The Swyx Mixtape

Swyx
undefined
Dec 15, 2022 • 29min

[Health] Mental Health with Kelsey Hightower

Trigger Warning: Suicide.full episode https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/software/mental-health-with-kelsey-qraH318AdcV/
undefined
Dec 15, 2022 • 12min

[Health] Sit Up Straight - Posture, Tech Neck, and Movement

Listen to the Art of Manliness: https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/the-art-of-manliness/future-proof-your-body-by-uBgYnZNpU5V/
undefined
Dec 14, 2022 • 10min

[Health] We Don't Know What Causes Obesity - Chris Palmer

From the Huberman Labs podcast: https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/huberman-lab/dr-chris-palmer-diet-JsmfBwoKN6M/And also read: A Chemical Hunger
undefined
Dec 13, 2022 • 23min

[Health] Eating Ourselves to Death - Dr. Casey Means

Listen to the Bari Weiss Podcast https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/honestly-with-bari/eating-ourselves-to-death-luwFMbHKBiv/
undefined
Dec 10, 2022 • 42min

[Weekend Drop] How to Thought Lead, the Metacreator Ceiling, and Learning in Public on the Build in Public podcast

Listen to the KP Pod: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-oTmQhagN4k
undefined
Dec 10, 2022 • 4min

[Music Friday] Conan O'Brien Needs A Friend

Listen to Conan's pod: https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/conan-obrien-needs/live-with-will-arnett-at-the-ERUub61feOY/
undefined
Dec 8, 2022 • 38min

[Business] Starting Shazam - Chris Barton

Listen to Tony Robbins' podcast: https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/the-tony-robbins/the-power-of-perseverance-zCW71lehdTi/Shazam turns 20: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32520593
undefined
Dec 7, 2022 • 17min

[Business] Oracle and the Internet Computer Architecture - David Senra

listen to Founders: https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/founders/124-softwar-an-intimate-UrgGJSAiaY2/ 40mins in
undefined
Dec 6, 2022 • 9min

[Business] Blockbuster's Innovation - The Great Fail

Listen to the Great Fail: https://overcast.fm/+l2GyND71I/12:00
undefined
Dec 6, 2022 • 7min

[Business] Musicians feared the Record Player - Jason Feiffer

Listen to Build for Tomorrow: https://www.jasonfeifer.com/episode/the-best-ways-to-use-a-crisis/ (40ish mins in)Today's twitter discussion: https://twitter.com/swyx/status/1599890745200377857TranscriptSo turn to the century, the phonograph, brandnew innovation, the very first record player, consider how completely insanelyrevolutionary this was, for all of human history, before the phonograph. If you wantedto listen to music, there was only one way to do it. And that was to be in front of ahuman being who was playing an instrument. There's no other way. How are you goingto listen to music? And then this machine comes along and can do it for you, can playmusic. Unbelievable. Consumers didn't believe it at first. Like they literally, they had tobe shown like, no, there is not a person behind the wall playing music. Like they had tobe shown. And then once they believed it, they loved it. They brought it home. You know who hated this?[00:43:45] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. I don't know. Musicians?[00:43:46] Jason Feifer: Yeah. Musicians hated it.[00:43:48] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah.[00:43:49] Jason Feifer: Hated it because they saw themselves being replaced here.That, you know, they see this new technology doing the thing that they do and they seechange and they equate change with loss and they say, "We got to stop this," right?They pull a margarine. And the leader of the resistance was this guy named John PhilipSousa. John Philip Sousa, you may not know his name, but you know his music becauseit's still around today. All the military marches, [Dah-dah-dah-dah] John Philip Sousa.[00:44:12] Jordan Harbinger: You know why we know who he is? Because we haverecordings of the music.[00:44:15] Jason Feifer: Bingo! That's exactly right. So John Philip Sousa, he at thetime was the leader of the resistance against recorded music. He wrote this amazingpiece, like Google it because it is hilarious. It's called The Menace of Mechanical Music.It ran in Appleton's Magazine in 1906 and it contains all of these wonderful argumentsagainst recorded music. And my favorite goes like this. He says, "When you bringrecorded music into the home, it will be the end of all forms of live performance in thehome because why would anybody perform music in the home when now there's amachine that can do it for them." So now, because we're going to extrapolate loss,remember I talked about that earlier, right? Like you see changes loss and youextrapolate the loss. So what's next? Well, he says, "Because people are no longerperforming music at home, mothers will no longer sing to their children."[00:45:00] Jordan Harbinger: It's quite the jump.[00:45:01] Jason Feifer: Yeah. Quite the jump. Why would they do that? When amachine could do it. Here's another jump, "Because children grow up imitating theirmothers, the children will grow up to imitate the machines, and thus, we'll raise ageneration of machine babies." That was his argument, like a real thing that—[00:45:16] Jordan Harbinger: Okay.[00:45:16] Jason Feifer: —people took it seriously. I feel like it's fun to like laugh atJohn Philip Sousa for this, but also—[00:45:20] Jordan Harbinger: Sure.[00:45:20] Jason Feifer: —I feel like what he's doing is pretty relatable.[00:45:23] Jordan Harbinger: It is relatable. It's very human.[00:45:24] Jason Feifer: It's very human. You have something and it works for you.And then you see some change come along and you feel like this change is existential.It is going to outmode you. So he tried to stop it.[00:45:36] And it's worth asking ourselves in this moment, three simple questions. Number one, what is this new thing that's happening? Number two, what new habit orskill are we learning as a result? And then number three, how can that be put to gooduse? Because if you do that, it just helps you reframe any moment of change as let'sfocus on the gain. Is there some kind of gain that we can extrapolate? Maybe it's not aseasy to see as the loss, but is it there and what would it look like?[00:46:06] Because if you ran that scenario with John Philip Sousa, what you would seeis, well, okay, what new thing are people doing? Well, what they're doing is they're nowlistening to music on these machines whenever they want. What new habit or skill arewe learning as a result? We're learning that we have control or consumers have a lotmore control over the music that they listen to. And therefore, also have access to a lotmore music because before the only music that they could get was whoever happenedto be able to travel to their town and perform for them. How could that be put to gooduse? Well, come on guys. Come on, John Philip Sousa. Like this means that you couldrecord something yourself. And you could sell it and now people can listen to and enjoyyour music. And you can monetize that in ways that are much more scalable than whatyou're doing now. Because you're coming from a world in which the only thing that youdo is perform for people that you can get in front of. And that means that you have alimited number of people that you can get in front of. But if you can change thatdynamic, then man, oh man, suddenly your economic ability skyrockets.[00:47:02] As it turns out, John Philip Sousa was protecting a system that limited hisown economic ability. And the reason he was doing that was because he was panickingbecause of change. And once he figured it out, he changed his tune. That is not meantto be a pun, but there it is.[00:47:15] Jordan Harbinger: Yeah. I see what you did there. You are a dad, indeed.[00:47:17] Jason Feifer: There it is. I'm nailing it. I got all the dad jokes. And he startedto record himself and he started to perform on radio and he changed. And this issomething that we all need to be mindful of. There is gain in change and we need to runourselves through these things that can just help us focus on it.

The AI-powered Podcast Player

Save insights by tapping your headphones, chat with episodes, discover the best highlights - and more!
App store bannerPlay store banner
Get the app