Author: LINUS FERNANDES
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Daniel Dennett: Scholar
“A scholar is just a library’s way of making another library.” —Daniel Dennett.
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Les Schwab: Guts
“I’ve often said that sometimes guts pays off more than brains, because, if I had followed advice, and, if I had had a formal business education behind me, I never would have started the profit sharing contract in the form I did.” —Les Schwab.
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Josh Wolfe: Real insight
“I think the most valuable thing that AI is going to do, when you ask it questions and it comes up with the answers, assuming those answers are accurate and cross-correlated and double-checked, [is going to be when] they actually say, ‘Here are the five questions you didn’t ask.’ That is going to unleash real…
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Jeff G Bone: Punk
“Well, punk is kind of anti-ethical, anyway. Its ethics, so to speak, include a disdain for ethics in general. If you have to think about some-thing so hard, then it’s bullshit anyway; that’s the idea. Punks are anti-ismists, to coin a term. But nonetheless, they have a pretty clearly defined stance and image, and THAT…
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A J P Taylor: Nothing more corrupting
“There is nothing more agreeable in life than to make peace with the Establishment — and nothing more corrupting.” —A.J.P. Taylor.
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Marc Andreessen: Fake people
“You ask increasingly detailed questions and people have trouble making things up and things just fuzz into obvious BS, and fake founders basically have the same problem. They’re able to relay a conceptual theory of what they’re doing… But as they get into the details, it just fuzzes out. Whereas the true people that you…
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Mary Oliver: Visited this world
“When it’s over, I don’t want to wonder if I have made of my life something particular, and real. I don’t want to find myself sighing and frightened, or full of argument. I don’t want to end up simply having visited this world.” —Mary Oliver.
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Baltasar Gracián: Counsel
“When you counsel someone, you should appear to be reminding him of something he had forgotten, not of the light he was unable to see.” —Baltasar Gracián.
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Fred Rogers: Share responsibility
“We live in a world in which we need to share responsibility. It’s easy to say “It’s not my child, not my community, not my world, not my problem.” Then there are those who see the need and respond. I consider those people my heroes.” —Fred Rogers.
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Kobe Bryant: Long game
“If I wanted to implement something new into my game, I’d see it and try incorporating it immediately. I wasn’t scared of missing, looking bad, or being embarrassed. That’s because I always kept the end result, the long game, in my mind.” —Kobe Bryant.
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Henry Singleton: Stay flexible
“I know a lot of people have very strong and definite plans that they’ve worked out on all kinds of things, but we’re subject to a tremendous number of outside influences and the vast majority of them cannot be predicted. So my idea is to stay flexible.” —Henry Singleton.
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Alan Kay: Communications junkies
“Humans are communications junkies. We just can’t get enough.” —Alan Kay.
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Penelope Lively: Walking lexicons
“We open our mouths and out flow words whose ancestries we do not even know. We are walking lexicons. In a single sentence of idle chatter we preserve Latin, Anglo-Saxon, Norse: we carry a museum inside our heads, each day we commemorate peoples of whom we have never heard.” —Penelope Lively.
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Christopher Fry: Halo
“What, after all, is a halo? It’s only one more thing to keep clean.” —Christopher Fry.
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Alan Cooper: Value of a prototype
“The value of a prototype is in the education it gives you, not in the code itself.” —Alan Cooper.
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John Leonard: Memory of a small boldness
“In the cellars of the night, when the mind starts moving around old trunks of bad times, the pain of this and the shame of that, the memory of a small boldness is a hand to hold.” —John Leonard.
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Tom Brady: Double the pleasure and divide the pain
“Things happen in life that you don’t want to happen—whether you lose a game, things don’t go well at work, or something happens with your child. There are many moments in our personal and professional lives that don’t go the way we want. How do you deal with them? Do you handle them with class…
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Steve Jobs: Don’t settle
“You’ve got to find what you love. And that is as true for your work as it is for your lovers. Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. And the only way to…
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Paul Graham: Two theories
“If you’re trying to choose between two theories and one gives you an excuse for being lazy, the other one is probably right.” —Paul Graham.
