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10 interesting stories served every morning and every evening.
Talking to 35 Strangers at the Gym
Published: May 1, 2026 Updated: May 4, 2026
Background
A couple months ago, I was the Wizard of Loneliness. I had graduated from college almost two years prior and, while I had luckily found a job, I was unsuccessful in finding friends.
Each night, I would look up “how to make friends after college” and find the same advice given every time: “do your hobby with other people, frequently”.
On paper, the gym seemed like the perfect opportunity to meet people since I would go there nearly every day; however, according to Reddit, there’s a number of people who want to be left alone and can be irritated if you interrupted their workout to talk.
I am deeply afraid of irritating someone or being in awkward situations. Here’s a list of things that I did as a result of that fear:
Hesitated for a couple minutes before waking up my roommate when the fire alarm went off
Hesitated for a couple minutes before waking up my roommate when the fire alarm went off
Pretended I didn’t know a childhood friend when they said hi because I didn’t know how to act around people I used to know
Pretended I didn’t know a childhood friend when they said hi because I didn’t know how to act around people I used to know
Ignored people I knew from class instead of saying hi because I didn’t know for sure if they remembered me even though the class had only 10 people in it
Ignored people I knew from class instead of saying hi because I didn’t know for sure if they remembered me even though the class had only 10 people in it
So you can understand when I say that walking up to someone and starting a conversation with them at the gym of all places is kinda terrifying for me.
Unfortunately, there was no other good option. My other hobby is programming, but the Syracuse Development group only meets up once a month, and activities suggested by r/Syracuse like volleyball and trivia night require you to already have friends. I didn’t have a choice. If I wanted friends, I would have to put in the work at the gym.
Problem Statement
I am lonely and have no friends.
Procedure
I decided to run a little experiment to find some friends.
Each day, for one month, I picked out one person to approach. Usually it would be someone I saw frequently at the gym.
If they were in the middle of an exercise, I waited for them to finish their set.
Then, I would approach them, stand near them and wave to get their attention, and then give them my opening line.
Initially, my opening line for everyone was “Hey I see you here all the time. You’re pretty strong. What’s your split?” After a week or so, I began customizing the opening line per person based on what I found interesting about them.
For instance, someone was wearing a Boston hat and I was curious whether they went to school in Boston like I did, so I asked them about it. After the opening line, I tried to talk to them for 5 – 10 minutes until they let me go. I tried not to be the one to end it because I have a habit of ending conversations early, but I did leave them alone if they obviously did not want to talk.
Results
Here’s the raw data. I split it up by week and put it into these collapsible things because it takes up a lot of space. Click on each week to see the data for that week.
Description is a short description of the person.
Length is how long the conversation was. A short conversation is 0 – 2 minutes, a medium conversation is 5 – 7 minutes, and a long conversation is 10+ minutes.
Notes are just anything interesting about the conversation or the person I was talking to.
Aftermath is what happened after that conversation.
Reflection
The first couple days were extremely difficult. I had been conditioned to believe that initiating a conversation with a stranger was weird and it was tough to break free from that. As a result, for the first few people, I would always make a detour at the last second, i.e. make a trip to the water fountain. I chickened out! The solution was to approach the person as quickly as possible so that I didn’t have time to think about running away.
Luckily, most people were receptive. I got a rush of dopamine whenever someone responded positively to my conversation, so talking to new people became strangely addictive. I kept talking to more and more new people each day until I talked to a whopping seven (SIX SEVENNN) new people in one day (this is why Week 3 has a lot of entries). It was crazy.
Something interesting I learned early on was that even if someone had headphones on, there was a good chance they were open to conversation. I mean, I had my earbuds in and I was willing to talk to anybody. Most people were just listening to music and took the headphones off to talk.
People didn’t always respond positively though. In Week 1 and Week 2, I came across a number of people who were really short with their responses and didn’t try to continue the conversation. They gave off the vibe that they didn’t want to talk to me. It was really awkward and almost made me end the experiment.
But over time, I came to accept that it’s ok if they didn’t want to talk to me. That’s just one of the things you have to expect when you do something like this.
