untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: Census: Segregation hits 100-year lows in most American metro areas
untamedmedley's comments
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: What will kill Facebook?
Facebook is odd in that it improves on a previous solution (communication tools: mail, phone, cellphones), but doesn't charge for the utility it brings.
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: Mark Zuckerberg Named TIME’s 2010 Person of the Year
Wikileaks has been in the public conscious for maybe a month (combined) this entire year. Regardless of your politics, you have to admit the Tea Party has been ever-present and incredibly effective at changing the makeup of our government and getting their message out. I don't see how wikileaks has that same (perceived) effect on everyday Americans' lives.
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: 10% unemployment yet every startup in NYC struggling to hire
From what I've seen, you've got a lot of developers commanding 60-80k salaries. From a startup perspective, I don't really understand why this is the only acceptable path.
It just seems smarter to locate near some technical colleges in cities that have a lower cost of living, and pay entry level developers a salary between 35-45k to start. As they improve their skills, you up their salary... assuming that improvement comes with an increase in revenues/profits.
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: I am a Female Sole Founder with no Dev Experience… Yeah, it’s a Tough Road
Maxing all those values, that's what, 22 hours? Where are the other 38 coming from?
ETA: I'm not being facetious here, I genuinely want to know what those hours are being spent on. When you have very young children, sure, but by 6/7 kids in my family are expected to start being self-sufficient (in the ways they can, such as picking up their toys, brushing their own teeth). By the time you hit 10, you've been doing some serious work around the house. I also got my first job at 14...
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: Is The Silicon Valley Talent Shortage Getting Worse?
The only way to get any experience seems to be to start your own company. Which is great for the person who goes off and does it, but not smart for the company trying to hire them.
If employers don't want to waste money investing in entry-level positions, why waste it investing in someone who has made it clear they want to work for themselves?
Pay less, train more.
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: The State of Jay-Z's Empire
I actually DON'T think it's his responsibility to be a role model. BUT I think it's wrong to glorify his success without saying something about the path he walked/walks to obtain it. He is 40-something and STILL writing lyrics about selling drugs.
As for citing examples, I'm sorry, I haven't been keeping a running log of the number of funerals I've been to, the guys I've known who've gotten shot, the women (including myself) who've been physically harassed by guys trying to re-enact the latest video, the children who are lost to drug addicted parents, and every other societal ramification that comes from supporting hip hop culture without qualifying/recognizing the damage it does to the black community. I live it, I think that's enough.
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: The State of Jay-Z's Empire
Exactly. ::sigh::
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: The State of Jay-Z's Empire
There are options that don't involve poisoning the very community you claim to care about through drugs and promoting a lifestyle/"profession" that can get someone killed or sent to jail.
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: The State of Jay-Z's Empire
I upvoted the comment above yours because I see his (and other rappers) influence firsthand among friends and family members and it's really very depressing. Sometimes I don't know how I justify listening to his music...
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: Ask HN: Zero programming experience and badly want to learn. Where to start?
It teaches like a math book, with practice problems after each lesson.
2. Pick a language to learn. I had a C++ background that I hadn't touched since high school, so I found Ruby a little confusing. But it may also be because of the teaching style of the books I used...
Anyway, I switched to PHP and learned from Larry Ullman's book, PHP 6 and MySQL 5 (http://www.dmcinsights.com/phpmysql3/)
3. Going through both of these will probably take you 2-3 months if you're diligent. But once you're halfway through the second book, I'd say you know enough to start building something and using the PHP book as a reference.
What you'll find is that as you build things, you will learn a lot more about how to make your app come together.
Also, I disagree with the comment that it takes years to be able to do something decent with your newfound programming knowledge. Yes, it will take years before you can talk shop with the best of them, but as someone who has taken several languages (Spanish, Japanese, Latin) and played several instruments (piano, flute), I know it doesn't have take years to get past doing scales.
That's has more to do with ability to learn quickly and dedication.
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: Women Don't Want To Run Startups Because They'd Rather Have Children
She is trying to blame her failure on being a woman.
She's started several startups, and each time has failed to create anything that matched her original entrepreneurial dreams. Unfortunately, because this is such a hot topic in tech, and it "verifies" (with purely anecdotal evidence) many people's biases on the issue, people aren't even pointing this out.
I'm calling BS. Trunk is looking for an excuse to explain why her failures aren't her fault (Biology). Instead of writing a meaningful postmortem on how difficult entrepreneurship can be, we get this tripe that's supposed to apply to all (or most) women. Nevermind that there are women in a variety of incredibly demanding professions with children.
Beyond that, I really don't get this notion that you have to be in your children's faces every moment of the day in order for them to be well-adjusted. There's a huge difference between parenting/discipline and hovering/coddling.
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: Thanks For Paying Taxes. Here's A Receipt.
Setting aside money for "Low Income K-12 students" or Foreign Aid or Amtrak (with prices as high as flying and quadruple the travel time) does not necessarily mean that investment is getting results.
I'd only trust a receipt like this if it were annotated with hard numbers on how my dollars turn into meaningful progress.
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: The Difficulty of Hiring Women
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: The Difficulty of Hiring Women
1. Give up time with our friends/hobbies to be completely there for a boyfriend, all the time.
2. Move to a new city to be with a guy (who sometimes isn't even planning to marry us), giving up any career progress made to date.
And that's even before adding a layer of geekiness that I've found acts as man repellent to most "mainstream" male populations. I cannot just go to a party and start talking about how happy I am that Mass Effect 2 is coming to PS3 now that I sold my 360, nor can I go any deeper than "I like computers" with most guys. It's just not all that hot. But the chick who has a fantasy football team (and doesn't know it's filled with D-list players) gets the welcome mat (eta: because sports is accepted in the mainstream).
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: The Difficulty of Hiring Women
The first is that it gives a heads up to the few women here who are just entering the field. It may open up discussions for how to handle such situations when they arise.
The other reason is that not sharing these examples is just as good as saying they never happened. Real concerns become phantom accusations of prejudice against women that don't ever get addressed.
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: A Tale of Two Users, or How Design is Tough
But what I'm saying is every designer should be asking 1. How many people are having this unique difficulty and 2. Is it worth the time and COST to fix it? Moreover, will adding the information/steps to needed to clarify the process bore/put off the majority of customers who already know how to use this (for example, a tutorial that either adds an additional step or doesn't allow users to bypass it)?
A good designer should be able to plan for contingencies, but a good businessperson should be able to draw the line between pleasing a customer and watching their bottom line.
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: A Tale of Two Users, or How Design is Tough
Is the cost associated with meeting this small percentage of customer's needs worth actually meeting them?
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: How YC helped InDinero raise over 1M in angel funding [audio]
A lot of the discussions about women in the workplace (tech and otherwise) have shown that women who make demands aren't taken as seriously as aggressive, blunt men since it goes against people's beliefs about what a woman should be.
(http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2009/12/can_nice_girls_negotiate.htm...)
What we have here is a female entrepreneur who raised funds without mincing words. It's pretty inspiring.
untamedmedley | 15 years ago | on: How 'Waiting for “Superman”' Will Further Fuel the Education Debate
That said, I don't want to give the impression that cram school culture should accepted and imported wholesale to America. I used cram schools as an example of outside forces based in capitalism acting as a self-correcting mechanism for a public school system. Given the political difficulties of transforming public schools, I think it would be helpful to have at least one place students can go to receive an education.
http://www.gq.com/news-politics/mens-lives/200810/devin-frie...
This article, while somewhat old, does a great job of discussing just how shallow that 100-year "achievement" really is. We may live near each other, but that doesn't mean we interact in non-superficial ways.