my5thaccount's comments

my5thaccount | 10 years ago | on: Interview with Dr. Bennet Omalu – the risk of high-impact contact sports

"Who will train all the NFL stars?" That's really what it boils down to. Training the million dollar gladiators for our modern society. Living vicariously through innocent children. Parental adrenaline rushes. It's sick. We should just ban it. It's worse than corporal punishment and that'll get a teacher fired but we let kids pummel each other on the field and it's fine. It's ridiculous. Those kids aren't choosing that for themselves. We won't let them drink alcohol or smoke cigarettes, but we'll let them do that to themselves to get a smile out of mommy and daddy. It's awful!

I've gone from super excited about life and the future when I sat down at my computer to pessimistic and frustrated with society.

my5thaccount | 10 years ago | on: Stein's paradox in Statistics (1977) [pdf]

Yeah, I think you're right. Everyone expects a reversion to the mean -- even the batters themselves. It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.

But maybe it's more than that. The will power to overcome our intrinsic limits eventually runs out. We can only focus on the ball so long before our thoughts wander. And at some point below the average of our capabilities, we get tired of taking a break and start to perform again as well as we know we can.

my5thaccount | 10 years ago | on: When the U.S. air force discovered the flaw of averages

I was really dismayed when Colin Powell argued for invading Iraq. Yes, there are military people who get it. But just look what's happening.

I guess they have to think, what is the alternative? We can't change our role in the Middle East. We can't just stop supporting Israel for example.

I suppose yes, they tried Camp David. I guess I just want everyone to cease fire.

Maybe the overpowered people resorting to terrorism, I do hate that word, have to think there is a positive outcome from the cease fire. If they cease firing and life doesn't improve, why did they cease firing? At least firing alleviates the frustration of it all. They think they are hurting those who are hurting themselves.

But life for the Palestinians never improves no matter. It just keeps getting worse and worse and worse for them. The people with the power have to stop exerting it over others and selfishly taking more.

I had a buddy in Afghanistan and he said their way of life is 500 years old. I mean, I think okay, if they don't want to progress, that doesn't mean we should use the tools of our progress to take from them so we can progress more.

I think at some point we have to stop betraying people.

my5thaccount | 10 years ago | on: When the U.S. air force discovered the flaw of averages

No, but thanks for bringing him to my attention! It's amazing how someone like that so long ago could have such an impact on so many fields, while today, it takes teams of people to win the Nobel prize in a single field.

It's a testament to how much we know today relative to yesterday.

my5thaccount | 10 years ago | on: When the U.S. air force discovered the flaw of averages

Articles like this remind me how rational and practical the military is. I know so many brilliant military minds, yet war itself seems outdated and plagued by so many emotionally irrational decisions. I can't reconcile those two thoughts.

How can people inside the military be so incredibly smart, yet still think it makes sense to ... you know, kill people's friends and families and not expect them to become terrorists.

What am I missing? It can't just be greed. Military industrial complex. The military minds aren't smarter than that? I struggle with it.

my5thaccount | 10 years ago | on: Customers Don't Want to Call for Support

There are plenty of things she could have done before calling me, but she could call me and she had a great experience doing so and now loves the product even more and has more confidence using it, because she knows if she faces something really hard, there actually is a person who will help her just a phone call away. If anyone asks her about it, she can say, "Omg, I just called them and they answered and I was in. I've never had that before!"

There's a real value in that and all it cost me was a phone call. No money well spent, imo. I was going to wake up that day anyway.

my5thaccount | 10 years ago | on: One Man's Journey to Eat and Train Like the Rock for 30 Days

As big as The Rock, yes. His mom is Samoan. They are huge. If he didn't exercise like he did, he'd be as big as a sumo wrestler.

I feel like this kind of attitude stops people from achieving more, "Oh, I can never be like The Rock, so why bother, clearly he has more going for him, whatever..."

But don't let the lack of his genetics stop you! You are in control of your body and yes, your limits may not get you biceps as big as a thigh, but you will get stronger and more fit and be proud of your accomplishment. You will have more self-confidence for no other reason than believing in yourself enough to do it and succeed.

Like all things that are hard, people just give up. They don't have the vision to see it through.

Don't measure yourself by the achievements of Dwayne Johnson. He's a primo genetic specimen, physically and mentally, not all of us can be like that, but you can put in some hard work and become a better person, be more fit, stronger, and more powerful.

my5thaccount | 10 years ago | on: One Man's Journey to Eat and Train Like the Rock for 30 Days

It is possible to get built. I was a skinny kid, picked on. Got tired of it. Started working out. Upped my protein intake. Went to the YMCA 3 days a week. The dudes in there were humongous and looked at me and smilled, this scrawny kid.

The first week I was there, one looked me and said, "It's hard, okay. Don't give up. Commit to 4 months of work and you will notice a difference. You will get stronger. You will bulk up. Don't give up. It takes time."

So I did. 4 months was nothing. I got a lot stronger. I put on mass. It worked!

This girl I had a crush on, she looked at me one day, looked at my new biceps and said, "Wow, you aren't so skinny anymore."

Within a couple years, I was curling 75 lbs on the preacher bench. Before I started, I couldn't bench press 50. If you want to change your life: Exercise. It takes time and energy and commitment, but it really does work and you will feel powerful and in control of your body like you never thought possible. People will look at you differently -- with admiration, with envy, with fear, with lust. Your life will change.

my5thaccount | 10 years ago | on: Google Posts

"Join the waitlist" Really? There are only, what, 10 candidates?? Srsly Google?

my5thaccount | 10 years ago | on: Customers Don't Want to Call for Support

Customers rarely call me, but when they do, it's fine -- I love them. It's usually because they can't figure out how to log in. It's especially painful when they call at 8:30am on the east coast and I'm on the west coast and my cell phone wakes me up and they say, "I can't log in." and they are mad at me and I don't even know who they are or which account and it turns out they've been typoing their username for days.

But I love every single one of them! "Hi, yes, sorry you're having trouble, I am happy to help. Which customer are you with? What is your username? Ah, let me send you a password reset to your email address. Did you get it?"

"Yes."

"Ok, great. Let me know if you need anything else."

And you can hear their tone of voice change immediately to, "OMG, this person was so nice and I was so mean to them and I was clearly doing something wrong, but I don't know what it was, but wow, I actually called a company on the internet today and someone answered the phone and actually solved my problem!!!!"

Nothing better than making customers happy.

my5thaccount | 10 years ago | on: Ask HN: Book Recommendations?

Zero to One by Peter Thiel

The Hard Thing about Hard Things by Ben Horowitz

Strategy Rules - Five Timeless Lessons from Bill Gates, Andy Grove, and Steve Jobs by David B. Yoffie, Michael A. Cusumano

These are all timely books and recently written.

my5thaccount | 10 years ago | on: Slack will soon start testing voice and video chat

The fact that they are ignoring this is a very bad sign. It's way easier to do and hasn't been done well and instead they are doing something really hard that people can already do easily outside the system. They've shifted their focus from their customers needs to beating the competition and it will their downfall.

my5thaccount | 10 years ago | on: Slack will soon start testing voice and video chat

Lots of different instant messengers like skype. Google chat, facetime, just the regular old phone. Video conferencing tools. Even screen sharing systems like gotomeeting. It's a solved problem mostly, but hard to do technically, so that's why it concerns me that Slack is trying to do it when there are lots of things no one does well and slack isn't addressing those. This is a bad sign for slack, IMO.
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