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Krebs cycle.


That's a great post, a video about this would be incredible.

Speaking of iPod videos, last week I shared one [0] about the story of the first iPod. A deep look into the crazy 11-month ride that led to its creation.

It's my first YT video, so please be merciful.

[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b8JoM9Lr3Go


Confirm.


Hi, Leonardo here.

We built Pulse because we saw that keeping people inspired, motivated and aligned in any high-growing organization is hard. When you’re a small company and employees fit into a single room (physically or virtually), everyone knows what everyone else is working but at around 50 employees, this stops working and answering simple questions like “What are the company high-level priorities? What does leadership value most? Who are all these people I’m working with around the globe?” becomes super hard.

If you have a system like Pulse, you (and others in your team) get a central location to (1) streamline important comm about priorities, directions and status, (2) share, discuss, review or collaborate asynchronously and (3) hold institutional knowledge and decision history that’s important to keep so that employees, current and future, aren’t lost without context.

With Pulse, you get 3 different systems in one:

1) An internal publishing platform perfect for both small-scale distributed teams or high-growing companies. You may think of it as an “internal Substack for teams” with: - Follow/unfollow teams, people, and topics - Personal feed to get caught up with new updates - Ability to discuss and highlight key decisions taken - Daily/weekly digests with updates batched in a single email - Automated Slack notifications when a new update is posted - Bi-directional linking to create dynamic references between updates

2) A lightweight people directory that helps you better know where your team members are based, what updates they shared, how to get ahold of them for work, and any quick background they’d like to share. Every profile includes: - Basic info such as name, role, department, bio, etc. - Contact links: email, phone, twitter, linkedin, etc. - Location and time zone - Posts and comments history

3) A lightweight browser extension (Chrome, Brave, Edge, Firefox supported) that makes your default browser “new tab” your new “company home” so that keeping up with new updates is ridiculously fast and easy. Includes:

- Recently shared updates - Company (or team-wide) bookmarks - Company (or team-wide) time zones - Weekly b-days, anniversaries, or new hires

Looking forward to ideas and feedback from the community


> Writing is thinking. To write well is to think clearly.

This idea of writing as a proxy for thinking is the essence of many misconceptions.

I know many 1st-class thinkers who have such hard time in writing.

What separates most people from good writing has very little to do with style, grammar, local sentences structure, word selection, or even content per se.

Most people can't write well because they don't know how to control the logical sequence in which they present their ideas.

And that is the single most important act necessary to clear writing.

I shared more on what that means here in a recent essay [0].

[0] https://pulseasync.com/operators/share-written-ideas/


> [..] to create a public domain recording and score of J.S. Bach's masterpiece

Very few realizes it but before Gould the Goldberg Variations were very little known even to professional pianists.

Given how old the GB variations are compared to when they found success, it's like Argonautica by Apollonius of Rhodes winning a best seller prize in 2020.


> Asynchronous communication across timezones has not been solved, and I struggle to see how it would be.

By focusing on excellent written communication.

Great written comms is hard, and (like coding) requires lots of deliberate practice and training.

Most people and companies gloss over this, but it makes a world of difference if you're operating across time zones.

Great internal writing is what separate the great companies from the average.


No. Not even for a second.

Suppose you have two engineers, one in America, one in India. PRs cannot be merged without an approval. Suppose the average PR requires 3 back-and-forth comments before it gets merged.

In the same timezone this gets merged in an hour. In a different timezones its days.


I agree with the broader point of view, yet I'm not sure if all you say makes sense. Most campaigns are budget limited because auto bidding is less ops intensive and, above all, sometimes works better than manual bidding (despite Google reducing the reach as you get nearer the daily budget).

Manual bidding is always preferable with fewer data points (low conversions, low clicks, no previous campaigns). Auto bidding is preferable as your GA accounts grow in conversions and the algorithms start to create a better profile of your customers.


This is a fantastic articulation.

Kevin Scott: Microsoft CTO - Lex Fridman [0]

[0] https://lexfridman.com/kevin-scott/


Would recommend reading "Sapiens" if you found that excerpt interesting (as it's rehashing one of the most important ideas from that book).



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