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Because most VC founded companies are not about results. They are about virtue signaling to attract even more capital. Profitability has been thrown out of the window long time ago. Success is measured in the stupidest KPIs you can imagine. That's why 9 out of 10 VC founded companies fail. So you need to indoctrinate your minions to make them act accordingly.


Well I can see your point, but this is not exactly the same.

As a thought experiment imagine that someone now builds a website called Linkedout and they post your profile with a layover animation resembling a big red stamp which reads 'Slacker'. I guess you are not OK with THAT information about you.


Oh funny I actually thought about same name

LinkedOut: A decentralized 'paid' job profile site for professionals, not recruiters. Where you decide who can see your profile/data and contact you.

I might just build this,but with a better name, lol


You might contribute to Flockingbird who are building that for the Fediverse.

https://flockingbird.social


Isn't that what someone that works at Slack? If they're getting basic employment details that badly wrong, then they're not very useful.


I would say you are probably talking to the wrong audience here. Apparently those flex drivers were OK with it, for unknown reasons.


I upvoted your comment because the blog author even references that book, and the book goes into great length to make this distinction between the two. So I think it's only fair to point it out.


And yet, all the upvotes showered on nitpicks again prevent HN from using the top comment for substantive discussion on the subject of the article.


On Android you can use a private DNS service, for example nextdns.io which will block all advertisement on the page for you. I wouldn't be surprised if iOS would have the same option.


I run PiHole (DNS-based ad-blocker) on my home network, as the DNS is given out trough DHCP all my devices gets less ads, including iOS.


Exactly. I feel for you. I am in the same boat. With young kids around I was forced to wake up 2 hours earlier than my circadian rhytm would dictate and it's been a nightmare so far.

I need to compensate each day with even more coffee than normally and my head's just spinning by the end of the day because I am too exhausted.

Since my rhytm cannot be forced to the early waking, on average I only sleep 5 hours each night.

It's a constant torture.


May I suggest: avoid first-thing caffeine; wait until your body has naturally woken up to drink caffiene (or other stimulants). The natural process for waking up (cortisol!) stops when you feel awake. Using caffeine can hasten that moment, but then it doesn't get you any more awake than you would have gotten naturally, and can disrupt your sleep cycle in various ways (for me personally, early caffeine actually makes it harder for me to fall asleep at night; I always thought I was really sensitive to caffeine, but it turns out "...even if I have it first thing in the morning" was more accurately "...only if...").


Idk if this will work for a regular coffee drinker. Part of the coffee first thing in the morning is dealing with the withdrawal from over night.


Caffeine also takes 30-60 minutes to really kick in anyway, meaning your body has to do the waking up on its own either way. The immediate pick-me-up a regular drinker gets from it is a psychological response to the initial low concentration that can start to be felt after 10 or 15 minutes.


Right. For a regular coffee drinker, coffee has stopped being a boost and is merely a requirement to get back to normal energy.


When stuck in a similar rut I had to quit caffeine cold turkey for over a month to get my body to settle down and start to acclimate.

Definitely cutting out caffeine at noon helps.


Google/Amazon


I find it ironic that the author points out in the first part of the post that companies are the real culprit but later puts the blame on governments. I wouldn't do such differentiation. They are equally wrong. Regarding free speech too. Case in point are the recent de-platformings.


I don't know which industry you worked in, but outages in the telecom industry was strictly forbidden and came with severe financial penalties even 10 years ago. And those companies managed to adhere to really strict uptime SLAs even then.

It might take less resource today though to achieve the same, I agree with that.


Telcos have historically had availability regulations in many places because of how people rely on them for access to emergency services. So they’re a special case here, and the amount of resources they invested into optimizing for that is beyond the capacity for most organizations.

10 years ago I was working for a company that provided a financial OLTP service. We had to invest a huge amount of money to be able to provide a reasonable HA architecture, and to be able to meet 4 hour DR SLAs, and we still had weekly maintenance outages. The amount of effort required to accomplish those service levels today is comparatively trivial, and you could reasonably expect even a low-budget one person operation to be able to exceed them.

You’d expect a service outage to be a significant public controversy today for a lot of companies. It’s never been a good thing, but we’ve come a long way from it being a completely routine event for most services. Especially given the explosion in online services.


The real question is: what was wrong with the website in the first place?


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