Ask HN: What accomplishment are you most proud of?

44 points by empressplay ↗ HN
This could be developing a piece of software, creating a website or webapp, writing a book, founding a company, obtaining a credential, or whatever else you're most proud of.

Tell us about it! Inquiring minds want to know... =)

64 comments

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Most proud of? I think the fact that I'm married to a person who loves me and is happy to be with me.

Accomplishments I've enjoyed on hindsight– getting my band on a pretty established local stage, doing standup comedy and getting a great response, giving a lecture to a group of University students about ecommerce marketing (I've never been to University myself, so that felt awesome), having blogposts I've written get to the frontpage of HN and widely shared on Medium, etc.

But mostly– earning the respect of people I respect. It's an ongoing process, of course, but probably the most fulfilling.

Well back a few years ago I got 1500 people a better pension.

In terms of my day job IT Fixing a 2 mill shortfall for BT and Finding a bug that was costing total jobs 1/2 a mill a week.

Most proud of? Having been truly happy during some moments of my life.

Happiness is the ultimate goal. To achieve it, all areas of your life must be positively aligned. Even if luck might have an important role in some of these "positive alignments", is improbable that luck is taking care of all of them. So, it means that, at least, you must be doing some things really well.

That's an accomplishment reserved only for the enlightened ones. Maybe you're onto something :)
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I managed to tell my dad how good of a father he was to me and how much I appreciated everything he gave me and taught me... one day before he passed away. An honest deposit like this isn't as easy as it sounds.
Agreed, kudos.
I'm really happy you did. I hadn't had this chance with mine, suddenly died from a stroke on his way to work. I really, really hope that he had the time, in that very fraction of a second, to realize how great he was. And speaking of "things you're proud of", I really wish time stopped for one more fraction of a second that day to give him the chance to look back and feel proud of what he did, one last time.
Making sure my family (better half and three kids) got to do everything they normally did while I was doing my MS program. Big shift from Finance to Engineering and the learning on all fronts constantly, both family power and computing power has been amazing!
My parents came from a third world country extremely poor. They struggled to ensure that my siblings and I received a good education along with good values. My own family is now in the top 1% of earners in the US, so our family tree went from poor to well-off in one generation.

When my parents come to visit us, I know how proud they are and I'm proud that I didn't squander the opportunity that they worked so hard to give us.

I'm not sure what my kids will do but I intend to instill the same values of education, working harder than anyone else, and having good values into them.

Congratulations for your hard work and achievements :)

I presume you know other people with your background that haven't managed to achieve this, do you have any insight into what the differences are?

Innate abilities? specific values? good luck? - I can imagine the general differences, but the specifics are really interesting to me.

Emphasis on education, but a lot of very hard work. Intelligence will get you some of the way, but hard work is everything.
Almost the same here. Bottom 3% -> top 3%.
My Ph.D. dissertation.

Although the sheepskin, title, and bound book are neat, the real prize is the dissertation. After years of struggling with the unknown, I teased out from nature a small secret that no one else in the world knew. Telling that story through the dissertation (and defending it!) was a life-changing experience.

That I after (too) many years of trying a lot of different theories, finally found a way to manage my employees without me having to sleep poorly and be unhappy.

I have told several others about the way I run my business now and everyone reponded very positive (7 companies are running using the method) so of course I am turning it into a business at www.timeblock.com

Looks really interesting on the surface, but there are few actual details. Guess I have to wait for the mailing list content.

A note: your email address signup form doesn't appear with AdBlock on. I had to open an incognito tab to sign up. (http://timeblock.com/sign-up/)

Finally, I'm digging the innovation coming out of the Nordic countries. Had the pleasure of studying abroad in Sweden last year and took quite a few trips to Copenhagen.

Thanks, I hope it will continue to be interesting when you dig deaper, let me know if you want to know more.

It is strange about the adblock!

If you are ever in Copenhagen, ping me and I'll offer you a cup of coffee!

This is tough for me.

Career wise, I'm currently working on Cachet (https://cachethq.io) and am blown away by being able to provide software that thousands of people actively use.

Although it may seem silly, I stopped a small, young lad from being picked on by some bigger lads. They were hitting him and calling him names. It hit home because I remember being in the exact same situation and nobody helped me. I got out of my car, told them to leave him alone and took him home in the car, which I didn't think anything of until afterwards.

Either being 21 years old with a degree and a company or becoming a proficient musician as a self taught guitarist.
One of them is having created a game, submitted to HN, received positive feedback and stars at the repo :)

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8886897

wow, is the CPU perfect? I cannot beat it. I keep ending up in a situation where the AI can beat me on its next turn in 2 different ways so I can't block both.
Try playing columns 4,2,3,4,6,2,3 - seems to play always the same up to here but then sometimes plays different, but it's trivial to win after this state - the AI seems to "give up"
It's not perfect. Yeah, I actually don't know why the AI seems to "give up" randomly.
1) Endurance and the understanding that "this too shall pass" in both good and bad situations.

