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mr_luc

1,556 カルマ登録 19 年前
whoami

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I've been following this community for a while, and in fact I attended the first Startup School conference -- and was almost certainly the only person to have arrived from the midwest via Greyhound bus. (I pestered a couple of very nice SFP alums about what they would do if they lived in a small town and had no co-founder ... I know, I know).

Startup School changed my life in an unexpected way: it finally clicked that I could change my location to make my life better.

This did not result in me moving to Silicon Valley.

Instead, for the next 7 years, I spent 9 months of each year in remote Pacific South America, doing volunteer work with friends - and surfing, quite a lot during the good season. Sometimes I'd return and do about 3-4 months of contract programming on-site with great teams, mostly in Ruby/JRuby and early Node.js in those years.

These days I work mostly remotely; I still have a home base down south, and I travel a lot with my better half. (I write mostly multi-user systems in BEAM languages since 2015, but I often do smaller projects in Swift, TS, Kotlin etc, usually with someone in my network or someone they've vouched for).

Like pg says, lots of good projects, to really do them right, have to be companies. For that reason I can't completely rule out doing a startup. But it'd have a lot to compete with, so it's not inevitable.

[email protected]

コメント

mr_luc
·9 日前·議論
Yes that feels like a good characterization.

Which, I would say, does seem a lot less black-and-white than the cell phone example, and anyone who thinks it's all settled now might be in for a surprise.
mr_luc
·9 日前·議論
Above was a quote from Carpenter, and the Court seems to have called out that the completeness of the record meant it recorded them, 'not only in public thoroughfares', but also private homes and doctor's office and so forth.

It does seem like that's an element, then -- this is not to say that it's sufficient for anything, since obviously a sufficiently good record of where one goes on public thoroughfares would fail the same test ('reliably reveals that so-and-so went to visit a specialist doctor, divorce attorney, and brothel all on the same day')
mr_luc
·2 か月前·議論
I feel like you’re right, for instance depending on how you define the extra in extraterrestrial.

The space station, the Artemis capsule, microbes on interplanetary probes, etc.

It could technically be said in a sentence and be true, but it would be misleading to most people.
mr_luc
·8 か月前·議論
I'd be cautious for the same reason: thyroid cancers are also positively associated with obesity, and people who take GLP-1s are often obese.

Below a table, it says "adjusted for social deprivation index, hypo- and hyperthyroidism, and use of other antidiabetic drugs..." -- but nothing about obesity.

What if the GLP-1-prescribed patients tended to be more obese?
mr_luc
·9 か月前·議論
Elixir too (Explorer library; default backend is Pola.rs based)

- https://github.com/elixir-explorer/explorer - https://hexdocs.pm/explorer/Explorer.html
mr_luc
·2 年前·議論
He’s 20, right?
mr_luc
·2 年前·議論
Wait you have an API now??? Is it open, is there a waitlist? I’m on a plane but going to try to find that on the site. Absolutely loved your demo, been showing it around for a few months.
mr_luc
·3 年前·議論
I’m surprised to find this on the 3rd or 4th page of Hacker News! It seems pretty impressive —- of course, the lack of code on GitHub might be partly responsible for that; there’s so much interesting AI stuff happening that an impressive page of results without either a detailed explanation, or an executable one, could easily fall through the cracks.
mr_luc
·3 年前·議論
Me too! I came looking for this sort of meta-comment. I've re-read the paper book a few times now.

What makes it my favorite is how clear Norvig's writing is. It's easy to follow (both when reading it in English, and when following its execution if you're a programmer), and it introduces important ideas so effortlessly that, years later, it will give you a chuckle.

Anyone interested in clearly communicating about technical topics, and with a knowledge of Lisp's nature and some idea of what programming in 1991 looked like, might be tickled to read Chapter 1; even its first few paragraphs are refreshing.