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Load a 1TB external SSD with everything you might want access to when the internet is down. Books, PDFs, how-to guides, medical references, repair manuals, homestead guides, wilderness first aid, foraging books, gardening resources, family photos, important documents, videos, entertainment. Whatever fits your life. Then drop it in a...

33,451 Aufrufe • vor 7 Tagen •via X (Twitter)

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we all dream of those big wins in life the 100x, the multi-million dollar trade, or even just 10x of what you started with in 7 days i’ve been fortunate enough to experience a few of those over the past few years, and the reality is when you do win big, it doesn’t feel like it at all it hits for a split second, and then your brain just normalizes it it's a part of how to get there in the first place, but makes it a lot easier to lose it if you don't have the right guardrails in place and in that exact moment, you being even keeled doesn’t mean the number in front of you isn’t life changing it is this is where you have to slow down a bit, breathe, settle your mind don’t just roll it into some bullshit take some off the table, step away for a few days if you have to, funny enough, blowing let's say 10k of it on a beautiful trip to tokyo will save you so much because once you actually process what just happened, your future self will thank you for it the truth is, even if you think you’re going for a certain number, the moment you hit it, you’ll want more and more, and more anyone who's been in the same position will tell you the exact same thing ironically the people that win are addicted to winning and if you ask the same people in a year after that big win, what they regret and where are they proud of themselves? they will tell you they regretted rolling it over and giving some/all back or they are proud for switching back on the switch all of this is real, but it’s also exactly how i imagined it would feel years ago before it ever happened manifest your life, the feeling not just the number everything happens twice, first in your mind, then in reality

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Jeff Bezos on the insight that started Amazon: In 1994, Bezos came across a statistic that changed his life: worldwide web usage was growing at roughly 2,300% a year. "That was sort of a wakeup call for me that there was something going on," he recalls. At the time, most people hadn't even heard of the web. This was the era of 28 kilobit per second modems and dial-up access. A very different age. But the signal was clear. Something was coming. Jeff Bezos explains the realisation that followed: "I realized you could make a bookstore on the web that could hold more books than a physical bookstore could ever hold. It could truly have universal selection." His background was in computers, not books. He's quick to point out that books weren't chosen out of personal passion: "My real compass, my real passion was computers, and that's how I was involved in this world of the web back in 94. But books was a great first best product to sell online." So why books specifically? Bezos breaks down the logic: "Books were very unique and still are in one respect, and that is that there are more items in the book category than there are items in any other category. There are millions of books active and in print around the world, and the largest physical book superstores only carry about 100, 150,000 of those millions of different books." That gap between what existed and what was accessible was the opening. On the web, you could solve a real problem. People couldn't find the books they wanted, especially the narrow, niche titles with smaller audiences. "We basically built Amazon to make it possible for people to find those hard to find books."

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.tobi lutke removed all the Norman doors from Shopify’s offices because he couldn’t have excellent people surrounded by bad design. Ramp Cofounder Eric Glyman says he learned the same lesson by studying Breville toasters: “ If you care about design, you should buy a Breville toaster.” “ One of the big problems in a lot of B2B software is: it starts out clean and elegant. There's a bunch of businesses who love the product and they start serving more customers and have more requirements and more ideas.” “Before you know it, you end up with these disasters of B2B softwares which require a PhD to learn how to use.” “ If you were to go ask people, ‘What do you want in a toaster or in a microwave?’ They might say I like toast but sometimes I want to reheat pizza. I should have a ‘reheat frozen pizza’ mode. Or maybe you're cooking stuff and want it to be more like an oven, or you want to make popcorn and it's a toaster/microwave and all these things.” “Before you know it, you end up with these toasters filled with buttons and buttons and knobs and dials.” “That is literally asking customers what they want and building exactly that.” “ if you watch people toast things, what they actually do falls into two categories: you hit start and either you've undercooked the toast and need to put it back in, or you've overdone it and have to start over.” “If you look at the [Breville] there are only a few buttons. One of the four buttons is called ‘A Bit More.’” “ No one would ask you for ‘A Bit More.’ They just want the perfect level of toast and it's hard to know that, so they built that in.”

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Vivek Ramaswamy message to YouTube is actually a much more important message about Free Speech “This is a message for the leadership of YouTube — My understanding is in the last 24 hours, you locked the accounts and shut down the accounts of two guys, Nick Fuentes and Alex Jones. They have big followings on the American right. I think it's better if you just unlock those accounts and let the guys be heard. —The reason I'm asking you to do it is that censorship isn't good for America. It's antithetical to our culture, and we're the country on God's green Earth where we're able to talk to each other in the open I want to credit YouTube and Google and your parent company and so much of your competitors in Silicon Valley for creating the first instance of the free and open internet with search engines. It's a beautiful thing for democratizing speech. But I think we take a step in the wrong direction when we choke those same technologies that allow us to access open debate and open ideas. It breeds discontent. It breeds frustration. It actually breeds mistrust. If you tell people they can't speak, that's when they scream. And if you tell people they can't scream, that's when they tear things down. So I think pre- free speech is a precondition for peace. It's a precondition for the scientific method. It's a precondition for our shared unity, our shared national identity as Americans. — It's the question of whether this is good or bad for America, and I think we live in a moment right now where when we tell people, whether it's the government or even a powerful company, when you tell people that because of who you are, you deserve not to be heard, I think that actually divides us. Even if it's done with the best of intentions of thinking it brings most of the rest of the country together, in the long run, it actually throws kerosene on the very flame you were trying to, to quash. — It's not even about the content. It's about the principle. I'd ask you to restore the accounts of those guys and believe me, it will be a down payment on beginning to reunite this country, a project on which we have yet a very long way to go. Thanks a lot for considering.”

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There are flood conditions in: Central Texas (Kerrville, San Angelo, Georgetown) Chapel Hill, North Carolina Ruidoso, New Mexico Sallisaw, Oklahoma Fort Smith, Arkansas Chicago, Illinois This is a good time to teach an important skill. How to be rescued from moving water or whitewater. If you find yourself in moving water float on your back (nose and toes in the air), keep your feet out in front of you with a slight bend in your knees so that you can absorb the shock of anything you might have to bounce off of. If you're the person in the water a trained rescuer will yell "Swimmer." That's your name in a rescue situation. If they yell Swimmer, assume they're talking to you, make eye contact and look and listen for commands. They will point positive, meaning, they'll point where they want you to go. They might also yell, "Swimmer, swim to me." At that time, they are trying to get you to move closer to them as they make their way to you. Or in a different kind of rescue they might be on land preparing to throw a throw bag to you. A throw bag has a length of rope inside a small bag the size of a football. They will throw the bag of rope over your head. Don't try to catch the bag, catch the rope with two hands. Don't wrap the rope around your body. Put the rope over your shoulder using both hands, roll onto your back, and allow the rescuer to pull you to shore. Stay frosty and stay safe friends. Share this with those you love. The video is me whitewater kayaking the Cache La Poudre River at high water near Ft. Collins, CO.

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24,255 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr