Bought for my first sales gig in 1996. Survived 12 moves in 4 states, plus countless dejections and rejections, with an occasional win sprinkled in.
Replaced for the best chair I could find on sale at OfficeMax.
Bought for my first sales gig in 1996. Survived 12 moves in 4 states, plus countless dejections and rejections, with an occasional win sprinkled in.
Replaced for the best chair I could find on sale at OfficeMax.
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Never underestimate Andy Reid’s ability to blow a lead via a combination of:
– Exceeding a 85/15 pass/run ratio.
– Clock management skills that leaves six-year-olds perplexed.
– A general lack of awareness that a football games lasts two halves.
– Play-calling often mistaken for quantum randomness.
Notice how a 4TD lead at half-time isn’t safe. The Eagles need to have more than a 2TD lead with under 2 minutes to go before a real Eagles fan can feel comfortable, and at least 2TDs with under a minute to go.
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Started by reviewing the monthly “Complexity Digest” from the NECSI, and it all led to this:
Somehow there’s an application to modeling the housing market… Oddly enough, I think I know what it is. I’m just not capable of delivering the message.
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voice-message.wav
| Date | : Oct 28 2011 05:25:17 PM |
| From | : unavailable |
| To | : Scott Sambucci |
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Saw a Blackhawk (complete with a fly-by), stunt plane, Citation, couple of Cessnas, Bombadier, and a 1983 Ferrari. Not a bad afternoon.
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A colleague is reading Keith Richards’ autobiography on Kindle. Said the most frequent highlights center around how Keith and Mick developed lyrics, but not a single hightlight on how they developed their muscial prowess by playing for 8+ hours/day, every day, for a long time. The 10,000 hour rule is a real thing.
Therein lies the problem, and why the creative class is a lie. For all of the trophies and mass inclusion, we get Facebook, Zynga, Groupon, and Color. Nice people as long as you agree with them, meanwhile ignoring hard problems.
Funny how the laws of competition and capitalism work objectively. When the “you tried hard” accolades dissolve away, the market rewards economic contributions. The “Creative Class” isn’t.
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Two-time champs after going 3-0 in today’s round robin. Persevered through injuries and the heat to escape with the title. Thanks to Eric R. for getting me involved with Special Olympics. Today was a blast.
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Peter Theil is a big thinker. He covers everything from the Green Revolution to the Arab Spring to beating cancer in his National Review article – “The End of the Future.” (Thank you to Paul Kedrosky for sharing on Twitter.)
Couple of my favorite passages:
One cannot in good conscience encourage an undergraduate in 2011 to study nuclear engineering as a career. “Clean tech” has become a euphemism for “energy too expensive to afford,” and in Silicon Valley it has also become an increasingly toxic term for near-certain ways to lose money.
This one was painful to read because of my ardent faith in free markets, though I acknowledge that obvious fallacies breed within the system:
The most common name for a misplaced emphasis on macroeconomic policy is “Keynesianism.” Despite his brilliance, John Maynard Keynes was always a bit of a fraud, and there is always a bit of clever trickery in massive fiscal stimulus and the related printing of paper money. But we must acknowledge that this fraud strangely seemed to work for many decades.
On our political system and the inmates running the asylum:
Most of our political leaders are not engineers or scientists and do not listen to engineers or scientists. Today a letter from Einstein would get lost in the White House mail room, and the Manhattan Project would not even get started; it certainly could never be completed in three years. I am not aware of a single political leader in the U.S., either Democrat or Republican, who would cut health-care spending in order to free up money for biotechnology research — or, more generally, who would make serious cuts to the welfare state in order to free up serious money for major engineering projects.
—-
Theil’s piece follows a number of dysphoric perspectives skirting my computer screen lately:
Is America Giving Up on the Future? (Umair Haque on HBR). The best line of this article:
Call me crazy, but I’d bet: you probably can’t Farmville your way into the future. Prosperity isn’t a video game. Reality matters.
Innovation Starvation (Neal Stephenson, World Policy Institute):
Still, I worry that our inability to match the achievements of the 1960s space program might be symptomatic of a general failure of our society to get big things done. My parents and grandparents witnessed the creation of the airplane, the automobile, nuclear energy, and the computer to name only a few. Scientists and engineers who came of age during the first half of the 20th century could look forward to building things that would solve age-old problems, transform the landscape, build the economy, and provide jobs for the burgeoning middle class that was the basis for our stable democracy.
World on Wi-Fire (Niall Ferguson in Newsweek)
In view of the extraordinary economic and political instability of recent months, it’s worth asking if the Netlords are the Four Horsemen of a new kind of information apocalypse.
Smart people think we’re on the downslope. Could they be right, or time to go long on society?
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Going from Vonnegut to Asimov was a leap of faith, and too far for me to jump. As the chapters sputtered along, I reached deathly point of gaining more utility by finishing than from reading, fulfilling my mission finally on Saturday night and sleeping well knowing I’d no longer subject myself to it.
From reviews I’ve read, Asimov’s Foundation series established the modern-day science fiction writing genre in many ways. I get it. It’s just not my cup of tea. Because of the 20, 50, and 70 year forward jumps, little time remains for the character development and minituae that I enjoy. And that’s the point with Asimov – the story matters more than the characters – and that’s where the great chasm exists for me.
I’m onto Catch-22 now. Yossarian lives. (I planned on Catcher in the Rye, but it’s not available on Kindle.)
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