Finding Andrew Huberman was crucial for my self-improvement journey.
I binged HOURS of his content and applied many of his tips to my life.
Here are the top 10 habits I learned from Dr. Huberman:
Software engineering: 50% understanding requirements, 40% complexity management, 9% debugging, 1% solving "interesting" algorithmic problems.
You'll enjoy software engineering a whole lot more if you instead think of the first 99% as the interesting part.
BREAKING: simultaneous freakish heat in the Arctic and Antarctic described as 'impossible' and 'unthinkable' by scientists as abrupt climate change accelerates wildly 🧵
A good example of the human brain using prior knowledge & mental models to fill in gaps of a low-res, noisy sensory input. This works well most times, but can fail on occasion. Useful to think about for AI development and for spread of misinformation on the internet.
Staying Sane While Working Remotely
I've been working remotely for over a decade and these are some of the lessons I've learned and I hope they help you.
https://t.co/o7mBpSLbFl
Still processing this feeling. To all of India and beyond, thank you so much for your support and blessings that have helped me reach this stage.
This moment will live with me forever 🙏🏽🇮🇳
Somewhere along the way, social media went seriously wrong.
• What we post is rarely who we are.
• What we see isn't from people we know.
• What we talk about online isn't what we talk about in private.
Where can we be ourselves?
🧵👇
I studied groups that have made outstanding technological achievements. What they have in common:
Curiosity, a big vision, an initial attack vector, a way to measure progress, people oriented towards rapid advancement, and a relentless focus on the few things that matter.