#but it definitely finds all the writing mistakes i've made that no program told me was wrong
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using a screen reader to proofread is fun until it loudly reads out all the stupid grammar & typing mistakes you've made. and this is exactly what you want it to do but you're also mad. like oooo look at youuuu stupid machine DO IT BETTER THEN HUH (thank u)
#i currently need it to read out 28 pages / 13k words and god damn does this take long#but it definitely finds all the writing mistakes i've made that no program told me was wrong#let's see if i can get this story out today... (anything 4 u pii)#own#the sergeant speaks
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Hi, I just wanted to say I really appreciate how much you fight for the no solicited criticism thing. I have dyslexia and it's really discouraging to get criticism about grammar and spelling. Which I know is one of the things people try to argue as really 'small' in ways of critiquing fics, but really it's just as bad as anything else.
I spend hours editing my work because I'm so nervous that I will miss use a word or spell it wrong. I use talk to text to check spelling, I ask Siri to spell things for me (which iPhone has serious screwed me over on by updating that feature to be no longer helpful.) I (a grown adult) call my mom who is not even in fandom and ask her to how things are spelled if I can't find it through technology. I completely rewrite sentences or paragraphs just because I and all of my resources can't figure out the word I'm trying to spell. I edit my work on programs that allow me to highlight a word and look it up in the dictionary to make sure the definition matches with what I think I've typed. I spend a lot of time trying so hard to not have spelling mistakes, or use the wrong word. I read things out loud with filter screens, and change fonts to make sure I'm seeing the words correctly. And without fail I miss something. The programs miss something. And people pointing that crap out is so devastating.
I spend a lot of time in life online now (thanks 2020) and I have never felt more self-conscious about my inability to spell, because now it is in everything I do, every interaction is text. Which made criticism about it on fics feel ten times worse. It's hard enough to not be able to play games online because I can't get the spellcheck to guess what I mean, or not be able to text in group messages with friends because I can't read it fast enough to keep up with the conversation. So in an area where I spend hours of effort working on something, to be told I missed something is gut wrenching.
I started putting on my fics requests in the author's notes to leave no criticism (and I tried to say it as nicely as I could. I explained it made it hard for me to want to write. I said I was doing this for fun and criticism ruined that. I left it there because I felt like telling people about my dyslexia was a cop out. I don't owe people that information to make them stop, which is why I'm sending this on anon) and somehow it just seemed to get worse. I started getting "I know you said no criticism, but..." And so I took all my work down. It just wasn't worth it anymore.
Sorry to unload this all on you. I just really wanted to say going through all of your posts about this issue made me feel less alone with it. So thank you.
I'm sorry that happened to you, and I'm sorry it's happened to so many others too.
People CONSTANTLY try to argue that typos are "small" so it's fine to correct them but anything else is not okay and it's like!!! it's not better!! it's still not okay unless the author says it is okay!! You deserve to have your wishes respected regardless of any personal life situation. You are 100% correct; you do not need a special circumstance to be treated with kindness and respect. That should be the default.
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Worthy ~Webpril Day 8
A/N: At almost my 4a.m, here it is! The concluding part to yesterday's little 'hidden injury' combined prompt fill. For some reason, these last two were harder for me to write, and I couldn't quite get this one to sound the way I wanted it to in my head (being sleep deprived probably hasn't helped haha). The struggles of writing sometimes - some ideas are just stubborn and don't always come out how you want them to haha Anyways, I hope you enjoy!
~Read it on AO3
~Read it on FFN
“I’m good, just a bit tired...had a big week of homework and helping Aunt May with the charity stuff y’know.”
Tony’s eyes narrowed from behind the suit’s helmet, his gaze a level of intensity usually only directed to dealing with complicated circuitry, mathematics, or playing the intimidation game with Nick Fury. Now that was some bullshit. Tony had known Peter for long enough to know that the more excuses the kid gave, the more likely it was that he was lying. Tony could practically taste the blood that Peter kept trying to subtly spit onto the pavement when he thought he wasn’t looking.
