Caracal Daily | Jan. 11

WATCHING TODAY:

1. Kim Jong Un-ism: Leader seeks 'new' ideology for North Korea: The third Kim is trying to build an image distinct from his father and grandfather.

2. Intel is about to relinquish its chipmaking crown to Samsung: Bloomberg reports it’s a symbolic blow for the US at a time when the geopolitics of semiconductors are trickier than ever.

3. Inflation up, virus down as priorities in US: AP-NORC poll: Heading into a critical midterm election year, the top political concerns of Americans are shifting in ways that suggest Democrats face considerable challenges to maintaining their control of Congress. A poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research finds that management of the coronavirus pandemic, once an issue that strongly favored President Joe Biden and his fellow Democrats, is beginning to recede in the minds of Americans. COVID-19 is increasingly overshadowed by concerns about the economy and personal finances — particularly inflation — which are topics that could lift Republicans.

4. Will journalism survive the internet? The internet is not about just replacing newspapers. It’s about how the news ecosystem is now organized. Journalism used to have a monopoly over news delivery and agenda-setting. This monopoly is now gone. New mechanisms for the search, selection, and delivery of content are not just replacing journalism – they are better.

5. How Mongolians came to dominate sumo, Japan’s national sport: The emergence of Mongolian wrestlers, with new techniques, skills and philosophy, and a dearth of home-grown talent, has created a new era for the sport.

GLOBALIZATION:

Globalization was supposed to prevent war; Russia may be showing the opposite
WSJ

+ Economic globalization was supposed to make wars harder to start. What if the experience with Russia right now is demonstrating that globalization actually makes them harder to prevent?

+ The head of Britain’s armed forces warned Russia over the weekend against any attempt to sever the underwater communications cables on which the world’s financial system is increasingly dependent.

China is rolling out its digital yuan to athletes and spectators ahead of the Beijing Winter Olympics, the first major test of the virtual currency’s appeal among foreigners.

#CBDC

Kim Jong Un-ism: Leader seeks 'new' ideology for North Korea: The third Kim is trying to build an image distinct from his father and grandfather.
Nikkei

+ Portraits of North Korean founder Kim Il Sung and the late Kim Jong ll are seen in a Workers' Party of Korea meeting in Pyongyang in 2018, left. The portraits were missing at a meeting in September.

+ Kim Jong Un-ism could be a kind of "marketing" strategy to put the spotlight more on him, and less on the country's founder and second leader

+ "Just like Kim Il Sung had 'juche' and Kim Jong Il had 'songun,' Kim Jong Un too is trying to create his own thought form, by combining these two ideologies and naming it after himself"

Facebook’s data center plans rile residents in the Netherlands: Locals say Big Tech data centers will siphon away all their green energy.
Ars Technica

+ Attitude reflects a wider shift against Big Tech's plans to flock to the Netherlands, one of three key hubs for data centers in Europe alongside the UK and Germany, turning the issue into a national debate ahead of local elections later this year

+ Meta's plan for the Zeewolde site, known as Tractor Field 4, is by far the biggest yet. It would span 166 hectares, equivalent of more than 1,300 Olympic swimming pools, and would devour 1,380 gigawatt-hours of energy a year, at least double what the 22,000 residents consume

+ Meta are also encountering a new type of data nationalism, where people protest Dutch resources being used to power Internet use beyond Dutch borders

These boats are really big, but Barcelona has the room: The city has become a hub for billionaires’ superyachts, banking on the strength of the “blue economy.”
NYT

+ Worldwide about 5,700 yachts are over 30 meters long (just under 100 feet), and this fleet is set to expand 15 percent by 2025, according to industry projections

+ At the pinnacle of this market are about 370 megayachts of over 60 meters, whose number has risen 70 percent in the past decade and is forecast to reach 500 in about seven years

America’s new moonshot: Getting Europe to sign up to its space rules: Paris and Berlin are still mulling whether to join US’s space coalition.
Politico

+ The text, dubbed the Artemis Accords, sets out Washington's preferred principles for a new era of space exploration

+ It aims to set accepted standards on everything from the exploitation of natural resources on the moon, comets, and asteroids to governments' ability to protect access to lunar bases or mining zones

DISRUPTION

Uber has quietly shut down its Apple Watch app.

