Sr. Content Developer at Microsoft, working remotely in PA, TechBash conference organizer, former Microsoft MVP, Husband, Dad and Geek.
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Daily Reading List – December 3, 2025 (#677)

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I’ve been sitting on a bunch of half-finished things, which makes me anxious. Today, I got through most of them. The reading queue is still deep, but I’m slowing burning it down.

[blog] What Is The Right Atomic Unit For Knowledge? How do you “get your findings into the minds of other people?” That’s a fascinating question that’s explored here.

[article] Going to market when no market exists. Goodness, this might be one of the most interesting things that a tech entrepreneur (or product leader) can read. You might disagree with parts, but it’ll make you think differently about GTM.

[article] Tech Veterans’ New Approach To Eliminate ‘Configuration Hell.’ Is there a better way? Will people adopt it or just work with what’s already standard? The ConfigHub folks make the case for change.

[blog] Registration is open for Google Cloud Next 2026! Mark your calendars. I hope you’ll join me in Vegas next April for a fun, impactful, and educational event.

[article] How to Lead When Things Feel Increasingly Out of Control. We probably all resonate with this right now. Stability is hard to come by. This is when good leaders need to step up.

[blog] Introducing Amazon Nova Forge: Build your own frontier models using Nova. I like to keep an eye on what others are doing. AWS is trying to make it easier to build custom models.

[article] Mistral closes in on Big AI rivals with new open-weight frontier and small models. The spotlight has been on the big model shops, but there are tons of great players out there. Mistral showed up with some strong models this week. More here.

[article] As AI Eats Web Traffic, Don’t Panic—Evolve. Engagement is changing. Our behaviors are different now. Companies need to rethink SEO, personalization, and metrics.

[blog] Treat AI-Generated code as a draft. Listen to Addy. When you stop reviewing and owning your output, you accept significant risk. Getting a first draft from AI is awesome; take the right next steps after that.

[blog] Gemini CLI for Authors — Part 5: Find and fix content gaps with AI. I’ve enjoyed this series of posts from a smart technical writer. This post shows a valuable use case.

[article] The complete guide to Node.js frameworks. Does any ecosystem have more frameworks than JavaScript? This is just covering Node, and there’s plenty more for other runtimes.

[article] Stack Overflow Puts Community First in New AI Search Tool. This looks like a good way to mix AI summarization with trusted source info.

[blog] Progress on TypeScript 7 – December 2025. The port to Go for some underlying engines of TypeScript is going great. People can try it now, and the performance improvements are dramatic.

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alvinashcraft
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Instagram API Updates for Insights, Content Management, and Collaboration

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Introducing several new Instagram API features and improvements designed to empower developers and partners.
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Introducing the VS Code Insiders Podcast

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The VS Code Insiders Podcast is your insider's guide to the features, decisions, and people shaping the future of Visual Studio Code.

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OpenAI to acquire Neptune

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OpenAI is acquiring Neptune to deepen visibility into model behavior and strengthen the tools researchers use to track experiments and monitor training.
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Gemini 3 Pro scores 69% trust in blinded testing up from 16% for Gemini 2.5: The case for evaluating AI on real-world trust, not academic benchmarks

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Just a few short weeks ago, Google debuted its Gemini 3 model, claiming it scored a leadership position in multiple AI benchmarks. But the challenge with vendor-provided benchmarks is that they are just that — vendor-provided.

A new vendor-neutral evaluation from Prolific, however, puts Gemini 3 at the top of the leaderboard. This isn't on a set of academic benchmarks; rather, it's on a set of real-world attributes that actual users and organizations care about. 

Prolific was founded by researchers at the University of Oxford. The company delivers high-quality, reliable human data to power rigorous research and ethical AI development. The company's “HUMAINE benchmark” applies this approach by using representative human sampling and blind testing to rigorously compare AI models across a variety of user scenarios, measuring not just technical performance but also user trust, adaptability and communication style.

The latest HUMAINE test evaluated 26,000 users in a blind test of models. In the evaluation, Gemini 3 Pro's trust score surged from 16% to 69%, the highest ever recorded by Prolific. Gemini 3 now ranks number one overall in trust, ethics and safety 69% of the time across demographic subgroups, compared to its predecessor Gemini 2.5 Pro, which held the top spot only 16% of the time.

Overall, Gemini 3 ranked first in three of four evaluation categories: performance and reasoning, interaction and adaptiveness and trust and safety. It lost only on communication style, where DeepSeek V3 topped preferences at 43%. The HUMAINE test also showed that Gemini 3 performed consistently well across 22 different demographic user groups, including variations in age, sex, ethnicity and political orientation. The evaluation also found that users are now five times more likely to choose the model in head-to-head blind comparisons.

