Jon Stevens

44 posts

Jon Stevens banner
Jon Stevens

Jon Stevens

@jonstevens

Twitter Katılım Ocak 2009
1.6K Takip Edilen633 Takipçiler
Jon Stevens
Jon Stevens@jonstevens·
@LukeDashjr Thanks Luke, nice to hear I was helpful. I was a user of your pool in 2014, so it is nice to pay it back even a small bit.
Jon Stevens tweet media
English
0
0
1
8
Luke Dashjr
Luke Dashjr@LukeDashjr·
I quit Dr. Pepper a few weeks ago, to reduce my sugar levels. But the alternatives I've tried (Zevia and Liquid Death) taste terrible. Any real solutions? 😕 (Dr Pepper Diet and Zero have aspartame, which is apparently poison)
English
644
4
224
61.8K
Jon Stevens
Jon Stevens@jonstevens·
@LukeDashjr I haven't had any soda in probably 25 years now and I used to be a heavy drinker of it growing up. Awful stuff. Good on you to give it up and be trying alternatives.
English
0
0
0
34
Luke Dashjr
Luke Dashjr@LukeDashjr·
@jonstevens I calculated it as the equivalent of 75c/can... Which is cheap for soda substitutes as far as I've seen...
English
1
0
0
284
Brian Armstrong
Brian Armstrong@brian_armstrong·
In the early days of Coinbase, we talked to experts about building our next-gen cold storage system. They said we’d need a team of 10 and two years minimum. We had two people and shipped it in 60 days. It got us to the next stage. We are now on generation five or six of this system.
English
32
36
539
44.9K
Brian Armstrong
Brian Armstrong@brian_armstrong·
People are capable of far more than they think, on far shorter timelines. Problems expand to fill the time you give them.
English
316
1.4K
12.4K
431.9K
Film The Police LA
Film The Police LA@FilmThePoliceLA·
Literally no one is gonna be pumping $7 gas thinking “the payoff from this is gonna be awesome.”
English
8
27
505
4.9K
Faytuks Network
Faytuks Network@FaytuksNetwork·
BREAKING: Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of Ali Khamenei, has been declared Supreme Leader of Iran, Iranian state media says
Faytuks Network tweet media
English
143
217
910
134.8K
joseph.eth
joseph.eth@josephdelong·
Colossus covered in Yahoo Finance
joseph.eth tweet media
English
11
6
128
6.5K
Jon Stevens
Jon Stevens@jonstevens·
@sentdefender Nobody commenting on the plants growing in their yard. lol
English
2
1
78
3.5K
OSINTdefender
OSINTdefender@sentdefender·
A UH-60 Black Hawk with the Mexican Air Force uses its mounted minigun to target gunmen with the CJNG Cartel near the prison in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.
English
96
487
6K
616.2K
Mark Harvey
Mark Harvey@thepowerfulHRV·
@HmrPoet I can’t imagine selling calls against the stock I’m most bullish on
English
3
0
5
914
Mark Harvey
Mark Harvey@thepowerfulHRV·
My 28 $MSTR shares will split to 280, then 2,800 after that. I'm going to keep buying, but 28 is plenty IMO.
English
37
5
261
20.4K
Jon Stevens
Jon Stevens@jonstevens·
That's why I waited to buy property until I was lucky enough that I could afford the entire thing outright. I didn't buy something crazy expensive or more than I minimally needed. Tiny 1 bedroom condo with a sane HOA, but at the beach with a very nice view of the ocean. I remodeled it myself and saved tens of thousands on that too. I'm not even a "financial professional" and this all seems so obvious to me. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
English
0
0
0
46
Mark Palmer
Mark Palmer@MarketPalmer_·
We're 4.5 years into our mortgage. We've paid over $107,000 in mortgage payments. But our balance has only gone down $35,000. The other $72,000 has gone to interest, taxes, and insurance. Owning a home costs a lot more than the price of the home.
English
2.9K
375
5.1K
332.6K
Daniel Morgan
Daniel Morgan@dtmorgan18·
@jonstevens For what it’s worth, I really like that John Stevens. You seem cool too
English
1
0
1
16
Daniel Morgan
Daniel Morgan@dtmorgan18·
What are we doing here?
Daniel Morgan tweet media
English
55
11
646
32.5K
Jon Stevens
Jon Stevens@jonstevens·
@dtmorgan18 at one point, i friended all the jon stevens on fb that i could find and i made a few long term friends. might have been one of them.
English
1
0
1
12
jintao
jintao@hellojintao·
had to put down our oldest cat today sad day, rip taki. we will miss you buddy.
jintao tweet mediajintao tweet mediajintao tweet mediajintao tweet media
English
53
1
189
5.8K
joseph.eth
joseph.eth@josephdelong·
I could not do the insane level of development I’m doing now without LLMs. I’m building an EMV card (credit card) from scratch and I had no prior knowledge of how EMV cards worked until now. 🗽
joseph.eth tweet media
English
54
7
148
10.9K
Rajat Soni, CFA
Rajat Soni, CFA@Rajatsoni·
As Bitcoin's price goes up, more people want it There will be more buyers at $1M than there are today at $91K
English
35
42
476
11.5K
Jason Fried
Jason Fried@jasonfried·
THE BIG REGRESSION My folks are in town visiting us for a couple months so we rented them a house nearby. It’s new construction. No one has lived in it yet. It’s amped up with state of the art systems. The ones with touchscreens of various sizes, IoT appliances, and interfaces that try too hard. And it’s terrible. What a regression. The lights are powered by Control4. And require a demo to understand how to use the switches, understand which ones control what, and to be sure not to hit THAT ONE because it’ll turn off all the lights in the house when you didn’t mean to. Worse. The TV is the latest Samsung which has a baffling UI just to watch CNN. My parents aren’t idiots, but definitely feel like they’re missing something obvious. They aren’t — TVs have simply gotten worse. You don’t turn them on anymore, you boot them up. The Miele dishwasher is hidden flush with the counters. That part is fine, but here’s what isn’t: It wouldn’t even operate the first time without connecting it to an app. This meant another call to the house manager to have them install an app they didn’t know they needed either. An app to clean some peanut butter off a plate? For serious? Worse. Thermostats... Nest would have been an upgrade, but these other propriety ones from some other company trying to be nest-like are baffling. Round touchscreens that take you into a dark labyrinth of options just to be sure it’s set at 68. Or is it 68 now? Or is that what we want it at, but it’s at 72? Wait... What? Which number is this? Worse. The alarm system is essentially a 10” iPad bolted to the wall that has the fucking weather forecast on it. And it’s bright! I’m sure there’s a way to turn that off, but then the screen would be so barren that it would be filled with the news instead. Why can’t the alarm panel just be an alarm panel? Worse. And the lag. Lag everywhere. Everything feels a beat or two behind. Everything. Lag is the giveaway that the system is working too hard for too little. Real-time must be the hardest problem. Now look... I’m no luddite. But this experience is close to conversion therapy. Tech can make things better, but I simply can’t see in these cases. I’ve heard the pitches too — you can set up scenes and one button can change EVERYTHING. Not buying it. It actually feels primitive, like we haven’t figured out how to make things easy yet. That some breakthrough will eventually come when you can simply knock a switch up or down and it’ll all makes sense. But that's at least 20 years down the road. It’s really the contrast that makes it alarming. We just got back from a vacation in Montana. Rented a house there. They did have a fancy TV — seems those can’t be avoided these days — but everything else was old school and clear. Physical up/down light switches in the right places. Appliances without the internet. Buttons with depth and physically-confirmed state change rather than surfaces that don’t obviously register your choice. More traditional round rotating Honeywell thermostats that are just clear and obvious. No tours, no instructions, no questions, no fearing you’re going to do something wrong, no wondering how something works. Useful and universally clear. That’s human, that’s modern.
English
577
831
8.5K
1.7M
Casey Neistat
Casey Neistat@Casey·
knowing im not alone in my hatred of unnecessary regressive tech-for-techs sake brings me great comfort. we bought a new fridge 2 years ago, it has wifi but does not keep food cold, why the fuck would i need wifi on my fridge?
Jason Fried@jasonfried

