Blog

Considering “Amazon Dethrones Walmart as World’s Biggest Company by Sales”

a woman making a business presentation

Bloomberg posted an interesting economic update: “Amazon Dethrones Walmart as World’s Biggest Company by Sales“. I saw a few of the comments on this post about how this news spells the end of brick-and-mortar retail. But this is not quite “apples to apples” (Amazon vs Walmart). When we factor out AWS sales from the overall revenue, Walmart eclipses Amazon by $125.2 billion (Walmart = $713.2, Amazon at $588 billion in retail sales). So, I think the jury’s still out on the notion that Amazon is going to completely displace brick-and-mortar retail.

The more important story, from a business sense, is that Amazon, with its wider business model, is more resilient to economic shocks. In the end, I think the real story is which business is more resilient. And I see that lead going to Amazon.

Reflections on Paul Waldman’s “The death of the CIA Factbook and Trump’s war on usefulness​”

woman working in lab

As someone deeply interested in data and data systems, I’ve been thinking about how the Trump administration’s attacks on data, these collections of information that are critical to researchers and scientists. And how they’ve also been attacking science, research, and innovation.

This administration has been fighting a sweeping information war meant to distort and suppress facts, ideas, and history that doesn’t “align with the president’s agenda,”

I find this distressing and deplorable. It’s monumentally short-sighted. It’s cost is extreme. America can not maintain it’s lead in innovation and technology without this knowledge. Add this to the cuts to research funding and the US is decimating it’s future. Access to this knowledge is key to moving society forward, aka: innovating. In this case, we’re looking specifically at the CIA Factbook, an amazing tool I’ve used on many occasions as it’s extremely useful, which Mr. Waldman points out seems to be one of the criteria for deletion.

Besides the attack on data, the Administration’s efforts to cut funding to so much scientific research is additionally concerning. This is feeding a brain drain that’s further eroding our scientific and technical leadership. These will take decades to recover from. If we ever can. The global academic community seeks to leverage our short-sidedness.

There are some counterpoints that give me some hope. There are many organizations that are working to collect this knowledge for the Library of Alexandria is burned. Here are just a few (with descriptions provided by Gemini):

In addition to the efforts to retain the knowledge we’ve already collected, I’m also heartened by the rest of the world seeking to recruit our leading researchers, ensuring that their critical work continues.

An aside: I wonder if, at the macro level, this will benefit humanity. Disbursing talent might make science more diverse and richer. I hope it also make it more resilient to the manic moodswings of social opinions. Even if it’s a net benefit to society, though, this situation will have a painful, negative impact for years to come.

So, please, take a minute to read Paul Waldman’s article “The death of the CIA Factbook and Trump’s war on usefulness”. Then take a moment and look over the list above, and give what you can to help capture this knowledge.

An Update

I’ve been thinking about something of a rebrand. Basically, want to align different elements of my web presence with elements of my life. The professional side, the poet, and, well, everything else. What I’ve decided is to distribute my content across three sites (I already held these domains)

CarlSetzer.com has the most SEO for my name, so I wanted recruiters and those looking for freelance talent to find me and my professional content quickly.

CarlSetzer.net started as a poetry site, so it’s really just coming back to the beginning. I just brought over all the poetry I’ve written over the past few years to get this page up-to-speed. This will tie into most of my social media accounts as that mostly been poetry.

NotJustSeattle.com fits me as someone who considers himself a lifelong Seattleite, but who was born in Newport, Rhode Island, and spent a lot of his childhood travelling the country. I’ll figure out this page soon and start updating with energy.

I’m not planning on porting my subscribers over, but am amenable if that’s what you want me to do. If I did that, I guess I would bring everyone over to CarlSetzer.net, and most of you seem to have connected with me over my haiku. Let me know what you think.

So, I’d love it if you popped over to the other accounts and subscribed. It’d mean the world to me. With all this, I’m planning on relaunching my haiku a day series on CarlSetzer.net. Come and join me there!

Oh, Spreadsheets!

statistics survey sheet

It pains me to see someone fill in data in a spreadsheet, then use a calculator to compute everything. It adds discomfort when the math errors are what first catch your eye. I hope I didn’t upset the originator by adding my =sum functions.

Anyway, I hope your Friday is fantastic and your weekend is wonderful.

