🔥 #1 Meta View: World of Risk, Tragedy, Platforms & Short-Term GratitudeBi-weekly digest at the intersection of business, technology, finance and society.
Happy Sunday folks! You haven't received a message from CryptoDash for a while now and the reason is that I personally felt it doesn't really provide much value anymore considering other resources such as Token Economy, Messari, Proof of Work and others. However I loved doing some curation and write-ups, therefore I am launching a "new new" thing called MetaView - a curated newsletter about all things business, tech, finance and society. As usual, I promise not to spam your folder without your permission so if you hoped to only get crypto news, feel free to unsubscribe (however I am still retaining a section for crypto with a bunch of other goodies inside). Who am I writing for? The easy answer is for intellectually curious, for the ones who are trying to improve their careers, health and life for the better but overall for professionals in the 21st century who are seeing radical change in our society and are aiming to increase their edge and adaptability. Without further ado, lets dig into issue #1. 🧐 PERSONALFor this issue I have compiled Jeff Bezos's letters to shareholders from 1997 to 2018 in a TL;DR tweetstorm format. 🏢 BUSINESSAmazon will pay their workers to quit and start a business8 minutes via New York TimesAs Amazon aims to cut delivery time to a single day, the company is encouraging its employees to quit and start their own delivery businesses. Under a new incentive program, announced on Monday, Amazon said that it would fund up to $10,000 in start-up costs and provide three months of pay to any employee who decides to make the jump. In seeding the delivery start-ups, the company is making a small investment in the distribution network that will make one day delivery possible, while letting the business owners grow from there. Reid Hoffman interview7 minutes via New York TimesReid has been on my radar for years now. As a successful founder of LinkedIn and coming from a non-traditional environment he has some smart things to say:
The World of Subprime Children5 minutes via New York TimesSeems like every other company these days is focusing on co-living as an extension to what WeWork has built for co-working. However another huge trend is ISA's - income share agreements. The principle is pretty simple, you pay nothing upfront and when completed a service (such as going through code school or re-skilling program), you share a percentage of your income with an institution that provided that particular service up to a specific cap amount. The good part is now you don't have to put a huge chunk of cash with a risk of not finding the job and going broke. Nonetheless, if something is too good to be true, it probably is? 💰 FINANCEThe Messy World of Risk1:20 minutes via YouTubeInvesting is not necessarily what you know but how people behave. Morgan shares 5 stories which have nothing to do with finance, but teach us how to be more productive when thinking about risk and psychology. Here is one story to get you started: What nuclear energy can teach us about investing? A nuclear plant which took 7 years to build with costs north of $1B was subject to a referendum by Austrian citizens. In the end, it didn't produce a single watt of electricity due to safety considerations. Despite the fact that other countries like US, UK, France, Japan, all using nuclear power. Risk is not universally perceived the same way by all people. Individual investors' willingness to bear risk depends on their personal history. As Nobel laureate and psychologist Daniel Kahneman points out: We explain the past with ease, but we are terrible at predicting the future. There are 3 ways to overcome this:
Mean Reversion15 minutes via Elmfunds.comFrom NYU Professor Aswath Damodaran:
🤖 TECHNOLOGYARK on Disruptive Innovation25 minutes via ARK Investment Management ResearchA few months ago I have subscribed to ARK Research and it was one of the best research I can find on the state of emerging tech and innovation. As an example they looked into economics of booming e-scooter businesses (spoiler alert: margin economics are tight), energy storage overview, genome sequencing analysis and much more. Their last research looks into the most disruptive tech and its impact in the future:
Is Behavioral Advertising a Fad?3 minutes via Wall Street JournalNew study came out, claiming behavioral targeting is overhyped and marketers are overpaying publishers for something that hasn't been proven to work. Advertising space is incredibly fragmented and complex which brings us to the next major issue, the so-called "adtech tax", which accounts for 60 cents of every 1$ spent on advertising.
