alex

2.8K posts

alex

alex

@HeAlexRo

Katılım Mart 2016
103 Takip Edilen121 Takipçiler
alex retweetledi
Neet
Neet@neet_sol·
New concept: reverse retirement do whatever I want until 60, then get a shitty desk job for the rest of my life
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teo
teo@teodorio·
Bangkok is a city I spend 3-4 weeks in every year at arguably one of the best hotels in the world (Park Hyatt Bangkok) and it costs around 400 usd per night. A tasting course at one of the best restaurants in the world (Gaa) is 250 USD per person. The price/quality ratio is unbeatable anywhere else.
Anatoly Karlin 🧲💯@akarlin

I have been in Bangkok for a week now. Doing touristy things aren't a priority, because I plan to be here and in SEA broadly for a long haul. I am mostly focused on just observing and vibing with the place, so here are my impressions so far. * Thailand, and SEA broadly, likely have the best price to quality ratio on the planet. This is the primary reason why I decided to relocate here. In Bangkok, you have a relatively clean, well-functioning, and low crime megapolis with near Third World prices for rent and food. - Street food - healthy, delicious, and optionally spicy - costs nothing by developed world standards. That chicken and rice dish with broth on the side in the photo below? $1.85 (60 baht). A dozen prawn shumai for like 100 baht. Three small satay skewers for $1 (30 baht). - The 7-11s stock those Japanese crustless egg sandwiches for $0.75 or 27 baht (I like them a lot, bread crusts are a federal psyop). Incidentally, these 7-11s are everywhere, they are like the Zabkas in Poland, there's apparently more of them in Thailand than anywhere else outside Japan. Cappuccinos can range from $1 to $3.5. The cheapest (drinkable) cappuccino I know of in SF is at the Capital One cafe for $2.87 and that's if you have their card. Singha 0.5l beer can is $1.7 (55 baht) and they have some nice local IPAs which are only modestly more expensive. - Obviously, there are more upscale places. Sit down indoor restaurants are pricier. Still, I had a blue crab curry for 620 baht at a relatively upscale restaurant. - Not that I care about this, I am mostly just interested in the food itself. But the quality of service at restaurants is way above anything you see in the US and Europe. (The US itself having plummeted to European levels over the past decade). At least for foreigners life is frictionless, much lower risk of career ending cortisol spikes. - Very nice Airbnb condos in serviced highrises with rooftop pool and gym for $1200/month. (I understand these can go as low as $800/month if on a yearly lease... I will look more into this in a few months). I can live in comfort here for prices I was paying for rooms in crowded group houses (in between occasionally bumming around offices) in SF. - You can get a 5 star hotel room for as low as $120-150/day. (This is budget inn tier in the US). - Cuisines. The cheapest food is (obviously) Thai, Chinese, and (surprisingly?) Japanese, if we're talking of street food and basic holes in the wall. Indian food is (surprisingly?) quite a lot more expensive. I guess it never really caught on with the locals so it caters to Indian expats and tourists. Thanks to the expat population, European staples are very easily available, if modestly more expensive than the local cuisines. This changes when some cuisine pretty much exclusively caters to expats (e.g. Mexican), as well as steakhouses. These are one of the rare categories that are more expensive than in the US. * You get a two months visa on arrival, which can be extended to three months. However, the real draw is the DTV (Destination Thailand Visa), which gives you pseudo-residency rights for 5 years, the only requirement being to cross the border once every 6 months. To qualify, you need to maintain $15,000+ in your checking or savings account for >3 months, as well as to satisfy one of the following conditions: (a) Be a freelancer or content creator with a portfolio that you can present as proof; (b) Have a remote job; (c) Learning or promoting Thai culture, such as attending Muay Thai or Thai language classes. This seems relatively easy for anyone in the First World with some