Betterment

Betterment

3320 bookmarks
Custom sorting
Optimistic Nihilism: Tastes Like Chicken
Optimistic Nihilism: Tastes Like Chicken
A big part of being a leader is helping people find more meaning in their jobs. “Making meaning” is a fundamental credo in the culture-building game.
·gapingvoid.com·
Optimistic Nihilism: Tastes Like Chicken
Staring at decisions
Staring at decisions
Soap is 85 cents a bar or two for a dollar. Which should you buy? It depends. It depends on how much space you have, whether you like this brand, how full your cart is and whether or not you’…
·seths.blog·
Staring at decisions
Boundaries are levers
Boundaries are levers
And assertions are maps. Which means that: Budgets Timelines Plans Decision trees and projections are nothing to be afraid of. They’re a gift. They give us the chance to act as if, to describ…
·seths.blog·
Boundaries are levers
Podcast #858: The Affectionate, Ambiguous, and Surprisingly Ambivalent Relationship Between Siblings
Podcast #858: The Affectionate, Ambiguous, and Surprisingly Ambivalent Relationship Between Siblings
For most people, their siblings will be the longest-lasting relationships of their lives, potentially enduring all the way from birth until past the death of their parents.  Marked by both jealousy and conflict and love and loyalty, siblings are also some of our most complicated relationships. While a little over half of people describe their relationships with their siblings as positive, […]
·artofmanliness.com·
Podcast #858: The Affectionate, Ambiguous, and Surprisingly Ambivalent Relationship Between Siblings
Sunday Firesides: Everyone's Just Trying to Make It in the World
Sunday Firesides: Everyone's Just Trying to Make It in the World
When someone shares too-private information on Instagram in the search for likes. When someone does any kind of dance on TikTok. When someone excitedly joins a multi-level marketing scheme. When someone swears they’re turning over a new leaf for the sixth time in as many years. When someone acts like they’re the first person to […]
·artofmanliness.com·
Sunday Firesides: Everyone's Just Trying to Make It in the World
The next big thing
The next big thing
This is the season for all the lists–the hot authors, singers and restaurants in any given genre. If you’re on the list, congratulations! You’re the next big thing. For now. But t…
·seths.blog·
The next big thing
Satisfaction and progress in open-ended work
Satisfaction and progress in open-ended work
When we’re in execution mode, we swim in signs of our progress. A day’s work stands crisply in some endless checklist: four problems solved; three features added; check and check. Am I on track? Did I...
·blog.andymatuschak.org·
Satisfaction and progress in open-ended work
Successful habits through smoothly ratcheting targets
Successful habits through smoothly ratcheting targets
Adopting new habits is hard! What a shame: New Year’s resolutions could represent such a bright spark of optimism. Instead, they’re a clichéd punchline on the futility of human will. Certainly, my own...
·blog.andymatuschak.org·
Successful habits through smoothly ratcheting targets
What “Work” Looks Like
What “Work” Looks Like
Writing about the big beautiful mess that is making things for the world wide web.
·blog.jim-nielsen.com·
What “Work” Looks Like
Sooner or later…
Sooner or later…
Random events are unevenly distributed and rarely arrive on time. Resilience and frequency increase the chances that the break we are hoping for will arrive when we need it. The resilience to keep …
·seths.blog·
Sooner or later…
It was only a matter of time
It was only a matter of time
The question, of course, is how long? We’ve been working hard on fusion for sixty years (using ‘we’ to include myself with all of humanity, not because I’m a physicist). The…
·seths.blog·
It was only a matter of time
Trying not to Try
Trying not to Try
The philosopher and sinologist, Edward Slingerland was on the Infinite Loops podcast recently, where he discussed among other things his 2014 book,
·gapingvoid.com·
Trying not to Try
Learn to Hand Letter Like a Traditional Industrial Designer or Architect - Core77
Learn to Hand Letter Like a Traditional Industrial Designer or Architect - Core77
In the days of hand drafting, architectural lettering was taught to all Architecture and Industrial Design majors. (My graduating class was one of the last ID classes to draft by hand, and they were already phasing it out.) This type of lettering evolved from the days of drafting
·core77.com·
Learn to Hand Letter Like a Traditional Industrial Designer or Architect - Core77
And what if you can’t tell?
And what if you can’t tell?
Our stories about brains are all invented. If a stunning surrealistic painting turns out to have been painted by an elephant or a toddler, does that make it less beautiful? If an essay on the natur…
·seths.blog·
And what if you can’t tell?
[Raindrop Highlights] My workflow integration of raindrop.io into Obsidian - Share & showcase - Obsidian Forum
[Raindrop Highlights] My workflow integration of raindrop.io into Obsidian - Share & showcase - Obsidian Forum
➡ I am not a professional writer and english isn’t my mother tongue. Some of the screenshots may contain text in other languages Please be nice 🙂 I will describe two use cases Using raindrop for litterature notes when studying a specific topic. Creating a backlog for things to study, watch, read with raindrop. Using raindrop for litterature notes when studying a specific topic. (Example: “Chaos Theory”) My raindrop notes are all stored in the folder “50 - Ra...
·forum.obsidian.md·
[Raindrop Highlights] My workflow integration of raindrop.io into Obsidian - Share & showcase - Obsidian Forum
Sunday Firesides: Hair of the Dog
Sunday Firesides: Hair of the Dog
“Hair of the dog” refers to solving a problem using the same element that caused it. The expression derives from the old idea that a bite from a rabid dog could be treated by stuffing the wound with fur from the dog that bit you. The same concept, which the ancient Greek physician Hippocrates termed […]
·artofmanliness.com·
Sunday Firesides: Hair of the Dog
The Seven Levels of Busy
The Seven Levels of Busy
Level 1: NOT BUSY My schedule is wide open. I can choose infinite paths. Zero commitments. The weekend. I sleep like a baby. Life is good, but am I living my best life? Level 2: STUFF TO DO I have a few commitments wandering around my brain. They are reasonable, knowable, and not deadline-based. I
·randsinrepose.com·
The Seven Levels of Busy
“You’re right”
“You’re right”
If a customer, a colleague or a friend is generous enough to share their feelings, those feelings are what they are. We might disagree with the assumptions that led to those feelings. But acknowled…
·seths.blog·
“You’re right”
Why thinking hard makes us feel tired
Why thinking hard makes us feel tired
Difficult tasks can lead to build-up of a signalling molecule in the brain, triggering fatigue.
·nature.com·
Why thinking hard makes us feel tired
The Massie Effect
The Massie Effect
Put this one next to Dunning Kruger, which shows that people of low ability traditionally overrate how talented they are. The Massie Effect is the tendency of people who support good causes to beli…
·seths.blog·
The Massie Effect
Good Advice is "Obvious" - Scott H Young
Good Advice is "Obvious" - Scott H Young
Is good advice counterintuitive? Or is it something you already know? Oddly enough, the answer to both may be "No."
·scotthyoung.com·
Good Advice is "Obvious" - Scott H Young
Expertise
Expertise
In a competition between someone who knows the most and someone who is willing to learn the most, the edge usually goes to the curious and empathic professional, not the one who is simply protectin…
·seths.blog·
Expertise