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Dash
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🐟🥖 Christ is King
Replying to Avatar UNCLE ROCKSTAR

In defense of developer depression:

Reflecting on my journey in Bitcoin over the last decade, I've come to realize that I've achieved success where a lot of other developers have failed.

Ironically, one of the biggest issues I'm still dealing with is that I may have succeeded too much. As a developer, you must understand that unfortunately, most people you’ll end up working with will not want you to succeed. The majority will simply want you to code what is needed for their success… and then go away. Disappear.

The core problem for you is that creating anything great requires deep coding focus for extended periods. You also need to constantly iterate on the product while ensuring it gains traction. Many developers mistakenly believe they can do both.

The hard truth is that you shouldn’t be doing this. You shouldn’t have to choose which part to handicap – your developer skills or the reach of the product you’re building.

Don’t fall for the false dilemma. Instead, find trusted collaborators who allow you to stay in a state of deep focus. Look for people who, once you create something that generates enormous amounts of value, won’t take your contributions for granted or betray you by claiming all the rewards for themselves.

My own immense success… it’s depressing to know that it had more to do with other people than myself. Yes, of course, I worked hard for it. I honed my craft for over 25 years. Studied computer science and led engineering at numerous startups. Stayed humble, while churning out commits for decades. But every time it came down to the wire, none of that mattered. What truly mattered was whether certain people recognized my contributions and stood up for my proof of work… or not.

So, if you are a developer – knowing that even in best-case scenarios you’ll depend on the goodwill of others is soul-crushing. You absolutely should be depressed.

But then recognize that the way out of that depression is through long-term commitments with others who resonate with the coding journey you’re on. Only surround yourself with trustworthy people. There is a reason that 4-year vesting schedules are standard in startups. For you and your code to truly succeed - you have to be part of long-term efforts with significant upside.

Anything less – and you’re setting yourself up for failure. You don’t want to create a routine where you daily force yourself into states of deep focus, only to see that after a couple of years of building, you’re defeated by an inferior product that has better marketers at the helm. You also don’t want to lose your technical competency in building political and promotion skills… this world needs more developers, not more politicians.

Observe your depression, but don’t succumb to it. In most cases, it correlates with how deeply you care about your craft. It’s a hint – that the way forward is with others. So, don’t fight your feelings, but follow them to find trusted collaborators who will help you realize the best version of the product you’re coding.

This is every profession, not just devs. Either you're risking capital and taking outsized rewards inline with risk taken or you are paid as a mercenary to apply your time and knowledge to perform some task. You have a contract with your employer and they are under no obligation to reward you above and beyond what is outlined in the contract. Sometimes business owners can be decent people and reward going above and beyond with extra recognition and financial compensation but you shouldn't ever expect or rely on that. If you don't like your working conditions you need to either renegotiate your employment contract or else emrisk your own capital and make your own rules.

Peter when are you going to have someone interesting on like Curtis Yarvin? We all know that censorship etc., is a problem and that the media is dying. How about digging into the idea that the real problem is actually "democracy" and what an alternative might look like?

I think there is a lot of fraud with passports. Maybe this doesn't seem to help, but it makes it slightly harder to cheat and makes it more likely fraud would be detected by insisting on the 本人 to be present, I imagine. They allow the application part to be done by a parent without the kid there. It's just the picking up of the actual passport which requires the kid. Must be to also ensure the photo matches the kid's actual appearance. Some people are also lazy and don't use a photo taken within 3 months etc., so it would also help flag that. A pain I know but there are good reasons for the rule, I'm sure. Anyway, I don't imagine this particular one is unique to Japan, is it?

ルール緩めればいろんないやなやつが調子に乗って皆に迷惑かけるようになる。(海外みたいに)なのでルールは仕方ないと思う。基本的には他人に迷惑をかけてなければある程度臨機応変にルールを破ったりすることができ、皆見て見ぬふりしてくれたりするし、うまくやればルールはそんな固くも厳しくもないと思う。しかし、ちゃんと信頼関係を築いた上でなど、ちゃんと状況などを把握した上でじゃないと、個人判断や個人プレーはリスキーなので、注意が必要だし、社会人の知識の向上や、メンタルもそれなりに鍛えておかないといけないかもしれない。

Interested to hear what Bobby had to say and make up my own mind. Had no idea about the US going after him and him being arrested in Tokyo etc. Interesting that they'd go after him like that. Wonder what he said which had so many people upset and keen to silence him?

Currently going down the Bobby Fischer rabbit hole

GOOD NEWS 1BTC 3000万円突破 🚀

BAD NEWS 1USD = 450JPY 👀

Let's get after it brother 🫡