Above all, however, Tony wasn’t sure whether to be angry that Peter was trying to lie about how he was feeling and thought his biometrics weren’t being transmitted to Tony’s HUD at all times (it’s Stark technology, of course it would be), or whether he should be concerned about some form of brain damage because it didn’t seem to cross Peter’s usually so sharp and quick mind at all that his biometrics would be transmitted.
Tony decided he couldn’t watch Peter struggle with moving what were some of the lightest pieces of rubble anymore. Cutting the power to the repulsors, he landed next to where Peter was trying and failing to nonchalantly lean against the tower of debris they had begun to stack, and placed a hand on his shoulder.
“You’re done, kiddo. I’ve got it from here.”
The HUD inside the suit displayed an increase in blood pressure, which F.R.I.D.A.Y informed him was likely a result of ‘the human body’s response to acute pain.’ Tony knew Peter was a tough kid, but the way Peter moved looked stiffer than the Doombot metal corpses that were now strewn about the streets of Manhattan.
“No no, I’m good, see?” Peter returned to shifting the (smaller) pieces of rubble onto the pile. Tony had a feeling he was only continuing to wear his mask to prevent the undoubtedly pained expression on his face from telling Tony all he needed to know.
If Tony could pinch the bridge of his nose through his helmet at that moment, he would. He knew a compassionate and understanding approach should be the first port of call, but it would take the strength of a god like Thor himself to summon the patience he needed to deal with the situation at hand. He was tired, possibly mildly concussed after his skull had repeatedly hit the inside of his helmet at least eighteen times that afternoon, and he couldn’t wait for the day to be over so he could hit ‘reset’ on life and enter into the welcoming void of sleep.
Peter would have five minutes to come clean. Five minutes was about as long as Tony gave himself before his celestially bestowed patience wore out. Tony gave Peter a once-over once more as he continued to collect the smaller pieces of fragmented concrete. Tony returned to scanning the surrounding buildings for any hidden damages to the infrastructure, still making sure to keep Peter in his peripheral, his biometric data continuously updating on the top left of the suit’s inner display.
After five agonising minutes and another spike in Peter’s heart rate, Tony sighed in resignation and approached Peter. “Kid. Stop.”
Peter looked up, having taken his mask off moments before, happy to feel fresh air on his face for the first time since the fight began. Moreso, Peter was happy to have anything that felt like it restricted his already strained breathing off of his face. Tony could empathise with the feeling - experiencing an elephant sitting on your chest didn’t make the job of breathing any easier.
Peter’s expression to his instruction was one he’d seen too frequently; it was the one that bled with innocence, accompanied by the wide-eyed stare of a young Labrador puppy. “Yeah, Mr Stark?”
The helmet receded from Tony’s face so Peter was able to take in his blended countenance; it was something hovering between disappointment and barely concealed concern.
“Is there anything you’d like to tell me? Maybe...I don’t know, an injury?” Peter blanched as he felt Tony’s probing eyes drilling into his own before clearing his throat.
He began to return to cleanup duties, hoping that if he ignored the situation for long enough, it’d go away. “No, Mr Stark, everything is -” Big mistake.
Another round of Peter’s half-baked excuses and deflection were cut off as Tony interrupted. “Zip it, you’re busted. You can try to hide it from me all you want, but F.R.I.D.A.Y knows better.”
Peter cursed under his breath. Even after spending considerable time in Tony’s Spider-Suits, he still sometimes forgot about the extent of the capabilities of the technology and AI programming that came with the package. While there was no point in hiding it anymore, Peter couldn’t stop himself before he insisted, “really, it’s okay.”
“It obviously isn’t,” Tony said, unable to prevent his tone from taking on a scathing and acerbic quality. Dragging his hand down his face, he paused and took a deep breath, seeing the way Peter’s features were pinched with hurt he was trying so hard to hide. Tony had a feeling that that hurt extended beyond just the physical; it was just wrong. “Look, kid, I’m sorry. You shouldn’t have to hide your injuries. I mean not like it’s possible anyway, you’re wearing my suit, for one. You should’ve known better.”
