Letter From the Editor

When Everything Feels Broken

Don’t be resigned: look to the future

Damon Beres
OneZero
Published in
3 min readAug 17, 2020

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A very broken Switch controller. Credit: Nintendo

There’s nothing more frustrating than when something stops working and you can’t do anything about it. I was fiddling with a busted Switch controller this weekend and watched helplessly as the calibration program showed the joystick pushing to the top of the screen without my direction; a little green ghost in the machine that I couldn’t exorcise.

A lot of things feel like this right now. August has been a long haul: It’s hot and slow; the president is blowing up the post office (!!!); Joyce Carol Oates, the 82-year-old author and five-time Pulitzer finalist, is revitalizing the soul of goatse on Twitter feeds worldwide with a nightmarish photograph of her extremely messed-up foot (just… don’t Google it, honestly); and the coronavirus pandemic is ongoing and getting worse in places. Life is out of control.

I sometimes feel a temptation to resign myself to all of this — folks, I really can’t overemphasize how Oates’ foot broke me — but that’s not really our style at OneZero. A cornerstone of our tech and science storytelling is that it points readers to a better future: You should walk away from our publication having learned something new, or thought about something differently. Yes, there are big problems (and we write…

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Damon Beres
OneZero

Co-Founder and Former Editor in Chief, OneZero at Medium