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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• over 6 years ago

One of the biggest tells that someone doesn’t know what they’re talking about: glossing over addressing resource constraints, or saying things that imply infinite resources. Effectively everything is resource-constrained, & seasoned practitioners are especially sensitive to this https://t.co/DZi8XbYQqx

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4/2/2019
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• over 6 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

The inverse is also remarkably true: telling stories about dealing with resource constraints often quickly reveals that a practitioner really knows what they’re talking about. (See also: incentive structures, social norms, common mistakes & misconceptions, prices...) https://t.co/HjfebCj4vH

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4/2/2019
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• over 6 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

Excited newbie: let’s do all the things!! Grizzled veteran: we have limited time, energy, morale, goodwill. Keeping this in mind, let’s pick one demonstrably good thing we’re confident we can achieve, and get it done decisively so we unlock more resources to do more things https://t.co/2JlAJC0E2z

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4/2/2019
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• over 6 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

In a single visual: https://t.co/EfEZ0z7YHq

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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• over 7 years ago

I think about these two pictures from @joulee a lot – very succinct and powerful way of describing how professional creatives have a more structured process, and how that isn't necessarily limiting – you actually get to try more things this way https://t.co/XUA8zUZBMb

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4/2/2019
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• over 6 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

In another: https://t.co/XGrkk1VuY2

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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• almost 11 years ago

1/ It's very interesting and useful I think to apply the MVP model of product development to personal development. http://t.co/ef1dY1UNr8

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4/2/2019
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• over 6 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

A concept that I really liked from my army days is “order of neglect”. Ie, if you don’t have enough resources to sustain your full operation, what’s the first thing you drop? Second? Third? All the way to the most critical thing. Really clarifies your priorities and purpose https://t.co/lRVoHvfSph

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4/2/2019
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• over 6 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

Another useful tool is the concept of bottlenecks. If you’re trying to do more of something, or do it better, the most important thing to do is often (always?) to figure out the tightest bottleneck, and loosen it https://t.co/UBgA120wtD

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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• about 7 years ago

2. Bottlenecks. The only meaningful improvement you can make in any system is at its tightest bottleneck. Progress at the second tightest bottleneck is still constrained by the tightest bottleneck, and it can actually make things worse, because of congestion. (@fortelabs remix)

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4/2/2019
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• almost 6 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

fantastic example of a thread by an industry veteran who clearly knows what he’s talking about. Look for constraints, look for creeping hidden costs, look for trade-offs https://t.co/g3mFi0gnFh

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Andrew Certain@tacertain• about 6 years ago

People dunked on this tweet, saying, in essence, "This isn't 100% correct - you shouldn't pay attention." But that misses the point. The value of any model is that it's simpler than reality so that you can gain insight. Here are the insights I have gained from this model.

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9/5/2019
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• almost 6 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

Great setup. Good teachers, like magicians, are storytellers, and they know how to work artfully with the audience’s expectations and assumptions https://t.co/WXGKqGff2l

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Patrick McKenzie@patio11• almost 6 years ago

August was finally landing the payment for a large deal with a large enterprise. As you can imagine, that required a lot of pre-work. Pre-work costs current money. You would think a profitable software business with a contract in hand would get all the money from banks, right?

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9/6/2019
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• almost 6 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

ask other people about the constraints they’re operating under https://t.co/bnSPukC2jd

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10/6/2019
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• about 5 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

effort shock https://t.co/G1xicKHQ6b

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8/1/2020
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Sarah McManus@SarahAMcManus• about 5 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

@visakanv Interesting that this link also came up today -- short article about details & constraints, on "Military Logistics for Fantasy Writers" https://t.co/HNwfqAn8Vz

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8/1/2020
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• about 4 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

how to tell a guy has never planted a tomato

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6/17/2021
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• about 4 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

how to tell a lady had never sold a cookie

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6/17/2021
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• about 4 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

14. constraints in growing construction biz notice right from the start they’re like “toss what’s not helpful”. then “don’t assume”, “you can’t X until Y” – lots of little markers of “experienced practitioner”

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🌷🐰 sonya serendipitously 🐇🎀@sonyasupposedly• about 4 years ago

great comment about starting to scale (in this case, a construction business) https://t.co/s8f1KFDQjA https://t.co/5BKR9B6qiN

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8/16/2021
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• almost 4 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

15.