Tony supposed his frustration stemmed from the fact that he felt like he was looking into a mirror. He had wanted for Peter to find that little grey area to operate in in more than one capacity, yet instead Peter was currently taking a page out of Tony’s book, and not one of the good ones. ‘Don’t do anything I would do’. Well, attempting - poorly - to conceal any and all injuries unfortunately fit the profile. ‘Don’t do anything I wouldn’t do’. Tony had to give Peter credit; that book hadn’t been opened.
“I just didn’t want to disappoint you again.” Peter saw the way Tony almost imperceptibly flinched as soon as the word ‘again’ left his lips. Chewing on his bottom lip momentarily and stopping when he tasted blood, Peter waited for Tony’s response. The silence persevered and Tony didn’t offer one.
Peter couldn’t quite tell what was going on beneath the surface with his mentor. At times, Tony was able to make himself so unreadable that it made Peter both envious and afraid. Envious, because Peter hated the way he was such an open, easily read book at times, and afraid for the aftermath of whatever Tony kept repressed under the surface. It was like a game of Russian Roulette, except Peter sometimes wondered which he’d really prefer; Tony’s disapproval or the actual bullet.
“I…” Peter continued, fixing his eyes on one particular pigeon feather that was floating in circles just in front of his left foot. He found himself pouring out his latest insecurities against his own will; at least he told himself it was against his will and that it was the pain’s fault. “I don’t feel like I belong with you guys. You’re all older, you’ve seen more stuff, battled more aliens and wizards. You all know what you’re doing and here I am, the young kid from Queens who doesn’t really deserve his place next to the Avengers.”
Silence.
Before Peter could react to the shadow that started to loom over him, he felt himself being pulled into a not-too-tight embrace that managed to expertly avoid his sore spots. He couldn’t help the tears that prickled at the corners of his eyes and fought to keep them from flowing over.
“Just so we’re clear on a couple of things. First, none of us know what we’re doing, get that out of your head. Second, you’re every bit worthy of being here.”
The sound of propellers were suddenly very close, and Peter wondered how on earth he’d missed them altogether.
“Third, get in the helicopter. I don’t want to hear a single complaint about it, kapeesh? We’re taking you to medical.”
A/N: Tomorrow's prompt is going to be quite an interesting one to fill. Tomorrow's prompt fill might also be a little bit later than usual. I've got quite a lot on my plate approaching the weekend, so worst-case scenario, I'll update twice in one day ;) Definitely going to try not to let that be the case though :) x Thank you for your continued support and encouragement!
#webpril day 8#webpril 2021#webpril#mcu fanfiction#marvel#peter parker fanfiction#tony stark fanfiction#irondad fanfiction#peter parker whump#h/c fanfiction#emotional h/c#writing prompt#writing challenge#my fic#h/c
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I'VE HEARD THE FOUNDERS DIDN'T JUST GIVE IN AND TAKE WHOEVER THE VCS WANTED
But it's not necessarily a mistake to try something that has a 90% chance of failing, if you think about it, I can't imagine telling Bill Gates at 19 that he should wait till he graduated to start a startup and Steve Jobs wanted to invest in Microsoft. A investors often make companies take more money than they have in the past to make sure you don't contradict yourself. You know how there are some people whose names come up in conversation and everyone says He's such a great guy? So I'm supposed to finish college, then go work for another company as we're suggesting, he might well have gone to work for Apple. Even Newton fell into this trap. But because the lies are indirect we don't keep a very strict accounting of them.1 A lot of startups, whereas this is probably the first you've founded. Some startups could go directly from seed funding to a VC round; several of the companies we've funded have. A rounds already are high res.
Want to get hired by Yahoo? I've given two examples of things founders complain about. Object-oriented programming, and three and a half of them are bad: Object-oriented programming is popular in big companies, because their software is probably going to be bloated and full of expensive fittings. So it is a high school student? Though lie has negative connotations, I don't mean to suggest we should never do this. They just want to invest millions in a company the founders could get nothing. They ask it the way you might poke a hermit crab in a tide pool, to see what it does. Like a lot of things e. Don't just do what they tell you, and then everyone wants to buy you.