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Kate Sheppard: All that separates
“All that separates, whether of race, class, creed, or sex, is inhuman, and must be overcome.” —Kate Sheppard.
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Amrish Puri: Destination
“Son, you are an actor of theater, you are an actor of stage. You will go to the world of film. And if you become a film actor, then don’t become a film. Don’t go to late-night parties. Don’t drink alcohol. Don’t smoke cigarettes. Cigarettes and all these things destroy an actor a lot. Be…
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Franklin Adams: Conviction based on experience
“The trouble with this country is that there are too many politicians who believe, with a conviction based on experience, that you can fool all of the people all of the time.” —Franklin Adams.
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Luther Burbank: Jungle of weeds
“If we had paid no more attention to our plants than we have to our children, we would now be living in a jungle of weeds.” —Luther Burbank.
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Nassim Nicholas Taleb: Inordinate courage
“It takes inordinate courage to introspect, to confront oneself, to accept one’s limitations—scientists are seeing more and more evidence that we are specifically designed by mother nature to fool ourselves.” —Nassim Nicholas Taleb.
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William Beveridge: Happiness of the common bank
“The object of government in peace and in war is not the glory of rulers or of races, but the happiness of the common man.” —William Beveridge.
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Napoleon: Ten people
“Ten people who yell make more noise than ten thousand who keep silent.” —Napoleon.
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Julia Cameron: Seeds of love
“When I listen to love, I am listening to my true nature. When I express love, I am expressing my true nature. All of us love. All of us do it more and more perfectly. The past has brought us both ashes and diamonds. In the present we find the flowers of what we’ve planted…
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Nietzsche: Happiness
“The only happiness lies in reason; all the rest of the world is dismal. The highest reason, however, I see in the work of the artist, and he may experience it as such. Happiness lies in the swiftness of feeling and thinking: all the rest of the world is slow, gradual and stupid. Whoever could feel the course of a light ray…
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William Goldwin: Mind with mind
“If there be such a thing as truth, it must infallibly be struck out by the collision of mind with mind.” —William Godwin.
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James Dyson: Misfit
“I have been a misfit throughout my professional life, and that seems to have worked to my advantage. Misfits are not born or made; they make themselves. And a stubborn opinionated child, desperate to be different and to be right, encounters only smaller refractions of the problems he will always experience. And he carries the…
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Leonardo da Vinci: Mastery of oneself
“One can have no smaller or greater mastery than mastery of oneself; you will never have a greater or lesser dominion than that over yourself; the height of your success is gauged by your self-mastery, the depth of your failure by your self-abandonment. Those who cannot establish dominion over themselves will have no dominion over…
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Toni Morrison: Beauty
“I think of beauty as an absolute necessity. I don’t think it’s a privilege or an indulgence, it’s not even a quest. I think it’s almost like knowledge, which is to say, it’s what we were born for. I think finding, incorporating and then representing beauty is what humans do. With or without authorities telling…
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Michel de Montaigne: Rub and polish
“It is good to rub and polish your mind against that of others.” —Michel de Montaigne.
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Will Rogers: Things will get better
“Things will get better despite our efforts to improve them.” —Will Rogers.
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Victor Hugo: Men hate those to whom they have to lie
“Men hate those to whom they have to lie.” —Victor Hugo.
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Patrick Volkerding: Slackware
“Besides, I think Slackware sounds better than ‘Microsoft,’ don’t you?” —Patrick Volkerding.
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Frederick P Brooks: Intramodular structure
“The programmer’s primary weapon in the never-ending battle against slow system is to change the intramodular structure. Our first response should be to reorganize the modules’ data structures.” —Frederick P. Brooks.
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Leo Durocher: Show me
“Show me a good loser in professional sports and I’ll show you an idiot. Show me a good sportsman and I’ll show you a player I’m looking to trade.” —Leo Durocher.
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David Foster Wallace: Voting
“There is no such thing as not voting: you either vote by voting, or you vote by staying home and tacitly doubling the value of some diehard’s vote.” —David Foster Wallace.
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Margaret Halsey: Crucial disadvantage
“The crucial disadvantage of aggression, competitiveness, and skepticism as national characteristics is that these qualities cannot be turned off at five o’clock.” —Margaret Halsey.