Jimmy

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Jimmy

Jimmy

@stackoversnow

coding for a living.

Beigetreten Ağustos 2024
132 Folgt39 Follower
Jimmy
Jimmy@stackoversnow·
@levelsio Its not cooking knowledge they are lacking its just that they got too comfortable and lazy
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@levelsio
@levelsio@levelsio·
You'd be surprised how few of the current generation can cook their own food Most people now are completely unable to do so and can only order food from delivery apps Tragic! Luckily AI is here to help
Denis Yurchak@denisyurchak

I used to believe that founders shouldn't cook You should only spend your time working on your business, and cooking is for the poor Eventually I started spending around €2,000 per month just on eating out (see screenshot), and my health declined because of all the unhealthy restaurant food Then I saw the videos of @dobry and tweets of @levelsio and how they cook their meals (and those guys are super successful founders), and something shifted in me I began cooking steaks because it's literally frying the meat, and it's doable in 15 minutes, then started cooking chicken breasts and fish in the oven (takes under 20 minutes) I am a total noob in cooking, so I'm using ChatGPT heavily. I go into the store, take a picture of the main protein I want to cook, and then ask it how to make it tasty and what to buy with it. Then, in the kitchen, I take a picture of all my appliances and ingredients and ask ChatGPT to teach me how to cook this meal with exact proportions and quantities. As a nice add-on, I learned how to serve food properly, keep different ingredients in the fridge so that they last longer, and awesome skills like separating the spine of the fish. Now, I'm spending way less on the food – and I feel less stressed about keeping up the MRR of my startup. Even if it goes to 0, I know how to cook and can live comfortably I have fewer energy spikes and mood swings. I know exactly what my food consists of, and I can control that it's more proteins and less carbohydrates, sugars, and fats. So if you're a founder, don't be ashamed of cooking. You will be healthier, live longer, have more independence, and as a result will build more awesome things!

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Jimmy
Jimmy@stackoversnow·
@levelsio "poor and hates rich" true, but if they rich, they wouldn't do the job, so what would be a solution
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@levelsio
@levelsio@levelsio·
The staff at luxury hotels is generrally overworked, poor and hates your guts because you're rich
blendaddict@blendaddict

@levelsio How are luxury hotels worse except for access to a normal desk you can put your laptop on?

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Jimmy
Jimmy@stackoversnow·
@BenjaminHouy Ah, I'm not primarily self-employed here, and mostly as I was scared of the concept. Stable job + self-employed on the side is doable in germany. The other way is terrible yeah.
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Benjamin Houy
Benjamin Houy@BenjaminHouy·
Sure but German safety nets are not that great if you are a self employed foreigner. I didn't qualify for public healthcare so had to pay 650 euros per month for private. No pension because it's crazy expensive and everyone says the German pension system is unlikely to pay out.. And many countries have equal or better safety nets without all the bureaucracy and downsides.
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Benjamin Houy
Benjamin Houy@BenjaminHouy·
Germany has a word for people who flaunt new money: protzig. Tacky. Showing off. There's no equivalent for inherited wealth, because that's just normal. I spent a year there trying to build something. It's exhausting in a way that's hard to describe — not just the bureaucracy, but the feeling that the whole culture is quietly rooting against you. That wanting more is embarrassing. That ambition is something to be suspicious of. And then I had Germans, multiple times, tell me the bureaucracy is great because it filters out weak people. Not as a complaint. As something to be proud of. Left for Cyprus in January. I miss my friends. The weight lifted the moment we landed.
Nicola Amadio@nic_amadio

