It is a very hidden feature though. You have to link your kids account to yours, and then in the Youtube mobile app (not on the web), you can click the three dots button and then share > "with kids"
So that way you can build up a whitelist of channels that they can see in the YT kids account.
In short: build things you are interested in with people who are also interested in those things. Don't call it a startup at first; just make projects.
Investors don't invest in projects, they invest in businesses.
Without investment, you might not have enough money to pay your next months' rent or your next hospital bill.
If this doesn't apply to you and you can hack at projects without financial concerns, great, but you're already in the privileged group, like PG himself, and disconnected from the reality of 80-90% of people.
True, though pg was talking to college students here, who are (presumably) mostly focused on classes, and have a stable living situation for 2-4 years until they graduate. That's why he says at the beginning that it's not a good idea to start a _startup_ in college (which will take over your whole life)
If you're 100% focused on your startup and trying to make a living, then it's a different story, I agree.
Sure but living in Bumblefuck, Arkansas you'll be unlikely to find a good cofounder. Oakland is cheap but you might get shot. Places with BOTH peace of mind and talented people cost money.
> Live with family.
Families are often toxic and unsupportive of doing startups.
> Cross a border if needed.
This however is actually a good suggestion if you go to the right places.
This, a thousand percent. Whether you are in college or not. Go to where people work on things you're interested in and/or build things in public and spread the word -- eventually, you'll meet people who are like minded in interest and work ethic.
Foods that decrease inflammation _probably_ help with arthritis; processed foods _generally_ increase inflammation, which is probably why you feel better not eating them.
There is also nutritionfacts, which takes a science and clinical study based approach to look at how diet plays a role in a whole host of diseases and conditions: https://nutritionfacts.org/?s=arthritis
* nutritionfacts and Dr. Greger do have several vocal opponents however, so I encourage you to read the studies themselves and come to your own conclusions
This is my exact setup and it's great. Several pros:
- Relatively cheap since the a6000 is an older camera
- The a6000 doesn't have the 30 minute hdmi limit that some other cameras have (this can be fixed with gphoto, but you have to redo it every time you connect)
- When you're ready you can buy more lights, and then eventually a nicer lens if you want
I was an employee, then did my own thing for 6 years, then recently went and got a job again.
I felt no push-back at all for doing my own thing; in fact, I think it was a positive for most people.
If it was only 6 months instead of 6 years then maybe that would have made a difference (?), but generally I've found that people saw it as a positive sign that I was able to be self directed, work in ambiguous circumstances, etc.
Also as pointed out elsewhere here, the ease of getting a job is often a lot more about your network and who you know rather than your exact experience.
While I was looking for a job I feel like I had a good chance at several types of companies; both startups and FAANGs viewed my independent time as a positive.
I bought a System76 desktop a couple of years ago with an rtx 3090 for some AI work and have been super happy with it.
It was a bit expensive, but everything "just works", it's super well built, and I've had no issues for 2 years. They definitely know what they're doing
That is good to hear! Framework has not been helpful on either minor or major issues when I've tried working with them, even the forums comingle AMD and Intel laptops without clear distinction muddying the waters as to what issues are relevant to a given user.
I've had the opposite experience, personally. There's a ton of helpful information on their forum both from community members and employees. Getting NixOS on my AMD Framework 13 took some doing and the forum was super helpful when it came to various issues.
That said, I _do_ agree that the information isn't as well organized as a result of the nature of its creation.
I'm sorry but nVidia proprietary driver and "just works" doesn't belong in the same sentence. Every Kernel version update is a crapshoot. Will need to wait for the new nVidia opensource support that's supposedly around the corner, any day now.
My experience has absolutely been that nvidia proprietary drivers "just work" including during kernel updates on arch linux. Maybe there's some sort of QA going on by the distro to only ship kernels that work with them? I don't know. For me it just works.
I can mirror what gpm said, I’ve never had a problem with the proprietary nvidia driver. The only annoyance is the requirement to reboot after an update, but that’s pretty standard everywhere.
I've been using laptops with Nvidia dgpus and the proprietary drivers under Linux for about 3 to 4 years now, and I've literally never had any problem with the graphics card, the driver, its integration with my system, or anything else. The last year on a rolling release (openSUSE Tumbleweed), too. Maybe that's just me though, who knows.
I’ve never managed to get my GTX 1070 working on Linux without any caveats, though currently I’m closer than I’ve been before. If you’re happy using X11 life is relatively easy, though you probably end up needing a compositor to solve tearing - and if you have mixed refresh rates you’re seemingly out of luck even then.
Wayland is better with mixed refresh rates, and now mostly works. I say mostly as XWayland is still broken - you have to disable GLAMOUR and rely on software rendering for X applications. This is where I’ve currently settled as most software I use is native Wayland anyway.
Of course if you have a newer GPU that can take advantage of Nvidia’s new open source kernel drivers with Nouveau and you don’t need CUDA this is all irrelevant.
>I'm sorry but nVidia proprietary driver and "just works" doesn't belong in the same sentence.
No issue for me on kubuntu LTS and I am using NVIDIA proprietary drivers since 7 years ago, I even experimented with various drivers to make wine games to work and never had issues. But maybe *ubuntu gets better testing and support from NVIDIA then other distribution,
I can chime in and say that I've had numerous issues over the years, every few months. Particularly when I want to update my kernel. It was a nightmare. Now that I am free from them I won't buy their products anymore because of how annoying it was.
Worth noting that the expensive price isn't because of the metadata feature - it's a new version of the Leica M11 which is $8995 itself (Leicas are just crazy expensive)
The non-Ms are beautifully made and worth every penny (eg Q2, SL) but the Ms are beautifully made terrible technology - specifically the rangefinder: they’re delicate, need frequent servicing and can only focus down to 0.7m, so the advent of live view finally allows lenses that go closer than 0.7m to be focused. That said, I just bought a Canon 7D from 2009 and it too is beautifully made.
However, I think the digital signing is a good way to provide the photographer with proof that the picture in the paper/competition is the picture that they made with the camera and not their pal Midjourney.
Why they put it in such a sluggish contraption, I don’t know, but probably a good place to start compared to a Z9 and trying to tag pictures at 500 frames a second or whatever.
Yeah this isn't something to get outraged over. The arguably "entry level" leica is over $6k. They're expensive but well made cameras that are hand built in Germany. If you're buying one you probably know what you're getting or you have more money than you know what to do with. If you think they're expensive, there's awesome options from fujifilm, Canon, nikon, and Sony that cost less.
Instead of a part time job, call yourself a "consultant" and say you have "1/2 of your time available". Companies are generally more likely to bring in a consultant/freelancer 1/2 time than an employee.
(Make sure you charge enough though - being a consultant means you'll have costs you're not used to as an employee, like insurance and self employment tax).
It is a very hidden feature though. You have to link your kids account to yours, and then in the Youtube mobile app (not on the web), you can click the three dots button and then share > "with kids"
So that way you can build up a whitelist of channels that they can see in the YT kids account.