30+ trending products to sell in 2022
Exploding Topics

Massage Gun = 5-year search growth: 7200%

Smokeless Fire Pit = 5-year search growth: 3150%

Laundry Strips = 5-year search growth: 9000%

Canned Cocktails = 5-year search growth: 2100%

Will journalism survive the internet? The internet is not about just replacing newspapers. It’s about how the news ecosystem is now organized. Journalism used to have a monopoly over news delivery and agenda-setting. This monopoly is now gone. New mechanisms for the search, selection, and delivery of content are not just replacing journalism – they are better.
Andrey Mir

+ The 1980s, roughly, was the demographic watershed between the Gutenberg era and the digital era

Into the metaverse: How sci-fi shapes our attitudes to the future: From the Terminator to Japanese manga, powerful narratives drive fear or reassurance around tech.
FT

+ “We get ideas about what AI should look like from Hollywood, that’s where the idea of the humanoid robot comes from. We did a survey in the UK. If people are concerned about AI, they cite The Terminator.” -- Kanta Dihal, the researcher behind AI Narratives

+ In sharp contrast, Japanese attitudes to AI are dramatically less dystopian. Two of the country’s most famous animated series, Astro Boy and Doraemon, have been around since the 1960s and have influenced people’s positive associations with AI.

POLITICS:

+ Polite society is all abuzz with talk of civil war and the dissolution of the Union. It's really something.

Fortune: An Arizona GOP candidate raised $575,000 in 36 hours selling NFTs as politicians look to a new kind of fundraising tool

Inflation up, virus down as priorities in US: AP-NORC poll: Heading into a critical midterm election year, the top political concerns of Americans are shifting in ways that suggest Democrats face considerable challenges to maintaining their control of Congress. A poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research finds that management of the coronavirus pandemic, once an issue that strongly favored President Joe Biden and his fellow Democrats, is beginning to recede in the minds of Americans. COVID-19 is increasingly overshadowed by concerns about the economy and personal finances — particularly inflation — which are topics that could lift Republicans.

+ Goli Sheikholeslami, the head of New York Public Radio, will become Politico’s new chief executive, Axel Springer announced on Monday.

YouGov / Sky News poll: Do you think Boris Johnson should resign from his role as PM?

+ 56% Should resign

+ 27% Should remain in his role

+ 17% Don't know

5,931 GB adults surveyed today, Jan 11

NOTABLES:

+ NBA stars Klay Thompson and Andre Iguodala will take part of their salaries in the form of Bitcoin

Football’s future is in the metaverse: Virtual stadiums will kick off a new debate over the sport’s ‘real’ fans.
FT

+ When European football was having conniptions last year over plans for a breakaway Super League, a key theme in the row was the concept of the “real fan”

+ The metaverse will push us towards a situation where certain “realities” are defined by experience rather than physicality. As millions of fans flock to virtual “concerts” in games such as Fortnite, it’s clear that the reality lines are already blurring

Bloomberg: Super Bowl LVI plans are full steam ahead in LA, NFL says

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

-Marc

Curation and commentary by Marc A. Ross | Founder @ Caracal

More @ caracal.global

Makers + Mavericks 2021 | Platforms of Influence

"Each year we compile a list of the one hundred+ people that got us to utter the words ‘I wish I had done that, made that, invented that, thought like that, changed that’.

"These are the amazing people who have shone the brightest for us over the past twelve months. Another year unlike any other."

Platforms of Influence:

Marc A. Ross.

Global communications strategist and founder of Brigadoon. Curating the emerging issues and independent thinkers shaping commerce and culture.

Full 2021 list - click here.


Wowsers.

The work of David Hieatt and Hiut Denim Co is an inspiration.

From displaying relentless creativity to being a force for good.

To be included on such a special list of global dreamers and doers is a humbling and glorious way to start the new year.

Onto 2022.

-Marc

Caracal Daily | Dec. 22

WATCHING TODAY:

1. Making Turkey great again: Erdogan throws out the rule book: Ankara has pursued geopolitical power at all costs, but now the bill is due.

2. Bitcoin’s ‘one percent’ controls lion’s share of the cryptocurrency’s wealth: WSJ reports new research shows that just 0.01% of bitcoin holders control 27% of the currency in circulation.

3. American workers are burned out, and bosses are struggling to respond: Workplace stress is rampant and resignations have risen. Employers are struggling to stop employees from leaving and to boost morale. Some are trying four-day workweeks, mandatory vacation days, and other new ways of working.

4. What if there’s no such thing as closure? Many of us are taught that if we work hard enough we’ll be able to get over our losses. The social scientist Pauline Boss sees it differently.

5. Inter and Milan announce new 'Cathedral' San Siro project: AFP reports Inter Milan and AC Milan revealed on Tuesday what their new shared home could look like after announcing a project designed by Populous, who drew up the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Named The Cathedral, the new stadium will be located in the same San Siro district of Milan as their current ground, officially called the Stadio Giuseppe Meazza.

