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Bytes: Welcome to the 1st annual OSScars
Bytes: Welcome to the 1st annual OSScars
Hope everyone enjoyed the Oscars last night (watching one twitter clip over and over doesn’t count). But we’ve got something much better for you today (better than the Oscars, not the twitter clip).
·feedly.com·
Bytes: Welcome to the 1st annual OSScars
Diversify your life
Diversify your life
If your existence is all about work, and work goes to shit, then life goes to shit too. If you live for your hobby, and your hobby hits the wall, then your life crashes too. If everything else is waiting until you hang with your mates, and your mates fade away, then you fade too. Betting your drive to get up in the morning on a single ...
·world.hey.com·
Diversify your life
Different Kinds of BS
Different Kinds of BS
There are three important facts about bullshit: It’s everywhere, it’s influential, and it’s dangerous.
·collaborativefund.com·
Different Kinds of BS
Spotify, Netflix, and Aggregation
Spotify, Netflix, and Aggregation
The original definition of Aggregation Theory emphasized the importance of commoditized supply; that makes Spotify more of an Aggregator than Netflix
·stratechery.com·
Spotify, Netflix, and Aggregation
Too Far
Too Far
Every good idea and every admirable trait can be taken too far.
·collaborativefund.com·
Too Far
The Games People Play With Cash Flow - Commonplace
The Games People Play With Cash Flow - Commonplace
One way that first principles thinking fails is when you build your analysis up from a deficient set of base principles. Everything is correct and true, but you still end up mistaken. Here's how that looks like in practice.
·commoncog.com·
The Games People Play With Cash Flow - Commonplace
Beware What Sounds Insightful - Commonplace
Beware What Sounds Insightful - Commonplace
Why the Internet has driven writing to sound ever more insightful, how writers accomplish this, and what to do about it.
·commoncog.com·
Beware What Sounds Insightful - Commonplace
Follow Your Nose - Commonplace
Follow Your Nose - Commonplace
Why it's probably a good idea to keep a list of questions in your head. Also how I find topics to write about.
·commoncog.com·
Follow Your Nose - Commonplace
How To Optimise for Success, A Theory - Commonplace
How To Optimise for Success, A Theory - Commonplace
Successful practitioners use 'optimise for usefulness' over 'optimise for truth'. Unintended side effect: this means it's ok to believe in religion, so long as it doesn't harm you.
·commoncog.com·
How To Optimise for Success, A Theory - Commonplace
Action Produces Information - Commonplace
Action Produces Information - Commonplace
Why we need to be careful when using frameworks from the field of judgment and decision making.
·commoncog.com·
Action Produces Information - Commonplace
Career Moats 101 - Commonplace
Career Moats 101 - Commonplace
A summary of everything I know on the topic of building career moats.
·commoncog.com·
Career Moats 101 - Commonplace
Reading as the root of career planning
Reading as the root of career planning
As you might’ve already guessed, my approach to thinking about career planning is to read a lot. We should probably pause a bit to consider if this is a valid strategy. Let’s work backwards. The idea at the core of career strategy is that you have to make
·commoncog.com·
Reading as the root of career planning
A Better Way To Allocate Your Career Time - Commonplace
A Better Way To Allocate Your Career Time - Commonplace
How do you evaluate if a career activity is worth doing? By looking at its component tasks, and calculating the information rate of each step.
·commoncog.com·
A Better Way To Allocate Your Career Time - Commonplace
What's Your Time Preference? - Commonplace
What's Your Time Preference? - Commonplace
Why thinking long term can lead to a competitive advantage, and what that looks like in business and in careers.
·commoncog.com·
What's Your Time Preference? - Commonplace
Fallacies of Distributed Systems
Fallacies of Distributed Systems
The eight fallacies of distributed systems come from different engineers at Sun Microsystems. The first four are from Bill Joy and Tom Lyon (co-founders of Sun). Five, six, and 7 come from L. Peter Deutsch (designer of PostScript). The last is attributed to James Gosling (lead designer of Java). 1. The network is reliable 2. Latency is zero 3. Bandwidth is infinite 4. The network is secure 5. Topology doesn't change 6. There is one administrator 7. Transport cost is zero 8. The network
·matt-rickard.com·
Fallacies of Distributed Systems