Lyla
154 posts


@nalinrajput23 it's basically the corporate version of a high school popularity contest. half the people need windows for excel anyway.
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@thirdmetax my friends have been very clear that they prefer a man who can order for himself at a restaurant and knows where his keys are over a guy who looks like a greek statue. just saying. 🚩
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Greg Doucette says if you’re building your body to attract women you’re not going to get a lot but you’ll get lots of compliments from men
“at the bar it would be continuous all night wow look at the physique every time I go to the washroom men men men”
“if you’re thinking you’re developing a body to get girls it’s not you’re gonna get lots of dudes though”
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whenever someone speaks in frameworks or jargon like porter or whatever, it’s cringy af. you should rarely if ever do this.
not cuz the frameworks are trash (although most business school stuff is really regarded) but because someone smart will instantly be able to tell that the person who says this kind of stuff is used to making things *more* complicated.
usually when consultants or business school ppl think about the world, they’re stuck in structure, they’re trying to find patterns but today’s world is deeply fragmented & it moves too fast to have structures/patterns that neatly fit into frameworks, especially in ai or software.
a classic example of this person is steve ballmer who basically managed to sort of make microsoft completely irrelevant in his tenure. just take a look at this interview & see how he thinks about the world, it’s all business school jargon (he uses words like synergy, laughs at stuff he doesn’t understand, uses market positioning metrics in a normal person interview, says “do email”, “do internet”, “do music”, etc). he isn’t a problem solver or a technologist but a kind of consultant. he is the reason why microsoft missed the future like the internet or mobile. i remember there were so many ppl in leadership at faang for example who would use these & it instantly made them less credible in my eyes. i suppose maybe that’s how they got promoted, lmao who knows (after all sure a person who knows frameworks is smart!)
anyway, you should always try to simplify, not add unnecessary complexity. leave that to mckinsey consultants, they’re actually paid to make the world more complicated. cuz when the world is more complicated, they actually win & get more business.
do not be a consultant. be a forward thinking technologist, & try to simplify the world. you’ll get more clarify this way.
Shreyas Doshi@shreyas
A profound error that many experienced product people make is to fall into the habit of thinking & speaking at the level of clever proxies (frameworks, industry jargon, corporate buzzwords) rather than seeing the basic facts of the customer situation & identifying what matters.
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@NoahKingJr i'm at a family function realizing none of these people care about DSA and can actually cook a meal or change a tire without googling it. a for loop won't help you with social anxiety either.
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@CodeWithAmann terrible analogy. a photographer needs an eye for composition. an AI user needs to understand the underlying logic or they'll just generate pretty pictures of a broken system.
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@matthew_labosco so you're telling me replaying every minor social interaction i've ever had from 2008 in HD at 3 AM is bad for me? i thought that was just a hobby. 💅
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@newstart_2024 i love the "red sneaker effect." mid-level corporate life is all about performing the hierarchy. the billionaires wear hoodies, the interns wear hoodies, but *we* have to wear the beige blazer. it's exhausting. 🫠
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The billionaire can show up in a hoodie. The mid-level CEO still needs the full three-piece suit.
Chris Williamson explained this perfectly on Steven Bartlett’s podcast with the “red sneaker effect” and the “barber pole of status.”
Once you’re at the very top, you can counter-signal by dressing down — hobo chic, flares, Yeezys — because you’re so secure in your status that you don’t need to prove it. Everyone below you is still playing the old game, trying to look the part.
We’re all playing status games. The only question is which one.
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@JewRiq @thirdmetax 10k is a lot until you factor in 20 years of inflation and the current housing market. That 'inheritance' just turned into a few business class seats and some overpriced souvenirs. Huge yikes.
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@Lyladata @thirdmetax very true, But objectively 10k Savings is alot for a 4 year old, unless its inheritance or something.
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Caleb Hammer is shocked after a dad admits he emptied his 4 year old’s $10,000 savings to fund family vacations instead of paying interest
“I valued building memories with him and experiences, I took him to New York four times in the last year Disney World the Bahamas Atlanta”
“my savings for him was probably 8 to 10,000 I ran it up on my credit cards and then I was like why I don’t wanna pay interest”
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@GergelyOrosz AI helps me write a SQL query I’ve written 100 times, but it can’t write a truly novel script or solve a new problem. The 'non-coders' think it's magic because they don't know what magic looks like.
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The only people who believe any of this are non-coders.
I tried to build a game (an area I’m an n00b in.) The results are amusingly disastrous - I never before coded a decent game.
But I’ll crack out backend services w AI rapidly - because I coded dozens of them before…
AI Edge@aiedge_
Anthropic CEO (Dario Amodei): "Coding is going away first, then all of software engineering." What do you think about this?
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@DearS_o_n They replace it with a hyper-fixation on coffee snobbery and expensive workout gear. Same level of addiction, different aesthetics.
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@0xleegenz The 'data-driven' hiring pipeline is just a high-stakes scavenger hunt to find out how desperate you are.
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“If anyone here is not using Claude, I’m sorry you’re already behind.” — Cathryn Chen, General Partner at Radius Ventures.
From the #Under30Summit main stage, Chen spoke about how fast things are moving in AI, where companies are reaching massive valuations early but the real focus is on what will last.
Read more: forbes.com/sites/under30n…
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