- "Sleeping in a tent is fun when you’re camping but miserable when you’re homeless."
- "Desiring money beyond what you need to be happy is just an accounting hobby."
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over 2 years ago
almost 3 years ago
- "Squads are both a product of—and a response to—contemporary social atomization"
- "Whether bound together for survival or for lols, the squads formed by today's crisis will be resilient. Distance is no longer a barrier with the closeness of network space—soon vital culture will be predominantly enacted by fictive kin. Group collaboration is now the strong default, putting squads at the center of social, cultural, and economic life."
- "Millennials are healing from decades of irony poisoning, rediscovering what it's like to have generative, exploratory relationships with one another."
- "The ideal squad count is no more than 12. How can you really be present with more than a dozen people"
- "A greater network may surround the squad, making it appear big and fuzzy from the outside. But for the core crew, an invisible circle binds and protects a space of group identity."
- "One necessary condition of the squad is this sense of persistence: co-presence and continuous availability to one another."
- "After enough fire in the group DM, some squads begin to externalize their social products"
- "Podcasting is obviously a squad technology. Rapid publishing turns memes into whitepapers, quickly flooding the marketplace of ideas with locally-grown squad humor."
- "Once together the squad's potential for creative production is immeasurable"
- "The group is the basic user class for the tools we need today as a society, yet few pieces of software allow the squad as a whole to produce cooperatively and generate wealth together."
- "Contributions to the squad are positive sum. And in return for their contribution, members have access to an expanded set of opportunities, claims on future economic flows and guarantees backed by the group. By risking together, a scrappy group can gain access to multiplicative yields"
- "Squads will be as important as companies in the years to come. And as the micro-structure of our social and economic fabric changes, strong vibes and sustainability will become the new metric of success"
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almost 3 years ago
- "The New American Dream is to build a profitable, sustainable, remote software business that can be run from anywhere, scales nicely, and prints money"
- 4 surges of technological development
- Industrial Revolution: 1771 - 1829
- Age of Steam and Railways: 1829 - 1873
- Age of Steel and Heavy Engineering: 1975 - 1918
- Age of Oil, Autos, and Mass Production: 1908 - 1974
- The Information and Communications Technology Revolution: Started in 1971 and still happening
- All characterized by
- Some critical factor of production suddenly becoming very cheap.
- Some new infrastructure being built.
- A laissez-faire period of wrenching innovation followed by a bubble, a post-bubble recession, a re-assertion of institutional authority, and then a period of consolidation and wide spread of the gains in productivity from using the new technology.
- We are moving into the “Deployment Age,” characterized by widespread acceptance and application of the new paradigm of information and communications technology.
- Conclusion
- "You no longer need to be an engineer to build a software-enabled business"
- "We’re moving towards a more entrepreneurial economy, which will lead to an explosion of niche software-enabled companies"
- People on the Internet are increasingly becoming companies.
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about 4 years ago