kcy | 15 years ago | on: What makes US health care so expensive? Hard numbers, no easy answer.
kcy's comments
kcy | 16 years ago | on: In the Next Industrial Revolution, Atoms Are the New Bits
kcy | 16 years ago | on: Ask HN: An HN for biology/medicine/biotech? Would you want one?
kcy | 16 years ago | on: Dropbox's Summer 07 YC Application
Anyway, thanks for posting this. I'm a huge Dropbox fan and it was cool seeing a bit of their history.
kcy | 16 years ago | on: Ask HN: I want to build/learn something this weekend - suggestions?
Just to add to the mix. How about TED Lectures, youtube around for old Feynman or Steve Jobs videos, check out OpenCourseWare or any of those online learning sites and make a dent in an interesting course. Catch up w/ friends on the phone.
I also second the jQuery, Python, Django, Google App Engine, and Processing crews.
Hope your ankle gets better soon!
kcy | 16 years ago | on: What Is The Real Reason Dell Is Discontinuing 12-inch Netbooks?
My NC120 has an awesome keyboard, battery life that seems to stretch forever (8 hrs, and I have a second battery!), and it was only $400 at Amazon (+ $90 or so for the extra battery). It's not ridiculously light like some of the other netbooks out there, but light enough that I put it in my bag and forget it's there. Light enough that I can carry it around town like a spiral notebook and not feel fatigued.
Really the only issue I have with it is that the screen is glossy and I personally prefer matte. Also the windows key is on the right side for some reason. Whatever, it's still great - the screen doesn't bother me that much (still would prefer matte) and the windows key thing is totally invisible to me now. Also I've found that when I'm out at a coffee shop or something people stop me left and right to ask about it. It's interesting who asks - retired folks and middle age folks.
My wife and I took it on vacation and watched movies and TV the entire flight off of iTunes. It was the slightest bit jerky at times but certainly not enough to be bothersome. As a random addition, the NC120 contains a subwoofer. Ha! Not that you can really tell.
I know I'm gushing. I'm going to stop. I don't work for Samsung, but the NC120 is truly great (I'm sure it's sister models are good too). It hits the magic keyboard/battery life/weight/cost sweet spot that makes it just feel awesome!
And yes, I can totally code, write long reports, and respond to emails, browse HN, etc on it to my heart's content. I got a little portable mouse which I rarely use, but sometimes pull out when I'm using it for a long time.
Ok, I'm stopping now. Hope it's helpful to someone out there!
kcy | 16 years ago | on: Poll: YC Startups, do you use Django, Rails, PHP or Other?
kcy | 16 years ago | on: Arduino, open-source electronics prototyping platform
kcy | 16 years ago | on: How To Develop a jQuery Plugin
kcy | 16 years ago | on: PowerPoint Does Rocket Science--and Better Techniques for Technical Reports
Here's a link to the article Melvin Conway wrote describing this insight: http://www.melconway.com/research/committees.html
Also the wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conways_Law
kcy | 17 years ago | on: Tell HN: I didn't get a job due to a failed startup on my resume
kcy | 17 years ago | on: I have to say that after being an app developer on Facebook...
kcy | 17 years ago | on: How Harvard Gets its Best and Brightest
Yes, HBS is all about the case method for its classes. It's actually a great way to learn. It is very time consuming, all-encompassing, and incredibly powerful if you commit yourself to it rather than blow it off the way many post-consulting, post-finance students may. The case studies will give you some tools that are really helpful in organizing a business, but they will not show you how to do it. The only way to learn how to start a company (in my opinion) is to actually do it yourself. The reason HBS is a great place to start a company is that you have access to all of Harvard, MIT, Babson, Boston University, several world-class hospitals, and many venture capitalists in the Boston area. HBS offers a protected time where you can get successful entrepreneurs (your professors, case protagonists who come in, classmates, etc) to help you come up with ideas, get in contact with people, and create something of enduring value. You are surrounded by classmates from any industry you could imagine who are connected at the very top who are excited to just have lunch and talk about whatever you want to talk about.
