gtbcb | 8 months ago | on: Thnickels
gtbcb's comments
gtbcb | 1 year ago | on: Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (March 2025)
Location: Los Angeles (Santa Monica)
Remote: In-person preferred, hybrid 3 days/wk in SF or nearby ok, open to remote.
Willing to relocate: Open to NYC or SF.
Technologies: Engineering + MBA + coding bootcamp.
Résumé/CV: 15 years in various technical, customer facing, and sales roles at startups and tech companies. Employee #30 at Segment; angel investor in various companies, managed $20m lead gen vertical at public online marketing company; started tutoring business in 20s.
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brantleybeaird/
Email: bbeaird at gmail! dot com.
gtbcb | 1 year ago | on: Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (February 2025)
Location: Los Angeles (Santa Monica)
Remote: In-person preferred, hybrid 3 days/wk in SF or nearby ok, open to remote.
Willing to relocate: Open to NYC or SF.
Technologies: Engineering + MBA + coding bootcamp.
Résumé/CV: 15 years in various technical, customer facing, and sales roles at startups and tech companies. Employee #30 at Segment; angel investor in various companies, managed $20m lead gen vertical at public online marketing company; tutoring business in 20s.
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brantleybeaird/
Email: bbeaird at gmail! dot com.
gtbcb | 1 year ago | on: Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (December 2024)
Location: Los Angeles
Remote: In-person preferred, hybrid 3 days/wk in SF or nearby ok, open to remote.
Willing to relocate: NYC or SF okay.
Technologies: Engineering + MBA + coding bootcamp.
Résumé/CV: Early employee at Segment in various technical, sales, and customer facing roles; angel investor in various companies, managed $20m lead gen vertical at public online marketing company; tutoring business in 20s.
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brantleybeaird/
Email: bbeaird at gmail! dot com.
gtbcb | 1 year ago | on: Author Clock: a novel way to tell time
I think one of the jobs of gov't is good regulation, which is hard. And once the rules have been set, maximizing profits within that box of regulation seems good, yea? Capitalism is reasonably good at allocating resources in many cases.
gtbcb | 1 year ago | on: Author Clock: a novel way to tell time
Another product like this for me is the Manta Sleep Pro Mask. It’s $80, but the best I’ve found, so I buy it anyways. I’m mildly annoyed and also feel like they’re taking advantage of me on price and will switch as soon as there’s an alternative at least as good for less…but when that happens, they’ll probably lower their price, which is what typically happens as sectors and products mature due to competition.
Profit maximization curves are interesting, and I think explain things like how convenience stores exist with much lower volume compared to grocery stores. Eg XYZ food costs 90 cents and the grocery store sells it for $1, yielding profit of 10% whereas a convenience store sells it for $1.50, just a 50% increase in price for the consumer (for the convenience), but the profit is 6x that for the grocery store, so they only need to sell approx 1/6 to make the same profit.
In the case of the author clock. If COGS is $50, profit is $150ish. If they sold for $100, they’d have to sell 3x as many to make the same profit. Given that it’s a niche product for readers (smaller population and typically more educated and wealthier), I think they care less about the price. Doesn’t seem that unreasonable to me.
gtbcb | 2 years ago | on: Scientists report asymmetry between heating and cooling
gtbcb | 2 years ago | on: Ask HN: Best password manager, 2FA, and recovery code strategy?
Which accounts do you consider important? Email, apple / google, banks, cell phone carrier, what else?
gtbcb | 2 years ago | on: Andreessen Horowitz Invests in Civitai, Which Profits from Nonconsensual AI Porn
I might argue this could be good in that this sort of stuff will become so commonplace that it won't be a big deal and people will learn (be forced to shrug it off). Up until now-ish, the scarcity of celebrity nude leaks and revenge porn type stuff made it somewhat of a forbidden fruit. I like the idea of destigmatizing this sort of stuff so that it loses power.
That said, I'm sure there will be some casualties along the way. Eg vulnerable teens who are picked on by mean girls / boys, semi-celebrities / public figures who are targeted by online trolls, etc. I hope that the prevalence of this sort of stuff enlarges the conversation around this, increasing the reach of strategies to deal with this stuff psychologically, and significantly reduces it's impact.
