I really like Paul's essays. Sometimes I have resistance to reading them and digging into the lessons, but there are always valid lessons to learn from them.
He'll never put in bold letters at the beginning the outcome he wants you to leave with. I think my brain is getting lacy to read content that makes me think and wants the distilled information.
I need more brain workout and less brain fast-food 😅
I really like Paul's essays. Sometimes I have resistance to reading them and digging into the lessons, but there are always valid lessons to learn from them.
Thanks for distilling the takeaways, Anton!
I'm curious to know, what kind of resistance? To the ideas?
I think it's Paul's writing style.
He'll never put in bold letters at the beginning the outcome he wants you to leave with. I think my brain is getting lacy to read content that makes me think and wants the distilled information.
I need more brain workout and less brain fast-food 😅
😂😂😂
“Most famous coder of all time” is a bit of a stretch. Outside of Lisp he is a footnote if anything.
As a VC? Famous for sure.
Yeah, you are right. I meant something more along the lines of “the most famous person who is also a coder at heart”, or something like that :)