Huh, I actually already tried Facebook earlier and still hit the paywall. I was on mobile then, desktop now. Does the Facebook redirect only skip the paywall on desktop? (and if so, that's very strange)
You can often enter the URL at archive.is and they seem to bypass some paywalls and scripts that would prevent browsing while ads are blocked. Quite frequently, pages have already been archived so you needn't archive them again unless you think the page has been updated.
I find it to be a handy site to keep bookmarked. It works well and often.
Printing is not cheap. I haven't seen business costs associated with printing since probably 15 years ago, so this is out of date. We used to lease most of our equipment from the same company that did our supplies and repairs, they'd also upgrade us on a regular basis.
When I last saw the numbers, our lease was right about the $12,000 a month mark. At the time, that was something I noticed because it was more than I made per month - and I owned the company.
I suspect the prices haven't gone down much. Granted, we printed a lot - but I suspect Xerox is going to be around for quite a while longer.
My understanding from friends who worked there is that Xerox wants to sell services, not products, or to paraphrase: be the leader in the servicing industry. It sounded mostly like having processes to externalise anything.
No one pronounces it "right", almost everyone uses the fake-french pronunciation "e cetera" instead of "at ketera" (which is how the latin original would be pronounced)
Ursula gave an in person interview at the NY Fed this summer while I was interning there. She was fantastic. Honestly, she's one of the first people that I would volunteer on a political campaign for.
It's hard not to root for someone everyone is trying to discredit and paint as a vilain. He must be doing something right if so many people are against him.
I wouldn't say that, actually. Germany's recovery was primarily fueled by massive deficit spending on rearmament and social programs. Keep the people pacified, bootstrap from the tiny military allowed by Versailles up to something world-class, then take over Europe and Asia. Not sustainable at all, and I think it's really debatable whether Hitler deserves any of the credit anyway. His role was more or less to turn on the money tap and tell the Prussians to tool up, which they did very happily and effectively because they were Prussians.
> His role was more or less to turn on the money tap...
Which in a country with absolutely savage inflation isn't as easy as you make it sound. I suggest you educate yourself before being dismissive like this.
That is way too simplistic, he did a lot of terrible stuff, but also some good, it is no question that he pulled Russia from 'backwardness' in terms of literacy for example.
That's why I said that he did a lot of terrible stuff.
I absolutely do not excuse the awful stuff he ordered. That does not mean we should now shut all sense of nuance.
Its a natural reaction to all those PC Blockwardens, patrolling every inch of society, telling one how to walk, how to speak and what behaviours are okay. Yelling at people who try new things, throwing hissy fits when they are ignored- because what they care about most is not protecting some class of citizens from the normal insult that is life, but that everybody better listen to them.
If you have the choice between one far away Stalin who might even improve your life against another loud entrenched special interest group (taxi drivers) , and a thousand little Stalins just around the corner - who want to Tugendterror everyone for - basically fun - i know what i would want.
It seems to be meaningfully affecting the company in a negative way. Look at other big tech companies -- they all have aligned leadership and clear missions. Uber is a chaotic mess in comparison. That certainly isn't helping with the ability to attract talent. The engineers I know who worked at Uber have already all left.
Maybe it's salary and an accounting entry meant to indicate they treat their underlings like fecal matter?
On a more serious note, the only toilets I know with legs are for injured/disabled people who have issues with mobility, or they are temporary affairs meant to be taken camping. None of those seems likely to cost tens of thousands of dollars, even if they may be considered medical devices.
I can't actually see that having a price tag over a few hundred dollars. I could see it costing up to a few hundred dollars, if it's medical equipment, but only if it is somehow certified for certai weight ranges, durability standards, and made of special materials meant to difficult for bacteria to live on and easy to clean.
They do charge a lot for medical equipment, but not $35,000 for a toilet.
Somebody would have to empty it. Having someone handle my waste would bother me. I suppose some folks would think that is a benefit. "Yay! I am making poors deal with my poop!"
Well, yeah. When you have high marginal tax rates, people try to relabel consumption as a business expense. Was practically an art form in the 50s before the IRS cracked down on it.
Supposedly "not just for his office, but also included two conference rooms and a reception area". But yeah, unlikely to have been a frugal renovation.
Independent of social mores, I kind of see the strategic logic. If Benchmark defeats him in court, this power is null and the action undone. (The cost: he makes it slightly harder to do his next thing. Maybe.) If Benchmark fails, this is a solid backdoor power move. Between the binaries, this could influence Benchmark's willingness to settle (or sell). He’s doubling down.
He’s a young man with a future to think about. Using all the powers you have can offend some people, some of whom are in a position to help or hinder your future efforts for decades to come.
