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If song lyrics count, Eleni Mandell's "Iowa City" is the poem that will always stick in my mind about that town.

  Girls, the boys don't cheat in Iowa City
  Iowa City nothing to do
  Now they're crisp and they're clean
  Iowa City
  Iowa Iowa
  Skies are blue
  
  Not so, Chicago
  Never, New York
  When you're off and you're looking for something
  What will you do?
  Where will you go?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C_mpBLD6_V0


And I think of "Iowa City Adieu" by Autumn Defense: https://youtu.be/8r55RdA8BZE


If you like this movie, I recommend Jamelle Bouie and John Ganz's podcast "Unclear and Present Danger" (the name is a riff on Clancy as well) which covers the political and military thrillers of the 1990s and how they dealt with the United States' changing place in the world after the end of the Cold War.

They have done two episodes on this movie:

https://jamellebouie.net/unclear-and-present-danger/2021/10/...

https://jamellebouie.net/unclear-and-present-danger/2022/10/...


Seconded! This was my favorite talk at Strange Loop (including my own).


As someone who was against the Iraq war, it's hard to express how important Paul Krugman's columns were to me at the time. It felt like the world had gone mad, but he provided an island of sanity. And he was right about the war.

I also appreciate Krugman's rediscovery of current music as an older person. It encouraged me to keep exploring.

My favorite Krugman moment is him visiting the White House after he won the Nobel Prize. This photo of him with Bush (who he'd been railing on for 8 solid years) is priceless: https://freakonomics.com/2008/11/bush-congratulates-krugman/


Zeke Faux's Number Go Up (https://www.amazon.com/Number-Go-Up-Cryptos-Staggering/dp/05...) started as an investigation into Tether. He found some extremely suspect clues, but he wasn't able to crack it. Hopefully the feds are able to shed some light on it.


It's quite fun, I played a lot of it during the pandemic. It's sort of like Advance Wars, but when you lose you can choose to send one of your leveled up characters back in time, which lets you use them again in a new game.


Yes, you can use CGO to call Rust functions using extern "C" FFI. I gave a talk about how we use it for GitHub code search at RustConf 2023 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KYdlqhb267c) and afterwards I talked to some other folks (like 1Password) who are doing similar things.

It's not a lot of fun because moving types across the C interop boundary is tedious, but it is possible and allows code reuse.


There's some interesting companies in this space.

https://gofourth.com/ - focusing on grid storage, uses graphite (carbon) and liquid tin for heat transfer

https://antoraenergy.com/ - industrial heat and electricity

https://rondo.com/ - industrial heat

You can find interviews with their founders on the Volts podcast.


I’m happy to see Standard Ebooks here! I’ve read their editions of Nostromo by Joseph Conrad and Vanity Fair by William Thackeray and the quality great. I recommend it if you’re interested in classic literature.


Yes. The concepts apply to all programming languages. The exercises use multiple programming languages. For example, one exercise has you explore the Git source code (which is in C) to learn how to use a program's data structures to understand an unfamiliar codebase. Other examples have you find bugs in Python code or write Java.


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