A Study Reveals Why Most Platforms Fail6 minutes via Harvard Business ReviewPlatforms have become one of the most important business models of the 21st century. The study divides them into two groups:
Five of the six most valuable firms in the world are built around these types of platforms. However, a study of 252 platform companies showed that 209 of them failed. The most common mistakes fall into four categories:
🔮 CRYPTOA 'Blockchain Bandit' is Guessing Private Keys and Scoring Millions4 minutes via WIREDThe odds of randomly guessing a private key on Ethereum are 1 in 115 quattuorvigintillion. Yet, somebody decided to run permutations on less secure keys. They call him (or them) a "bandit":
Facebook's Crypto Partners Revealed4 minutes via The BlockFacebook is about to reveal their project Libra and official whitepaper. The coin is supposed to be pegged to a basket of currencies and might be used for the following use-cases:
One thing we can say for sure is that if something is going on at Facebook, the guys are going full-steam ahead. The leaked partners seem to back the high expectations of the project ranging from non-profit to music and travel. 👥 SOCIETYFriendship & Tragedy27 minutes via Texas MonthlySabika Sheikh, a Muslim exchange student from Pakistan with dreams of changing the world, struck up an unlikely friendship with an evangelical Christian girl. The two became inseparable—until the day a fellow student opened fire in their high school art classroom – killing Sabika. Throughout South Asia, Sabika's death was front-page news. Reporters described her as Pakistan's martyred daughter: an idealistic, promising young woman who had traveled to America with a message of peace, eager to experience the best of its culture, only to suffer its worst. Playing Catch-up in the Game of Life15 minutes via Wall Street JournalNew set of data shows that millennials are in worse financial shape than every preceding living generation and may never recover. The numbers are coming from US but I personally feel the socio-economic changes are touching pretty much everyone in the developed world (and well even more in the underdeveloped countries with wealth gap). It seems like older generations are wondering why people are marrying less, having less kids, cars, houses but are also more depressed and burned-out than any preceding generation. Well, some say it is because of capitalism. We work more and earn less, which creates a disparity between expectations and financial status. Another side to it is that a lot of articles started attacking millenials for being lazy and killing industries which were thriving a few decades back. However it all comes down to the current economic situation and the state of the world which has changed so radically for the past 2 decades that we have no other choice than to adapt. 🧠 MINDThe Moral Peril of Meritocracy8 minutes via New York TimesAn interesting opinion piece on how the times of great adversity and suffering help us re-evaluate our priorities and go against the grain of what the system prepares us for (climbing mountains of achievements).
Chaos & Avocado Toasts7 minutes via Wall Street Journal
On Patience and Short-Term Gratitude7 minutes via Gates NotesIn Bill Gates words from his last chilling session with Warren:
🐦 #TWEETOSPHEREJawad provides a short overview of what is happening with Silicon Valley. The world of inflated valuations, Saudi money and potentially lost hopes. 🎤 PODCASTFollowing Intellectual Curiosity (Thomas Tull of Tulco)71 minutes via The Knowledge Project
📺 VIDEOKevin Systrom of InstagramAn amazing interview with Kevin about the humble beginnings of Instagram and focus on the most simple things from the product development perspective. First instagram release only included taking photos and feed which caught consumer attention and mobile-first social network effects. Other golden nuggets include some book recommendations and general tips on business and life. 🛠 RESOURCES100+ Resources for Optimizing Productivity & PerformanceFeeling like procrastinating lately? Not to worry, everyone does. Here is a huge list of various productivity products, software, hacks and guidelines to make your better. A lot of the things are a complete overkill however there are a few useful ones like:
💥 RANDOMA poem about Silicon Valley constructed of Quora questions:
____________________________________________________________________________ Below the foldThanks for reading the first issue! This will be a section for shoutouts and other short blurbs (ICYM, Jobs, Projects etc.) Happy weekend and cheerio! End noteI am always happy to get feedback and suggestions from the readers. There are plenty amazing folks in this newsletter including entrepreneurs, investors, artists, designers, developers and others! Ping me with your projects and thoughts at info@getmetaview.com and I am happy to shoutout here and add more sections in the future. If you liked this post from META VIEW, why not share it? |