ClariCue

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ClariCue

ClariCue

@clari_cue

🧩 Decision-making under uncertainty · Writing about judgment, chance, and irreversibility · Books

Copenhagen Katılım Şubat 2025
116 Takip Edilen179 Takipçiler
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ClariCue
ClariCue@clari_cue·
Drowning in open loops? Try this free tool. Your brain isn’t built to hold dozens of problems at once. That’s why they circle, stall, and steal your clarity. 🧩 ClarityCue™: The Clarity Map turns clutter into one clear dashboard — so you know exactly what to do next in under 15 minutes. 👉 From noise to overview. From stuck to moving. From scattered to clear. notion.so/ClarityCue-The…
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
The Danish Frogman Corps is an elite special operations unit of the Danish Navy, trained for underwater warfare, reconnaissance, and counter-terrorism missions. Known for their extreme selection process and versatility, they operate in some of the toughest maritime environments worldwide.
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ClariCue
ClariCue@clari_cue·
@sukh_saroy Nothing has led me further astray than praise.
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Sukh Sroay
Sukh Sroay@sukh_saroy·
Peter thiel asked a room of stanford students one question that made most of them quietly stop typing. He asked them what important truth do very few people agree with you on. Then he said the reason most of them could not answer it was the same reason their careers would be average. His name is Peter Thiel, and he has funded more zero to one companies than almost anyone alive. Here is what he said, and why it changes how you should be thinking about your work right now. He said the most valuable thing a person can own in the next decade is not a skill, not a network, and not capital. It is a real contrarian belief that turns out to be true. For most of history, being right about things everyone else was also right about was enough to build a good career. In the world that is arriving, consensus knowledge is free. Anyone can ask a model and get the answer the smart people would have given. The only thing that compounds is being correctly early on something the room thinks is wrong. His framework for testing your contrarian belief is brutally simple. He calls it the three layer test. The first layer is whether your belief is actually contrarian. Most people fail here instantly. They think they have a contrarian view, but when they say it out loud, half the room nods. If your belief is one a smart person at a dinner party would agree with after thinking for ten seconds, it is not contrarian. It is just slightly under the surface consensus. The second layer is whether your belief is specific enough to act on. Saying education is broken is not contrarian, it is a t-shirt. Saying a specific category of credential will collapse in a specific industry within a specific window is something you can build a company around. Most people stop at the t-shirt and wonder why they never compound. The third layer is the one almost everyone skips. Are you actually willing to look stupid for it. Thiel said the number one predictor of which of his students went on to build something important was not intelligence. It was tolerance for being publicly wrong-sounding for years before being right. He said the students who held their contrarian belief privately, waiting for it to be socially safe to say, almost always watched someone else build the thing they had quietly believed in for a decade. The people who are actually winning right now are not the ones with the most knowledge. They are the ones who picked one uncomfortable truth, said it out loud before it was safe, and stayed there long enough for the world to catch up.
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ClariCue
ClariCue@clari_cue·
@garyvee Nothing has led me further astray than praise.
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Gary Vaynerchuk
Gary Vaynerchuk@garyvee·
Way too many of you aren’t changing your job your relationship your friends cause you think you’re in deep you’ve over-committed you’re already “there” … my friends .. life’s about adjustments - so adjust ❤️
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ClariCue
ClariCue@clari_cue·
@RickRubin Nothing has led me further astray than praise.
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ClariCue
ClariCue@clari_cue·
@sharran Nothing has led me further astray than praise.
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Sharran Srivatsaa
Sharran Srivatsaa@sharran·
Taste is one of the most underrated advantages in life. Knowing what to ignore can shape your future faster than knowing what to chase.
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Reads with Ravi
Reads with Ravi@readswithravi·
Naval Ravikant on success and happiness:
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ClariCue
ClariCue@clari_cue·
I really hate the concept of 'rationality'. What does it even mean? People often call entrepreneurship irrational. But look up from your screen. You are surrounded by “irrational” acts: the inventions that built modern comfort, extended human life, and gave us great art. Irrationality is often just a lack of imagination in disguise.
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David Senra
David Senra@FoundersPodcast·
“Entrepreneurship is irrational and you do it anyways”
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ClariCue
ClariCue@clari_cue·
Nothing has led me further astray than praise.
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ClariCue
ClariCue@clari_cue·
@KoalaQuillHQ Oh yeah, forgot that. The dreadful part when you realize that the beautiful house you build in your mind is really just a stupid lego house nobody ever will live in ;)
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Koala Quill
Koala Quill@KoalaQuillHQ·
@clari_cue You forgot the step during editing where everything falls apart again 😅
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ClariCue
ClariCue@clari_cue·
"You can’t learn to see until you realize you are blind. Education is to help people realize they are blind and show them how to see a little. " Alan Kay: worrydream.com/refs/Kay_2004_…
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Codie Sanchez
Codie Sanchez@Codie_Sanchez·
You don’t realize enough how contagious humans are... relentlessly remove the negative. Roger Federer changed his dentist because he was too negative. Cut them out.
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ClariCue
ClariCue@clari_cue·
@PhysInHistory I think our (Western) tendency to think linearily fails in thinking about the Big Bang. When looking at nature everything else is cyclical and constant change. Why not this?
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Physics In History
Physics In History@PhysInHistory·
If the universe began with the Big Bang, what existed before it? And if the answer is "nothing" - can nothing even exist? ✍️
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Reads with Ravi
Reads with Ravi@readswithravi·
Elon Musk on how he learned to build rockets:
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Dan Martell
Dan Martell@danmartell·
One piece of advice I’d give to my younger self: Dream bigger.
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David Senra
David Senra@davidsenra·
“It's shocking to me how few people actually give entrepreneurship a shot. The fate of the world over the next 1,500 years is riding on the people who actually want to give it a shot.” — Marc Andreessen @pmarca
David Senra@davidsenra