Germans: "Germany is a low-tax country". "It's only high tax for labour; BE AN OWNER". Was surprised by the backlash from Germans when I asked on LinkedIn about the appeal of living and working in Germany in 2026. It gave me a glimpse into what @levelsio often mentions when arguing that the biggest issues in EU are due to Germany's influence. Basically: a kind of perverse way of thinking that wants to be blind to the negatives of bureaucracy, and just lacks common sense. This seems to be rooted in arrogance for "how things work in Germany" - "the best country!!". Now, the nonsense I am actually referring to: 1. "Germany is low tax - just be an owner" CIT ~15% (not the best, also not the worst) Super high income taxes and (mid/low ROI) social security contributions, easily over 40% for high earners. 25%+ capital gains. 26% dividend tax. What is low tax about this? And how is it fixed by "being an owner"? Also: everyone earns income and pays dividends, also owners. Also: how disrespectful, elitist and weird way of thinking is to plainly neglect the right to fair taxation to people working jobs (majority of population, including business owners)? 2. The ridiculousness of becoming a bureaucracy's slave as the only path to lower taxes (also, spoiler: it won't become low tax anyway...) So, apparently, the "genius tax hack" of Germans is: - Invest most of your income into German real estate - Leverage your investment paying interests to German banks - Access one of the lowest rental yield and lowest appreciating housing markets in Europe - Your core expertise is in tech, media, finance? It doesn't matter: you need to start mastering German real estate and bureaucracy! - Liquidity? Worthless. Hold the real estate for AT LEAST 10 YEARS, as the only way to avoid insane capital gains taxes. Don't forget the mindset shift: ❌ high bureaucracy ✅ "tons of hacks" 3. "OK, if you want money... Just build a unicorn" Look: if you don't have money and want some, why don't you peak the highest risk, lowest ROI wealth path out there, and grind 10 of your best years to build something that has almost 0 chance to succeed and even if it does is more likely to make someone else wealthy rather EU? Also: don't forget to do it in the worst continent in the world for VC-backed startups. To most people coming from lower/middle class, it's much better having decent chances of getting to 1-10M than having almost no chance of getting to 1B. VC-backed startups are for rich kids and/or brainwashed/passionate kids who don't care about $. 4. The sad truth Is that Germany, as most other countries in Western Europe, is a place ruled by "old money", that gives very little opportunity to young people wanting to build something for themselves. Thing is: majority of people are not rich. And these people don't benefit from operating in a system like Germany. The only ones who benefit are: 3rd worlders and old money. This sad truth makes Germans look even weirder when they try to mask their system and society into moral high grounds' wrapping. Cut the bs. 5. The alternatives Poland is a way better place to build wealth, much more fair, with way less rich old fucks getting in the way of people building from scratch. Everyone is a hustler. Even boomers. Ukraine would've been even better, if it wasn't for Russia and Belarus. UAE and the pace they've attracted capital with (both old and new) is a testament to what works and what doesn't. Even the rotten US does much better than Germany. Paraguay and other Southern Cone alternatives offer a more "wild west" alternative that can be great for those leveraging the internet building online. Cyprus is another EU country offering a top alternative. Switzerland is way more fair and worthwhile than Germany, even if your goal is to build a billion dollar startup. --- Stop German cope.