If you want to talk to the other board members, you just yell into the next gear. At Viaweb we got our first $10,000 of seed money from our friend Julian, but he was sufficiently rich that it's hard to do a really good job on anything you don't think about in the shower in the morning is more important than I'd thought. Y Combinator doesn't require vesting, because a we invest such small amounts, and b you're often forced to take deals you don't like. I'm often reluctant to go running, but once you publish some definite ambition, it switches directions and starts working in your favor. How do you decide?2 The trouble with consulting is that clients have an awkward habit of calling you on the phone.3 I think we're still at the beginning of this one. With individual angels you don't have to worry about. Why does it bother adults so much when kids do things reserved for adults? When I was in high school is: mental queasiness.4 PG, Thanks for the intro!5
It's harder to say about it has some kind of turf to protect, and this question is just to get you?6 So just keep playing. I think it can scale all the way to succeed is through following the rules.7 I could play all day. It wasn't the vet's fault; the cat had a congenitally weak heart; the anaesthesia was too much for it; but there was no one but him. Not all the people who list at ABNB, they list elsewhere too I am not claiming to be good at what they do. The disadvantage of taking money from less known firms is that people will assume, correctly or not, that you were turned down by the more exalted ones. But if someone had, they'd probably be quite rich now.
As one VC told me: If you were talking to a guy four feet tall whose ambition was to play in the NBA, I'd feel pretty stupid saying, you can do; and don't underestimate your abilities. I believe they conceal because they'd be frightening, not because they want to believe you're a hot prospect, because it meant we didn't have to pay much for infrastructure. I can't predict for sure which forces will prevail, but I'll describe them and you can ask each for advice about the other. They leave 20% as an options pool for later employees but they set things up so that they can hack the admissions process: that they can take the very same kid and make him seem a more appealing candidate than he would if he went to the local public school. And that's what the malaise one feels in high school either.8 In fact, you don't worry that it might come out badly, or upset delicate social balances, or that you won't be able to push back in the matter of control, because they get a big idea to appear in your head.9 But as I thought more about this project, I realized it would probably have been better for all of us, it wouldn't have been better just to tell us the truth: that there weren't any famous black scientists. Professors nowadays seem to have become professional fundraisers who do a little research on the side of the ledger; if you could, you'd have made it.
In fact most such rules are just hacks to manage large groups efficiently.10 But as I grew older, suburbia started to feel suffocatingly fake. But I am daily waiting for the line to collapse. They'd face some challenges if they wanted to make more, but not totally unlike your other friends. He likes to observe startups for a while to recover. Inexperienced angels often get cold feet when the time comes to write that big check. Of all the reasons we lie to kids to protect them. They may feel they have to make something people want. The example of a startup, managing them is one of their apartments at first, and since they don't have to pay much for infrastructure.11 You can go anywhere you want. As turned into de facto series B rounds.12
But that, if not beyond the bounds of possibility, is beyond the scope of this article. The traditions and financial models of the VC business both success and failure are self-perpetuating. They ask it the way you might poke a hermit crab in a tide pool, to see what it does. To be a startup you need to do: find a question that makes the world interesting.13 Well, maybe. I think about it, and let some MBA take over as soon as this thought occurred to me, because just about every startup I've seen grinds to a halt during fundraising, which can easily take 6 weeks. Only a great designer can. Y Combinator exerts less.
Notes
In When the same ones.
Now we don't use code written while you were expected to, but rather by, say, recursion, and FreeBSD 1. Whoever fed the style section reporter this story about suits coming back would have turned out to be some number of restaurants that still require jackets for men. Stiglitz, Joseph.
The IBM 704 CPU was about bands.
If you walk into a great discovery often seems obvious in retrospect. A larger set of plausible sounding startup ideas is many times that conversation was repeated.
If your income tax rates were highest: 14. I know, Lisp code.
Many hope he was exaggerating. And while they may try allowing up to the option pool as well they would probably also the main reason I did the section of the venture business barely existed when they decide you're a loser they're done, at one remove: it might seem, because they could be pleasure in a in the mid 20th century. But not all are. You'd think they'd have taken one of those things that's not true.
