I think there is a high variance in how involved different HOAs are, so it's hard to make a blanket statement that you should totally avoid considering buying a property that's in an HOA.
My current house is in an HOA that's around ~$20 / month (which pays to keep some of the common spaces of the development maintained), has never gone up in ~4 years, and we've never been notified about anything needing to look better even when our lawn was in pretty rough shape the summer we moved in. We did some research and were pretty confident going into it that we weren't going to be dealing with an overbearing HOA, and I also like that the development and community areas (including a tennis court and basketball court) stay well maintained. In our case, it feels like we're getting a good deal for the cost.
Makes sense - transcribing speech from all uploaded video seems like it would be valuable for identifying interests and serving more personalized advertisements.
For example, in a video taken at the beach where someone says “wow that looks fun” (in any language) and there is a boat in the frame, you could serve them boat ads.
If you are really trying to maximize, you could try to get offers from places you don’t want to work for anyway just to use in negotiations. Personally, I find interviewing tiring enough (or maybe I care too little about maximizing) that I don’t do this. After one interview I’m good to not go through another one for at least a few years.
The problem with 15 day sprints is that you tend to get tired and slow down before the end of of the sprint, whereas with 5 day sprints it's easier to go full velocity because you're only sprinting for 1/3rd of the time.
Adding my data points: Macbook Air M1 16GB RAM, 512GB SSD. I have had the laptop for 4 days, and so far only used it for OS updates, a little Discord usage, web browsing (Firefox) and a small amount of programming (no Spotify).
Percentage Used: 0%
Data Units Read: 596,588 [305 GB]
Data Units Written: 404,196 [206 GB]
Host Read Commands: 8,532,827
Host Write Commands: 3,851,891
> I know that people will think it's great that you are doing this and I also know that you think it's good (for you) to have a feel for the issues that frustrate every day users. But I think it's not a great use of a company execs time and I am not even sure it's a good way to deploy resources at Cloudflare.
As a counter example, Jeff Bezos (whose time may be worth more than anybody else's) famously audits his email for customer complaints and occasionally derails an organization for a day or two in order to figure out what happened. He stands behind this practice and has said that he often picks out cases where the anecdotal complaint is counter to data that he's been presented, and that more often than not the anecdotes are correct and find a shortcoming in the data. IMO it also demonstrates a culture of caring and following up about anecdotes to others whose time is worth less than his own.
Those all sound like concerns that probably aren't your top priority when you have 10 users unless your product is performance critical, and then none of this guidance applies anyway. When you have 10 users, your database concerns are more likely to be: Is my database up? Is my database secured? Do I have automated backups? Am I otherwise at risk of losing data? Is the database fast enough for now to not be a blocker to my business? All of which are concerns that tend to be well covered by managed database services.
My current house is in an HOA that's around ~$20 / month (which pays to keep some of the common spaces of the development maintained), has never gone up in ~4 years, and we've never been notified about anything needing to look better even when our lawn was in pretty rough shape the summer we moved in. We did some research and were pretty confident going into it that we weren't going to be dealing with an overbearing HOA, and I also like that the development and community areas (including a tennis court and basketball court) stay well maintained. In our case, it feels like we're getting a good deal for the cost.