neekb's comments

neekb | 8 years ago | on: Blink has been acquired by Amazon

The thing that bothers me most is.. Don't people want cookies any more??? When I go grocery shopping, I get a cookie from the bakery. I need to look at them all and pick out the best one. That's how it works! Although I'm sure Amazon will have a solution for that soon enough as well!

neekb | 8 years ago | on: Blink has been acquired by Amazon

Amazon has their own delivery service, bought wholefoods, and now bought blink. Blink has a doorbell offering plus the camera's that you already know of. It's not a stretch to have groceries delivered all the way to your fridge and put blink cameras all over the house to make sure the delivery guy walks back out when he's done.

neekb | 8 years ago | on: How do you keep track of work tasks

Thank you, you are right about the software versus system piece. I hadn't thought about it that way. I'll grab a copy of that book and take a look!

neekb | 10 years ago | on: What us worry? Ashley Madison says it added over 100K users last week

I find it hilarious that anyone is signing up, man or woman, after finding out that there were so many "bots" there talking to people. If this company has ambitions of being public (or being a company at all) then the bots shouldn't be a thing. That's just straight up defrauding users.

The problem with the site in general is that (relatively speaking) there aren't a lot of people looking SPECIFICALLY for affairs. No doubt SOME, but not a LOT. I think that the reason is that affairs work that way. I don't think people wake up, sigh deeply, and say "I think I'll have an affair today". It comes from a relationship that is broken (actually, 2 relationships that are broken), and an opportunity (finding that second person).

neekb | 11 years ago | on: Why Airlines Want to Make You Suffer

One thing that the story doesn't mention is that business travelers are some of the people that suffer the most, because we are required (usually, and unless you're some sort of corporate higher-up) to book the cheapest seats that we can find. Ironic because we travel quite a lot more than "regular people". I guess this is something that could be dealt with on a corporate policy level, and isn't necessarily the problem of an airline, but it's just interesting to notice.

neekb | 11 years ago | on: What to Expect from a Developer “Bootcamp” Program

Wrong title. "Nobody can make you a decent ANYTHING in less than six months." At least job related. You need to make a bunch of mistakes and have a bunch of "AH HA!" moments when those theories you learned in school or a book actually make sense.

neekb | 11 years ago | on: Mark Cuban: If Your Company Is Moving For Tax Reasons, I'm Selling Your Stock

Then you just joined a very large club. I don't think that means you shouldn't pay them, however.

Also, there are tons and tons of people who complain about taxes but don't do anything about them. Do you vote? Did you ever run for any public position? Did you ever write a letter to someone in a public position making an awesome suggestion, or volunteering your time to help fix the system you think is overinflated? (Just examples, you know what I mean...)

Of course I WISH taxes were lower, I love money! But I also believe that despite it's many, many, GLARING flaws... The USA is the best country on the planet, and I want to support that.

neekb | 11 years ago | on: Mark Cuban: If Your Company Is Moving For Tax Reasons, I'm Selling Your Stock

Let's put it a different way. Let's assume for a second that the taxes are more or less "fixed" and need to be paid. SO - you can have companies participate to a lesser or fuller extent. The rest falls on us as INDIVIDUALS.

The moral angle here is that companies shouldn't avoid the taxes of the very environment that enabled them to succeed in the first place.

So I think what he's basically getting at is that paying your (corporate) taxes is basically like "giving back" to that system/environment.

That's the way I think about it, anyways.

neekb | 12 years ago | on: Ask HN: What do you do as IT consultants?

If you get really good at a specific product, there is usually someone out there that needs some help. For example Checkpoint firewall, or another IT Security product...

neekb | 12 years ago | on: Ask HN: I do not enjoy my job, what to do?

> I feel that I currently only have my programming skills and have no idea how to safely move to something else.

That's a pretty damn good skill to have. I often think the opposite "If only I knew how to program I would..."

neekb | 12 years ago | on: Pay No Attention to the Bloody Corpse in the Bathroom

I think the article called to mind some other issues that were more important than the debate about how ethical studies like this are or are not.

This guy's mother was giving the researchers feedback that the participant could not. Namely, that he was getting WORSE. She tried to have him removed from the program, and apparently couldn't. That goes well beyond "yet another statistic", especially as he was deemed incapable of making his own medical decisions.

neekb | 13 years ago | on: Parable of the Stones

The part I liked best was:

"And as you evolve that great idea, it changes and grows. It never comes out like it starts because you learn a lot more as you get into the subtleties of it."

I think this really relates to the hacker community because it shows that you can start with SOMETHING (Just go try something), and then later you can change it and modify it. The idea you start with is never the idea that comes out on the other side.

I have a seemingly simple, offline business that we had to pivot more than once to get it just right. We used feedback from our customers (and more importantly, would-be customers) to evolve and succeed. Thanks for posting this!

neekb | 13 years ago | on: Want to learn to code? Start here.

I agree. I think it's a lot easier to get started if you have SOME idea of what you want to accomplish or what direction you want to go in. And who couldn't use a good to-do list?

neekb | 13 years ago | on: Negotiating Your Startup Job Offer

I think this was the most important point regarding equity: "The only thing that matters in terms of your equity when you join a startup is what percent of the company they are giving you. If management tells you the number of shares and not the total shares outstanding so you can’t compute the percent you own – don’t join the company! They are dishonest and are tricking you and will trick you again many times."

I have twice worked for companies that presented my options this way. Although one of them worked out very well for me, and the other is likely to as well, it's still sketchy. I wish this post had been around back then :) That being said, I will be referring back to it in the future!

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