Life of Isaac Newton, p. Free money to start over from scratch. The attention required increases with the buyer's picture on the parental dole, and graph theory.
We didn't swing for the popular vote. So if you're good you are.
As always, tax rates will tend to have to resort to expedients like selling autographed copies, or the presumably larger one who shouldn't? Hint: the separate condenser.
The First Industrial Revolution happen earlier? Innosight, February 2012.
I know it's a problem can be huge.
You should probably fix. Pliny Hist.
There is archaeological evidence for large settlements earlier, but they can't afford to. Joe Gebbia needed Airbnb? And I'm sure for every startup we funded, summer 2010.
Thanks to Sam Altman, Jessica Livingston, Fred Wilson, Ben Horowitz, Max Roser, Reid Hoffman, and Geoff Ralston for reading a previous draft.
#automatically generated text#Markov chains#Paul Graham#Python#Patrick Mooney#anaesthesia#chance#summer#sup#things#Roser#Altman#disadvantage#nothing#consulting#Professors#candidate#series#VC#dole#fittings#Combinator#Revolution#startup#Well#guy#fact#Fred
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Why can you not get it through your head that some people with mental health problems NEEDED 13 reasons why. Like I've seen so many people explain that seeing something they could relate too personally was very important to them. Maybe for others it was hurtful but that doesn't change the fact that some people with real mental issues also benefited from it. If it wasn't that way for you then great. Also I'm sure if Demi lovato was promoting it you'd be all for it, and that's just the tea.
Here’s the ~tea~. The show still would have helped people without those god awful graphic scenes. As I’ve said before, the show had great writing and great acting. It is based on a book that actually helped me a lot about ten years ago when I was first realizing some of my own mental health issues.
Had they not included some of the triggering material in that show, you would not have noticed the difference. You would not be on the internet complaining about the fact that you didn’t get to watch a girl literally cut herself and bleed to death. The story and acting would have remained intact and people still would have been helped by it. The only difference is that fewer people would have been HARMED by it.
My concern is not just with my own experiences. My concern is for the experiences of others. Why did nobody think about a situation where the parents of a child who died by suicide might watch this program? Why did nobody think that parents who never got a reason why may decide to watch this show in hopes of finding one? Why did they show Hannah’s character displaying symptoms of PTSD, but not think about how their show would trigger suicide survivors or parents who found their dead child in the bathtub?
I don’t only speak from my own experiences with mental health and suicide (although I do have PLENTY to draw from). I speak taking into account the experiences of others. I speak taking into account the opinions most mental health professionals would have if you told them about a show that included such graphic material. I speak taking into account the parents and little sister of my classmate who killed himself when he was 14. I speak taking into account every person who has ever had to find somebody’s corpse after they committed suicide.
If you’re only concerned about how something affects YOU, then you’re missing a huge part of the story. Everything affects everything. The butterfly effect. So the show helped you (or the other people you’ve read about)... is your life worth more than mine? No. Is my life worth more than yours? No. So what is the solution? A middle ground.
And here’s what the middle ground would be: The same exact show. The same exact story. The same exact actors. The very small changes that could have made all the difference include:
- Actually including a trigger warning on EVERY episode- Providing a link on the warnings that would include a more detailed discription of the graphic material (including time stamps) for anyone who wanted to skip over those parts- Not making the trailer seem like it’s going to be some sort of murder mystery drama- Including actual resources for people struggling with self harm, suicide, sexual assault, etc. IN THE SHOW- Actually making mental illness a part of the show. Mentioning at least one mental illness. Educating their audience.And here’s the big one...
- Respecting their audience enough to NOT make us watch a girl literally die and her parents find her body in a pool of blood. Have the camera zoomed in on her face, in pain, while she cut herself instead of making us watch the blood poor out. Use wide angles and silhouettes. Choosing to leave out graphic, triggering, and harmful material is not censorship. It’s respect.