2) Teaching myself programming (LAMP). Not because it was a major accomplishment, but simply because it taught me everything else can be learnt, from Economics to Philosophy to Arts to Biology to Quantum Mechanics.

Lately the thing I would honestly say I'm "proud" of is my ability to keep a consistent A+ on the Qualsys SSL server test. I know that sounds weird, but the effort is far outside my normal skillset. For things that come relatively easy for me or things that I am motivated to do and work really hard at, I don't ascribe any "pride" to that.
I'm most proud of my compiler for my programming language, it's still in the works, but the fact that it does somewhat work and I made it from scratch makes me happy :)
Being married 24 years with two college age kids who appear to be turning out just fine.
For all time: That I still stretch myself, even when it's painful.

Right now: How far we have gotten with Realty Africa, a property crowdfunding platform dedicated to Sub-Saharan Africa. The response we have gotten on the ground has taken us completely by surprise and the potential market is massive. (Shameless plug: we are raising the final money for our startup costs at http://igg.me/at/PCA)

Software: reverie/CMS. Currently at the end of a rewrite, but I'm fairly pleased with how far it's gotten. Writing a cache manager is a serious puzzle though! (https://github.com/emil0r/reverie)

Family: My wife. She's amazing :)

When my grandfather's caretaker embezzled multiple 6 figures from his estate and his kids mismanaged it...I stepped in, took over, and fixed everything. Knowing how thankful and proud my grandfather was made the feeling of success and accomplishment so much more visceral than anything else I've done.
I am proud of being married to my better half. Over the course of the last 2 years I learned that no job, money or any other success in career can make you happier than the person you love.
I dropped out of this scene after burying myself in technology/networks/programming for over 10 years. I didn't realize it, but my one-pointedness on programming harmed almost every other aspect of my life. Sure I could tell you how to do amazing things with a computer, but could I successfully get your number? Not a chance in hell.

Instead I picked up a paintbrush, got a night job at a hotel and now I oil paint for 5-6 hours out of my day. I'm exercising, talking to friends, being social. And just like my terrible paintings, my other skills are improving.

I did have a close second though, a little project called Samsara that brought zero-click downloading to iTunes. Once set up, getting new music is as easy as plugging in your iDevice. It is written in Go, binds Last.FM, TPB and Transmission together and runs a daemon. The gist of the program is that it grabs your recommended music, scrapes TPB for it, Downloads it, Shovels it into your iTunes library, and auto-syncs it with your devices over wifi. It's been running for the past few months with no errors, and my music is fresh. Even has an option to constrain the downloads to releases in the past two years. InstaHipster.

I never got around to packaging it up as it was the last real project I was working on. Just trying to find drive to work on it was a pain. If anyone wants the code, send an email to zeropointer@icloud.com , If someone wants to take the project off my hands and polish it up properly and release it. It's all yours.

You could link that to shazam somehow to get some real magic. Imagine, you hear a song, tap a button, it records, recognizes, finds, downloads and files it away into a new music playlist ready for listening at your leisure.
I taught myself to code by post/mail.

I didn't make the smartest choices when I was young(er), but I turned that around, found a career, ended up co-founding a company and making a cool game (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Nethernet) then started a new company to help people figure out wtf they can do with their lives (https://www.somewhere.com).

Saying that though, the stupid robots I built, the side-projects and the articles in Hack Circus mean just as much.

Of course, pride comes before a fall so, yeah, cheers.... ;)

I've been fortunate enough to enjoy success in the tech field, but by far the accomplishment that I'm most proud of is that I was able to bring friends with me. This isn't something that I ever would have envisioned starting out that I would be this proud of.

I grew up in a very small town in the US with not a lot of opportunity and lucked into getting hired by an information security firm in a bigger city back when many companies had never heard of firewalls. I had close tech savvy friends from back home that were struggling and was able to convince my employer to hire them.

Since then, they've become very successful in their own right. Yes, they are very smart and have worked hard, but knowing what I do now about the power of networking and getting the right opportunity at the right time, I like to think that how I was able to help them made a huge difference in how their lives turned out.

That is really cool, I know some really good people that I hope I can help some day too
I was working as an accounting intern, making $80 a month in a third-world country. I taught myself how to code, dropped out of college, and make a good 6-figure living.

Before the age of 22, I earned my freedom, and discovered what I truly love in life.

Getting my first start up job. I couldn't afford to stay in college. Had zero professional experience in anything related to software. Bought an HTML book and got a photocopy of a JavaScript one, created a demo site on a floppy disk (1998) and showed it at my job interview. Was hired for the lowest rung position, worked my up to Web team lead.

I will always be grateful for my boss for taking a chance on me, which is why all the bullshit, risk-averse "hiring process" discussions always get to me. I try to give people the same break I got, and it's surprising how often it works.

I had a similar experience in 2009. I'll never forget that one guy who took a chance on me.