GLOBALIZATION:

US-China gas deals defy tensions between world powers: FT reports Cnooc locks in 20-year LNG contract with exporter Venture Global as global fuel prices surge.

+ Oh. Like US-China commercial relations matter

Will Putin invade? On the front lines of Ukraine’s long war, that’s beside the point. A reporting trip to Donbas reveals the tight hold Russia already has over the lives of Ukrainians accustomed to living with war.
Politico

+ "In Ukraine, we found less focus on the question of outright invasion and more concern that Moscow would never release the grip it already has over the occupied swaths of Donetsk and Luhansk."

+ “If we are not afraid, why should the West be afraid? We are thinking about it all the time. There are three scenarios. The first is that Russia attacks, the second is that they give us the territories back, and third is they continue to provoke.”

Making Turkey great again: Erdogan throws out the rule book: Ankara has pursued geopolitical power at all costs, but now the bill is due.
Nikkei

+ "Where Turkey has failed to build diplomatic power, it has made up for that with military power."

+ Turkey has recently also had its sights set on Africa. Erdogan has traveled to 30 countries on the continent, bearing gifts. On Dec. 18, Erdogan hosted 16 African heads of state and government as well as more than 100 ministers at the third Turkey-Africa Partnership Forum.


DISRUPTION

Why it’s too early to get excited about Web3
Tim O’Reilly

+ Tim O’Reilly on #Web3

The new get-rich-faster job in Silicon Valley: Crypto start-ups: Tech executives and engineers are quitting Google, Meta, Amazon, and other large companies for what they say is a once-in-generation opportunity with crypto.
NYT

+ Investors have poured more than $28 billion into global crypto and blockchain start-ups this year, four times the total in 2020, according to PitchBook, a firm that tracks private investments. More than $3 billion has gone into NFT companies alone

Why Pittsburgh is dimming its streetlights: Pittsburgh is becoming the first city in the eastern US to become dark sky compliant, meaning it will switch to LED lightbulbs that reduce light pollution and put the stars in view.
Josyana Joshua

+ Pittsburgh is becoming the first city in the eastern US to become dark sky compliant, meaning it will switch to LED lightbulbs that reduce light pollution and put the stars in view

POLITICS:

+ “Just the other day former President Trump announced he got his booster shot. It may be one of the few things he and I agree on.” -- President Biden

How do Democrats recover from this? Here are five ways in which they could salvage their election chances.
Atlantic

+ "I gotta heap a ton of blame on the Democrats because we’re just not telling our story." -- James Carville

+ "I’d start framing messaging around: We’re not going back to insurrections and Clorox and stock buybacks, which the previous Republican rule was known for. It’d be very simple, hard-hitting, and direct." -- James Carville

We took Bill and Hillary Clinton’s MasterClasses. Guess who seemed more prepared.
WP

+ The bigger surprise in Bill and Hillary Clinton’s new MasterClasses is that hers is nearly a third longer

+ MasterClass merges the American zeal for self-improvement with our impatience, quest for speed, convenience, and unshaking belief that the celebrated know better

+ Final grades: For Bill, B for content, B for presentation, C for effort. For Hillary: B-plus for content, B-plus for presentation, and for effort, A-plus-plus

Civil war is coming
The Article

+ By 2040, 70 percent of Americans will live in the 15 largest states, meaning that 70 percent of the country will be represented by 30 senators, while the other 30 percent is represented by 70 senators

+ The 477 counties Biden won accounted for 70 percent of America’s economic activity, while Trump’s 2497 counties accounted for only 29 percent

NOTABLES:

Bloomberg: FDA expected to authorize Pfizer and Merck COVID pills this week

+ Pfizer’s pill, Paxlovid, and Merck’s molnupiravir are intended for higher-risk people who test positive for COVID

Inside the Omicron fear factory: Public health chiefs and the media are working overtime to gin up hysteria.
The Spectator

+ "We hear constantly that 1,300 people are dying a day from Covid. By comparison, about 2,000 people die each day from cancer, and 1,600 from heart disease. Their deaths get no coverage."

Professional sports are learning to live with COVID. We’re next.
Will Leitch

+ "The leagues are now admitting what most of us are realizing but wary of saying out loud: COVID is just a part of our lives now, and if we don’t learn to live with it, we’re never going to be able to do anything."

NHL pulls out of Beijing Olympics over Omicron spread, quarantine concerns.

Dambisa Moyo joined NBA Africa as a strategic investor.

+ Bay Area vacation spot is Zillow’s most popular place of 2021

How NASA’s Webb Telescope will transform our place in the universe
Quanta Magazine (Video)

+ Wild

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

-Marc

Curation and commentary by Marc A. Ross | Founder @ Caracal

More @ caracal.global