My life and my experiences are not more important than yours. I’ve spent the last ten years of my life trying to speak out about suicide, self harm, and mental health/illness. I have never said (and would never say) that a show such as 13 Reasons Why should have never been made.
We do need shows and artists out there that get people talking about such important issues. But we need shows that are safe places for people who are dealing with similar issues. Not everyone gets triggered by graphic material, but we need those people to be empathetic towards those of us who are.
That’s what’s really important about these shows: The aftermath. The conversation. Listening to the opinions of people who are dealing with those issues. Asking ourselves “Okay, this show started a conversation, now how can we continue it? How can we help people who are dealing with suicidal tendencies?”
And you now what the answer to that could be? Making more shows that they can watch and relate to without getting so triggered! Copycat suicide is a real thing and it’s a serious issue. People see self harm on TV and no matter how gruesome it is, they often start doing it themselves.
Someone suicidal may watch 13RW and think “Wow, so many people cared about Hannah and it’s so sad she’s gone. I don’t think I want to kill myself anymore...” OR they may think “Wow, nobody cared about Hannah until she was dead. The signs were right under their noses and nobody did anything. People finally loved her once she was gone. Maybe they’ll love me too once I’m gone”. YOU NEVER KNOW HOW SOMEONE IS GOING TO REACT TO SOMETHING LIKE THAT AND IT’S IMPORTANT FOR CREATORS TO REALIZE THIS. NOBODY IS CENSORING THEM. THEY HAVE A CHOICE AND IF THEY ARE TRUE ARTISTS, THEY CAN GET THE POINT ACROSS WITHOUT BEING GRATUITOUS.
Please start listening and understanding people. Have empathy. Understand that (as I have already said) this is not a personal attack. Plenty of shows that are favorites of mine (My Mad Fat Diary, Degrassi) have made mistakes like this too. I like to openly discuss those mistakes while still appreciating the shows that changed my life.
And as for what you said about Demi - that is absolutely not true. I have no trouble calling out my faves when they do something I don’t approve of. That’s why I’ve taken a break from Taylor Swift. It’s important to acknowledge when someone you love makes a mistake or does something you don’t approve of, and to realize that it doesn’t necessarily mean you have to stop loving them. Demi has done so much for the mental health community and I love her for that. She has definitely done more to raise awareness for self harm, mental illnesses, mental healthcare, etc. than Selena or most of the people involved on the show. But here’s the thing - it’s not a competition. The more the merrier. We need multiple voices on multiple platforms. But despite everything great that Demi has done, if she fully backed a show like this, I would lose most of my respect for her as a mental health advocate. She could tweet about it, watch it, enjoy it, say it made her cry, whatever... and that would be okay. But if she tried to say that there was no issues with it? I would never respect that, especially coming from someone so deeply involved and educated in the mental health community.
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I'VE BEEN PONDERING FIELD
The problem with a score is that no one cares enough to disagree with you. Also turn off every other filter, particularly Could this be a big deal. Why don't more people do it? Just build things. Traditional profitability means a big bet is finally paying off, whereas the main importance of ramen profitability is a trick for not dying en route. You can fix the first by stepping back from the problem. And you end up with two large hash tables, one for each corpus, mapping tokens to number of occurrences. Few startups succeed without taking investment. As Marc Andreessen put it, software is eating the world, if you find yourself shrinking away from them. What seems like work to you? Bold? What's missing?
Thump, thump, thump. The writing is the familiar word salad: Gender is not like some of the efficiency of taking the status quo for granted and start to question things. Which means to understand economic inequality in the US has increased dramatically. What about grad school? Just be warned you'll have to do a lot better for a lot less money. If you're at the leading edge of a field that's changing rapidly, your ideas about what's sexy will be somewhat correlated with what's valuable in practice. In the group one level up from yours, your boss represents your entire group is one virtual person. But only graduation rates, not how much students learn. That was one reason even smart people were fooled by the Bubble. I wanted to buy expensive things. 9889 and. The answer that springs to mind is Usenix, but that it was located to the south.
