thiagoperes's comments

thiagoperes | 10 days ago | on: Apple Studio Display and Studio Display XDR

I got the Kuycon G32P and it’s an incredible alternative. 32in + 6K for less than 2k$

Also works great with other sources like an Xbox

I used a Pro Display XDR as my daily driver at work and the difference is minimal

thiagoperes | 5 months ago | on: Slack has raised our charges by $195k per year

We’ve been using Microsoft Teams as well as the entire office suite, and we’ve been positively surprised. There is an occasional clunky UI you come across, but the feature set is far superior to Slack or Zoom, and the ecosystem integration is nice.

thiagoperes | 8 months ago | on: ChatGPT's enterprise success against Copilot fuels OpenAI/Microsoft rivalry

msft had a massive edge. it had exclusive access to models + had web search before anyone.

they flopped this royally, just like windows mobile. they created a shitty ux by shoving it inside the bing app, then they decided to charge for it instead of capturing all enterprise value.

lastly, the product has stalled and missed on their biggest opportunity which is tapping into the data. you can think it's because of how complex it must be, but then openai and everybody else did it.

it's truly a lesson in product mismanagement, once again, from microsoft

thiagoperes | 1 year ago | on: Portugal brings back tax breaks for foreigners in bid to woo digital nomads

The downstream issues are not related to immigration, otherwise house prices would have fallen in Lisbon.

Look at examples such as Singapore, Dubai and many others that adopted an entrepreneurial attitude and figured out the infrastructure to support that growth.

When will they blame when the immigrants don’t come but the problems remain?

thiagoperes | 1 year ago | on: Portugal brings back tax breaks for foreigners in bid to woo digital nomads

What I see in comment sections of articles like this is a perfect example of why EU is set to lose in the coming decades: mindset.

I’d say most Americans understand the value of highly skilled migration. It’s how America stays #1, it’s how they have the best companies, and bring the most value to their nation.

Meanwhile in EU, any move to attract talent is seen as net-negative, unfair and detrimental to the culture and livability. Their negativity is a self fulfilling prophecy, but it will be a very costly and hard pill to swallow, just like the UK is seeing after Brexit.

thiagoperes | 1 year ago | on: Ask HN: Is there any software you only made for your own use but nobody else?

I created my own translation app using llama3-80b, I call it "expat translator": I live outside of my home country and always struggled with using translators like Google Translate because they don't tell you if the way you're writing something feels natural in the other language. It gives me some pretty good results and I also instruct it to give me rewrites for informal and professional use, so I don't sound weird on WhatsApp for example.

It uses an on-device model for language detection and results are sub 0.3s thanks to groq

If someone wants to try: https://testflight.apple.com/join/GBxPMw2h

thiagoperes | 1 year ago | on: An even faster Microsoft Edge

I started using Edge due to work being on the msft suite and I’ve been positively impressed with its performance. It handles way better than Chrome, especially with multiple tabs.

thiagoperes | 5 years ago | on: Is Dark Mode Such a Good Idea?

I have a type of migraine called vestibular migraine and I can confidently say that using dark mode helps A LOT. I agree with previous comments, dark mode is not about optimising for the median, it's about giving more options, just like we did with screen readers, font sizes, etc.

It's one of the sad sides of tech: we have all this knowledge about accessibility and this is either siloed or just not talked about. Designers are learning about aesthetics, color theory, typography but not about making your product support as many humans as possible - which is a business outcome!

thiagoperes | 7 years ago | on: Apple Reports Fourth Quarter Results

Mac and iPhone prices will always be about perceived value. Unfortunately they don't have enough competition to drive prices down and they will take advantage of that for as long as they can.

Some tried from different angles but it seems people just don't feel confident enough to leave the ecosystem. Google keeps pushing sub-par phones. No one has delivered a robust face recognition tech as good as Face ID. Screen and camera quality are almost there but never better in a distinctive manner.

In fact, no one is trying to compete with Apple anymore. Android manufacturers abandoned the high-end market. The tablet and smartwatch markets are pretty much dominated by iPad and Apple Watch.

And as the service category expansion shows, people are getting comfortable with the idea of paying a monthly price for good tech. If competition eventually becomes a problem, they can just start bundling things up like Amazon does: iPhone Upgrade Plan + Apple Music + Cloud Storage + Apple Care + (eventual) TV content.

thiagoperes | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: Best companies to work for in Europe?

In Amsterdam / Netherlands:

- Booking.com

- Uber

- ING

- TravelBird

- Travix

- Backbase

- Catawiki

- Marktplaats

- KLM

- Transavia

- PVH

Or look for startups

Advantages of Netherlands, and things to look for at in a country:

- #12 highest net disposable income after tax in the world [2]

- #3 best inequality adjusted HDI in the world [1]

- #1 best healthcare in Europe, costs a flat 100 EUR for everyone [3]

- #1 highest English proficiency of non-native countries [4]

- #1 most affordable place in EU to buy a house [6]

- #4 lowest average of hours worked in OECD [5]

- Vacation days can be taken one-by-one

- Bike culture, cannabis culture, receptive towards immigrats

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_inequalit...

