FUCK OFF. watch your baseless privilege. imposing your fake idea of language standard on others. Free expression or have you fucking forgotten it shanwang...FUCKING idiot. You think your standing up for civil society but you're actually undermining it. let me explain it to you, you fucking idiot. i'm not asking you to talk to me...if you don't like the way i talk you don't have to drop under my comment. I can talk however I want and you can't do anything about it. Funny thing is it will take you 10000 years to realize that telling someone how they should or shouldn't, and thinking you have a right to dictate that, is a worse imposition than telling someone how you feel about them and saying FUCK. So you think you're in the right, but actually by acting entitled to dictate behaviour to others, you put yourself in the wrong. By trying to be in the right you actually end up imposing on others. If you like that sort of thing...maybe go join Daesh, cut out a few tongues for blasphemy, that should sate your appetite for telling others what to do. DO you get it now? You fucking idiot. Fuck off. I feel better now. aaa....you don't like what I say? Why'd you walk into the lion's den...Your puny standard is no match for free expression. Learn that. aaa. Trust your own heart. Stop being a lemming. Your lesson is concluded. You may go now. No fee required. This time.
lesson 2 --- and seriously. why don't you respond to something else rather than this. even in this comment there are good points beside language. you criticise the language but that is what you respond to and thus emphasize. respond to the things of value to make a useful contribution. ignore what is not your taste unless you wish to emphasize that. you pretend to make a useful contribution by criticising what you find distasteful, but actually you just end up emphasizing what you already assume is useless, instead of making a useful contribution -- thus doing the same thing you pretend to be criticising.
When AI are everywhere, the ability to tinker with them, repurpose and reshape them to your specific needs and desires, will then be the point of difference. So coding will always be important.
If AI-in-everything becomes as ubiquitous as the written word, which it will, our lives will be vastly transformed. The ability to code will become like the ability to write is now: the absolute bottom rung of the ladder to enter society as a participant.
If AI and energy become essentially zero cost then the differentiator will be how clearly you can tell them what you want them to build, and how useful are the things you choose to build. Oh, wait, so no different to coding today. So coding will always be important, and increasing saturation of advanced technology will only make it more so.
If you are assuming, as counter to these points, AI where you can essentially say: make me a FB clone that will make me 1 trillion dollars per year, finish it in 2 hours. As in, you have a Magic Lamp, then, either everyone will have a Magic Lamp, and the differentiator will be your mind, or only those who can afford it will have a Magic Lamp, so the differentiator will be money, equivalently again, your mind. So coding, in the purest sense of giving instructions, will be important.
To put all this another way, when the number of things to which people can give instructions to produce results increases in number then will also increase the number of people who are capable of giving instructions to such things.
But you can control it. Adopt a strategy resilient to big company interference. Don't think of yourself as a fake victim of big companies. There's always things you can do. Have you forgotten the even basic lessons of MS vs IBM, you fucking idiots?
What they're also doing is preparing their markets ( fb, messenger, WhatsApp, oculus, etc ) for future products, like VR chat, VR multiplayer gaming and events ( Fb handsfree - voice controlled VR headset for gaming, social and events ), telepresence androids. Building psychological profiles to guide buying behavior, and adopt products like order clothes, items and food for delivery. Partnering with Amazon for delivery. Working out how to keep order and stability in a big community. Assisting intelligence collection.
The core UX is only one area of innovation. Much happens towards these other ends. In a lot of ways FB is far more future looking than the rest of the Big 5.
Everyone talks about clean code, but where are the real world examples? Javascript, Python, something useful and which inspires that the ideal of clean code is actually possible.
I'm considering the perspective that think clean code is this ideal that can be misused by reviewers to blackball otherwise good code for arbitrary personal reasons.
I know the book Clean Code and I like the ideas in it. I just haven't seen any production examples and I'm considering the idea that talking about clean code is a hand waving way to criticize others contributions without substance.
The story of Snowden being a patsy is going to come out. It will be even more entertaining than the snowdengate tale act 1. But it will probably come out in 20 years.
Fate of your country at risk. And you ask where is the risk for you. What's in it for you. That cowardice is a disease of Western culture these days. Ask not...
Well he was a patsy so pardoning him reduces the risk he will blow true story of the most successful increase in intelligence gathering capacity since WWII... So there's that. Pardon him for sure. And never doubt he's a patriot. But he doesn't believe in openness. He helped usher in a new age of secrecy. I think that's a good thing. I also think people should actually know the real.
Thanks for your compliment. You saying that helps me feel a lot more belief in myself again. I guess I'm perceptive. Montreal is a good place. I considered it as a base for my startup because it's affordable, open minded and has interesting culture. Never been there tho. I wish you a lot of good progress in your investor search. I'm currently looking for one and at a much earlier stage. Again thanks for the comment it lifted my spirits.
Man up and pass on the cost. In some sense in this situation you are a slave to market forces beyond your control. Price gouging once they've built lock in on an API is pretty much a natural part of any service's lifecycle. If you can afford to ride it out, eventually the forces of competition will take over and prices will come down a bit.
From the way you talk about potential partnerships or help with gmaps it seems you really believe in the value of your business. That's an asset. Try to articulate this value more clearly but understand that gmaps is unlikely to just "help you out" or "invest" in you at this stage since: 1) it's not their mandate and 2) they're the incumbent and potentially you are eating a piece of something google wants to do.
At the stage you're at ... 4-5K MRR 25-100K DAU ( I'm guesssing ), and suddenly a slave to a price gouge, an investor can help you out. Definitely try to find one. There's probably a lot for them to like in your situation, not the least part of it being that you're to some extent desperate for their help right now.
I love your non-defeatist attitude. Don't give up. Keep going. You know what you're doing is somehow close to how Airbnb started right?
Or it might becaude we are all just building what it exceeds human capacity to understand.
We're just slaves tilling the earth for the further AI colonists who will actually use the global information system we built in ignorant anticipation of their arrival
1. Timelines. In the future these devices will just be screens. Transparent and flexible. So this is the timeline that leads to that future.
2. Economics. You can ship more devices because they're lighter so the revenue per pound is higher.
3. Sexual selection. The many arbitrary extremes that exist in nature in males function as points of difference with no function but the attraction of mates. Consumer 'mating' with a device functions the same way as sexual selection. Every purchase makes that phenotype more likely to occur in the next generation. Thinner has caught consumers eyes as an effective selective feature.
4. Mastery. People feel satisfied by achieving mastery. Finding ways to squeeze more stuff into less stuff is one way people feel like they're mastering stuff.
lesson 2 --- and seriously. why don't you respond to something else rather than this. even in this comment there are good points beside language. you criticise the language but that is what you respond to and thus emphasize. respond to the things of value to make a useful contribution. ignore what is not your taste unless you wish to emphasize that. you pretend to make a useful contribution by criticising what you find distasteful, but actually you just end up emphasizing what you already assume is useless, instead of making a useful contribution -- thus doing the same thing you pretend to be criticising.