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11/8/2021
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• over 3 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

16. agriculture

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ⓘ Dogs don't have thumbs@MorlockP• over 3 years ago

2/ I raise 3 hogs per year, maybe every other year. The idea that one can "merely" just raise 10 pigs is ... insane. Also ... pigs eat food. If you're keeping them on 1/2 an acre (or far far less if you're also gardening), they're not foraging > https://t.co/tcrV3nM0u3

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1/29/2022
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• over 3 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

17. comms https://t.co/MVCEfVa596

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Dan Luu@danluu• over 3 years ago

One thing it took me quite a while to understand is how few bits of information it's possible to reliably convey to a large number of people. When I was at MS, I remember initially being surprised at how unnuanced their communication was, but it really makes sense in hindsight.

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1/29/2022
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• about 3 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

18. honey

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tiktok comments@commentsooc• about 3 years ago

https://t.co/eLsrVrUjOw

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6/13/2022
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• over 2 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

19. acres

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Sarah Taber@SarahTaber_bww• over 2 years ago

"Ok but tell me a precise number" You can't. "How much food can you grow on X square feet?" depends on how long the growing season is. How much it rains. What the soil is like. How much $ & time you have to throw at irrigation, food preservation, etc.

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2/19/2023
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• about 2 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

20. video editing

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Thomas Frank@TomFrankly• about 2 years ago

Dear video editors looking at this: For transparency, when @tonystoodios started with me 5 years ago, we started at $350/video and very quickly increased rate from there. "Length of video" is a garbage metric for setting a rate. Charge either hourly, or by average project complexity. A per-video rate can work well if you build a long-term relationship with your client, but be cautious about it in the beginning. Get a sense of the project's scope. Leading with, "I charge $300 per video" is a good way to find yourself underneath a 100-hour project, and realize you're making $3/hour. Trust me, I've been there. Just out of high school, I once quoted $50 for a project that ended up taking 80 hours. Lesson learned. A 10-minute assembly cut of talking-head footage might take 30-60 minutes (of edit time), but a 10-minute explainer with b-roll, motion graphics, etc can take 40 hours of work. It all depends. Keep in mind that edit time isn't your only time expenditure. You'll spend time waiting for your client to deliver assets, and if they expect you to render the video, that's time your machine is basically unusable. Consider all these factors when setting your rates. Use a contract, and include language about how you handle revision requests. Typically it's a good idea to charge hourly after the first round or two. When I did web dev, I charged $60/hour after 2 revision requests – and that was back in 2009, when I was 18. Stand your ground if asked to do more work than your negotiated rate covers. It's ok to give your client a bit of leeway in order to build a good long-term relationship, but don't let yourself be exploited. And let me put this part in bold: Your portfolio is everything, and it can include work you do for yourself. I have my eye out for motion graphics artists right now, and I couldn't care less if the work in an artist's portfolio was done for a client or for themselves. Don't let a cheap client try to pressure you with the old "work with me and I'll help you make more connections". There's merit to that – to a degree – but not to such a degree that you should allow yourself to be exploited.

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7/10/2023
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• over 1 year ago
Replying to @visakanv

21. hit em where it actually hurts

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Patrick McKenzie@patio11• over 1 year ago

A lot of successful mitigations for financial crimes begin by sketching out the production functions of the adversary’s business and then attacking their P&L.

