Publishing your work increases your luck

(github.com)

62 points | by magoghm 5 hours ago

4 comments

  • volkercraig 1 hour ago
    I publish into an open sea and hear nothing in reply. The constant reassurance from every platform that i use that i am merely "one more post" away from all my wildest dreams has to be true eventually, right?
    • grim_io 13 minutes ago
      But did you record a complementary TikTok dance, though?
    • llmslave2 44 minutes ago
      The best is when a random throwaway post blows up for some unexpected and unknown reason and everything you think is good is met with silence!
    • bulletsvshumans 1 hour ago
      Hello fellow human!
    • fragmede 1 hour ago
      You may want to be more goal oriented. If you're just publishing into a void and hoping for things to happen, I mean I'm not an influencer, but the successful ones I do know have specific goals that they're driving towards are not screaming into the void and hoping for the best.

      Not looking for you to answer these questions for me here, but ask yourself, what are those dreams specifically? What are the concrete steps you've taken to get there, and how are you going to accomplish them? How long is it going to take you? What are success criteria? What are the risks? What are the failure modes?

  • blibble 2 hours ago
    translated from marketing-droid-ese:

    > greetings peasants! er, sorry, valued open source contributors!

    > remember, without you feeding us training data, we won't be able to train our AI to replace you at your dayjob!

    > now, get back to work

    • glouwbug 2 hours ago
      I’m sure they probably train on private repos too
  • ronbenton 1 hour ago
    I used to release some writing and publish code publicly but the mean comments got to me.
  • beej71 2 hours ago
    This has definitely worked for me. Never got rich from putting stuff out there, but got a number of good jobs from it.