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Would this work as a workaround for creating a Stripe account, if I'm living in a country not supported by Atlas?


Stripe does not seem to support Estonia.

https://stripe.com/global


Check out the UK LLP.


God what a well written article! I don't have much to say on the subject, but this was pure joy to read, it's crazy good. Clear, engaging, to the point, making a difficult subject accessible without dumbing it down, no fluff or unnecessary side stories, just awesomeness.


Welcome to The New Yorker.

Malcolm Gladwell, as well as many other great writers, can be found here:

https://www.newyorker.com/contributors/malcolm-gladwell

This weeks story on Donald Trump might be of interest:

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/01/07/how-mark-burne...


The only gripe I had with the writing was the completely unnecessary injection of gender pronoun controversy.

I highly recommend the AlphaGo movie as well, it does a great job documenting the psychology of professional Go in the world of AI.


what gender pronoun controversy? did we read the same article?


>An expert human player is an expert precisely because her mind automatically identifies the essential parts of the tree and focusses its attention there.

Instead of using gender neutral pronoun like "they", the author used a feminine pronoun.


This is nitpicking. I like using singular "they" and I'm guessing it will win, but this isn't settled yet and some editors make different choices.


I don't like singular "they", we should try to establish a second person plural pronoun.


It actually feels to me that you are injecting gender controversy here.

The New Yorker style guide allows the author to use he or she at their discretion. That’s been the norm for hundreds of years.


It is especially jarring when there is only one woman in the current top 100 chess players, Yifan Hou ranked 86.


Are there no expert players outside of the top 100?


I'm not sure that out of those thousands of words that's the idea that deserves notice and discussion.


Awesome comment! One thing I have problem with is that you keep saying "ripping off" or "steal". There really shouldn't be any shame in taking 2 existing good ideas and using them to make something better, something widely successful.

TF2 or PUBG could've done this but didn't, fortnite did, and nailed it, and now we all get to benefit.


Especially as Battle Royale modes already existed before PUBG as well.


Anything except Linux apparently.

Unreal Engine works on linux, and Fortnite used to work through wine, but because of their anti-cheating system it's broken now, and their CEO doesnt seem to have any plans for the linux version, he has some weird stance [1] on that.

Such a bummer, I really wanted to play it.

[1] https://twitter.com/timsweeneyepic/status/964284402741149698


Except that in modern culture people tend to call anything they disagree with "abuse", like using a wrong pronoun or not supporting feminism enough.

I want to live in a world where anyone is free to say any stupid idea they want, and anyone else is free to correct them or ignore them or do whatever they like.

Actual harm/abuse/harassment should be illegal of course, like the kind where a person is physically doing stuff to another person against their will.

But if blocking a person on twitter is all it takes to avoid "harassment", maybe that's the best way to deal with that.


Maybe it's a new body for Peter Thiel made out of some poor person.

Maybe it's immortality for all of us, ability for a dying person to hop into a young, healthy, good looking clone body.


Do you really need a source telling you that you can learn stuff from books?


That you can learn facts from books is fairly self-evident. That doesn’t obviously extend into gaining raw intelligence from reading, IMO.


How do people end up finding friends online? I spend 90% of my time online, I post on forums, but I didn't end up making even one lasting online relationship. It seems like a fun thing to do though, how does that usually happen?


I don’t think the types of relations as described above are a result from primarily text based conversation, but years of gaming with the other person until 3 a.m. and while doing so, being on Teamspeak, Discord and the like. Talking to the person really makes these connections much deeper. I once started using in-game voice chat and simply asked the person something, and just from hearing his “yes” I could tell he was the same nationality as I and could even pin down the region from his accent, so the conversation started and became quite interesting.

Not saying this can’t be happening through forums, but I’d say it’s less likely and slower.


The other difference is that there is some authentication. I generally don’t play with a mic and I have some “friends” I enjoy having very minimal text chat, but mostly because they are good players. I do t consider these significant because I don’t talk. If I did, they may be surprised I’m a middle age Aussie guy, up way too late playing with the US. The authentication that voice offers makes it far more personal.


It is pretty easy. Back in WCIII, I had my clan when we used to do semi pro matches. I even ran a bot called Ghost++ for my clan so that we could have "LAN" games even when I was gone. Now that I play DotA, people usually add me after a game (I am pretty decent at the level I am rated since I watch a lot of games but don't play often). Hell, you can go on the DotA 2 subreddit right now and post in the "make a team" posts.

Like others said, voice chat also makes the connection much faster. Get on Ventrilo (RIP), party chat, or discord!


In my case IRC, I started hanging around a programming channel related to a particular framework, over time we all pretty much moved off that framework for various reasons but a core group of us just spun a new IRC channel and moved over there.

It's now my digital watercooler (I'm the only dev at work), interestingly many of the other regulars are sole devs or small company devs where they are the lead dev.


How old are you? Like, serious question: if is a generally reported experience that people start to suck at randomly making friends as they approach 30.


Age does sound like a likely explanation. When I was younger, I made friends online pretty much the same as offline: Some people I just got along with very well, at some point hung out and talked with them more consciously (online or offline or both).

Now that I'm older, that barely happens. Online or offline, even while I do meet new people and some friendship forms on some level, a certain distance remains and things often stay confided to a particular function (lunch group at work, people in an online group).

I first tried to fight it, but now I suspect that I'm just more interested in furthering the relationships that I already have, instead of making room for new ones.


I was thinking about this recently and decided it's probably another culprit: we're less tolerant of unexpected and different things as we get older.

That seems kind of essential for younger-esque 'Hey, stranger who I know nothing about? Want to spend a lot of time together?'


But they suck at it because they lack the time due to other adult obligations (kids, spouses, work, etc).


Battles, and Hard Work. Someone mentioned WoW below, it was the first widely popular MMORPG, the scale was dozen times larger than any previous MMORPG. And to get good or the fun, you have to join Raid and Guild. There were no quick way to do it, no Pay to win like we have today. Everyone joins and help each other in the Guild if you want to grow. And through having the Same Goal, overcome the impossible battles you have and hours spending time in Teamspeak ( Do they still use it today ), you form friendship.

It is much easier to have friendship when everyone have the same goal.


Many of my best online friends I have through having shared a faction in an online game. Working as a team with them led to the initial favorable views and relationships with each other which I think is vital, which then grew into out of character friendships which went beyond the game.


I have definitely quit blender because of being unable to bear the horrible alien ass-backwards UI, same with GIMP. I love learning new things, but when EVERYTHING in software works the opposite way from what you have expected, it's too much.

ZBrush UI is also alien and counterintuitive, but after you learn it it begins making sense and feeling convenient, not so in blender, here I have to fight it for no reason.


In that case you may enjoy Blender 2.8 more than when you previously tried it.


Can you share why it makes for a bad experience?

Personally I've enjoyed the feature.

I find it annoying on youtube though, for some reason.

Edit: Oh, wait, are you talking about autoplaying preview trailers or autoplaying the next episode? I like the next episode feature, autoplaying trailers are annoying.


Binge watching is not that different from binge drinking - it's a path to oblivion. You might still have enough health to deal with it, but the health itself dwindles in the process.


You got it. I want to be able to open the app and flip through my options in peace. Having the preview play automatically makes the experience into a sick game of hot potato. Go too slow and you are blasted with random preview music with every click...


Kids shows are worse though. Netflix will sometimes helpfully restart the entire series when you finish it. Super Halloween Monsters all day long with no intervention needed woo.


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