Your thoughts on private journaling instead? It frees that stuff from your head and it doesn't need to be anywhere close to as polished as preparing the stuff for an audience. So you have a TON of time to do more. I liken it to personal programming projects. Working out the logic is the constant. The wasted time in preparing it for others is code optimization and readability, testing testing testing, etc.
Yes! I'm a huge fan of journaling, and do it pretty much every day (right now using a tool called Roam Research). So I suppose my questions started to pop up because I was adding more burden with all these public forms of writing as well — they hold a different (but meaningful) value than writing privately
Wow. Blast from the past. We used it in our Psychology Dept. to find out if users could perceive 3D images through simulated 3D rotation of the 2D lines on the device. This was in 1984 and I was the student intern software developer. They put the project on hold at some point.
There's a union vote up for the relationship between the WGA and the big 4 agencies, and he is on the WGA council. So this is him giving a stump speech for voting for the restrictions on agencies. Here's an article on the subject:
> The WGA aims to revise its decades-old rules to bar agencies from taking packaging fees from production entities on TV series and movies, and the guild seeks to bar WGA members from working with talent agencies with parent companies active in the production arena.