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This is something the WSJ decides to write an article on? Man, journalistic standards have really gone down-hill, haven't they? What's next, an article about the merits of white vs yellow paint for the stripes designating spots in the parking lot?
I assume that this is the “we need about X thousands words of filler content” kind of article. I could be wrong of course but the opening paragraph didn’t really make me want to pay to see the rest :)
Thank you. My thoughts exactly. Of all the things to worry about, this one makes the list. It just goes to show you the sorry state of our concerns.
I mean, I think there's room for interesting, but not important, articles as long as they don't take away from the important stuff.
White for designating spots, yellow for marking prohibited areas.
The front page (yes, dead tree) contains one fun article each day.
This is just silly.
I seriously don't understand why people continue to pay for a WSJ subscription.

Their balance sheet is a bloated nightmare, and I get more insight from downvoted comments on HN

Gotta pay or signin to read this article on one-name email addresses. Hmmm, I'll pass.
search for title on google, click link. Not worth the hassle for this fluff piece though ;)
Heh. I have a first-name-only university alum email address that I grabbed pretty early on. I can't say I've received anything too inappropriate for a while but I did find myself trying to get myself off one or two board email lists and redirecting people trying to contact a professor for a while.
At one university I was at, I had an email address which was my four initials plus two digits. But I kept receiving emails intended for a lecturer with the same first name in the same department. I was getting emails about papers, conferences, and students asking for career advice.

He actually has a completely different email address to the one I had, but I guess people just looked us up in the directory (which, at the time, was publicly searchable) and didn't realise there could be more than one person with the same first name in the same department.

I have a very easy name and email address. I get wrong emails every week. Often have gotten emails with links to reset passwords for bank accounts, some medical record sites in some hospital systems, etc. Every week without fail.

I’m glad I have the email address. I hold myself to good moral values so I try to reach out to correct these errors if possible. It would suck for me if someone else had my email address and is not an ethical person.

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I have cpr@{me,mac}.com and get 2-5 emails a day with CPR completion certificates or card scans. Have no idea how to redirect them or turn them off...
Managing SV startup seems to be very similar to running kindergarden.

But maybe we those "rockstar" employees simply show us that the human brain power is not unlimited:

In order to fit awesome coding skills in you have to sacrifice the part of the brain responsible for emotional stability, or even common sense? :)

Can’t read the article (paywall) but I’ve found this to be a funny dynamic in my own family. I share a name with my dad. He was “there first”, yet I own the Gmail address. He hates this, but even if I wanted to, it’s my address of record for hundreds of services, and changing it now would be virtually impossible.

I wonder what the equivalent will be with my kids.

Yes, this is sort of a fluffy feature piece. But I would hope that all the people complaining realize that doing nothing other than multi-month investigative journalism on Theranos isn't a profitable model. This is an easy story to crank out. Drowsy people on morning plane flights read it. Not everything is or can be serious investigative and analytic jornalism.
My main email only has 8 characters, guess 7 is the shortest a mere mortal can get these days. Often I don't earn awe for this, but confusion if it is really valid.