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Frankly, I'm surprised the attitude of many people seems to be: "I'm going to work at an established company for X years to get experience, then break off to start my own."

Then they write blog posts and postmortems about how they lost their friends and spouses, became horribly unhealthy and severely depressed. But it was worth it in the end, of course.


> It is very rude to sit at the dinner table with people and be interacting with your mobile device rather than your real life companions.

Right, and whose responsibility is it to make sure that children grow up knowing using their mobile phone at the dining table is wrong?


The mobile carriers and cell phone manufacturers.


The majority of people I know who are into aggressively and efficiently managing their time are definitively 'non-techies'.


> psychopaths do so well in life

Do they?


I don't know if there's been a lot of rigorous academic research on the topic or not, but there have been a handful of articles in the pop business press, talking about the connection between being "CEO material" and displaying the traits of a psychopath. For example:

http://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffbercovici/2011/06/14/why-som...


Psychopaths are genetically built to be extreme r-strategists (see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R-strategist ). What seem like stupid social behaviors are actually practice so that, when they are in a high-stakes social situation, they can win it. Most people find the psychopaths around them to be petty and stupid and think, "How could that guy ever succeed?" Well, the psychopath has decided that you're not of primary importance to the game he is trying to play, so he's using you for practice.

By the time they're adults, psychopaths have a wealth of social experience and knowledge, often gained from high-pressure social situations they created at a rate exceeding what most people would ever encounter. When they want something, they're very good at playing to win.

The prehistoric context was that developing an outsized social ability enabled someone to have an above-normal number of sexual encounters. The lack of emotional attachment and compassion, likewise, keeps them from pair-bonding and slows down their proliferation.

In the work context, organizations are also r- or K-selective (quantity vs. quality) in how they replicate process. Get-big-or-die companies are r-strategists, while "lifestyle businesses" tend to be K-strategic. As the business world becomes increasingly r-strategic, so does the character of people running it.


On their own terms, yes.

The serial killers are the lower classes of psychopaths, usually with other mental issues.

They don't all become CEOs but they generally rise to the highest level permissible by their intelligence. An 80-IQ psychopath isn't going to rise to the top of a bank, but he will end up in a position of power over other people.

Of course, they blow themselves up every few years or so, but they usually move away unharmed.


But everything in this UI kit is clickable. Design and clickability of elements is down to the designer.


"a whole language for handling events across the representation of layout"

While I agree block-linking seems like an odd way to implement the desired functionality, the idea that javascript (did you mean javascript?) is a more suitable alternative is dubious.

The concept of requiring an entire engine to enable linking from HTML elements just seems dirty, when it could be achieved so much more simply with a universal href tag. For starters, how would one define link targets?


Sorry to burst your bubble, but she's hardly a celebrity in Britain anymore. Like most of the winners on these "talent shows", she has been milked of all profitability and is now forgotten by the wayside.

Of course, all she had to put up with was a total nervous breakdown.


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