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This is wild


Wouldn't the NYT or whoever object to someone reposting their articles?


I think the NYT is involved in lawsuit claiming garbling them through an LLM is still copyright violation. In any case you could link to them and display the headline, and maybe the first sentence.


Wow, that's wild


As OP said, these aren't the newspaper articles. They're AI generated stories based off the facts of the events.


Stories like this make me sick to my stomach.

Lots of mistakes made on both sides but hourly billing itself was a major contributor that neither party even mentioned in the postmortem.


FWIW - I think you meant "fake" not fact at the end there.


Hi! Author here. Thanks for your comment :) I was preparing to answer your questions and then I read that you consider yourself a laborer. If you see yourself as a laboror, my book is definitely not for you. If at some point in the future you start to feel like you've maxed out your annual income and don't know what to do about it, you might want to revisit the idea of ditching hourly billing. Cheers! —J


It's clear now that you use "laborer" as a slur.

My extended family is not so far out of poverty that such class warfare snobbery appeals to me.

You are not using the normal definition of "laborer". Merriam-Webster defines it as "a person who does hard physical work for money". Wikipedia defines it as "a person who works in one of the construction trades, traditionally considered unskilled manual labor, as opposed to skilled labor."

Neither you nor I mean that definition of laborer.

I believe you use it as a metaphorical slur. Rather than use that interpretaion, I decided to use the more common Marxist analysis of calling those who labor, including skilled laborers like programmers, the proletariat.

Your secret sauce is likely to encourage people to become capitalists, perhaps a rentier capitalist, and thereby join the bourgeoisie class.

Marx pointed out the petite bourgeoisie, of which we are members for I both consult and sell software, are more likely to identify with the haute bourgeoisie; those who truly control capital. But I prefer to identify with craft-based workers (and unlike the old AFL policy, promote labor solidarity over trade separatism; though free education/training and strong social services).

Now, I agree with Piketty that capital return is greater than the rate of economic growth, so if your proposal is that people should become capitalists, the you are right. But we cannot all become capitalists. That's why, to resolve the dilemma of the categorical imperative, I support a progressive global wealth tax.

As an observation, many people running a con choose marks who already half-believe in the con. The ones who follow up on a Nigerian prince scam are those who want to believe. Your last paragraph follows the same lines of only trying to convince those who want to believe you are right. If my guess is correct, and since I don't think a Marxist analysis like this is flawed, I think it's a shame that you find yourself needing to use these tactics for something I don't think is a scam.

Rather than trying to understand your ideas through promotional materials, I hoped to get some input from jagthedrummer, who it seems has found that they are not applicable to part of a business. I'm curious to know both the success and failures. jagthedrummer? Care to speak up?, since the author thinks I'm not worthy of his time.


Dalke,

I see that I have insulted you and for that I am sorry. I doubt that there is much I can say in this medium to undo that damage other than to tell you that it was unintentional.

I really don't see the word "labor" as a slur but I do agree that I didn't use it in the strictest sense. To me, the word "laborer" equates to something like: "someone who is instructed by their employer what to do."

I don't begrudge or judge anyone who is comfortable with such an arrangement. If my words contained a tone of disdain, it's because I've absorbed the frustrations of literally hundreds of people who are not comfortable with such an arrangement.

My book is for folks - usually experts in their field - who are sick of their employers telling them what to do. Sick of being micromanaged, second-guessed, and generally disrespected by clients who have nothing but a checkbook and an opinion.

My impression from your previous comment is that you do not fall into this category, and therefore, my book would be useless to you. In retrospect, I do understand why you took offense and again I apologize for that.

Yours,

Jonathan


Having read the book four times and loving it, I believe what Jonathan means by labour is that developers should sell their unique brainpower/expertise not only their easily replaceable keyboard-banging skills.

My conclusion is that what’s in our heads is unique strategic knowledge that can seriously help clients to improve their businesses. Yes, they need us to do the keyboard-banging too, but the real value of our contribution is what’s between our ears.

I think it would be unwise to turn a practical book on pricing into a treatise on capitalism, socialism or socioeconomic differences between so-called classes. We should just read it for what it is and for what the author intended it to be: An easy-to-read book on the highly sensitive topic of pricing.

In an odd way, even employees are capitalists. They have various deals to negotiate and make from car payments to mortgages. Life is complex and it requires pretty good business savvy even from employees who want to get paid well for their expertise.


dalke, I said "some parts of my business" because I run several different business of various types.

Since the book focuses on value pricing for consulting projects it's obviously not applicable to the SaaS that I run.

However it's been fantastic for my software development/architecture consulting.

I recently completed at project for a client where I used the value based approach from the beginning of the sales cycle and very early on identified the real goals that the client had in mind and was able to work with them to identify a dollar amount that they wanted to invest to fix the problem. We agreed on that amount and I went to work. After completing the project my effective hourly rate was around $600/hour, and the client was extremely happy with the results.

(I know you're not a fan of the term "effective hourly rate", but it's the best term I have to talk about that concept since I didn't agree to an actual hourly rate with the client.)

Had I gone with my old process of saying "this is my hourly rate and I'll track hours" it's doubtful that the client would have agreed to $600/hour and I would have made much less on that project.

I don't think Jonathan meant to use "laborer" as a slur of any kind. I think he's trying to get at the distinction between being "a pair of hands" on a project, who is told what to do and how to do it VS being "a brain" on the project who is operating at a higher level of abstraction to identify problems, propose possible solutions, determine which solution is best, etc...

Those are two very different things, and the advice in the book would be MUCH harder to apply if you are filling a "pair of hands" role.

Hope that makes sense and answers your questions.


I've been beta testing Remarq and the time it has saved me more than makes up for the cost.


Very, very nice. Kudos DHG!


@robertnealan Well said.

Having personally worked on responsive redesigns for ew.com, techcrunch.com, and timeinc.com, I know as well as anyone that designing a full scale responsive site can be hard. Really hard.

That said, the hard parts are not the technology or the implementation. Rather, the hard parts are organizational dysfunction, legacy CMS software, integration with non-responsive 3rd party services like ad networks, and so on.

The complete lack of those sorts of challenges in something like a hackathon means that devs are free to design in a way that maybe they can't do at work or for clients. My shock was that given such freedom, they choose to basically ignore mobile.


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