But the ranking matters less than why it won.

"It's the consistency across a very wide range of different use cases, and a personality and a style that appeals across a wide range of different user types," Phelim Bradley, co-founder and CEO of Prolific, told VentureBeat. "Although in some specific instances, other models are preferred by either small subgroups or on a particular conversation type, it's the breadth of knowledge and the flexibility of the model across a range of different use cases and audience types that allowed it to win this particular benchmark."

How blinded testing reveals what academic benchmarks miss

HUMAINE's methodology exposes gaps in how the industry evaluates models. Users interact with two models simultaneously in multi-turn conversations. They don't know which vendors power each response. They discuss whatever topics matter to them, not predetermined test questions.

It's the sample itself that matters. HUMAINE uses representative sampling across U.S. and UK populations, controlling for age, sex, ethnicity and political orientation. This reveals something static benchmarks can't capture: Model performance varies by audience.

"If you take an AI leaderboard, the majority of them still could have a fairly static list," Bradley said. "But for us, if you control for the audience, we end up with a slightly different leaderboard, whether you're looking at a left-leaning sample, right-leaning sample, U.S., UK. And I think age was actually the most different stated condition in our experiment."

For enterprises deploying AI across diverse employee populations, this matters. A model that performs well for one demographic may underperform for another.

The methodology also addresses a fundamental question in AI evaluation: Why use human judges at all when AI could evaluate itself? Bradley noted that his firm does use AI judges in certain use cases, although he stressed that human evaluation is still the critical factor.

"We see the biggest benefit coming from smart orchestration of both LLM judge and human data, both have strengths and weaknesses, that, when smartly combined, do better together," said Bradley. "But we still think that human data is where the alpha is. We're still extremely bullish that human data and human intelligence is required to be in the loop."

What trust means in AI evaluation

Trust, ethics and safety measures user confidence in reliability, factual accuracy and responsible behavior. In HUMAINE's methodology, trust isn't a vendor claim or a technical metric — it's what users report after blinded conversations with competing models.

The 69% figure represents probability across demographic groups. This consistency matters more than aggregate scores because organizations can serve diverse populations.

"There was no awareness that they were using Gemini in this scenario," Bradley said. "It was based only on the blinded multi-turn response."

This separates perceived trust from earned trust. Users judged model outputs without knowing which vendor produced them, eliminating Google's brand advantage. For customer-facing deployments where the AI vendor remains invisible to end users, this distinction matters.

What enterprises should do now

One of the critical things that enterprises should do now when considering different models is embrace an evaluation framework that works.

"It is increasingly challenging to evaluate models exclusively based on vibes," Bradley said. "I think increasingly we need more rigorous, scientific approaches to truly understand how these models are performing."

The HUMAINE data provides a framework: Test for consistency across use cases and user demographics, not just peak performance on specific tasks. Blind the testing to separate model quality from brand perception. Use representative samples that match your actual user population. Plan for continuous evaluation as models change.

For enterprises looking to deploy AI at scale, this means moving beyond "which model is best" to "which model is best for our specific use case, user demographics and required attributes."

 The rigor of representative sampling and blind testing provides the data to make that determination — something technical benchmarks and vibes-based evaluation cannot deliver.



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Writing Is An Act Of Courage

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Is writing an act of courage? How do you face this challenge and deal with the fear of writing? We answer these questions and share 15 quotes on having the courage to write.

Courage is the “mental or moral strength to venture, persevere, and withstand danger, fear, or difficulty.” (Merriam-Webster)

Writing Is An Act Of Courage

The act of writing is an act of courage. A writer exposes their very being to the world when they create a work of fiction. More than that, it is a commitment – to yourself and to the process. It takes a long time to write a book, and if it were easy, everyone would be writing one.

There is also the very real need to have a good understanding of the tools of the trade. If you can afford a course, take one. If not, read blogs like Writers Write where you can learn about the essential elements of a good book by reading this post and clicking on every link in it: The 7 Critical Elements Of A Great Book. This is a good start. It will make you braver to start writing.

Sometimes, it will seem like the act of writing is the most terrifying thing you’ll do. Sometimes, you won’t feel as if you’re good enough to even pick up a pen.

Remember that your first sentence is the first step. If it seems overwhelming to write a whole book, start with an opening sentence, then a paragraph, then write a page, then a scene, and then a chapter.

It takes bravery to have the creativity to make something that never existed before you wrote it.