[2] https://www.numbeo.com/cost-of-living/country_price_rankings...

[3] https://healthpowerhouse.com/publications/euro-health-consum...

[4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EF_English_Proficiency_Index

[5] https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2018/01/the-countries-where-p...

[6] (page 25) https://www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/Deloitte/at/Documents/...

thiagoperes | 8 years ago | on: “I thought I could ship at least 700 units to stay in business”

I think this is a common mistake developers make when creating products: when things start not working, blindly start to add features or improvements they think will be good. I've been on that path myself and had the pain of (almost) going bankrupt.

Most (if not all) of this can be avoided if you spend time after development on getting feedback from customers, doing interviews, usability testing and most importantly trying to find the right commercial angle to develop the business. For example:

- Is the game localised in different languages? - Why targeting Linux and Windows, and not testing/developing on Mac or mobile platforms? - Why not create a end-of-year sale or bundle the game with others for promotion?

thiagoperes | 8 years ago | on: How Booking.com manipulates users

This is a misleading way to compare salaries and cost of life between countries.

A much better metric is to look at net disposable income after tax, if you're focusing on the "making money" aspect.

If you're focusing on the life quality aspect you'll also have to consider mortgage, car ownership and time off.

Example:

- In Netherlands you have 24 business days of time off, where you can take them from the moment your contract begins (not after 1 year working), and you can take them however you want.

- Taking a mortgage in Netherlands is currently cheaper than renting and most houses in the "sweet spot" cost around 300k euros, which is ridiculously cheap. Monthly payments are subsidized by the government (for some years) which makes it cheaper than renting.

To summarise, every country has a lot to offer, and at the end of the day life is not just about money.

thiagoperes | 10 years ago | on: WhatsApp, Used by 100M Brazilians, Shut Down Nationwide Today by a Single Judge

Well, this alone will not make WhatsApp comply with the law, specially if these conversations were encrypted.

Also, there also has to be a consideration for the 100 MILLION users that might depend on this service. Imagine companies that depend on this to communicate efficiently and businesses that rely on this platform to take orders etc.

If they disobey the law, it must have consequences, but not at the cost of hurting your own people.

Taking it to an extreme, would they also take down a bank website if they didn't comply with a similar request and stop people from withdrawing money? I don't think so.

This takedown will not help in the investigation in any ways. So it seems the justice system isn't working for their main customer: the people.

thiagoperes | 10 years ago | on: A Basic Income Should Be the Next Big Thing

First of all, no job should be considered dirty.

Second, if you go to places like Netherlands, Norway and Japan you'll see that it's not about money. Higher education prepares workers to do more complex, more efficient and more productive jobs.

Also, the society is more conscious about not having someone to do stupid things for them like collecting their trays after they eat at the McDonadls, this is YOUR responsibility as a member of a society, to look for others as well.

So in Amsterdam for example, street cleaning and trash collection are done with specialized vehicles. In Denmark, subways are autonomous.

I like to believe that as you increase education and income, the people that would be considered "dumb" in an very unequal society will spend their time developing technologies to automate tasks no one likes to perform and increase productivity.

thiagoperes | 10 years ago | on: Ask HN: Who is hiring? (November 2015)

Booking.com | Amsterdam, Netherlands - FULL-TIME, ON-SITE, easy VISA provided

Booking is hiring Android, iOS, Frontend and Backend Developers. Also Mobile App Designers and UX Designers.

Wanna move to Amsterdam with full expenses paid, a great relocation package and live in the 3rd best life quality in the world (besides making in Euros)?

Frontend: http://grnh.se/52768c

UX Designer: http://grnh.se/46ukx1

Backend: http://grnh.se/3squye

iOS: http://grnh.se/4fwlq6

Android: http://grnh.se/ntofj2

We also have openings for Network Engineers, DevOps, Data Scientists and many more: http://grnh.se/ql4fkw

----------------- ABOUT BOOKING -----------------

Company reviews: http://www.glassdoor.com/Reviews/Booking-com-Reviews-E256653...

Video - Moving to Ams: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gYgESPtEOeo

Video - Booking Hackathon: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iuFiEmx-M_M

Video - Designing at Booking: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SgPsc8GFD5Q

thiagoperes | 10 years ago | on: I spent the last 15 years trying to become an American and failed

That's exactly what I did. I spent a lot of time and money on immigration lawyers trying to find a way to immigrate to the U.S. only because I don't have a degree.

After years of trying without any success I started looking into other options, only to find that it's significantly easier to immigrate into other countries (like Canada). Two months ago I got an offer from a Dutch company (even with them knowing about my degree issue), and I'm moving to Amsterdam next week.

Last month I spent two weeks in California, and, with this new reality, saw the whole place with new eyes. After the glamour wears off, you realize that the other options might be even better, specially after you see that some countries are much more welcoming to immigrants.

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