I don't know many celebrities or politicians, but I suspect that after they see a few weird / porn related photos of themselves, they stop caring.
Thoughts?
gtbcb | 2 years ago | on: Othello Is Solved?
gtbcb | 2 years ago | on: Light can make water evaporate without heat
gtbcb | 2 years ago | on: Show HN: BigHoops – Topgolf for Basketball [video]
gtbcb | 2 years ago
I made a Show HN post earlier today about a startup I invested in and am now working for. I haven’t posted too much to HN, so I only know what’s popular based on what’s on the front page, which is usually very high quality and interesting to me (tech, business, startups, generally really interesting stuff).
Given the builder-focus of HN, I thought more people might be interested. Selfishly we were hoping to generate buzz and some investor leads but also to get genuine feedback. HN is my favorite forum as the quality is so high.
Here are a few thoughts on why it’s flat, and I’m curious to hear y’all’s thoughts.
* Too market-y.
* Too long a post.
* HN is too nerdy for a sports related startup.
* I should’ve done more to “promote it”; however, I read this is frowned upon, so I didn’t really do it.
* It’s not a good idea.
* Poor posting time.
* Just not that relevant for HN.
* It was downvoted for some reason…perhaps I violated some written or unwritten rule.
Am I doing this in hopes that it will boost the original post? Yes, but also to understand the mechanics better as I’m going to post on some relevant subreddits too.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36634428
Cheers!
gtbcb | 2 years ago | on: Show HN: BigHoops – Topgolf for Basketball [video]
I'm a big nerd, but I'm wondering if HN is too nerdy for this? Maybe we'll get more traction on some relevant subreddits?
gtbcb | 2 years ago | on: Show HN: BigHoops – Topgolf for Basketball [video]
I'll also say, I think the video above is cool, but honestly, it doesn't do justice for the experience. It's WAY more fun in person. At our beta site at an Atlanta brewery, half-way through a game, people who aren't that into basketball are talking trash and having a blast.
gtbcb | 2 years ago | on: Show HN: BigHoops – Topgolf for Basketball [video]
A quick personal story...this hit home recently when I took my 8 year old niece along with my 10 year old nephew and 2 of his male friends to play basketball (games, HORSE, and Knockout) at a school playground. My niece is younger and smaller, and she felt left out, eventually leaving to go play on the playground by herself because the boys were older / taller / better. I feel that a skill-adjustment component to the physical game will make the game much more accessible and attractive to folks regardless of skill-level, gender, age, etc.
Another way I like to think about this is...has your 10 year old child ever beaten you (40ish yo, decent shape) at Topgolf or bowling?
gtbcb | 2 years ago | on: Show HN: BigHoops – Topgolf for Basketball [video]
Topgolf does this well but golf is a difficult sport and just not that much fun for me. Honestly, I think they succeeded in spite of golf's popularity (on-course play has been declining since the mid-2000s) by creating a terrific and more upscale experience compared to the more old-school entertainment dining of bowling (which has been catching up in terms of nice-ness). And if you pair a terrific experience with a sport that's more fun to play (also with a much larger market), I think there's a lot of potential.
I'm at [email protected] if you have any questions :-)
gtbcb | 2 years ago | on: San Francisco library turning off WiFi at night to keep homeless from using it
X% of the population will always need some gov't help and Y% will need gov't help at some point. I think we need to stop negatively viewing these groups as sponges on society. Ability is a spectrum, and we don't criticize someone w Down's Syndrome, and so I don't think we should be so harsh on people who are homeless / have trouble holding down a job / low-ish IQ / and even those who fried their brain w drugs / etc.
Yes, we want to avoid perverse incentives and incentivize people to be productive members of society, but we also need to recognize that some people will always need some help, and as a society, I think we should help them, striving for a future with little to no involuntary poverty.
gtbcb | 3 years ago | on: Stanford's “Elimination of Harmful Language” Initiative
Thoughts on what replacement they’d prefer? I also suspect though that they wouldn't want to be identified as a group at all. What do you do when there's group that doesn't want to be referred to as a group?
gtbcb | 5 years ago | on: DuckDuckGo Billboards