Looking for some feedback on this idea I'm working on. How did you decide where to go to college/get a master's? How did you choose your major?
Have a look at what I have so far: https://t.co/rcZoX3rqGw
I just answered today's machine learning question on @0xbnomial!
"Scheduled learning"
So far, people have answered with 76% accuracy.
Give it a try here: https://t.co/UQL9N2ZSnj
Apparently, the word dashboard was originally used to describe a wood board on horse carriages that kept the mud that was "dashed up" by the horse, out of the carriage. Cars inherited the term which I like better than "instrument panel".
"Preference Falsification is the act of communicating a preference that differs from one's true preference. The public frequently [lies], especially to researchers or pollsters, because they believe the conveyed preference is more acceptable socially."
Read this thread and then go give https://t.co/bxBpXu8pQz a spin. I agree it's better to focus on income over spending, but I have found most people gain very valuable insights after realizing how much they really spend a year!
I was at Amzn in 2000 when the internet bubble popped. Capital markets dried up & we were burning $1B/yr. Our biggest expense was datacenter -> expensive Sun servers. We spent a year ripping out Sun & replacing with HP/Linux, which formed the foundation for AWS. The backstory:
En el día a día tanto de las personas como de los emprendimientos y compañías existen diversos costos que no solemos intuir desde el principio, mucho menos reflejar en la contabilidad.
📝Costos ocultos en el emprendimiento y el día a día | Por @ndrsp
https://t.co/d5dQoZIP7w
@rexsalisbury If you don't now how much money you spend a year, it's hard to be prepared for retirement. This is part of what we are building: https://t.co/bxBpXu8pQz