One question led to another, and soon enough, we had a unique question for each day of the year. That's when I realized it would be perfect as a book! (https://thinknewsletter.com/book).
The book is a beautiful artifact that people can carry and journal with — or even share with others.
This is a collection of 366 thought-provoking questions.
These questions are designed to challenge conventional thinking, generate ideas, and guide decision-making.
I hope you love it!
It's common to encounter sites like as `archive.ph`, `archive.org` high up in the comments. These links are particularly useful when articles are behind a paywall (eg. NYT articles).
Based on that, I started posting links to those articles linking up to the content.
Even though that's indirectly promoting my product, I believe it provides real value to the HN community since it not only serves the content but also helps people listen to it.
However, this has been flagged as spammy behavior.
So I'm wondering, why is it OK to post `archive.is` links, but not `playtext.app` links, since they both provide similar value?
I would love to know what you think!
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References:
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36667840#36681336
[2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36678375&p=2#36680693
[3] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35538095#35570470
After applying for more than 100 jobs, I got into five interviews, three proposals, and a job. The hardest part? Finding those jobs!
And searching for worldwide jobs on LinkedIn is really hard since most remote jobs are US-only.
Surprisingly, LinkedIn doesn't have every job in the world! Linear is hiring 10 people, Raycast is hiring 02, and WorkOS is hiring 07 people. But those jobs aren't there ¯\(ツ)/¯
So I made a website that only has is truly work-from-anywhere remote (instead of USA/Canada-only remote).
If you're interested, check out the website I made! https://heyhunter.com
I'd love to know what HN thinks and if this seems helpful to you. :)
How did you do it?