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Couldn't we solve this with a percentage type for zoning, or adding a "mixed commerical/residential" zone? UI wise that shouldn't be any more complicated.

Or you can change the zoning into japanese zoning, where the UI can stay simple as you escalate the permission level of a zone. https://code.uberinternal.com/T2597239


Seems like you've accidentally posted the wrong link.


At my apartment building, I only get the email for my unit's mail, not everyone's. Sounds like a bug like other people said.


The macbook and it's 3+ year butterfly keyboard debacle or windows 10 laptops with all of their spyware even when high end being his only 2 practical choices is what he is probably referring to.


Sometimes when you prototype something, half the reason is to try out these new fancy architectural styles :p

Usually it's for this kind of project: http://www.commitstrip.com/en/2014/11/25/west-side-project-s...


This is why discipline is the one thing that differentiates developers that release something and those that don't.

It's easy to try something new all the time, but it is tough as nails to stay with something even in the many cases where it sucks and gets difficult. Finishing something is it's own reward though, so even though it's tough it's always worth it.


In a way, it's easier to support parents in a poor country because everything is cheaper there. Give them $1000/month and they will probably live better than you.


Which is why as a startup you have to offer something that FANG can't offer, like full remote working or similar.

That or taking the people who fail to get FANG offers / naive jrs.


I wonder how much the proliferation of start up failures has to do with this very fact versus a poor product/model/founder/execution/etc.

Not saying that the employees are to blame but I'm sure there's plenty of good ideas out there that just don't have the right people trying to implement it.

Or that's such a small amount that it really doesn't contribute.

Really just wondering what that number is.


If I were to start a VC-backed startup I would just employ the paradigm most big publicly traded tech companies use: pay competitive market rates for good engineers as FTEs, and contract with body shops for all the other work. Given that FANG are some of the best performing companies in the world I'd say it's a safe assumption that they've done the math and found that it's more economical to pay a high rate for a limited number of high qualified engineers rather than pay medium rates for less qualified engineers. And then you can have contractors making less than what "medium" engineers make do the less important/skillful stuff.


Not to totally dismiss your point, but don't forget that one of the reasons, a very big reason, why FAANG companies pay that high is because they literally print money like crazy, so they can afford to behave that way. They have tons of cash to burn and they're not going to run out of it anytime soon.

If you are a startup that just raised 10M$, you just can't go around and pay a few good engineers $500k a year in cash compensation (which is what they would make at FAANG, since the RSU portion of the compensation is basically cash-equivalent, perhaps discounted at 80% if you want to be conservative), even if "a few" is a very small group.

You'll have to settle with offering them $180k base + stock options that on paper might bring their compensation to $500k, 5-10 years down the road, and any reasonable good engineer should value them at 10% of their pitched value, if not less.

It just really never makes sense to join a startup for financial reasons, and I say this as a person who was lucky enough to have a ~1M$ windfall from stock options of a former startup employer: amortized over the amount of time I spent at that company (4 years), I'd have been much better off financially had I been at FAANG the whole entire time (which is where I am now btw, completely done with the startup bs).


I think this is a relatively recent development. 8-10 years ago, working at a startup or working at FANG paid about the same, but the startup came with this lottery ticket, you learned more at a startup and it wasn't a big co with big co politics and process. Back then it definitely made a lot more sense to maybe give up %10-%20 less income in exchange.

Startups & VCs started getting a lot of money in the global search for yield as interest rates dropped to 0 and QE started printing money and giving it to banks who would invest it. The google/apple/etc wage collusion lawsuit increased the amount of competition for engineers. FANG was losing engineers who would rather do their own thing for a little bit less. The H1B lottery system limited the supply. Housing started getting even more expensive in the SFBA. And as you said, FANG prints money so they can afford to keep on going up in the bidding wars.

Compensation started going up in this competitive system as a result until we are at the point we are today, where startups are definitely not competitive comp wise to being at FANG.


Given my experience, I don't consider FAANG engineers any more qualified than other engineers on average. Actually, people coming out of agencies and consultancies that sell their development expertise are usually the most qualified candidates I interview, whereas FAANG companies are banking on hiring more engineers than anyone else and then building systems so even shitty engineers can productively contribute.


Not quite, because the equivalent pure pcie connection is faster than thunderbolt due to the overhead in thunderbolt.

We need another doubling in thunderbolt's speed for it to not have a penalty when using eGPUs


It's been a few years since I was programming those things but IIRC the TB 3frames are comparable to PCIe 3 frames (terminology is slightly different between the two).

The real thing is that TB3 only has four lanes while Intel's server (and I believe some desktop) chipsets have 16-lane PCIe. Not sure about the mobile chipsets (again, I no longer follow this as closely/ as I used to). So indeed you won't be able to pump data into an eGPU as quickly as you could a high performance internal one. Or perhaps we should add "yet"?


Well you can already get cheap usb-c cables that only have usb 2 speeds and power delivery capacity, if that is what your hinting at.


Maybe off of your state taxes I think makes more sense.


In some places, such as New York city, there's also a city income tax. Do the states with such cities allow the writing off of the local tax off of the state tax?


You can not deduct NYC income tax on your NY State income tax return. (I know this because I'm a NYC resident.)



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