Something Witty

Entrepreneur of many hats. Lover of all things tasty. Barnard, Columbia grad '11. http://www.linkedin.com/in/lchelak.

twitter.com/larachelak:

    "(The NYT algorithm for which articles have commenting turned on is about as opaque as Google’s search algorithm, at least according to someone who has spent only the last 30 seconds contemplating it.)"
    — 2 months ago
    "Eric Schmidt told her, “Stop being an idiot; all that matters is growth."
    — 2 months ago
    "I’m committed to making Facebook the leader in transparency and control around privacy."
    — 2 months ago
    "I teach financial markets, and it’s a little like teaching R.O.T.C. during the Vietnam War,” said Robert J. Shiller, a professor of economics at Yale University. “You have this sense that something’s amiss."
    — 2 months ago
    "Understanding your place in the ecosystem and the value you’re able to bring gets lost and distorted when there’s so much money sloshing around, and everyone you know is pushing you to go and start a company."
    — 2 months ago
    "Take apparel: who would have thought ten years ago that Zappos could build an online business which prides itself on delivering not just low prices but an excellent customer experience, including service? Zappos’s online-only retail format is so efficient that it can offer very competitive prices, free shipping and free returns of as many shoes as you like, at a stroke removing the biggest problem with online apparel shopping: “Does it fit?"
    — 2 months ago
    "In many categories, online retailing is advancing much faster than the last format innovation — self serve — did the last time around. That’s partly because having to build out stores is not a constraint to growth in the virtual world."
    — 2 months ago
    "Too bad it’s also a lot of hype. For the record, not only is Black Friday not the busiest shopping day of the year (that would be Dec. 24), but its value is also largely symbolic. “In general, Black Friday is overrated,” says Robert Spector, a retail historian and the author of Category Killers: The Retail Revolution and Its Impact on Consumer Culture. “Retailers use it to create a sense of excitement to get you to come in. But does it signal whether business is really up or down? I don’t think so."
    — 2 months ago
    "They can bear children. They can create life. Feminists can scoff at the concept, but this is a privilege of such mind-boggling significance that it essentially blows everything else I’ve mentioned out of the water. And I’ve barely scratched the surface."
    — 2 months ago
    "Students, most of them with high SAT scores and low interest in football, lobby fiercely for the right to forsake their studious dignity for one Saturday morning and guzzle cheap beer while tromping in a muddy field. Some may eventually stumble into the Yale Bowl or Harvard Stadium; many others will not."
    — 2 months ago
    "I" before "E" except Gleitzman: Gender Bias in NYC Salaries →

    Gender bias at the top.

    gleitzman:

    Beatbeat recently released an article listing the 20 most hirable yet already employed developers and designers in the NYC area. Given the scarcity of tech talent on today’s market, these “poachable” employees were listed alongside a Ballpark Poachability Number (B.P.N.) that, as Foster…

    — 2 months ago with 15 notes
    "He found that reductions in smoking, high cholesterol and high blood pressure since 1988 have been offset by weight gain, diabetes, and pre-diabetes."
    — 2 months ago