Advertising

You are the product, 2

Advertising isn’t just the disruption of aesthetics, the insults to your intelligence and the interruption of your train of thought. …

When people ask us why we charge for WhatsApp, we say “Have you considered the alternative?”

— WhatsApp Blog

2013.04.13 Saturday ACHK

Indie game, 3

“Publishers might be a necessary thing,” he said. “but it’s inevitable that they will shift the focus from games being made by people who want to make good games to people who want to make money.”

In Persson’s view, this benefits players more than anybody: “The more studios that can remove themselves from the publisher system, the more games that will be made out of love rather than for profit.”

— The Creator

— Simon Parkin

— The New Yorker

2013.04.11 Thursday ACHK

Referrals

Referrals tend to be a really fantastic way to bring people in and should be the first place you go. If you leverage each of your first ten hires’ networks, chances are you’ll meet some excellent candidates. When done right, internal and external referrals can scale your company pretty efficiently. Sit down and get your engineers to physically list out the best and smartest people they’ve ever worked with and then go after them with crazy intensity. As an added bonus, referral candidates might be easier to close because a friend’s recommendation goes a long way.

— How Stripe built one of Silicon Valley’s best engineering teams

— Jack Leidlein

2013.04.07 Sunday ACHK

The Metagame

I’ve been bored at work for many reasons at many different times, but three things stand out as real killers:

1. working on the same project with the same people for years and years,
  

These are the symptoms of a problem, not the cause, and I think most jobs will have elements of them. But surprisingly it turns out that – for programmers at least – boredom is a choice. Recently, I chose not to be bored. I chose to think one abstraction level higher. I chose to play the metagame.

— Work Is Fascinating: The Metagame

— Mark O’Connor

2013.03.28 Thursday ACHK

Posthaven

Live forever! 2

In the long term, we’re still focused on becoming the place for people to post forever — a stable platform that will operate without worries of the site, team, or mission disappearing. We’re exploring options around becoming a non-profit entity to support the goal of data preservation, which is very different from other sites which are as a rule for-profit entities. With the death of Google Reader, we think that it’s increasingly clear that certain types of social software need to be outside the auspices of entities pursuing pure profit motive at the expense of its users.

— Garry Tan

2013.03.26 Tuesday ACHK

Hacker 3

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The Jargon File has had a special role in acculturating hackers since its origins in the early 1970s. Many textbooks and some literary works shaped the academic hacker subculture; among the most influential are:

* Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution, by Steven Levy
* Godel, Escher, Bach, by Douglas Hofstadter
* The Art of Computer Programming (TAOCP), by Donald Knuth
* The Mythical Man-Month, by Brooks
* Compilers: Principles, Techniques, and Tools (“the Dragon Book”), by Aho, Sethi, and Ullman
* Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs (SICP), by Abelson and Sussman
* The C Programming Language (K&R), by Kernighan and Ritchie
* The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, by Douglas Adams
* The Tao of Programming, by Geoffrey James
* The Illuminatus! Trilogy, by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson
* Principia Discordia, by Greg Hill and Kerry Thornley
* The Soul of a New Machine, by Tracy Kidder
* The Cuckoo’s Egg, by Cliff Stoll
* The Unix System, by Stephen R. Bourne
* Hackers & Painters, by Paul Graham
* The Cathedral and the Bazaar, by Eric S. Raymond
* The essays of Richard M. Stallman (many published in Free Software, Free Society: Select Essays of Richard M. Stallman)

– Wikipedia on Hacker (programmer subculture)

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[10] “Hacker” here means a highly skilled programmer, not a computer criminal. — Me

The basic difference is this: hackers build things, crackers break them. — Eric S. Raymond

In academia, a “hacker” is a person who follows a spirit of playful cleverness and enjoys programming.

– Wikipedia on Hacker (academia)

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2010.03.04 Thursday ACHK

Hardware and Software, 2

Live forever!

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He attributes his lifelong habit of writing every day to an incident in 1932 when a carnival entertainer, Mr. Electrico, touched him on the nose with an electrified sword, made his hair stand on end, and shouted, “Live forever!” It was from then that Bradbury wanted to live forever and decided his career as an author in order to do what he was told: live forever.

– Wikipedia on Ray Bradbury

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2010.03.23 Tuesday ACHK

The Top Idea in Your Mind

事業愛情觀 4

I realized recently that what one thinks about in the shower in the morning is more important than I’d thought. I knew it was a good time to have ideas. Now I’d go further: now I’d say it’s hard to do a really good job on anything you don’t think about in the shower.