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Jimmy
Jimmy@stackoversnow·
"Creating new is so unattractive" - I agree, but not to me. I love creating new. Stable jobs are the perfect instrument, to pay the bills and ensure a safety net, for you to grow that business on the side. You can always go back to it if it doesn't work and try again later. As a couple you can make roughly 10k+ MRR in Germany on a 9-5, that's what most Tech Twitter is doing with the apps on a 996. The safety nets that 10k offers in 🇩🇪 are probably worth 30k+ MRR a month. At this point seems pointless to overwork 996 for 10k. So build that business on the side till it reaches 30k+, then use that freedom to request/influence/complain for a change.
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Igor@hansa.chat
[email protected]@igorhansachat·
@stackoversnow @BenjaminHouy That's the thing. Creating new is so unattractive that everyone just prefers to stay with a stable job. Meaning that at some point (basically now) we end up in situations when businesses are closing en masse and there is/will be no replacements
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Jimmy
Jimmy@stackoversnow·
I get you. The way I calm myself on that is that, the 25% of wasted time in unnecessary bureaucracy = 25% I would have to make more in a country with less safety nets. If I lived in Cypress I would think I need to make more to compensate, so to me its almost similar. (except for 🌞) Only place that's an exception to it would maybe be the US where I feel would be much better.
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Benjamin Houy
Benjamin Houy@BenjaminHouy·
I don't know. I have run a business in many countries. France was pretty bad but it didn't feel like the whole system was against me. In the UK, the bureaucracy was pretty hidden and mostly didn't bother me at all. Only in Germany did I feel like I had to spend a good 25% of my time dealing with the bureaucracy. It's honestly not the same everywhere.
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Jimmy
Jimmy@stackoversnow·
@BenjaminHouy @igorhansachat I see. I come from a place where bureaucracy was so bad that the German one, looks not so scary to me. I'm probably used to that. I will try to prove my point that it can be done here as well - or at least be started from here.
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Jimmy
Jimmy@stackoversnow·
@igorhansachat @BenjaminHouy I do agree on both counts. I do hate bureaucracy. But the only pragmatic choice I see now is to grow the business enough and let the growth fight the bureaucracy. If it doesn't grow enough to fight the bureaucracy I'll just settle for the stable job then.
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Igor@hansa.chat
[email protected]@igorhansachat·
@stackoversnow @BenjaminHouy You can't change it for the country but you can decide on what to focus: on growing business or fighting bureaucracy. Germany is a great place to work and rent. Terrible to build any wealth
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Jimmy
Jimmy@stackoversnow·
@igorhansachat @BenjaminHouy no no, more like "its bad, can you change it now? no. stop complaining, make more money (maybe change it later)"
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Jimmy
Jimmy@stackoversnow·
@bryan_johnson let me commit to make some money first chief. I'll join you afterwards
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Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
Join me for a social media fast. Start: Friday sundown End: Sunday morning It will stabilize your mind, improve sleep, calm your nervous system and restore sobriety. Like to commit.
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Jimmy
Jimmy@stackoversnow·
@brian_armstrong pretty sure your hr department things otherwise
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Brian Armstrong
Brian Armstrong@brian_armstrong·
Some of our best hires were totally unqualified on paper. They always had the same qualities: entrepreneurial, high agency, smart, mission aligned, and they got shit done. If you’re hiring, especially in early stages, seek out & bet on these people. Don’t over-index on resumes.
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Jimmy
Jimmy@stackoversnow·
How reliable is the sync with bg tasks ? I tried doing it before this and it was a mess, background tasks work but they were no guarantee it would actually update the app state from lock screen - i assume iOS limitation. Push notifications might work but they too expensive. I read a blog from Uber about their LiveActivities. They do use push notifications though, and they don’t have actions on it, I assume its hard to implement reliably uber.com/en-DE/blog/liv…
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phil 🫠
phil 🫠@_philpl·
@stackoversnow @expo yep, widgets/live activities are functions that describe Swift UI views and can be updated via props from the app, a background-task, or push notifications. button presses can also feed back into the app
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Expo
Expo@expo·
The 𝚎𝚡𝚙𝚘-𝚠𝚒𝚍𝚐𝚎𝚝𝚜 alpha is here! Now you can build iOS home screen widgets and Live Activities as React components. No separate Xcode target. No manual App Groups. No SwiftUI layout code. Write your widget in @expo/ui, and Continuous Native Generation handles the rest. ◆ Interactive buttons and toggles on the home screen ◆ Live Activities for the Lock Screen and Dynamic Island ◆ One React component, native rendering under the hood Details and code to get started in the blog below ↓
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Jimmy
Jimmy@stackoversnow·
@levelsio Has demand for these kind of things increased in the past 6 months or not. I don’t see this topic catching up much
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Marc Randolph
Marc Randolph@marcrandolph·
Just curious. Once you bookmark something, how often do you go back and look at it? My retrieval percentage is in the low single digits. Wondering if I’m an outlier - or if bookmarking is simply aspirational for all of us.
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Jimmy
Jimmy@stackoversnow·
@claudeai you could already do this with a prompt and its no different.
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Claude
Claude@claudeai·
Introducing Claude Code Security, now in limited research preview. It scans codebases for vulnerabilities and suggests targeted software patches for human review, allowing teams to find and fix issues that traditional tools often miss. Learn more: anthropic.com/news/claude-co…
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Jimmy
Jimmy@stackoversnow·
@marcrandolph Probably the most down to earth human ceo on my feed recently. Emphasis on human.
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Marc Randolph
Marc Randolph@marcrandolph·
I’ve worked hard, for my entire career, to keep my life balanced with my job. In my book, I write about my Tuesday date nights with my wife. For over thirty years, I had a hard cut-off on Tuesdays. Rain or shine, I left at exactly 5 pm and spent the evening with my best friend. We would go to a movie, have dinner, or just go window-shopping downtown together. Nothing got in the way of that. No meeting, no conference call, no last-minute question or request. If you had something to say to me on Tuesday afternoon at 4:55, you had better say it on the way to the parking lot. If there was a crisis, we are going to wrap it up by 5:00. Those Tuesday nights kept me sane. And they put the rest of my work in perspective.I resolved a long time ago to not be one of those entrepreneurs on their 7th startup and their 7th wife. In fact, the thing I'm most proud of in my life is not the companies I started, it’s the fact that I was able to start them while staying married to the same woman; having my kids grow up knowing me and (best as I can tell) liking me, and being able to spend time pursuing the other passions in my life. That’s my definition of success.
Marc Randolph tweet media
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Jimmy
Jimmy@stackoversnow·
@_lhermann @steipete @OpenAI The questions really disappointing, but talking about what he built would have been fun for us tech twitter (minority) and boring for the average TV audience (majority)
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Lukas Hermann
Lukas Hermann@_lhermann·
OpenClaw inventor @steipete (now joining @OpenAI) is interviewed on Austrian TV. The questions are super one-sided. Here's an excerpt: - Who's liable when AI makes a wrong decision? - Aren't you afraid it will do things you can't control? - What happens to jobs? ...
Lukas Hermann tweet media
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