minimal degree of agency to satisfy, and the DTV strikes me as OP relative to other such nomad visas such as the ones in Portugal and Mexico. Standard practice is to go to Vietnam and apply for the DTV from there, and that's what I intend to do in a couple months' time. * There is a large Chinese minority, about 10% of the population. The Thai Chinese, unlike Malaysian Chinese, are integrated into Thai society, and as in the rest of SEA, own some ridiculous proportion of the economy. Unsurprisingly they seem to be overrepresented in central Bangkok. * Bangkok is a massive expat hub. There are plenty of Americans and Russians (I heard close to 100k), many Europeans, large numbers of recently arrived Indians (goes to show that this Indian wave is truly global), and a lot of mainland Chinese and Japanese (who are less visually noticeable for obvious reasons but are similar to Russians, Americans, and Indians numbers wise). I would estimate 5% of the population are expats in the central areas, and I assume similar percentages in the resort cities. While many of these expats are probably not exactly "Elite Human Capital" types (basically various kinds of "content creators" and people who claim they are "building" things on their Macs and are "into crypto" which tbf describes myself to a good degree as well) I do think they're a notch or three above the Dubai set. * Unsurprisingly, crime appears to be very low. Funnily enough, a young Arab man pretending to be from Dubai did try to scam me by requesting to take a look at my Thai banknotes (this is the so-called "Dubai family" scam where they discretely pocket some of those notes if you're foolish enough to give it to them). I am quite skeptical by nature and very alert to scams so it was never likely to work on me, but I suppose they must catch some fish from time to time if there are actual immigrant gangs who specialize in this in Bangkok. The other slightly unpleasant experience was with a boorish and I suspect mentally ill Russian man who loudly pestered me and other randoms with strange conversational approaches. So 2 negative encounters, both with foreigners, but nonetheless a refreshing change from America's street-shitting hobos and problematic groups that are impolitic to mention. * Nobody is going to write home about the architecture. Bangkok is not a beautiful city. There's only one and a half proper parks in the center. But on the plus side, housing policy is full YIMBY and rent is extremely cheap. You can get a cheap studio in the suburbs for less than a trailer park spot in the US. Public transport infrastructure is good, though it is way too car centric and hot/humid to be comfortably walkable. I can easily do 25,000+ steps a day in SF or other temperate cities, but here I am knackered after 10,000. Perhaps that will change as I get acclimatized to the tropical hothouse, but nonetheless, so far as I personally am concerned, the climate is the single biggest negative. I am not a fan of the tropics. YMMV. * Surprisingly few Thais speak English (big contrast from Morocco, a curious nation of polyglots). Younger people, and employees at more exclusive restaurants and hotels, do speak English, but real fluency is otherwise quite rare. (I can only imagine what it is like in the small towns and rural areas outside Bangkok, Chiang Mai, and the coastal resorts). If I end up staying here, I will probably have to brute force learn some basic Thai, if only to make everyday interactions less awkward. Most Thai Chinese do not know Chinese (unlike Malaysian Chinese). This is probably good for Thailand, as its society is not ethnically fissured like Malaysia's as a result, but it is less convenient for me personally as I know some basic Chinese. * Another unsurprising observation, Thais are placid and quite orderly. They understand queueing. Polite (they call their country the "land of smiles"). Very clean relative to its GDP per capita - more so than the Balkans or Turkey; way more so than Morocco. (I hear they differ a lot from Vietnamese). The streets are often gridlocked, but drivers are not aggressive. Crossing the street is reasonably safe and stop signs and lights are respected. Very different from Arab countries where they are a