Mental health experts say identifying when someone is in need of help is the first step — and approaching them with careful compassion is the hardest, most essential part that follows.
Activity
My custom keyboard layout
A list of my favorite custom keyboard features thus far, courtesy of TailorKey:
- Caps word: Engages the caps lock function only until you hit a word boundary (anything that's not an alphanumeric character, underscore, or backspace basically). So helpful I'm wondering how I ever typed without it.
- Home row modifiers: Tap asdf or jkl; and they function as normal letters, but hold them and they function as modifiers (ctrl, alt, cmd, shift). Tremendous.
- The "select word" functionality. This is a macro for alt-leftarrow (move cursor to beginning of word) followed by alt-shift-rightarrow (select to end of word boundary). There's also a select line, but I haven't found myself using that much yet.
I've also added some of my own customizations:
- A key that triggers a script that flattens whitespace from selected text
- Keys to uppercase, lowercase, titlecase, and sentencecase selected text
- A key that triggers a macro to type "site:citationneeded.news ", which I type constantly while writing my newsletters and trying to find a past newsletter where I referenced something
- A two-key combo to trigger the typically three-key cmd-shift-4 screenshot selected area command
- A two-key combo for "paste and match style", which is the hand-breaking four-key ctrl-option-shift-v
- A two-key combo for — (em dash), which is typically three (alt-shift-hyphen)
And I've moved some of my previous shortcuts that tended to bump up against other shortcuts (like alt-arrowkey to snap windows to portions of the screen) to esoteric key combos involving F13+ that will never conflict. (I don't have physical F13+ keys, but by using layers I just map comfortable keys to the shortcuts I want).
my new keyboard layout has “caps word” functionality (think caps lock but just for a single word) and my god traditional keyboard manufacturers need to get with the times
where has this been all my life
The Binance crypto exchange has just filed a defamation lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal over its article reporting that Binance's own compliance investigators had found $1 billion in transfers to Iran-backed terror groups, and then were fired.
The article, and related investigations by the New York Times and Fortune, were cited in an inquiry over the alleged sanctions evasion by Senator Blumenthal, and a request by Sen. Van Hollen and others for an investigation by the Treasury and Justice Departments. Today the WSJ reported that the DOJ had opened such an investigation.
Binance spends much of the filing complaining that news outlets like the WSJ do not give them enough credit for how hard they're trying. I'm not sure bragging about stopping $131M in illicit transfers quite lands when the whole point of this article is that you allegedly allowed 10x that.
with great sadness i had to retire my trusty Ergodox Infinity, but: new keeb! expect typos as i learn how to type again
(MoErgo Glove80)
the Ergodox was also ortholinear with thumb clusters so the transition shouldn't be too difficult, but the default layout on this one is a little different (thumb shift and modifier keys mostly)
There are a number of senators who’ve taken a look at this but there seems to be no will to move forward because No. 1, people don’t understand A.I., but because, No. 2, we’ve seen the entry of really big political money tied to A.I. Just like the crypto space, a lot of senators are scared to stick their neck out even though action is being demanded of us on this issue.
Fascinating comment on AI regulation from Elissa Slotkin of all people, who received $10 million — the second-most support — from crypto PACs in 2024.
Today the SEC filed a proposed final judgment to settle their lawsuit against Justin Sun and his businesses for $10 million and no admission of wrongdoing.
Sun has spent between $112 million and $233 million on contributions to Trump-linked crypto firms.
In January, House Financial Services Ranking Member Maxine Waters sent a letter to SEC Chair Paul Atkins expressing concern over the SEC's "retrenchment from crypto enforcement", citing the Sun case and urging Atkins to hold him accountable.
Chair Atkins has suggested that the crypto cases his agency has dropped were merely over "registration issues" that were "red herrings" from the Biden admin. But the complaint against Sun also alleged serious fraud.
In July, shortly after Sun announced his plan to purchase another $100 million of the $TRUMP memecoin, the Sun-involved and -themed SUNDOG memecoin posted a meme showing its corgi mascot holding puppet strings attached to the White House.








![Tweet screenshot: SunDog @SUNDOG_TRX You never truly know who’s pulling the strings… 🤫 [AI-generated image of a corgi dog with a collar depicting the Tron logo, paws raised above the White House, with strings attached to the paws like a marionette] 2:30 AM Jul 24, 2025](https://storage.mollywhite.net/micro/0add1a4647959f313bac_Screenshot-2025-08-13-at-12.00.02---AM.png)