Everyone who’s worked on difficult problems is probably familiar with the phenomenon of working hard to figure something out, failing, and then suddenly seeing the answer a bit later while doing something else. There’s a kind of thinking you do without trying to. I’m increasingly convinced this type of thinking is not merely helpful in solving hard problems, but necessary. The tricky part is, you can only control it indirectly.

I think most people have one top idea in their mind at any given time. That’s the idea their thoughts will drift toward when they’re allowed to drift freely. And this idea will thus tend to get all the benefit of that type of thinking, while others are starved of it. Which means it’s a disaster to let the wrong idea become the top one in your mind.

What made this clear to me was having an idea I didn’t want as the top one in my mind for two long stretches.

I’d noticed startups got way less done when they started raising money, but it was not till we ourselves raised money that I understood why. The problem is not the actual time it takes to meet with investors. The problem is that once you start raising money, raising money becomes the top idea in your mind. That becomes what you think about when you take a shower in the morning. And that means other questions aren’t.

I’d hated raising money when I was running Viaweb, but I’d forgotten why I hated it so much. When we raised money for Y Combinator, I remembered. Money matters are particularly likely to become the top idea in your mind. The reason is that they have to be. It’s hard to get money. It’s not the sort of thing that happens by default. It’s not going to happen unless you let it become the thing you think about in the shower. And then you’ll make little progress on anything else you’d rather be working on.

— The Top Idea in Your Mind

— July 2010

— Paul Graham

2013.03.07 Thursday ACHK

Emacs, 2

Nice to see Emacs getting a bit of press recently. I’ve used it for almost 20 years now and it dominates my time at the keyboard. It isn’t perfect and I’m reluctant to recommend it but I wouldn’t want to be without it. Let me explain.

The best thing about Emacs is that it can do everything (including the things it can’t do yet). The worst thing about Emacs is finding out how it does anything. I wouldn’t call it discoverable. In fact, on several occasions, I’ve learned about Emacs by accident: you press the wrong key combination (easy to do when you’re holding down a couple of keys and stretching for a third) and, look, something interesting happens!

— Accidental Emacs

— 2008-05-06 

— Thomas Guest

2013.03.04 Monday ACHK

Overprolific Alpha Geeks

Everyone, including Alpha Geeks, use only one app:

People complain about how their work wants them to use organizers…

Joel Splosky uses Excel for everything.

HR person sends website designs in PPT.

Don Lancaster sees the world in Postscript.

— Running notes from

Life Hacks: Tech Secrets of Overprolific Alpha Geeks

— Danny O’Brien

— 11 February, 2004

— by Cory Doctorow

2013.03.03 Sunday ACHK

Backward compatibility, 5

To enjoy the past without limiting your life progress, install the past as virtual machines in the present. 

— Me@2013-02-24 2:50 am

The attraction of virtualizing older operating systems is that it throws off the eternal yoke of backwards compatibility. Instead of bending over backwards to make sure you never break any old APIs, you can build new systems free of the contortions and compromises inherent in guaranteeing that new versions of the operating system never break old applications.

— Has The Virtualization Future Arrived?

— April 26, 2009

— Coding Horror

— by Jeff Atwood

You cannot start a new chapter of your life if you keep re-reading the last one.

The past is a good place to visit but a bad place to stay.

2013.03.01 Friday (c) All rights reserved by ACHK

Hiring

We rely on the Lake Wobegon Strategy, which says only hire candidates who are above the mean of your current employees.

— Hiring: The Lake Wobegon Strategy

— Peter Norvig, Director, Google Research

— 12th March 2006

 

2013.02.25 Monday ACHK

Anger 4

gbog 15 hours ago | link

“Brilliant marketing play”

Maybe, but where the idealism gone? Both on HN, in tech circles, and, yes, at Google, there was some healthy dose of idealism. You know, this thing that make people do thing for something else than money, for the better good of humanity for example.

Idealism (and anger) brought us Linux, Vim, the Web, etc.

— Google has killed Android (the brand)

— Hacker News

2013.02.22 Friday ACHK

The 6th Day

Copy Me, 7

The 6th Day is a 2000 American science fiction action thriller film directed by Roger Spottiswoode, starring Arnold Schwarzenegger as family man Adam Gibson, who is cloned without his knowledge or consent in the future of 2015.

— Wikipedia on The 6th Day

This movie has helped me to understand that identity is memory and memory is software.

— Me@2013-02-14 10:55:47 AM

2013.02.14 Thursday (c) All rights reserved by ACHK