I love that they do one thing really, really well. Further:
"Dropbox is the fastest SaaS company to reach $1 billion in revenue run rate" - given that, I don't care if they are profitable or not. They got to $1B faster than Salesforce, as long as they keep this up they'll be just fine.
Rule when I was at Yahoo! "not on company time, not on company equipment" but you also may want to check that inventions agreement you signed when you started employment. Those tend to be pretty all-encompassing.
Requires a bit of discipline to monthly "review the whole icebox and choose a month’s worth of activities from the best items in there" but is really the right way to go.
Similarly, in Agile if you're backlog is ranked going into planning then you'll always be pulling from the "best" or "most productive" stories and ideas, not just the new tickets.
He's a creepy guy, and a total business jerk but I'm not sure what he did wrong in this case."How is this allowed @jack." ??? Do you mean, how can someone be allowed to create a collage and post them to social media? There are apps for that. And if you're a public figure you should expect this to happen to you, too.
Would she have complained if Channing Tatum or Aziz Ansari did it? And would twitter and Dorsey have cared?
I downvoted you. Since I really hate when people downvote me without providing a reason I thought I would comment:
This is pragmatism in action. I do think it's often easier to get better results by working around people's behaviors than than to try to fight them. (Btw: this applies to more situations involving humans than you're probably assuming.)
You're just being flippant, saying there is a solution, seemingly without even attempting to consider the situation from a holistic system point of view.
I can think of several reasons why this is better. One being that condoms only work if the man wears them (obviously). In cases of sexual assault or similar this would allow the other person to be protected from hiv.
Another being that condoms aren't 100% effective at preventing hiv, and combining with this provides more sure protection.
> A device for this exists already. Is he going to invest all that money in Durex or Trojan?
First of all, sex is not the only way to contract HIV.
Second - and most people don't know this - condoms are not FDA approved for anal sex. They're not even tested for anal sex, and the testing requirements for condoms are specifically limited to vaginal sex[0].
But even if we look at vaginal sex, condoms are rather ineffective compared to other prevention methods, even when you look at success rates under perfect use. And perfect use is not what's relevant - what you need to look at are success rates under actual use). In this regard, condoms fail horribly as an HIV prevention tactic.
Decades of unscientific education or education based on faulty science have caused people to subjectively underestimate their risk of contracting HIV when using condoms, and to subjectively overestimate their risk when using other prevention methods.
For example, how would you rank these behaviors in terms of risk levels?
* Having sex, with a condom, with more than one partner of unknown HIV status
* Having sex, without a condom and without PrEP, with a single, HIV+ partner with an undetectable viral load
* Having sex, without a condom while taking PrEP, with multiple partners of unknown HIV status
Surprisingly, the first is the riskiest, and the second and third are comparable levels of risk. (The second is actually believed to be slightly less risky than the third, but the difference is not even statistically significant, let alone practically significant).
The common counterargument to this is that condoms prevent more than just HIV - except even then, people dramatically overestimate the protection that condoms provide. HIV is pretty much the only (common) sexually transmitted disease that can be transmitted through vaginal or anal intercourse but not through oral sex or other forms of physical and sexual contact. Since most people only use condoms for intercourse, the added protection they provide for other STDs under these scenarios is a lot less than people imagine.
In fact, STD transmission rates are actually lower among people who use PrEP for HIV prevention. The common explanation for this is that people on PrEP have to get routine checkups (every 90 days, usually), and this provides a convenient time to do other STD testing as well. For most people, the problem is that they simply don't do routine STD testing at all, which means they can have asymptomatic STDs (chlamydia, gonorrhea, syphilis, etc.) for much longer, which makes them harder to treat, and pass them on to more people in the interim.
I figured HN was as good of a place as any to start this discussion and seed topics. What is it you think Product Managers do? What have you observed that you hate/love/try to ignore?
"Dropbox is the fastest SaaS company to reach $1 billion in revenue run rate" - given that, I don't care if they are profitable or not. They got to $1B faster than Salesforce, as long as they keep this up they'll be just fine.