I love this little video featuring Charlie Mackesy’s work

“What do you want to be when you grow up?”

“Kind.”

“I believe that you bring to this world things that no one else can. So hold on.”

May you find your value, my friends.

This video is built upon the work of Charlie Mackesy, and it was my introduction to his work. I see great value in exploring it completely.

Are you familiar with his work? Let me know your experience.

Some career advice from LinkedIn

female office worker relaxing with feet on table

I know a number of people don’t see the value of LinkedIn. I, however, find a valuable tool, both as a networking tool and for advice in this continuously morphing economy and job market. Today, I came across this gem with the first line ‘The common advice is to find a stable role with a good team and “vest and chill”.’

I’ve heard that advice for most of my life, though mostly when I was young. Especially to young sailor me. Do the minimum, don’t attract attention…these pieces of advice are rather alluring on the surface. They seem to appease fear, any adversity to risk, to minimise the chances of failure. However, as Mr. LoPrimo, the writer of the post, points out, you’re relying on pure luck. I’ve long given up on that mindset, even though it still haunts me.

For years, I’ve “given plenty of thought” to where I am going. My challenge? There are so many options and variations, it’s so damn hard to pick amongst them. I guess that’s preferable than sitting here after a layoff wondering where I should apply.

I want my career to be more than reacting; I want proactivity, to be ahead of the curve. I don’t want to be playing the game of scrambling to find work again. And to be evolving in a direction of my choice. So I build myself, my mind, pointing towards the future I want.

What about you?

A wrenching story highlighting the importance of vaccines

hands with latex gloves holding a globe with a face mask

Today, I came across this story via LinkedIn.

“A brief, shining time: One of my sons died of a disease that later became vaccine preventable. But now that and other vaccines have been struck from the recommended list for children.”

As a dad, there’s nothing more brutal than the thought of my son dying. Ms. Dalstrom Anderson’s story brings those feelings to the fore, taking my breath away. I also feel her pain and frustration at the “current environment,” which is undoing the work of decades of vaccine research.

It’s my hope that this reminder of the human cost of this attitude is real and awful.

Please give this story a read. I deeply believe it’s worth your time.

Today’s haiku

clawing through the clouds
sunlight mingles with the rain
a winter’s day born

Ah, another winter’s morning starts here in Seattle!

Thoughts on Yearly Goals and Resolutions

close up photo of yearly planner beside a pen

A blogger I respect, Pooja with Life’s Fine Whine, posted a few days ago a review of 2025: How Many Of My 20025 Goals Did I Keep? For most of my blogging tenure, I have not posted such things. The closest I can find is this one, from 2015, “Growing Healthier“, where I express my concern with my weight (Follow Up: I was successful with getting my weight down 20 lbs, though I recognize that I have more work to do).

With that, I’m wondering if I might find some value in doing so. For instance, have any of you found the public accountability helpful? How many of you have posted either your yearly plans or an evaluation of your year’s results per plan? I do make plans and evaluate things, so creating a post would be relatively easy.

Anyway, I’d love to hear your thoughts.

The Destructive Power In The Drive To Monopolization

monopoly board game on brown wooden table

I came across this article this morning on LinkedIn: My 2-year-old gave up his seat on an American Airlines flight. Where’s my refund! It’s a perplexing and bewildering series of responses by American Airlines’ customer service team. TLDR: John Bailey paid for a separate seat for his 2-year-old grandson, as required a federal law. An American flight attendant had the child give up their PURCHASED seat in order to accommodate another passenger’s comfort, with the airline then refusing to refund the purchase with a bewildering series of nonsensical responses. (Side note: I’m quite confident that these responses were AI Slop.) Resolution finally happened when the purchaser filed a complaint regarding the illegal request for the child to sit in the grandparent’s lap (federal law REQUIRES children over 2 to have their own seat. Something the airline kept overlooking…or not caring.

I see this as a classic case of Cory Doctorow’s “enshittification“. As airlines slide towards monopolies and competition collapses, they have no incentive to provide quality service. The monopolization and concentration of power is exploitive and destructive, as this case highlights.

Enshittification is, supposedly, more of an internet-based phenomenon. Monopolization has a wider impact, though. And both need to be addressed to move us towards a just and equitable future.