And being in an awkward situation is actually not that bad. It sucks in the moment, but then you just take a few minutes to calm down and then you move on with your life. You’re ok.
However, I did end up pulling back in Week 4 and Week 5. I felt like constantly talking to more new people was producing diminishing returns. I had already established a connection with many people at the gym, so it was a better use of my limited time (remember I still have to work out!) to nurture those existing connections into meaningful ones.
I ended up prioritizing the 5 – 6 people who seemed the most interested in me.
One of these people is someone I will refer to as “the other Asian guy”. I got a lot closer to him than expected. We realized we had the same workout routine so we became gym buddies and started working out together. A few weeks later, he invited me to his apartment, where he cooked me a smash burger. His girlfriend showed me graphic pictures of what she was learning in PA school too. Then, we watched a movie with their cat. I’m really grateful that they were kind enough to have me over as a guest.
Also, something new happened: instead of scaring people away, I had a positive impact on someone.
These texts were from one of the people I prioritized, the male SU student. He had recently moved to Syracuse and was struggling to make new friends. He related to a couple of my videos where I talked about the same struggles and was super appreciative that I talked to him that day. The following week, we tried out Kofta Burger after a recommendation from my friend who lives downtown.
The burger was delicious and we had a great time.
Despite my successes, my work isn’t done. I realized near the end of the month that what I truly wanted was to consistently hang out with people on the weekends. Unfortunately, most of the friends I’ve made are busy on the weekend. They’re taking trips to visit loved ones, going to the bar (I’m not that into drinking), or running errands, so it’s hard to plan anything.
But I guess that’s a better problem to have than eternal loneliness.
A few months ago, I was googling “how to make friends after college” every night. Now I have people to text, people to wave to at the gym, and people who notice when I don’t show up for a few days. AND I became a more resilient person who is unafraid to do hard and scary things.
No more Wizard of Loneliness for me!
Heh this blew up on HackerNews. I want to give some more context for people who are unsure if the gym was the right place to do this. And this is all in hindsight; I did not realize this until now.
The gym I go to, Crunch Fitness, has a social aspect to it. While many people keep to themselves, it’s common to see people chatting. Sometimes they’re chatting in between sets. Other times, they’re chatting on the treadmill. The staff go out of their way to interact with us, and often the people who didn’t want to talk to me talk to other people! I guess they are more open with their friends.
The people at the gym are also really supportive. I forgot to mention this but once, when I was doing hip thrusts, I messed up and didn’t rerack the machine correctly. I fell on my butt and the machine made a huge CLANK sound when it fell. Everybody turned to look at me. I was really embarassed. But then, one guy came and helped me return the machine to the starting position while another guy swung by to make sure I was ok. He assured me that it happened to everyone and to not let it get to me. I didn’t know either of these people! They just wanted to help.
I don’t disagree that the gym is primarily a place to workout, but I think that it’s also a place where you can find community. Maybe my gym is special in how social it is but maybe people are friendlier than they appear to be. I’m betting on the latter.
Starting in 2027, there will be a noticeable change for smartphones in the EU: The removable battery is making a comeback. What used to be standard is returning due to legal requirements for new models.
What exactly can we expect?
Starting February 18, 2027, new smartphones and tablets must be designed so that end users can remove and replace the battery themselves using standard tools. Adhesive bonds that require heat to be removed will then be largely prohibited.
Specifically, this means the following for new models starting in February 2027:
Easy replacement: Batteries must be replaceable using standard tools (e.g., screwdrivers).
No barriers: The use of adhesives that can only be removed with heat or solvents is prohibited.
Tools: If a special tool is required for replacement, the manufacturer must provide it free of charge.
Spare parts guarantee: Replacement batteries must be available to end users at a reasonable price for at least 5 years.
Why is the EU introducing this?
The main driver is the transition to a true circular economy. Currently, smartphones are often replaced as soon as battery performance declines, which wastes enormous amounts of resources.
Waste prevention: Millions of tons of electronic waste are generated in the EU every year. Easily replaceable batteries significantly extend the lifespan of devices.
Cost savings: Many users shy away from expensive repairs or buying new devices. The EU estimates that consumers could save tens of billions of euros in total by 2030 thanks to longer usage cycles.
