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You’re right these are good. Ty!


Adding to the list!


Not sure, this is my first interview with a larger company and there is one (cashapp)


Is this satire? What option would someone have if they’re:

1. Unable to commit to a location long term (students, seasonal workers, people trying to find their fit)

2. Unable to fiscally purchase property (not everyone can just buy a condo

3. Unable to fiscally commit to a property/location - many people have dynamic incomes over time. What they can afford one year may not be the same the next.

Many people have unstable living situations one way or another, and I put myself in this category. People like the verbiage of “landlords do nothing” but in reality they take on the risk of property ownership so people forced to think short term don’t have to.


And here I had no idea there was a separate app for Spotify live. Splitting functionality out like that seems like the feature would’ve died from day one


This article is less about how ChatGPT was built and more about how surprised openAI was by the success and why


You absolutely should, but also - charging a paltry amount is hilariously in line with the lessons about stealing every inch that you’ve been forced to learn


Zanny Minton Beddoes (the writer of that piece) has a degree in economics from Oxford, a masters from Harvard, worked for the minister of finance Poland, and has worked for the economist for the last 30 years.

She’s conducted surveys and covered policies across the world from South America to Moscow (all this per Wikipedia).

I think she’s well qualified to provide opinion, not sure if I’ll take it - but that’s the point of an opinion piece.

What have you done to qualify yourself for your job? Except write snarky, poorly written and ill contributing comments on this forum for the last decade?


Now that it's open source, what's stopping you from integrating it into your workflow? Have you ever even tried it?

I don't think the being locked in a proprietary workflow bit is your real reason, because when you break it down - this doesn't make much sense. Fear of needing to switch workflows down the line outweighs the [potentially temporary if company dies] boost in productivity?

Of course, this assumes kite fits your workflow well and you find it delivers value (you don't cancel immediately)


Believing this is a normal/typical way of using twitter is one of the most neurotic things I’ve read on this forum


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