THE BIG REGRESSION My folks are in town visiting us for a couple months so we rented them a house nearby. It’s new construction. No one has lived in it yet. It’s amped up with state of the art systems. The ones with touchscreens of various sizes, IoT appliances, and interfaces that try too hard. And it’s terrible. What a regression. The lights are powered by Control4. And require a demo to understand how to use the switches, understand which ones control what, and to be sure not to hit THAT ONE because it’ll turn off all the lights in the house when you didn’t mean to. Worse. The TV is the latest Samsung which has a baffling UI just to watch CNN. My parents aren’t idiots, but definitely feel like they’re missing something obvious. They aren’t — TVs have simply gotten worse. You don’t turn them on anymore, you boot them up. The Miele dishwasher is hidden flush with the counters. That part is fine, but here’s what isn’t: It wouldn’t even operate the first time without connecting it to an app. This meant another call to the house manager to have them install an app they didn’t know they needed either. An app to clean some peanut butter off a plate? For serious? Worse. Thermostats... Nest would have been an upgrade, but these other propriety ones from some other company trying to be nest-like are baffling. Round touchscreens that take you into a dark labyrinth of options just to be sure it’s set at 68. Or is it 68 now? Or is that what we want it at, but it’s at 72? Wait... What? Which number is this? Worse. The alarm system is essentially a 10” iPad bolted to the wall that has the fucking weather forecast on it. And it’s bright! I’m sure there’s a way to turn that off, but then the screen would be so barren that it would be filled with the news instead. Why can’t the alarm panel just be an alarm panel? Worse. And the lag. Lag everywhere. Everything feels a beat or two behind. Everything. Lag is the giveaway that the system is working too hard for too little. Real-time must be the hardest problem. Now look... I’m no luddite. But this experience is close to conversion therapy. Tech can make things better, but I simply can’t see in these cases. I’ve heard the pitches too — you can set up scenes and one button can change EVERYTHING. Not buying it. It actually feels primitive, like we haven’t figured out how to make things easy yet. That some breakthrough will eventually come when you can simply knock a switch up or down and it’ll all makes sense. But that's at least 20 years down the road. It’s really the contrast that makes it alarming. We just got back from a vacation in Montana. Rented a house there. They did have a fancy TV — seems those can’t be avoided these days — but everything else was old school and clear. Physical up/down light switches in the right places. Appliances without the internet. Buttons with depth and physically-confirmed state change rather than surfaces that don’t obviously register your choice. More traditional round rotating Honeywell thermostats that are just clear and obvious. No tours, no instructions, no questions, no fearing you’re going to do something wrong, no wondering how something works. Useful and universally clear. That’s human, that’s modern.

English
79
97
3K
360.3K