Day: February 19, 2026

16-bit pixel art of a math-driven workspace at night featuring How Not to Be Wrong on a desk, with dual monitors displaying regression to the mean, expected value, and base rate visuals, alongside dice, charts, a calculator, and notes, set against a neon city skyline.
Books

How Not to Be Wrong Book Review: Why Mathematical Thinking Is a Decision-Making Superpower

A clear, engaging review of How Not to Be Wrong by Jordan Ellenberg, explaining how mathematical thinking improves decision-making. This article covers regression to the mean, expected value, base rates, and statistical reasoning for professionals in analytics, finance, and strategy.

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Pixel art sci-fi horror scene showing a crashed corporate spacecraft burning in a futuristic city, a towering Xenomorph emerging from wreckage, cracked alien eggs leaking green acid, a human woman in a hospital gown walking forward, and an emotionless android at her side beneath corporate insignia.
Entertainment

Alien: Earth Episode 1 Review, “Neverland”: A Terrifying Crash Landing With a Bold New Mythology

Alien: Earth Episode 1 “Neverland” launches the franchise’s most unsettling premise yet, blending classic Xenomorph terror with transhumanist horror, corporate domination, and a catastrophic crash that brings the nightmare to Earth.

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Pixel art illustration inspired by 1990s video games showing RoboCop aiming his gun in a dystopian Detroit, with police cars, the ED-209 robot, corporate buildings, and retro HUD elements displaying health, ammo, and score.
Entertainment

RoboCop Film Review

Released in 1987, RoboCop used sci-fi action and extreme violence to deliver one of the decade’s sharpest satires. Beneath the chrome armor and gunfire lies a chilling critique of corporate power, media desensitization, and the erosion of human identity, making RoboCop as relevant today as it was at release.

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