My conversation with Marc Andreessen (@pmarca), co-founder of @a16z and Netscape. 0:00 Caffeine Heart Scare 0:56 Zero Introspection Mindset 3:24 Psychedelics and Founders 4:54 Motivation Beyond Happiness 7:18 Tech as Progress Engine 10:27 Founders Versus Managers 20:01 HP Intel Founder Legacy 21:32 Why Start the Firm 24:14 Venture Barbell Theory 28:57 JP Morgan Boutique Banking 30:02 Religion Split Wall Street 30:41 Barbell of Banking 31:42 Allen & Company Model 33:16 Planning the VC Firm 33:45 CAA Playbook Lessons 36:49 First Principles vs. Status Quo 39:03 Scaling Venture Capital 40:37 Private Equity and Mad Men 42:52 Valley Shifts to Full Stack 45:59 Meeting Jim Clark 48:53 Founder vs. Manager at SGI 54:20 Recruiting Dinner Story 56:58 Starting the Next Company 57:57 Nintendo Online Gamble 58:33 Building Mosaic Browser 59:45 NSFnet Commercial Ban 1:01:28 Eternal September Shift 1:03:11 Spam and Web Controversy 1:04:49 Mosaic Tech Support Flood 1:07:49 Netscape Business Model 1:09:05 Early Internet Skepticism 1:11:15 Moral Panic Pattern 1:13:08 Bicycle Face Story 1:14:48 Music Panic Examples 1:18:12 Lessons from Jim Clark 1:19:36 Clark Versus Barksdale 1:21:22 Tesla Versus Edison 1:23:00 Edison Digression Setup 1:23:13 AI Forecasting Myths 1:23:43 Edison Phonograph Lesson 1:25:11 Netscape Two Jims 1:29:11 Bottling Innovation 1:31:44 Elon Management Code 1:32:24 IBM Big Gray Cloud 1:37:12 Engineer First Truth 1:38:28 Bottlenecks and Speed 1:42:46 Milli Elon Metric 1:47:20 Starlink Side Project 1:49:10 Closing Includes paid partnerships.

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ClariCue
ClariCue@clari_cue·
Decision-making as a skill is becoming more valuable than knowledge.
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George Mack
George Mack@george__mack·
One of the most ironic lessons in life: The pareto principle is the pareto principle for principles. When you find yourself exploring other principles, first assume you haven't taken the pareto principle seriously enough. It's true even when you factor in this rule.
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