suggestion at best (I lived some time in Casablanca). * Many establishments advertise themselves as LGBT friendly. (Thailand was the 3rd country in Asia after Taiwan and Nepal to legalize gay marriage). I saw color coded recycling bins for different kinds of rubbish. Quite curious and endearing to see an $8000 GDPpc country aspire to $40,000+ GDPpc cultural practices. Overall, a very curious mix of First World (boutique establishments; SAPL/SWPL culture; the gay stuff), Second World (solid infrastructure; nationalism and lese-majeste laws; 0.8 children per woman TFR), and Third World (ubiquitous street food; cash heavy economy) attributes "with Asian characteristics" (malls as centers of community life; love of cold sugary drinks; animal cafes). * Thailand vs. Vietnam? So far as I'm concerned these are your core two options in SEA. Cambodia is too poor and outright Third World. Laos and Myanmar? LOL, gl. Malaysia perhaps okay for conservative family types, excellent infrastructure, KL is even marginally cheaper than Bangkok despite Malaysia being quite a lot richer ($14k GDPpc), but ultimately, it's a pretty rigid Muslim society that most Westerners will have trouble adapting to. It's more conservative than Turkey, and I suspect even Morocco. I am mostly only interested in visiting it to see Balaji's Network School. (Why is Thailand poorer than Malaysia? I have some extensive thoughts on this, but this post is too long already. May revisit at the blog.). So returning to Thailand vs. Vietnam. Thailand is richer ($8k vs. $5k GDPpc); infrastructure is more developed - Bangkok has an extensive light rail system, while Saigon is just beginning to construct its equivalent; digital nomad infrastructure is way more developed; Thais are reputed to be more orderly, quieter, and cleanlier. Vietnam is considerably cheaper - I suspect it's the cheapest country anywhere that is not blatantly "Third World"-coded - and Da Nang in particular appears to be what Bali was 15 years ago (though it has been "discovered" by influencers in the past 2 years). Worse, in Vietnam, you are still dependent on the vagaries of immigration control tolerating your visa runs, whereas the Thai DTV has made digital nomadism safe and predictable. Personally, I don't think the cost savings in Vietnam relative to Thailand (Thailand being very cheap anyway relative to Western baselines) are worth the extra hassle of Vietnam's more visible "Third Worldish" vibes, undefined legal regime for digital nomads, and lesser political freedoms (it being an actual Communist state). Nonetheless, I will likely be in Vietnam this May, which will give me an opportunity to refine these thoughts. * Obviously, there is no comparison between Bangkok and SF, or other major world cities like NYC, London, even Berlin, for "Elite Human Capital" concentrations. Tokyo overshadows it in East Asia. OTOH, a question that some may consider asking themselves - how often and frequently do you NEED to commune with EHC? We live in an age of extremely cheap, almost free, air travel. US - SEA return flights can be found for as little as $700 (and potentially much lower if you invest some time into researching how to stack credit card benefits). But even $700 is the monthly rent differential between a very nice high-rise condo in Bangkok and a cramped group house in SF! Obviously, this doesn't apply to startup founders and the like who actually have to constantly network with VCs and researchers and lawyers and so forth (or very wealthy people, or people whose jobs require physical presence). However, if you're at the level of personal wealth where staying in group houses is advisable in SF, but would likewise having appreciate having your own apartment and time-saving amenities in order to be more productive - again, cooked food, cleaning, taxis, transport, clubbing, weekend getaways to other cheap SEA and East Asian destinations - are all massively cheaper than where you live, then SEA is wildly competitive. This is ultimately the main reason why I moved here, even though I expect to fly back to SF 1-2x a year since I am still involved with various events and organizations there. Only time will tell whether this will be sustainable, or a failed experiment.