Resource conservation: Batteries contain valuable raw materials such as lithium and cobalt. If they are easily removable, they can be sorted by type and recycled more efficiently.
Fire safety: Batteries that are permanently glued in place are often damaged during shredding, which repeatedly leads to dangerous fires in sorting facilities. Clean removal significantly increases safety in the recycling process.
What does this mean for users?
DIY repairs: Instead of paying a lot of money to visit a repair service, you simply buy the replacement part and swap it out yourself.
Higher resale value: Used cell phones can be resold much more easily and for a higher price with a brand-new battery.
Longer software support: Since the hardware lasts longer, there is also increased pressure on manufacturers to offer security updates for a longer period.
Will this make smartphones thicker or less waterproof?
That is the key challenge for designers.
Modern devices are often bonded together to make them particularly thin and waterproof.
Removable batteries make this design more difficult, but not impossible.
Manufacturers are already working on solutions, such as:
new seals instead of adhesive,
more robust casings with screw mechanisms,
modular internal structures.
Many users fear that cell phones will break immediately if they get wet in the rain or fall into water. That’s not true: It is entirely feasible to make smartphones waterproof despite having a removable battery. The principle is similar to that of rugged outdoor phones. A rubber gasket running around the battery cover, which is pressed into place by screws or a secure clip, ensures that the interior of the housing is sealed.
It is therefore quite possible that smartphones will become slightly thicker, but significant increases are unlikely, as design remains a key selling point.
Are there any exceptions to the replacement requirement?
Yes, but only in specific cases:
Specialized hardware: Devices used in highly specialized fields (e.g., medical diagnostics or explosion-proof industrial cell phones) are also exempt if a replaceable battery would compromise safety.
Extremely long lifespan: To avoid the replacement requirement, a battery would have to be extremely durable. The battery must retain at least 80% of its original capacity after 1,000 charge cycles. That is significantly more than many batteries on the market today can achieve (often around 500 – 800 cycles).
Simultaneous water protection: In addition to durability, the device must be water- and dust-tight according to IP67.
Another innovation: the “battery passport”
In addition, the EU is introducing a digital battery passport.
Users and recycling facilities can access important data via a printed QR code. It stores information about the battery’s carbon footprint, the proportion of recycled materials, its chemical composition, and its “state of health.” This represents a huge step forward, particularly for the second-hand market and professional recyclers.
Conclusion
The new EU regulation marks the end of the “disposable” era for smartphones. Starting in 2027, users will benefit from longer device lifespans, easier repairs, and lower costs.
Even though manufacturers will have to adapt their designs to improve water resistance and aesthetics, the benefits for the environment and consumers -including less electronic waste and greater transparency — outweigh these changes.
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Bun is great software.
I use it all the time. It is fast and practical, and the team ships constantly. It makes TypeScript a joy to work with in small scripts, apps, tests, and tooling. That is why this is frustrating. I want Bun to win. I want a serious Node.js alternative. I want faster installs, faster tests, better bundling, and less toolchain bloat.
But I am worried about Bun now.
Anthropic owns Bun
Anthropic acquired Bun in December 2025.
The announcement said everything I wanted to hear: Bun stays open source and MIT-licensed, the same team keeps working on it, and the roadmap keeps focusing on high-performance JavaScript tooling and Node.js compatibility.
It also said this:
Claude Code ships as a Bun executable to millions of users. If Bun breaks, Claude Code breaks. Anthropic has direct incentive to keep Bun excellent.
Claude Code ships as a Bun executable to millions of users. If Bun breaks, Claude Code breaks. Anthropic has direct incentive to keep Bun excellent.
In December, that sounded reassuring. Anthropic had a huge product built on Bun. That meant Anthropic had a direct incentive to keep Bun fast, stable, and excellent. I still think that argument has merit, but now cracks are showing.
Bun is still a great JavaScript runtime, but now it’s in the hands of a company that doesn’t seem to care at all about their software.
Anthropic models are still great
This is not an “Anthropic bad” post. Well, not entirely. I still think Anthropic’s models are great. Claude Opus (4.6 I guess) is still one of the best model families for coding, writing, reasoning, and general dev work. The model quality is not my concern here. My concern is the product layer around the models. Claude Code kind of sucks to use today.