If this works, it’ll be Jobsian brilliance. If, as more likely, not—then expect his life to get harder.
Benchmark claims that Travis agreed not to exercise the authority as part of the resignation ordeal. This is mentioned in the article in passing. I'd guess that being sued by them changed his perspective on the deal, assuming it existed.
Oh man, is there like, a big group of people for whom this distinction matters? If so I am not prepared to explain. Are you able to explain this difference in my place, pjc50?
It matters when you go into debt buying a four door Uber approved vechicle, just to find out that your "Hustle" is not paying the bills, or even the car payments.
(I wouldn't have a problem with Uber's business plan, except for the vechicle requirement. Let Independent Contractors drive whatever their state let them register. Let the customers decide whether they want to get in? A safety inspection I kinda get. Then again the driver is the one paying for commercial insurance?)
I was alluding to the way that Uber specifically calls its drivers not employees, although they do work for Uber. The drivers do not have stock options and may have a different opinion of Kalanick.
> If a scientific poll of Uber employees were taken today they would probably elect him CEO.
My guesss is that there’s a lot of self-selection that’s happened through the Uber ranks. Employees who weren’t TK loyalists have probably largely opted out of Uber and moved on. So I’m guessing that first sentence is indeed accurate.
93 comments
[ 2.2 ms ] story [ 137 ms ] threadhttps://venturebeat.com/2017/08/10/uber-investor-benchmark-s...
http://archive.is/qsftk
You can often enter the URL at archive.is and they seem to bypass some paywalls and scripts that would prevent browsing while ads are blocked. Quite frequently, pages have already been archived so you needn't archive them again unless you think the page has been updated.
I find it to be a handy site to keep bookmarked. It works well and often.
https://charlierose.com/videos/29786
When I last saw the numbers, our lease was right about the $12,000 a month mark. At the time, that was something I noticed because it was more than I made per month - and I owned the company.
I suspect the prices haven't gone down much. Granted, we printed a lot - but I suspect Xerox is going to be around for quite a while longer.
01:13, 03:18, 03:37, 14:30, ...
https://charlierose.com/videos/29786
No one pronounces it "right", almost everyone uses the fake-french pronunciation "e cetera" instead of "at ketera" (which is how the latin original would be pronounced)
Careful what you wish for, in terms of government efficiency
Which in a country with absolutely savage inflation isn't as easy as you make it sound. I suggest you educate yourself before being dismissive like this.
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
If you have the choice between one far away Stalin who might even improve your life against another loud entrenched special interest group (taxi drivers) , and a thousand little Stalins just around the corner - who want to Tugendterror everyone for - basically fun - i know what i would want.
How's that work?
Step 2) thousands of people are now losing money and get upset at Kalanick
Step 3) millions are spent lobbying governments, suing Uber, publishing anti-Uber news, shilling against Uber on social media etc
Step 4) everyone hates Uber and Kalanick
[1] http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/27/business/27bank.html?mcubz...
On a more serious note, the only toilets I know with legs are for injured/disabled people who have issues with mobility, or they are temporary affairs meant to be taken camping. None of those seems likely to cost tens of thousands of dollars, even if they may be considered medical devices.
Here is one such example: https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/712PPTaGQDL...
I can't actually see that having a price tag over a few hundred dollars. I could see it costing up to a few hundred dollars, if it's medical equipment, but only if it is somehow certified for certai weight ranges, durability standards, and made of special materials meant to difficult for bacteria to live on and easy to clean.
They do charge a lot for medical equipment, but not $35,000 for a toilet.
> If Benchmark defeats him in court, this power is null and the action undone.
> If Benchmark fails to defat him in court, this further ensconces his unofficial power.
> Between the binaries, this power move could very well influence Benchmark's willingness to settle (or sell).
If this works, it’ll be Jobsian brilliance. If, as more likely, not—then expect his life to get harder.
Poor guy might be out of a job, would just have to get by with his few paltry billions.
(I know what you are trying to say, but no-one makes billions without being smart, lucky and willing to take a chance)
The truth will not be found in the media channel. The media is rarely reporting anymore. They are delivering.
Here, have a citation: https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/252780-believe-nothing-you-...
(I wouldn't have a problem with Uber's business plan, except for the vechicle requirement. Let Independent Contractors drive whatever their state let them register. Let the customers decide whether they want to get in? A safety inspection I kinda get. Then again the driver is the one paying for commercial insurance?)
Um, given there's been multiple court cases about that, yes apparently there is a big group of people for whom that distinction matters...
My guesss is that there’s a lot of self-selection that’s happened through the Uber ranks. Employees who weren’t TK loyalists have probably largely opted out of Uber and moved on. So I’m guessing that first sentence is indeed accurate.
ok travis, whatever you say.