGRESSION
My folks are in town visiting us for a couple months so we rented them a house nearby. It’s new construction... It’s amped up with state of the art systems. The ones with touchscreens of various sizes, IoT appliances, and interfaces that try too hard. And it’s terrible. What a regression.

The lights are powered by Control4. And require a demo to understand how to use the switches, understand which ones control what, and to be sure not to hit THAT ONE because it’ll turn off all the lights in the house when you didn’t mean to. Worse.

The TV is the latest Samsung which has a baffling UI just to watch CNN. My parents aren’t idiots, but definitely feel like they’re missing something obvious. They aren’t — TVs have simply gotten worse. You don’t turn them on anymore, you boot them up.

The Miele dishwasher is hidden flush with the counters. ... It wouldn’t even operate the first time without connecting it to an app. This meant another call to the house manager to have them install an app they didn’t know they needed either. An app to clean some peanut butter off a plate? ... Worse.

Thermostats... Nest would have been an upgrade, but these other propriety ones from some other company trying to be nest-like are baffling. Round touchscreens that take you into a dark labyrinth of options just to be sure it’s set at 68. ... Or is that what we want it at, but it’s at 72? Wait... What? Which number is this? Worse.

The alarm system is essentially a 10in iPad bolted to the wall that has the weather forecast on it. And it’s bright! I’m sure there’s a way to turn that off, but then the screen would be so barren that it would be filled with the news instead. Why can’t the alarm panel just be an alarm panel? Worse.

And the lag. Lag everywhere. Everything feels a beat or two behind. Everything. Lag is the giveaway that the system is working too hard for too little. Real-time must be the hardest problem.
Now look... I’m no luddite. But this experience is close to conversion therapy. Tech can make things better, but I simply can’t see [how] in these cases. I’ve heard the pitches too — you can set up scenes and one button can change EVERYTHING. ... It actually feels primitive, like we haven’t figured out how to make things easy yet. That some breakthrough will eventually come when you can simply knock a switch up or down and it’ll all makes sense. But that's at least 20 years down the road.

It’s really the contrast that makes it alarming. We just got back from a vacation in Montana. Rented a house there. They did have a fancy TV — seems those can’t be avoided these days — but everything else was old-school and clear. Physical up/down light switches in the right places. Appliances without the internet. Buttons with depth and physically-confirmed state change rather than surfaces that don’t obviously register your choice. More traditional round rotating Honeywell thermostats that are just clear and obvious. No tours, no instructions, no questions, no fearing you’re going to do something wrong, no wondering how something works. Useful and universally clear. That’s human, that’s modern.
(@jasonfried. Jan 5, 2026)

The government makes the Civil Service get the lowest bid for computer services and it always, always results in the Civil Service paying out a ton of money in compensation for continual errors. They hide the information about compensatory payments under different names in their rules and regs. "Special payments" was the name the DWP used to use (I worked on the team for two years and paid out an average of 27 claims per week, just me. There were over 50 on the team covering CSA alone, let alone the other areas of the DWP). (Rebecca Hodson)

Friends my age, who have been not-very-techy for decades, and hardly ever watched TV (some didn’t know how to turn theirs on) have now got tablets and Netflix and are keen followers of some niche series I’ve never heard of! (Now I want to say: There are other streaming services!)

Your life becomes so much more liberating when you learn that keeping your laptop plugged in at max is actually Perfectly Fine and much healthier for the battery than draining and recharging constantly. (@PalmyrPar)

More here, and links to the rest.