| 1. | | Easy Ways to Fail a Ph.D. (might.net) |
| 205 points by RBerenguel on Sept 1, 2010 | 107 comments |
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| 2. | | Welcome Alexis (ycombinator.posterous.com) |
| 204 points by pg on Sept 1, 2010 | 32 comments |
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| 3. | | Why Users Fill Out Forms Faster With Top Aligned Labels (uxmovement.com) |
| 182 points by UXMovement on Sept 1, 2010 | 63 comments |
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| 4. | | Why can you turn clothing right-side-out? (math.stackexchange.com) |
| 177 points by niyazpk on Sept 1, 2010 | 37 comments |
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| 5. | | Reddit Cofounder Alexis Ohanian To Join Y Combinator (techcrunch.com) |
| 173 points by razin on Sept 1, 2010 | 40 comments |
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| 6. | | Ask HN Emacs Users: What's in your .emacs file? |
| 131 points by grizzydot on Sept 1, 2010 | 61 comments |
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| 7. | | William Gibson: "Google's Earth" (nytimes.com) |
| 124 points by michael_dorfman on Sept 1, 2010 | 58 comments |
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| 8. | | How to set up your own private Git server on Linux (intranation.com) |
| 124 points by urbanmbeatz on Sept 1, 2010 | 65 comments |
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| 9. | | Google releases its own Javascript Lint tool (closuretools.blogspot.com) |
| 115 points by edd on Sept 1, 2010 | 15 comments |
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| 10. | | Scalable ACID (dbmsmusings.blogspot.com) |
| 109 points by ithkuil on Sept 1, 2010 | 29 comments |
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| 11. | | How to Track Six Key Metrics for Your Web App (thinkvitamin.com) |
| 107 points by ryancarson on Sept 1, 2010 | 9 comments |
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| 12. | | Hacker Monthly - Issue #4 - September 2010 (hackermonthly.com) |
| 106 points by alexkay on Sept 1, 2010 | 51 comments |
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| 13. | | Google Chrome Is The New “Down For Everyone Or Just Me” (techcrunch.com) |
| 92 points by Garbage on Sept 1, 2010 | 38 comments |
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| 14. | | Hello, my name is Reginald and I am a Socialist (raganwald.posterous.com) |
| 90 points by raganwald on Sept 1, 2010 | 162 comments |
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| 15. | | Rely your web startup on Rackspace Cloud? Think again (bencheng.net) |
| 89 points by edwincheese on Sept 1, 2010 | 77 comments |
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| 16. | | Google Code University (code.google.com) |
| 86 points by absconditus on Sept 1, 2010 | 5 comments |
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| 17. | | Build An Opensource Dropbox Clone (fak3r.com) |
| 86 points by tommynazareth on Sept 1, 2010 | 58 comments |
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| 80 points | parent |
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| 19. | | Writer Neal Stephenson unveils his digital novel The Mongoliad (venturebeat.com) |
| 74 points by Tichy on Sept 1, 2010 | 51 comments |
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| 20. | | Canadian Startups kick ass (rypple.com) |
| 74 points by jsatok on Sept 1, 2010 | 25 comments |
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| 21. | | Load Balancers need static IPs (pagerduty.com) |
| 71 points by bpuvanathasan on Sept 1, 2010 | 25 comments |
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| 22. | | Darwins artificial ecosystem could be key to colonising Mars (bbc.co.uk) |
| 69 points by KoZeN on Sept 1, 2010 | 33 comments |
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| 23. | | The Art of Engineering By David Kirkham (kirkhammotorsports.com) |
| 68 points by gvb on Sept 1, 2010 | 15 comments |
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| 24. | | Google Making Extraordinary Counteroffers To Stop Flow Of Employees To Facebook (techcrunch.com) |
| 65 points by daviday on Sept 1, 2010 | 64 comments |
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| 26. | | Smiley: An app in 24 hours (37signals.com) |
| 64 points by alonswartz on Sept 1, 2010 | 10 comments |
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| 27. | | Adioso (YC W09), Flight Search For People Keeping Their Options Open (techcrunch.com) |
| 64 points by px on Sept 1, 2010 | 58 comments |
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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.