It is most likely to avoid it becoming like CS Career Questions, which is inundated with students who haven't even started their first job yet.
Additionally, for those not in the know, Anthropic was founded by some pretty senior ex-OpenAI folks, presumably carrying over a lot of the same culture and technology. It's as close to a copy-cat investment as one…
Hi Stefan, this looks great! I'm curious to hear what you think your competitive advantage is against other players in this space such as Applied Intuition. From my research, Applied Intuition has a focus in the AV…
There was a HN submission awhile back about a Dev in Japan who did this very thing. Hiring people such as college dropouts, or older women, who have higher expectations of being stay at home moms in Japan.
A primary benefit of Android is that Google is allowed to put their search engine on Android mobile devices for close to free instead of multiple billions of dollars.
What's the difference between hardness and effectiveness in this context?
I'm pretty sure the consensus is that in the developing world, STEM education is considered a more viable path to financial independence [1]. 1: https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2018/02/the-more...
It is most likely to avoid it becoming like CS Career Questions, which is inundated with students who haven't even started their first job yet.
Additionally, for those not in the know, Anthropic was founded by some pretty senior ex-OpenAI folks, presumably carrying over a lot of the same culture and technology. It's as close to a copy-cat investment as one…
Hi Stefan, this looks great! I'm curious to hear what you think your competitive advantage is against other players in this space such as Applied Intuition. From my research, Applied Intuition has a focus in the AV…
There was a HN submission awhile back about a Dev in Japan who did this very thing. Hiring people such as college dropouts, or older women, who have higher expectations of being stay at home moms in Japan.
A primary benefit of Android is that Google is allowed to put their search engine on Android mobile devices for close to free instead of multiple billions of dollars.
What's the difference between hardness and effectiveness in this context?
I'm pretty sure the consensus is that in the developing world, STEM education is considered a more viable path to financial independence [1]. 1: https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2018/02/the-more...