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Googly 👀
Googly 👀@0xG00gly·
Trump going from Venezuela to Iran is basically like me trading. Venezuela? Perfect setup, worked but I sized too small. Next trade? I am euphoric, I go 10x size on a shitty setup: Iran. It goes wrong. But I am trapped, keep adding size and blame the market for being wrong.
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Peter Teal
Peter Teal@RealPeterTeal·
@Outdoctrination @levelsio Numbers for women are even more shocking tbh What do you mean I was already to the left of median at a little over 30%
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alex
alex@HeAlexRo·
@lucasjamesjohns @gregogallagher I hated how they always showed him partying and drinking beer like cmon you re not doing that if you wanna have THAT body
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Lucas
Lucas@lucasjamesjohns·
@gregogallagher On the flip side, Zac Effron in Neighbors was effortlessly cool
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Greg O'Gallagher
Greg O'Gallagher@gregogallagher·
Why was Brad Pitts Physique in Fight Club so effortlessly cool. Same with Christian Bale in American Psycho Same with Craig in Casino Royale But Zac Efron in Bay Watch seemed just like some forced fitness display. Prob because he was on multiple compounds. Using diuretics. Starving on zero carbs to his own admission. It just felt forced and try hard. Not rogue cool effortless. Do u see the difference
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Custom Wetware
Custom Wetware@CustomWetware·
@Jordan_W_Taylor Can't he just donate it to a charity in Bratislava so they can build a hotel or something?
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Jordan Taylor
Jordan Taylor@Jordan_W_Taylor·
And the prize for "most German thing ever" goes to the supplier I'm trying to pay a quarter of a million, and who is refusing to accept it because the payment sum is 12 cents too high.
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Dean Turner
Dean Turner@DeanTTraining·
@ImJosefRakich His workout plan was garbage by modern day standards Understanding evolves over time
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Dean Turner
Dean Turner@DeanTTraining·
“I do 2…MAYBE 3 sets” — Nick Walker One day you guys will realize this: 2 sets is the answer MOST of the time 3 sets is the answer SOME of the time 1 set is OCCASIONALLY the answer 4+ sets is almost NEVER the answer (Talking sets of a single exercise in a single session)
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MR. OBVIOUS
MR. OBVIOUS@ObviousRises·
This Martha Stewart interview is such a great example of how women rewrite reality in their own heads, she calls her husband a piece of shit for cheating but then the interviewer reveals it was she who cheated first (he only started after he found out), her reaction is telling.
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alex
alex@HeAlexRo·
@scfilipowski @visionergeo they know it and they dont care, mothers in russia are actually so brainwashed that they feel honoured when their sons die in battlefield
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Steven Filipowski
Steven Filipowski@scfilipowski·
@visionergeo More cannon fodder. It may soon dawn on the Russian people that their sons, nephews, and neighbors go into service and never return.
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Visioner
Visioner@visionergeo·
‼️🇷🇺 BIG NEWS | The reason why Putin restricted Russians' access to Telegram has become known (and it will be completely shut down from April 1) —- Russian military bloggers and Telegram channels are spreading information that due to critical needs on the Ukrainian fronts, Putin is preparing to announce a large military mobilization - a forced conscription. Therefore, he wants to avoid public dissatisfaction and possible protests as much as possible, which could be coordinated precisely through the TELEGRAM platform. Against this background, an interesting article was published today in the NEW York Times — Kremlin officials told the publication that Putin is ready to fight for up to 2 more years because the Russian dictator is confident in his success and is prepared to continue the war for another 2 years to gain full control over the Donetsk region. 🔹 Given that the Russians are already spending more annual manpower on the Ukrainian fronts due to catastrophic losses than the monthly or yearly number of voluntary contracts, it is logical and probably the Kremlin's only solution to continue the war for another 2 years and, in their view, to occupy Donbas, is precisely to increase the flow of soldiers through mobilization and to fully staff the thinned-out units or brigades with live forces. Follow, repost, like, and comment on the posts at @visionergeo.
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alex retweetledi
NEET CHUD
NEET CHUD@NeetChud888·
be immune to AI
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cigaro solis
cigaro solis@cigarosolis·
@SSavson Healthiest looking people don’t shop at grocery stores
cigaro solis tweet mediacigaro solis tweet mediacigaro solis tweet mediacigaro solis tweet media
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Sam Savson
Sam Savson@SSavson·
Healthiest looking people at the grocery store always got insane amounts of fruit and yogurt in the cart
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alex
alex@HeAlexRo·
last 1:15 of excavator slaps so fuxking hard
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alex
alex@HeAlexRo·
today I tasted what it feels like to be free for 2 hours, thanks kh
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Nike
Nike@Nike·
With a career Grand Slam at just 22 years old, @carlosalcaraz has everyone looking forward to what he does next. Except his opponents.
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alex
alex@HeAlexRo·
I was hacked obviously
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alex
alex@HeAlexRo·
I hate it when I am by myself
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alex
alex@HeAlexRo·
Hurry up tomorrow but skip open hearts
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alex
alex@HeAlexRo·
times get hard with heart like this
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Oliver
Oliver@0xOliverX·
Since my post yesterday $Fish has crashed more than 35% I had the $FISH community come after me because of my post saying I wouldn't touch it because Marcell was in it This is why I wasn't gonna touch it, and I still wouldn't touch it until every one of his side wallets owns 0 Cancer to this space Anyway, buy the dip?
Oliver tweet media
Oliver@0xOliverX

"Why are you not buying $FISH?" This mfer Marcell has to be the one of the worst to grace the depths of CT They make you think they're the good guys, but they're not here for anybody but themselves. Avoid people like this at all costs

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