Posts

India's Population Decline: Trends and Drivers

Everyone spent the last few months talking about India surpassing China as the world's most populous nation. It's a clean, headline-friendly stat. But while the news cycle was obsessed with who has the biggest number, a much quieter shift happened that actually matters for the long term. India's fertility rate has finally dipped below the replacement level. For a lot of people, this feels like a victory for public health and urban planning. I'm not so sure. We're moving toward a world where the "demographic dividend" we've been promised for decades is starting to look like a math error. The transition from a booming youth population to a shrinking one doesn't happen overnight, but the trajectory is now set. The real question is whether the infrastructure can actually keep up with a population that's suddenly aging faster than expected. The Data Behind the Drop The Total Fertility Rate (TFR) is now below 2.1 in most developed nations. Tha...

Why Legal Structures Keep SpaceX and OpenAI Out of S&P 500

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The S&P 500 is essentially the world's most influential club, and it's currently keeping SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic at arm's length. The funny thing is that it isn't about their valuations. These companies have more than enough money to play the game. It's about their legal structures. S&P Dow Jones Indices recently decided that SpaceX wouldn't get accelerated entry into the index, despite the company requesting a swift admission as part of its market debut. This is a rare move. Usually, when a company of this size knocks on the door, the index providers find a way to let them in. By saying no, the S&P is blocking SpaceX from a massive, automatic influx of capital from passive investment funds. It's a weird standoff. We're seeing a clash between how the modern tech giants are built and how the legacy financial world decides who actually counts as a "large company." If the most successful companies in the world can't ...

C++ Evolution: Foundation and Complexity in Computing

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C++ is the only language that manages to be simultaneously the foundation of modern computing and a cautionary tale of feature creep. It's the engine under the hood of almost everything that actually matters, from high-frequency trading platforms to the browser you're using right now. But it's also a minefield. I've spent years watching people wrestle with its complexity. The problem is that C++ doesn't just add features. It layers them. You end up with a language that supports multiple ways to do the exact same thing, most of which were deprecated ten years ago but still exist because some legacy codebase in a bank depends on them. It's a mess, but it's a mess that we can't afford to replace. The real question is whether the modern standards are actually making the language safer, or if they're just adding more ways to shoot yourself in the foot. The Original Promise Bjarne Stroustrup didn't set out to create a new world; he just wan...

S&P 500 Eligibility Rules and Private Company IPOs

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The most valuable private companies in the world are running into a wall. They spend years prepping for an IPO, but once they actually hit the public market, they can't just slide into the S&P 500. There's a regulatory lag that keeps them on the sidelines, and it's creating a weird disconnect between a company's actual market cap and its eligibility for the index. I've watched this happen a few times now. A company goes public with a valuation that dwarfs almost everything else in its sector, yet it stays invisible to the passive funds that drive the bulk of market volume. It's a frustrating quirk of the system. We're basically pretending these companies aren't giant just because they haven't checked a specific box regarding profitability or listing duration. The real problem is that this isn't just a clerical annoyance. It changes how these companies price their shares and how they handle their first few quarters of public life. It ...

AI Dependence and Mental Models in Berkeley CS Classes

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When the world's top computer science students start failing basic math, the problem isn't the AI. It's the erosion of the mental models required to actually use it. Look at the numbers from UC Berkeley. In spring 2026, 6% of students in CS 61A received Fs. For a course that serves as the gateway to a degree at one of the best engineering schools on earth, that's a loud signal. These aren't students who can't handle the material. They're students who have outsourced the "thinking" part of coding to a LLM and realized too late that they've forgotten how to debug their own logic. I've seen this cycle before with calculators and IDEs, but this feels different. We're not just automating syntax. We're automating the struggle that actually creates a programmer. If we stop valuing the friction of learning, we're just training a generation of operators who can't fix the machine when it breaks. I want to look at where exact...

Anthropic: Scaling Intelligence or Anthropomorphism?

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We're confusing the ability to mimic human language with the presence of a human mind. It's a mistake we're making on a massive scale, and no one is leaning into it quite as hard as Anthropic. The company is a giant in the AI space, but their real specialty might be anthropomorphism. Take "Claude’s Constitution," an 84-page document that reads more like a moral manifesto for a sentient being than a set of alignment constraints for a probability engine. Then there's CEO Dario Amodei, who recently admitted in an interview that he's "open to the idea" that AI could be conscious. No. Absolutely not. The distance between a sophisticated token predictor and a conscious entity isn't a gap we can bridge with more parameters or a better prompt. It's a fundamental category error. I want to look at why we're so eager to believe the ghost in the machine, and why that impulse is actually dangerous for how we build these tools. The Illu...

MAI-Code-1-Flash: Logic Performance vs. Low Latency

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Speed is a feature, but only if the model doesn't sacrifice the logic of your codebase to get there. We've all seen the "fast" models that hallucinate a library that doesn't exist just to finish a sentence. It's frustrating. The goal isn't just to get code on the screen faster, it's to get code that actually compiles without a ten minute debugging session. Microsoft is trying to solve this with MAI-Code-1-Flash. It's a model built from the ground up using clean, licensed data, which is a nice change from the legal grey areas we usually deal with in LLM training. More interestingly, it's designed specifically for the GitHub Copilot harness. The idea is that the model shouldn't just act as a fancy autocomplete, but as part of an agentic workflow that understands the environment it's actually operating in. The real question is whether this specialization actually translates to better code, or if we're just getting the wrong an...