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Stories from September 1, 2010
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1.Easy Ways to Fail a Ph.D. (might.net)
205 points by RBerenguel on Sept 1, 2010 | 107 comments
2.Welcome Alexis (ycombinator.posterous.com)
204 points by pg on Sept 1, 2010 | 32 comments
3.Why Users Fill Out Forms Faster With Top Aligned Labels (uxmovement.com)
182 points by UXMovement on Sept 1, 2010 | 63 comments
4.Why can you turn clothing right-side-out? (math.stackexchange.com)
177 points by niyazpk on Sept 1, 2010 | 37 comments
5.Reddit Cofounder Alexis Ohanian To Join Y Combinator (techcrunch.com)
173 points by razin on Sept 1, 2010 | 40 comments
6.Ask HN Emacs Users: What's in your .emacs file?
131 points by grizzydot on Sept 1, 2010 | 61 comments
7.William Gibson: "Google's Earth" (nytimes.com)
124 points by michael_dorfman on Sept 1, 2010 | 58 comments
8.How to set up your own private Git server on Linux (intranation.com)
124 points by urbanmbeatz on Sept 1, 2010 | 65 comments
9.Google releases its own Javascript Lint tool (closuretools.blogspot.com)
115 points by edd on Sept 1, 2010 | 15 comments
10.Scalable ACID (dbmsmusings.blogspot.com)
109 points by ithkuil on Sept 1, 2010 | 29 comments
11.How to Track Six Key Metrics for Your Web App (thinkvitamin.com)
107 points by ryancarson on Sept 1, 2010 | 9 comments
12.Hacker Monthly - Issue #4 - September 2010 (hackermonthly.com)
106 points by alexkay on Sept 1, 2010 | 51 comments
13.Google Chrome Is The New “Down For Everyone Or Just Me” (techcrunch.com)
92 points by Garbage on Sept 1, 2010 | 38 comments
14.Hello, my name is Reginald and I am a Socialist (raganwald.posterous.com)
90 points by raganwald on Sept 1, 2010 | 162 comments
15.Rely your web startup on Rackspace Cloud? Think again (bencheng.net)
89 points by edwincheese on Sept 1, 2010 | 77 comments
16.Google Code University (code.google.com)
86 points by absconditus on Sept 1, 2010 | 5 comments
17.Build An Opensource Dropbox Clone (fak3r.com)
86 points by tommynazareth on Sept 1, 2010 | 58 comments
Yes
80 points | parent
19.Writer Neal Stephenson unveils his digital novel The Mongoliad (venturebeat.com)
74 points by Tichy on Sept 1, 2010 | 51 comments
20.Canadian Startups kick ass (rypple.com)
74 points by jsatok on Sept 1, 2010 | 25 comments
21.Load Balancers need static IPs (pagerduty.com)
71 points by bpuvanathasan on Sept 1, 2010 | 25 comments
22.Darwins artificial ecosystem could be key to colonising Mars (bbc.co.uk)
69 points by KoZeN on Sept 1, 2010 | 33 comments
23.The Art of Engineering By David Kirkham (kirkhammotorsports.com)
68 points by gvb on Sept 1, 2010 | 15 comments
24.Google Making Extraordinary Counteroffers To Stop Flow Of Employees To Facebook (techcrunch.com)
65 points by daviday on Sept 1, 2010 | 64 comments

I was reading Aristotle's Nichomachean Ethics, and he talks about being liberal and magnificent with money. I'm in Vietnam now, things are cheap-ish anyways, so I decided I'm make the transition towards doing that. I wrote up my first experiences here -

http://www.sebastianmarshall.com/?p=161

Since then, it's been even more crazy. I was just trying to be gracious - I wasn't trying to bribe for favors like the author of the gourmet.com piece. Just either before or after I get service, tipping more. Result is staggering to me - people start working for you. I wasn't asking anything in return, but I'm now getting informed on all sorts of little details, recommendations, little extra services here and there. In the changing room of the place I go to get a massage, the guy there is like my intelligence agent now. As I was getting changed back into street clothes after getting a massage, he says, "Psst - hey, next time... go with locker #1." He taps the locker. He explains, "Very pretty, young girl. Best girl here." Apparently the experience is streamlined by number the whole way through - locker number, who you are massage therapist is, and billing for tips/coffee/extra food or drink you order is all tied together. He also shined my boots and he's super friendly helping me put a robe.

It's strange, I came from pretty humble origins so this is all very new for me. I just thought I should start being good to people and taking care of people, and I'm kind of taken aback by how gracious people are. It's still against my nature to over-tip, I came up pretty frugal and had literally no money for large portions of my life, but I'm starting to see the value of really taking care of people. There's a security guard near where I live who I'm friendly with, I'm going to go buy him a tuna sandwich next time I'm buying stuff at the bakery. I think, just like that, I'll go from having a friendly acquaintance to having a guide and intelligence agent.

That's not even why I do it. I thought - give back, spread money around a little bit, take care of people. But people seem to really want to take care of you when you do. It's like you're signalling that you're a person who takes good care of people or some such. I don't know, still very new to me. It's interesting though.

26.Smiley: An app in 24 hours (37signals.com)
64 points by alonswartz on Sept 1, 2010 | 10 comments
27.Adioso (YC W09), Flight Search For People Keeping Their Options Open (techcrunch.com)
64 points by px on Sept 1, 2010 | 58 comments

> Increasingly, I was struck by how much impact the experience was having on me. Surmounting this challenge night after night was actually giving me a certain self-assurance, a feeling of having grown up. Some might find this disillusioning: “You mean life is not first-come, first-served?” I found I had a different reaction: “You mean all it takes to crack one of New York’s most daunting thresholds is fifty bucks?” Even if I chose not to do it on a regular basis, just knowing how doable it is brought the whole puffery of New York restaurants into perspective. Bribing, it turns out, has as much effect on the briber as it does on the bribee.

If you ever wanted to know why corruption is so entrenched in many parts of the world, there is your answer.


A side note:

> You can also break the form up into multiple pages to make each part of the form shorter

I dread the 'next' button on multi-page forms, especially when there's no indication of how many pages there are or how long the questions will be.


This doesn't quite qualify as ignoring, but I think it matches the spirit of the question: I wouldn't be running Tarsnap now if Paul Graham hadn't listed "Single Founder" as the #1 mistake that kills startups. Having read that, I decided I was going to prove him wrong, damnit.

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