While it's true that many people out of HBS go to work at a company, the statistics show that more than 50% of HBS graduates ultimately do start their own companies, often only a couple years after leaving HBS. If you look at the sorts of companies they start there are many really great companies, not just random me-too sorts of small tech companies based on relatively thin IP.
I think it's really easy to dismiss a place like HBS as a place that just churns out consultants and crappy I-bankers. In all honesty I looked at HBS, and MBA programs in general, like that a few years ago too. I was a techy who thought most business people only had a limited amount to add to any true entrepreneurial endeavor. I still think that's the case for many business types and surely HBS still pumps out its fair share of consultants and crappy-douchebag I-bankers. Nevertheless, there are also some world-class entrepreneurs there. People who will and have changed the world in far more significant ways than most technical folks who think the way I used to will ever really appreciate.
Also, just for the record, I know there are a group of HBS'ers who do read HN regularly and have attended Startup School. I for one have not signed up for hndir.com yet and I'm guessing most of them haven't either. I have my yahoo mail account that I'll use to sign up for random sites, but I'm a bit more selective about how I use my .edu account and it's not clear from the website that they won't use this for spam. Overall I like the idea though. Just my 2 cents.
kcy | 17 years ago | on: Mathematica home edition, finally. $300.
kcy | 17 years ago | on: Netflix profit up 45% in Q4, nears 10 million total subscribers
I think the only thing that's really missing from my current experience is an easy way to stream live video to my Apple TV (without breaking the simple interface). It was a bit of an issue during the election. I would have paid to have had access to a CNN or some other news channel other than one of the broadcast networks, though PBS served us reasonably well.
kcy | 17 years ago | on: Dive into Python 3
And is this (http://docs.python.org/3.0/) the best place to look for 3.0 learning material or is it better to do the Dive Into Python (for v2.0) thing then figure out the 3.0 differences?
kcy | 17 years ago | on: Jeff Bezos and Root Cause Analysis
This is similar to his Startup School talk (http://www.omnisio.com/startupschool08/jeff-bezos), but perhaps offers a bit more perspective.
kcy | 17 years ago | on: Ask YC: Cars?
kcy | 17 years ago | on: Surgeons in England to adopt checklists - expect to halve death rate
The body is an incredibly complex system that you or a pathological process can perturb in a variety of ways, just like any other system. The results of those perturbations may be evident immediately or may take a long time to present themselves. The results are output in the form of physical signs and symptoms. The way this particular system works is that there are more potential pathologies than there are physical signs and symptoms, so sometimes you end up with collisions in the pathology to sign/symptom mapping. In these cases you can use instruments like labs, radiological tests, and sometimes invasive methods like surgery to further investigate. These tests are imperfect and are themselves perturbations to the system.
If you can come to a final diagnosis of the underlying pathology using the tools at your disposal (history, physical exam, labs, tests, and procedures) you can then engage in a therapy. The more precise your diagnosis, the more precise your therapy can be. Again, therapies are also perturbations to the system. Ideally these perturbations move the system back into its normal functioning state though they may also cause undesired results that must then be diagnosed and treated.
This entire process takes place within the context of a social interaction that can itself help or hinder. Both doctors and patients have their own social idiosyncrasies that may or may not match up well with each other.
I believe that most physicians operate by generating a gigantic hash table. Essentially they know several patterns of physical signs/symptoms that act as the key. The value is whatever knowledge they have of that disease process. As medical knowledge progresses some physicians update their hash table keys/values with new information, most don't. Almost all physicians update their hash table (i.e. learn) using information gathered in the process of seeing their own patients and recognizing the difference between the predicted outcome and the actual outcome. This is often a subjective process. I think it is because of this approach that most physicians find it hard to believe that medical diagnosis and treatment can be highly systematized and is at least partially such an obvious idea even needs a study to support its use.
kcy | 17 years ago | on: Obama's big idea: Digital health records
Does anyone have any good resources that describe frameworks for developing standards or examples of other industries that have done a good job with standards?