Hot cup of coffee on a rainy Sunday afternoon, slow jamming R&B (the dog’s comfort music for the week) while getting some work done - loving the peaceful moments
Discussion
What kind of work do you do?
Jack of all trades, master of none, lol :) in the spirit of remaining nym I’ll share briefly - I run a fashion tech startup that I’m hoping to raise or sell. And consult early stage startups on the side, currently working with an early stage investor in hopes to balance up free market & gov’t control of funds. Was a HW high-freq engineer (spectrums, EMC, satellites, radar).
Hopefully when I have a clearer schedule and financial freedom someday, I can focus on building use cases on Nostr and web5 esp on using Bitcoin to trade (the real trade - export import ie small manufacturers globally). For now just chilling here. Kinda peaceful and positive here than the world outside :)
I figured you had some startup experience! Seem very versed in the subject and now it all makes sense. Ty for sharing!
At a phase where I realise i know nothing :)
Lol. I feel the same all the time. Tech and startups change so fast.
The Socratic paradox of wisdom.
Makes logical sense not to know much give the amount of knowledge out there that’s known, never mind the unknowns which probably massively outweigh the knows.
I’ll see myself out for typos 🤦♂️
In the beginning, learning is the journey to the frontier of knowledge. To know what is known.
But once you get there, you stare out into the abyss and then you realise. Our maps are small.
It’s especially evident in medicine. It seems like one of those fields where we know a lot, but once you encounter some difficult to diagnose issue, you quickly realize how little is known.
Yeah, medicine is the one field where I know that I know absolutely zero. 😂
I just don’t understand it at all. I know anatomy and some basic stuff but medicine is the opposite side of the map of human knowledge to all the thing I’ve spent time on.
These knowledge maps are cool if you haven’t seen them, it’s worth learning about the structure (and the gaps!). 
Where can you do this? Looks interesting.