Claude Code used to be great
Claude Code felt incredible a year ago. It was one of the first AI coding tools that convinced me developer workflows would change from mostly autocomplete to agents. It could read a project, make focused edits, run commands, fix mistakes, and keep going. It felt like a tool built by people who understood how devs actually work. Combined with Anthropic’s models, which up until recently (GPT-5.5) were best-in-class, Claude Code felt unbeatable.
Though even in December Claude Code was already getting worse, it was still good and that made the Bun acquisition make sense to me. If Anthropic was building the future of coding tools, and Bun was the runtime underneath those tools, maybe Bun had found the best possible home. I was always a little worried about how Bun was going to become a sustainable business given it was VC funded. So the acquisition made sense, and I was optimistic.
Claude Code is bad
There are so many good coding agents out there right now. Cursor, Augment, Codex, OpenCode, T3 Code, Pi, probably more. For a long time Cursor was my main driver, because while Claude Code was getting worse over time Cursor (the CLI) was so good at using Anthropic models. Recently, I had to stop using Cursor for reasons. I hadn’t used Claude Code in a couple months, so I picked it back up and was actually shocked at how bad it has become.
In April 2026, devs started complaining about Claude Code quality, limit behavior, third-party harness restrictions, confusing billing, and slow communication.
Anthropic published an engineering postmortem that blamed product-layer issues, including a reduced default reasoning effort, a stale-session bug, and a prompt change that hurt coding quality. I appreciate the postmortem. It is better than pretending nothing happened. Honestly, it was possibly the first time Anthropic mentioned anything being their own fault.
Then there was the OpenClaw mess. TechCrunch reported that Anthropic told Claude Code subscribers they would need to pay extra for OpenClaw and other third-party harnesses. That is already bad enough. But the weird part came later.
Gigazine covered reports that simply having OpenClaw in git history could cause Claude Code to refuse a request or bill extra. That article quotes Theo saying a recent commit mentioning OpenClaw in a JSON blob could trigger the behavior, even in an empty repo while calling claude -p “hi” directly. If you’re interested in watching the clip, it’s incredible.
Theo’s read, and one I find plausible, is that this looks like a product where nobody is carefully dogfooding the actual code-level experience before shipping changes. Maybe that is unfair, I don’t know what actually goes on at Anthropic. But from the outside, Claude Code looks like a tool moving in the wrong direction. More restrictions, billing weirdness, surprise behavior based on text in commits.
That is textbook enshittification.
That is why Bun worries me
Bun is embedded in Claude Code. Claude Code appears to be enshittifying. So now I have to worry that Bun could enshittify too. Not because Bun is bad. Bun is not bad. Bun is excellent. Not because the Bun team stopped caring. I do not believe that.
The problem is as Bun and its team get further integrated into Anthropic, so will their policies. The same policies that have led to the collapse of Claude Code. Will we see issues start popping up in Bun that make it seem like the team doesn’t even dogfood their own product? I don’t know, but I’m not sure I want to continue using it just in case.
I’ll stick with pnpm for now
The upsetting thing is Bun provides a lot more than what pnpm offers that I end up having to reach for additional dependencies to cover. Things like built-in TypeScript support instead of needing a build step, a bundler instead of Vite, testing instead of vitest. It’s not that the dependencies are bad, but getting them all wrapped into a single toolchain is very nice.
pnpm is not a replacement for Node.js. It is not a replacement for Bun either. pnpm is just a package manager. But for most of my day-to-day work, the part of Bun I reach for most is package management. I want installs to be fast. I want monorepos to work well. I want disk usage to be sane. Bun gives me that, and so does pnpm.
So for my projects that are currently using Bun, I am moving away from Bun and using pnpm. When someone asks me what I recommend for a JavaScript or TypeScript project today, my answer is pnpm.
I don’t recommend moving away from Bun
Even though I personally am moving some projects away from Bun, don’t take my advice as gospel. I’m just some guy on the internet. You should decide what is best for you. For new projects, pnpm makes sense. For existing projects, you might want to stick with Bun unless and until you have a good reason to leave.