Facing The Challenge With Courage

If you want to be an author, you will have to act like one.

  1. Write a little bit every day.
  2. Have the intention to write, use any opportunity you may come across, and then see it through.
  3. Write down your goal (whatever that may be for you) every day to remind you what you’re doing.
  4. Carry it through.
  5. Invest the time and effort and COURAGE, and who knows how far this will take you?

What Frightens You About Writing?

Is it the:

  1. Fear of rejection? (Read 50 Best-Selling Writers Who Were Repeatedly Rejected)
  2. Fear of failure? (Read 5 Fears That Keep You From Finishing Your Novel)
  3. Fear of turning an idea into a full-length novel?  (Most writers agree that what they imagine can never be written exactly the way they want it to be.)
  4. Fear of success? (It’s a real thing. Once you’re published, your life will not be the same.)
  5. Fear of offending? (If you’re writing a memoir, read: 5 Ways To Write About Real People In Memoirs)
  6. Fear of having only one book in you? (You won’t know until you’ve written the first one.)

You cannot know how things will turn out until you take that leap of faith and try. Writing is complicated and it is an act of courage, but it is also fun and rewarding. And you are not alone in your fears. Read these quotations from famous writers who comment on having the courage to write.

15 Quotes On Having The Courage To Write

  1. I have come to believe over and over again that what is most important to me must be spoken, made verbal and shared, even at the risk of having it bruised or misunderstood.” ~Audre Lorde
  2. I have already settled it for myself so flattery and criticism go down the same drain and I am quite free. ~Georgia O’Keeffe
  3. The question is not who influences you, but which people give you courage. ~Hilary Mantel
  4. Whether or not you write well, write bravely. ~Bill Stout
  5. And by the way, everything in life is writable about if you have the outgoing guts to do it, and the imagination to improvise. The worst enemy to creativity is self-doubt. ~Sylvia Plath
  6. If we had to say what writing is, we would have to define it essentially as an act of courage. ~Cynthia Ozick
  7. The scariest moment is always just before you start. ~Stephen King
  8. If something inside of you is real, we will probably find it interesting, and it will probably be universal. So you must risk placing real emotion at the center of your work. Write straight into the emotional center of things. ~Anne Lamott
  9. Fear is felt by writers at every level. Anxiety accompanies the first word they put on paper and the last. ~Ralph Keyes
  10. I strongly believe that writing is an act of courage. It’s almost an act of physical courage. You get up and you have this great idea. Maybe you were hanging out with your friends—you guys were having beers and you were talking about something. You had this idea and they said, “Wow, that’s brilliant! Someone should go write it.” And you sit down to write it and almost always what was brilliant before, when you were sitting around talking, is somehow not so brilliant when you go to write. ~Ta-Nehisi Coates
  11. Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear, not absence of fear. ~Mark Twain
  12. We fear that we are inadequate, but our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. ~Marianne Williamson
  13. You need a certain amount of nerve to be a writer, an almost physical nerve, the kind you need to walk a log across a river. ~Margaret Atwood
  14. I admire anybody who has the guts to write anything at all.  ~E.B. White
  15. Close the door. Write with no one looking over your shoulder. Don’t try to figure out what other people want to hear from you; figure out what you have to say. It’s the one and only thing you have to offer. – Barbara Kingsolver

Some Ways To Build Up Your Courage

  1. Start A Blog – you can start by writing short pieces about any topic you like.
  2. Never Stop Reading – writers need to be readers.
  3. Understand The Basics Of Grammar – you have to write properly.
  4. Join A Writing Group – find your tribe of like-minded aspiring writers.
  5. Enter Competitions – you don’t have to tell anyone.

The Last Word

Writing is an act of courage. Don’t stop believing in yourself. Writing is hard – for any author. But, you can do it – just like all the writers before you.

Source for image: Pixabay

by Amanda Patterson
© Amanda Patterson

If you liked this blogger’s writing, you may enjoy:

  1. A Quick Start Guide To Writing An Inciting Incident
  2. A Quick Start Guide To Foreshadowing
  3. Writing Through The Pain – Tips For Memoirists
  4. Does Your Character Fight, Freeze, Or Flee?
  5. What Is Head-Hopping & Why Should I Avoid It?
  6. 4 Ways To Kickstart A Scene
  7. Help! I Fell In Love With My Antagonist
  8. A Quick Start Guide To Writing Descriptions
  9. A Quick Start Guide To Writing A Memoir
  10. 37 Ways To Write About Grief

Top Tip: Find out more about our workbooks and online courses in our shop.

The post Writing Is An Act Of Courage appeared first on Writers Write.

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