telebone_man | 6 years ago | on: Telix clone
telebone_man's comments
telebone_man | 6 years ago | on: Ask HN: What job can a “jack of all trades” look for?
I was a 'generalist' for most of my career. I had started, run and sold a successful business that required me to touch all parts of the business.
Until a Sales Director absolutely schooled me in the theory that underpinned his work. He seemed insulted that I claimed to be proficient in sales. It was an insult to his specialism.
I would suggest you really test yourself in one of these areas before claiming you're proficient. I've never met a single person who was proficient in all the above. I've met plenty of people who could trudge along in those areas.
telebone_man | 6 years ago | on: Tell HN: Google fi bug directs calls to strangers
It's technically feasible.. but in my opinion, if it's happened with you then it's very likely to be happening with others.
There's no one single way to setup telco infrastructure, so it would be educated-guesswork in the case of Google Fi.
Worth noting VoIP is real time, it either works or it doesnt. And if a call is being setup between two parties and it's otherwise a good quality call, then monitoring is unlikely to mark it as a bad call.
Personally, I would recommend logging this as a bug (if Google Fi allow it?) as I suspect it will be near impossible for them to spot these scenarios, even with clever monitoring tools.
I'll be keeping an eye on the news for follow ups on this one!
telebone_man | 6 years ago | on: Ask HN: Is it legal to use Twilio/Plivo within India
"In India, VoIP is allowed, but only for computer-to-computer communications. India deregulated IP Telephony on 1 April 2002 following the ITUís World Telecommunication Policy Forum held in 2001 on the topic of ì IP Telephonyî. Indiaís proposed unified licence regime, however, would impose no restriction on VoIP telephony or other IP-enabled services, provided they are offered by operators with a unified licence that have duly paid all required registration charges."
..In practice, this means Twilio can terminate a call into India, as long as the route the call takes is via a licensed operator. This is Twilio's problem, not yours. (unless it says otherwise in their terms).
It also means if an individual, physically within India, chooses to make an outbound call, over the Twilio service, then the endpoint has to be another IP-endpoint. Or if to a 'copper cable endpoint', then at least traverse over an appropriate Indian carrier at some point. Probably using some kind of PSTN-IP gateway. Again, Twilio's problem and not yours (unless it says otherwise in their terms).
These complications were introduced to prevent people in India setting up copper cable-IP gateways, taking advantage of cheaper retail call bundles, and selling them cheap on the wholesale market. Naughty!
Personally, I would contact Twilio. They won't be able to give legal advice, but they will at least tell you if they can legally facilitate the requirement.
telebone_man | 7 years ago | on: Ask HN: What are the best questions to ask a CTO during a job interview?
Doesn't have to be technical, in my opinion.
telebone_man | 7 years ago | on: Ask HN: What're your startup negotiation tips?
telebone_man | 7 years ago | on: Ask HN: How did you get introduced to HN?
One of them was something like ‘don’t under estimate the value of wasting time on hacker news’.
Held true!
telebone_man | 7 years ago | on: Ask HN: What project ideas have you had, think it would work, but will never do?
And then display that figure in a big lcd panel in your back window.
Haven’t done it, because every time I remember it, I’m driving my car and forget by time I’m home.
telebone_man | 7 years ago | on: Ask HN: Incentivizing kids
Imagine being challenged at work... in a sales team, for example. Make a sale, get to do a lucky dip. Say two people make an equivalent sale, one wins and the other doesn't. I would personally feel less motivated if I lost.
I wonder if you did it to kids, they would learn to weigh up whether doing any given task was worth some arbitrarily set lost/win.
It's the difference between learning that "washing a car is worth $10 of my time because it will takes x hours and the cost of soap is y and so on" vs "washing a car is 50/50 worth nothing or $10".
telebone_man | 8 years ago | on: What questions should I ask the engineering team I'm going to manage?
Sometimes, you'll be taking a job that someone in the team thinks they should have been offered - but didn't for whatever reason (perhaps current management weren't aware... or they simply aren't appropriate skilled...)
These people can also be well respected by others in the team. And winning their respect is therefore particularly important, as they may be the ones to validate you on behalf of others.
You can normally spot them, as they will lean back, fold their arms and keep to themselves (out of frustration). Or act the opposite and be completely outspoken over the top of others.
I would consider that these people do exist, and need to be wooed in a slightly different way. Instead of asking 'what do you want?' perhaps it'd be better to ask 'where do you think the problems are?'.
telebone_man | 8 years ago | on: Open Speech Recording
That's almost same thing you say to vocally authorise yourself with HMRC in the UK...
It's something like "My voice is my password".