I hope I am wrong
I hope Bun stays great. I hope the Bun team keeps shipping excellent work. I hope Anthropic gives them room to make the right calls for the JavaScript ecosystem. Bun can still come out of this stronger. Anthropic has money, distribution, and a real reason to care about Bun’s performance and stability. But I do not trust the situation as much as I did in December. Claude Code used to feel like proof that Anthropic understood dev tools. Now it feels like a warning that Anthropic doesn’t know what it takes to maintain and improve a product over time.
Bun is still great. I just do not know where it goes from here. A year from now things could be completely different, so I will follow-up and see if my prediction is right.
In Brief
Posted:
7:30 AM PDT · May 4, 2026
Almost all of the 20 U.S. state government-run health insurance marketplaces shared residents’ application information with advertising and tech giants, including Google, LinkedIn, Meta, and Snap, according to a new investigation by Bloomberg.
The report drives home the privacy problems created by pixel-sized trackers, which allow website owners to collect information about their visitors, often for web analytics and identifying bugs. A common tool in digital advertising, these trackers also allow the collection of personal information if misconfigured and placed on websites that contain sensitive content, such as healthcare data.
Per Bloomberg, New York’s health insurance exchange shared information with several tech companies about a person’s application, including whether they provided details about whether they have incarcerated family members.
The health insurance exchange for Washington, D.C. also asked residents about the person’s sex and race, which TikTok’s pixel tracker attempted to redact. Some races were masked and others were not, the publication reported. A spokesperson for the Washington, D.C. exchange told Bloomberg that residents’ email address, phone number, and country identifiers were also shared with TikTok.
Washington, D.C. paused its rollout of the TikTok tracker, and Virginia removed the Meta tracker from its website after Bloomberg found it was sharing residents’ ZIP codes with the tech giant.
This is not a new problem, and has previously caught out telehealth startups and healthcare giants alike. Several companies and healthcare giants have had to notify millions that they inadvertently collected and shared their health information with tech giants, whose profits are derived from using consumer data for advertising.
But Bloomberg’s investigation shows that these pixel trackers can affect large swathes of the population when placed on government websites. The publication noted that more than seven million Americans purchased health insurance for this year through a state health insurance exchange.
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Speaking of companies with valuable minority stakes in AI companies, there’s one thing that stuck in my craw about the blockbuster Ronan Farrow / Andrew Marantz investigative piece on Sam Altman and OpenAI last month for The New Yorker. It didn’t come up during Nilay Patel’s excellent interview with Farrow on Decoder, either.
Sam Altman was the president of Y Combinator for several years, and left to become the full-time CEO of OpenAI. The New Yorker quotes Y Combinator co-founder Paul Graham multiple times, in the context of Altman’s trustworthiness. (Some of those quotes are firsthand, others secondhand.) Graham’s role in the story — particularly his public remarks after publication — comprised an entire section in my own take on the New Yorker piece, wherein I concluded:
I would characterize Graham’s tweets re: Altman this week as
emphasizing only that Altman was not fired or otherwise forced
from YC, and could have stayed as CEO at YC if he’d found another
CEO for OpenAI. But for all of Graham’s elucidating engagement on
Twitter/X this week regarding this story, he’s dancing around the
core question of the Farrow/Marantz investigation, the one right
there in The New Yorker’s headline: Can Sam Altman be trusted?
“We didn’t ‘remove’ Sam Altman” and “We didn’t want him to
leave” are not the same things as saying, say, “I think Sam
Altman is honest and trustworthy” or “Sam Altman is a man of
integrity”. If Paul Graham were to say such things, clearly and
unambiguously, those remarks would carry tremendous weight. But — rather conspicuously to my eyes — he’s not saying such things.
I would characterize Graham’s tweets re: Altman this week as
emphasizing only that Altman was not fired or otherwise forced
from YC, and could have stayed as CEO at YC if he’d found another
CEO for OpenAI. But for all of Graham’s elucidating engagement on
Twitter/X this week regarding this story, he’s dancing around the
core question of the Farrow/Marantz investigation, the one right
there in The New Yorker’s headline: Can Sam Altman be trusted?