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2/25/2024
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• about 1 year ago
Replying to @visakanv

22. https://t.co/848q4j362I

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TibetanBasketWeaver@TibetanBasket• about 1 year ago

I’ve seen posts over the past few days talking about “go to rural america to get a job and find someone to teach you the ropes!” and “there are plenty of young women to choose from if you drive across the country!” Here's a thread detailing my experience in North Dakota

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7/9/2024
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• 4 months ago
Replying to @visakanv

23. https://t.co/RaLoxzwyIr

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Computer ♥ Records@ComputerLove_• almost 2 years ago

In 2003, Ben Affleck predicted Spotify and Netflix streaming before either existed. https://t.co/QiXefQnO96

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4/29/2025
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will minshew@wminshew• over 6 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

@visakanv wholly agreed, and would add I think it's an interesting exercise to continually cycle through constraints and ask how you might do things differently if this constraint *didn't exist* [which seasoned practitioners don't always do well, ime]

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4/2/2019
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• over 6 years ago
Replying to @wminshew

@wminshew True; the failure of the overly grizzled tends to be to get too hung up on past constraints which may not still apply

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4/2/2019
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Fun Pilgrim@tasshinfogleman• over 6 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

@visakanv i would love to know what this is responding to / subtweeting 😂

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4/2/2019
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• over 6 years ago
Replying to @tasshinfogleman

@tasshinfogleman Nothing in particular really; was just chatting with someone about good vs bad content in general

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4/2/2019
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Vishal Chandra 👻@vishalchandra• about 6 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

@visakanv constraints can be traded off and that can make things interesting Understanding these trade-offs and expressing this also reflects greater expertise

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6/23/2019
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bob@dsdtzero• almost 6 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

@visakanv Feel this so much. But also I think at some scale everyone does this. It’s like the Peter principle for ignorance to system size effects.

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9/6/2019
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• almost 6 years ago
Replying to @dsdtzero

@dsdtzero yeah https://t.co/wCjbstIa9z

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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• over 7 years ago

People typically have high-res models of their own lives and lower-res models of other people’s. We are all born clueless with incredibly low-res models of the world - then we tweak and upgrade our models. Different people do this to different degrees depending on many variables

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9/6/2019
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Shivam Saini@ishivamsaini• over 5 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

@visakanv @threader_app Compile

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5/14/2020
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Enye Word@EnyeWord• about 5 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

@visakanv Well, unless they don't have enough time.

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8/1/2020
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Matthew Pierce@MJPiercello• about 4 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

@visakanv Great thread! Meta-question: Given technology's rising curve, at what point does constraint evolution outstrip our capacity to solve constraint problems? As in, by the time I've understood a problem, tech has alrady iterated it into something unrecognizable? What happens then?

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6/10/2021
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Visakan Veerasamy@visakanv• about 4 years ago
Replying to @MJPiercello

@MJPiercello my instinct is that you don't have to perfectly understand a problem to navigate better around it – it's worth getting a quick rough understanding and to adjust accordingly

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6/10/2021
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𝐜𝐚𝐫𝐨𝐥𝐢𝐧𝐞@benefic_venefic• about 4 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

@visakanv https://t.co/7DPXzuGi9t

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8/17/2021
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Clay ✈️ 🎤 (ep 8/100)@ClayNichols• over 3 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

@visakanv When I taught sw engr I had a test devoted to that concept.

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12/26/2021
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not a poster@TimjaminButton• about 3 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

@visakanv This is a really good point and also just a really good gif

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6/30/2022
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Trang@trangquest• about 3 years ago
Replying to @visakanv

@visakanv It's an inherent part of nature. A sound wave that propagates through a medium exists and changes in accordance with the environment's rules, information is subject to the constraints of the computer; There's an *interaction* among objects and environments governed by rules

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7/1/2022
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Fred@FriedKielbasa• 11 months ago
Replying to @visakanv

@visakanv just wanted to mention that you've achieved memetic victory in my brain with this thread. when i think of resource contstraints, this gif immediately appears in my brain. congrats! 🎉

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10/2/2024