A company is defined by the schleps it will undertake. It would be a good thing for the world. No, he said, by then I was interested in AI a hot topic then, he told me I should major in math. To start with, spam is not unsolicited commercial email. The organic way to do it is to be young. The especially observant will notice that while I consider each corpus to be a large tumor. Are there better ways to solve them? They didn't have to try to get customers to pay them for something, in the unlikely absence of any other evidence, have a 99. The summer before senior year I took some college classes.
16804294 what 0. One of his projects was to connect Harvard to the Arpanet; it had been nice growing up in the middle of the 20th century that convinced some people otherwise. Appendix: More Ideas One idea that I haven't tried yet is to filter based on word pairs would be in effect a Markov-chaining text generator running in reverse. I said at the start so they can follow whoever breaks first. Plus series A terms usually give the investors a veto over various kinds of important decisions, including selling the company. But we can't start from the symptom and hope to fix the underlying causes. Hotmail began as something its founders wrote to talk about abstractions. Suppose new policies make it hard to get fired. Finally, here is proof that Internet companies can make money. Older founders only make the first mistake. If we want to establish a first-rate university in a place where rich people want to live.
The people still look healthy, and the greater part of a century to establish that central planning didn't work. But the way they talk about them is useless. It took me a while to grasp this, but most hackers are very competitive. Fixed-size series A rounds later. Almost by definition, if a startup could give us something of the old Moore's Law back, by writing the sufficiently smart compiler you could create a situation indistinguishable from you being that manufacturer, at least not right now, but they also don't know how much they'll need to. Imagine waking up after such an operation. It took me a while to grasp this, but most hackers are very competitive. But if you're thinking about that initially, it may be, this is the exact moment when technological progress stops. Looking for waves is essentially a way to save computation than as a way to simulate the organic method is the example of the use of Bayes' Rule. Lions in the wild must feel better to a wide-ranging predator like a lion. In the real world, programs are bigger, tend to involve existing code, for example, by going to work at a big company? The writing is the familiar word salad: Gender is not like some of the questions they did.
01 describe 0. Fixed-size series A rounds. And there has been a qualitative change in the last few decades US universities seem to have rooted themselves in Tampa on $118k, but they're usually trying to improve the world. On one hand, entrenched protocols are impossible to predict. If you're not allowed to implement new ideas, you might do better to learn Ruby on Linux. But it was the same curve. It's the same with work. There's no consensus yet in the general case, it is scanned into tokens, and the number of false positives will not tend to be fairly laborious no matter what they did to the message body. The financial risk? You can't replace those.
It could be replaced on any of these axes it has already started to be on a larger scale. How do you find them? Together these mean that in many fields the rule will be: Build it, and focus our efforts where they'll do the most good. You can't replace those. So I hope people will not be the next Yahoo. Even when the startup launches, there have to be dragged kicking and screaming, so I've tried to make each link unbreakable. But what's changed is not variation in wealth and income, then follow it with the most naive speculation about the underlying principle. At least, I think we're better off attacking one step downstream, where wealth turns into power. So the best plan would be to make the right choices, but to make choices that can be made to develop new technologies at a slower rate than the rest of the world, and I'd spent a lot of people doing something lots more people will be doing in the future is to focus extra attention on specific parts of the email being a spam. Language courses are an anomaly.
30 startups that eminent angels have recently invested in, give them each a million dollars each to move, a lot of people. A particularly promising way to be good people, and how much is because big companies made them that way, who can argue with you? The CEO of that company, the better. Over the long term, which do you think most will choose? If you still want to go to their site and change your account preferences if you want to learn how to operate hers. In workouts a football player may bench press 300 pounds, even though its revenues are only $3000 a month, because the bigger your ambition, the longer it's going to take money from investors. By the end of the spectrum out of business. The Metaphysics is among the least read of all famous books. If you're a nerd, you can prove what you're saying, or at best a way to unsubscribe, or ask you to go to grad school to become a professor.
Thanks to Emmett Shear, Jessica Livingston, Trevor Blackwell, and Alexia Tsotsis for their feedback on these thoughts.
#automatically generated text#Markov chains#Paul Graham#Python#Patrick Mooney#word#way#ideas#start#part#operation
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