“We didn’t ‘remove’ Sam Altman” and “We didn’t want him to
leave” are not the same things as saying, say, “I think Sam
Altman is honest and trustworthy” or “Sam Altman is a man of
integrity”. If Paul Graham were to say such things, clearly and
unambiguously, those remarks would carry tremendous weight. But — rather conspicuously to my eyes — he’s not saying such things.
The thing that stuck in my craw is this: Does Y Combinator own a stake in OpenAI? And if they do, given OpenAI’s sky-high valuation, isn’t that stake worth billions of dollars?
OpenAI was seeded by an offshoot of Y Combinator called YC Research in 2016 — when Altman was running YC. In December 2023, the well-known AI expert (and AI-hype skeptic) Gary Marcus wrote the following, in a piece on Altman’s trustworthiness in the wake of the OpenAI board saga that saw Altman fired, re-hired, and the board purged in the course of a tumultuous week:
After poking around, I found out that “I have no equity in OpenAI”
was only half the truth; while Altman to my knowledge holds no
direct equity in OpenAI, he does have an indirect stake in
OpenAI, and that fact should have been disclosed.
In particular, he own a stake of Y Combinator, and Y Combinator
owns a stake in OpenAI. It may well be worth tens of millions of
dollars; even for Altman, that’s not trivial. Since he was
President of Y Combinator, and CEO of OpenAI; he surely was
aware of this.
After poking around, I found out that “I have no equity in OpenAI”
was only half the truth; while Altman to my knowledge holds no
direct equity in OpenAI, he does have an indirect stake in
OpenAI, and that fact should have been disclosed.
In particular, he own a stake of Y Combinator, and Y Combinator
owns a stake in OpenAI. It may well be worth tens of millions of
dollars; even for Altman, that’s not trivial. Since he was
President of Y Combinator, and CEO of OpenAI; he surely was
aware of this.
So it’s well known that Y Combinator owns some stake in OpenAI. But how big is that stake? This seems like devilishly difficult information to obtain. I asked around and a little birdie who knows several OpenAI investors came back with an answer: Y Combinator owns about 0.6 percent of OpenAI. At OpenAI’s current $852 billion valuation, that’s worth over $5 billion.
Graham and his wife Jessica Livingston are two of Y Combinator’s four founding partners. The fact that Paul Graham personally has billions of dollars at stake with OpenAI doesn’t mean that his public opinion on Sam Altman’s trustworthiness and leadership is invalid. But it certainly seems like the sort of thing that ought to be disclosed when quoting Graham as an Altman character reference. A billion dollars here, a billion there — that adds up to the sort of money that might skew a fellow’s opinion.
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Working Papers
Does Employment Slow Cognitive Decline?…
Working Paper 35117
DOI 10.3386/w35117
Issue Date April 2026
With large gains in life expectancy, the population share of disability due to cognitive decline and dementia has substantially increased. Many older adults in the United States leave the workforce well before age 65. Correlational evidence suggests that leaving the workforce before retirement age could accelerate the pace of cognitive decline. We offer causal evidence, using HRS data for the United States, exploiting plausibly exogenous shifts in labor demand in local labor markets as a Bartik instrument for employment variation across these markets. We find substantial declines over time in cognitive scores stemming from negative labor demand shocks. These findings are concentrated among men aged 51 to 64, whose employment decisions and outcomes may be more sensitive to local labor market conditions than are these decisions or outcomes for women or for older men. Our evidence extends past work focusing narrowly on the retirement age window and provides further support to the notion that working to older ages may delay age-related cognitive decline.
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Noah Arman Kouchekinia, David Neumark, and Tim A. Bruckner, “Does Employment Slow Cognitive Decline? Evidence from Labor Market Shocks,” NBER Working Paper 35117 (2026), https://doi.org/10.3386/w35117.
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Noah Arman Kouchekinia, David Neumark, and Tim A. Bruckner, “Does Employment Slow Cognitive Decline? Evidence from Labor Market Shocks,” NBER Working Paper 35117 (2026), https://doi.org/10.3386/w35117.
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