I recently wrote a physics paper that was peer-reviewed and accepted by the International Journal of Quantum Foundations. My aim with the paper was showing that the Born rule, which is the empirically established postulate of quantum mechanics, can be rigorously derived from fundamental relativistic symmetries (Poincaré representations group). This derivation can transform this important quantum postulate into a dynamical universal law necessitated by relativity.
I would highly appreciate your feedback on it.
Disclaimer: Almost 30% of the paper was written using AI for grammatical consistency and collecting/organizing citations and refs.
Hello fellow founders, a new tournament for startups called pioneer has updated it's offer yesterday to give its winners access to up to $1M in funding, a round-trip ticket to Silicon valley + incorporation there, and a one month Startup accelerator program to learn from the best in the silicon valley startup ecosystem. All this in exchange for 10% of the company equity.
If you're building a short term project that doesn't require much work go for a smart and lazy co-founder, he will get the work done robustly as fast as possible. On the other hand If you've got a long term project that requires perseverance your ideal co-founder is an average intelligence hard-working dude, he will work hard for long time since he has low opportunity cost.
If a website didn't require an account initially it should not require it years after it's founded, that's just nonsense and it will drive people away to other alternative websites giving the same service without requiring registration.
It's strange how most schools and universities teach students that "the scientific method" was applied since the 17th century and the majority of scientific discoveries were made in the last 500 years, while it seems, after investigation, that all the major scientific methodologies and discoveries were figured out and used by Greeks and Muslims before even the west was a thing.
It depends on your users need and the service you provide. Usually decentralization is thought of when you want to avoid Single-Points-of-Failure in a network or when you are giving a service that can't work properly without multiple nodes contributing to it.
I was looking for that kind of answers,can you elaborate more, with some practical examples, on the rewards someone can get from "mastering" a pure-functional language?
Julian Assange has offered humanity a lot more than what humanity can offer him at anytime. I wonder why the hell would someone get jailed for revealing the truth.
1. Either we actually have discovered all the fundamental pieces of the puzzle and there is nothing significant we still could work on so we entered the infinite journey of technological optimization. Or,
2. We have missed or misinterpreted some important pieces of the puzzle and we're stagnant until we go back and fix them so we can move forward.
I am a startup founder managing a team of 3 developers and 2 sales persons, I can say from my personal experience that team building and culture are the most important points a new manager can focus on.
1. Team building: you should ensure your team share a vision, are aligned around the same goals, and each one of them is a accountable for one specific subject she/he is good at.
2. Team culture: try to naturally build a cult like culture for your team, by that I mean some kind of special rituals or habits that differentiate you from other teams or groups. This will strengthen the bonds between team members and improve productivity long term.