Not Boring by Packy McCormick - Blank Page
Welcome to the 649 newly Not Boring people who have joined us this week! If you haven’t subscribed, join 177,034 smart, curious folks by subscribing here: 🎧 For the audio version, subscribe on Spotify or Apple Podcasts Today’s Not Boring is brought to you by… Masterworks. Don’t miss the (life) boat. All-time great scene, but let’s stay focused… According to Bloomberg, the average portfolio is down 30% year-to-date. Now, 2023 is upon us – and with it, blank pages, uncertainty, and volatility. One way I’m hedging against that uncertainty is investing in art, with Masterworks. If you’re new to the Not Boring family, Masterworks, the fintech unicorn from NYC, makes million-dollar paintings investable via shares. I’ve been talking about Masterworks for over two years now. I invest with them for two reasons: 1) I like the art but can’t afford the whole pieces. 2) Their track record. Masterworks has built a track record of 9 exits, the last 3 realizing +13.9%, +17.8%, and +21.5% net returns even while stocks took a dive¹. Plus, since you’re just buying shares on the internet, you don’t need to dust off a tux and go to a stuffy auction. You can skip their waitlist and make that level-headed investment using our Not Boring link. Hi friends 👋, Happy Monday! Welcome to the last Not Boring essay of 2022. This has been a rollercoaster year. On the one hand, it’s been the best: Maya was born and is already becoming a happy little human, Dev is growing into an incredible little man, Puja is the best mom a dad could ask for, and our family is filled with amazing grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins. Not Boring has grown well, Dan, Elliot, and Rahul joined the team, and we’ve invested in and written about companies that will change the world for the better. On the other hand, markets have been brutal, the vibes are off, and all of my accumulated bad takes have come home to roost. More than anything, this year feels like a reset, a turbulent intermission between the last act and the next. And I couldn’t be more excited for what’s on deck. I’m taking the next few weeks off — I’ll be back in your inbox January 9th — and the time off for the new year means a chance to pause, read, reflect, and kick off 2023 with a fresh blank page. This one’s about how I’m going to fill it in. Let’s get to it. Blank PageDuring nearly every week of the past three years, at some point, I’ve stared at my laptop and my laptop has stared back at me, like this: Not to brag, but I’ve become somewhat of an expert in staring down blank pages. Here’s what to do when one faces you:
Everyone’s process is a little different. The pro bloggers, the ones who do it every day, skip steps, just bang it out. The true writers might take months or years and end up with a beautifully-written novel. There are many flavors in between. That’s the process that I unintentionally follow most of the time, and it works well enough, as much as I would like it to work better. A blank page can feel like a curse. It often feels like a curse. But a new one can also be a relief. By the time you’re finished whatever you filled that last blank page in with, you might have come to hate it, or at least gotten sick of it. I can go so deep on a topic, get so far into it, that halfway through I wonder if it’s the best or most important or most interesting thing I could be writing about, but by then, it’s too late. I’m in too deep. And so the blank page is a chance to start fresh, to really write the best or most important or most interesting thing I possibly can, free from the sunk cost and (ever-so-temporarily) relieved from the pressures of a deadline. This isn’t an essay about writing an essay, though. It’s a *metaphor*. Every new year is a blank page, a chance to start fresh with new ideas and new sources and new energy. Of course, January 1st isn’t actually any more different from December 31st than December 31st was from December 30th. But the collective time we all spend away from the daily routine during the holidays feels like a reset. And we’ve all tacitly agreed that the new year is a different thing than the old year. So it’s close enough to actually different. This particular upcoming new year feels even more different, like a decadal reset. Markets have crashed (optimistically) or are in the process of crashing (realistically). The wave of momentum that the tech industry has been riding since the early 2010s has crashed (optimistically) or is in the process of crashing (realistically). The past few years have been chaotic and weird, and it came to a boiling point in 2022. The things that made sense a couple of years ago, the sure things, don’t make as much sense, are no longer sure. You might be experiencing the weird as a general vibe or very specifically in your life and career. So Step 1: Panic. But if you’ve been reading Not Boring this year, or the two before it, you know this isn’t really about how scary things are, or how scary they’ll be. It’s just a blank page, and blank pages are opportunities, if you take them to be. We’re optimists here, so let’s take them that way. One of the inspirations for this piece – Step 4: Scroll, Step 5: Read – was an essay I came across in Noah Smith’s interview with Ezra Klein. Klein said of the post-Elon-Twitter-internet-landscape, “Maybe it’s also an opportunity. I’m inspired by Robin Sloan’s call to make this a season of experimentation in how I use the internet, and what I use my energy to help bring into existence on the internet.” Click. “Here’s my exhortation,” Sloan exhorted:
Sloan is calling for experimentation in how we relate online, not how we do everything (although the two are moving closer and closer). If Twitter is toxic, great, go play with smaller communities. If it’s too shallow, start a book club. If Facebook has gotten too crowded to be fun, cultivate smaller group chats with friends new and old. If you scroll Instagram too much, stop. My personal opinion is that the next decade in online experiences will be driven by smaller, more niche, more tailored products – we won’t see a social media app born this decade cross a $1 trillion market cap, like Facebook did, briefly – but that’s just my opinion. If re-reading the past two years’ year-end posts have taught me anything, it’s that predictions are hard and mine are often wrong. If you want to build products online, bring your own opinion and influence the outcomes of your predictions. I’d go wider than Sloan, though. I think 2023 is the start of something entirely new. If I could add a personal exhortation, by subtracting, I would exhort:
More boldly: Choose Good Quests. Click.
The essay’s co-authors, Trae Stephens and Markie Wagner name a bunch of Good Quests:
These are massive, humanity-altering things, and there are more besides this, some of which I listed in Decentralization. Everything is up for grabs. These are the quests that bend that oscillating sine curve upwards. A big theme in Not Boring in 2022 is that those quests, while still painfully difficult, are more possible and financially viable today than they have ever been. Why? I’ve become enamored by the exponential curves that drive industries. There’s the OG, Moore’s Law: And the declining cost of solar: And the declining cost of sequencing the human genome: (Hint: if those curves don’t look exponential at first glance, look at the y-axes.) You’ve probably seen these charts. I’ve included all of them in Not Boring posts at one point or another, and other people talk about them a lot too. What’s most fascinating to me about them is that while they look inevitable, like math, they require the efforts of thousands or millions of people to stay on track. Albert Einstein said that “Compound interest is the eighth wonder of the world,” but with all due respect, compound interest just happens. It’s contracts and math. The curves above are the real eighth wonder. Somehow, over the years, the invisibly-directed efforts of a bunch of people, each contributing their unique and varied skills, somehow, wondrously, resulted in smooth, exponential curves. In The Invisible Hand’s Visible Swarm, I tried to square that emergent mystery:
I got so close to fitting this whole essay in the email. To read the last ~900 words of Not Boring for 2022…Thanks to Dan and Puja for editing! Keep an eye on Dan’s twitter for a Create launch announcement at 11am EST 👀. Thanks for hanging out with us in our optimistic little corner of the internet in 2022. Have a wonderful holiday season and I’ll see you in the new year. It’s going to be fun. Thanks for reading, Packy 1 *net returns refers to the annualized internal rate of return net of all fees and costs, calculated from the offering closing date to the date the sale is consummated. IRR may not be indicative of Masterworks paintings not yet sold and past performance is not indicative of future results. See important Reg A disclosures: Masterworks.com/cd |
Older messages
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A Deep Dive Into Zero-Knowledge Proofs and the Future of the Internet
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