I wouldn't want me saying that phrase released into public...
telebone_man | 8 years ago | on: Making music using new sounds generated with machine learning
But, in every practical sense, the sounds are seemingly random to the listener.
Abstract expressionist art can be enjoyed regardless of the fact it's visually just a bunch of random scribbles.
But the sound this machine produces has to then be sculpted - lest we listen to a droning tone.
Would be cooler if you could describe the timbre of a sound you want to hear, and it produces that...
"I want a woody.. tinny.. percussive sound" (out pops some kind of glockenspiel marimba hybrid) or "I want a breathy sounding noise that sounds synthesized with the tone of tenor vocalist but a punchy distorted entry".
telebone_man | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: How can I stop receiving spam phone calls?
For example... A call from a garage to say your car is ready to be picked up, or perhaps some kind of emergency service? I imagine their calls would start with similar wording to sales calls. "Hello, can I speak to so and so?"
telebone_man | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: How can I stop receiving spam phone calls?
There's a business called Pindrop that conduct an analysis of audio data to guess where a call is originating from. The idea being, if a call originates from somewhere like India it'll take roughly a certain route that will produce certain audible artifacts on the line.
They also score a bunch of other stuff. I'd recommend reading the patents their CEO filed if you're interested. It's interesting.
I wondered if you could share, roughly, what your algorithm is doing? Are you also analyzing audio data?
telebone_man | 8 years ago | on: Hi,I'm a 19 year-old starting a new music streaming service, would love feedback
On a Sunday morning, I get 'Sweet soul Sunday' or 'Easy Love Songs'. At 9am on Monday it's 'Concentration Music' or 'Background Synth Songs'. Around 2pm, you start to see 'Workout Mix'.
Then you have 'Daily Mix 1', 'Daily Mix 2' and so on which are automatically created playlists, based on what I've listened to. They themselves are generally categorized into rough timbres or styles.
I think Spotify actually employs 'agents' that curate and search for new music for a given style or scene. I think Apple does too.
I very rarely search on Spotify. I've never created my own playlist.
If it's relevant, I would consider myself well versed in music. I studied it during my younger years, and whilst I don't these days - it's a passionate hobby of mine.
I just wanted to mention this, as you've mentioned things you want to do, that Spotify already does well, in my opinion. I can't speak for the other services.
That being said, maybe you could do it better. So I don't mean to discourage you.
If you could build something exactly like Spotify, that allows me to filter out songs with explicit content I would snap that up in a heartbeat. LOL.
telebone_man | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: What do you wear to work?
When I was contracting, I would go from businesses to business, every 6 months or so. I would always start by 'dressing up', full suit. Tie. Etc.
I'd then suss out how people acted on the first impression. Some companies have a culture where a suit = respect and authority. I wanted this because I was there to get a job done quickly and needed people to be on board, as I was only there for a few months.
Then, some companies have alternative views. Suits can provoke anti-establishment mentalities. So, I'll dress more like my colleagues and rely on more honest things to gain that respect.
One man can change the world, by recycling every day, hugging a loved one or cycling instead of driving. But the way people jump to conclusions based on the way someone dresses is unfortunately far too ingrained in our society. And this has been the case for 1000s of years. There's little value in making a statement by wearing something different.
FYI, if I'm not in a suit is probably a plain t-shirt, dark jeans and a 'smart trainer' (such as converse?). Take a look at some of the high-street shops and find a style you like.
telebone_man | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: What would your ideal programming language be like?
telebone_man | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: How have you hacked the job search process?
It's not enough to just be the best. You have to be (one of) the first applicants. I wrote a simple scraper for a bunch of job-aggregators (indeed... jobserve...) that would send me a SMS and e-mail when a job matching my keywords was posted.
On the subject of keywords, sometimes jobs are posted with bad spellings. I work in 'telecommunications'. But there would be jobs posted under telecoms... telecomms.. telecomunications...
Sometimes you were a near perfect fit for a role, and sometimes you're a perfect fit. If you're a perfect fit, spend an extra few minutes finding the recruiters direct email and phone number. Then apply both via the website and then communicate directly with them.
Make the recruiter's life as easy as possible. In any e-mail you send, attach your CV again. Make sure you finish your email with your contact details.
Try to get good at understanding what an employer wants. Sometimes it's unwritten (someone hardworking.. someone loyal..) and sometimes it's written between the lines (e.g. 'experienced xyz needed' = 'we currently don't have skilled people or have too little of them'). Sometimes it's these unwritten requirements that are more or just as important as the written ones.
And finally, if you're unsuccessful, do your part in contacting the recruiter to thank them for their time.
telebone_man | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: Music listeners.. why do you listen music today?
telebone_man | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: Writing cover letters for tech jobs
UUDDLRLRBA
It pops up a cute little rainbow