Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | masterofmasters's commentslogin

It's not a ton, but he could also get a summer salary if he has grants for it (netting 33% more salary) and do some consulting on the side.

Also on the whole we should take into account that professors didn't have to pay for grad school unlike medicine / business and instead got paid for it.


true. As a grad student I did get a salary. You know what it was? $11,000 per year...


For some reason, when I messaged someone on Facebook Messenger, it always felt to me more like I was bothering them, than when I used AIM/ICQ in the past. So I felt it was never really used in the same way. So I think this app is an attempt to make it a bit more casual, less formal.


Huh, that's an interesting way to feel! I wish I remember what AIM felt like better; I was so young when I used it that any chance I had to IM people was exciting. I was probably an absolute pain in the ass.

D'you think this could be — at least in part — because Facebook is an always-on environment for a lot of people? They're not explicitly on to chat, so there's more of an unstated barrier to beginning a conversation.


The above post makes sense with this context, but I wouldn't say it was needlessly downvoted. A post doesn't stand on its own when it throws around uncommon metaphors without explanation.

Personally, I'd prefer of posts/articles all explained their metaphors and acronyms before using them. This is Hacker News, not Enterprise IT News. For example, the article tosses out USP and CI which I don't believe are very common terms either. They should be spelled out.


Continuous Integration is pretty common, but I have no idea what USP means.


USP is Unique Selling Point.

There's lots of technologists on HN and lots of business types, and only a subset of each understand the other's lingo. People should try and explain their lingo when they use it, for the benefit of the other camp :)


For people with government / federal contracting experience that aren't familiar with the 'USP' jargon (as I wasn't, once), the appropriate federal term is "key differentiator".


To be fair, the metaphor is pretty common in our industry, especially if you've ever done (or been lectured about) project management.

My take is that I've never seen a chicken or a pig program a computer, so if you need code produced, you'd better not get either. But then, talking about project management really brings out my inner asshole.


Wow, this is a pretty strong attack, for something that is likely just a miswording. Cruise passengers pay an automatic gratuity at the end of a trip. Much of this goes to your room attendant. So it's "free" in the sense that it's essentially included in the total price.


Sensationalist. A blog citing another blog citing a Wall Street Journal article citing a quote from a Facebook employee who probably was just giving examples of data that could be tracked. Decide for yourself.

"The social network may start collecting data on minute user interactions with its content, such as how long a user’s cursor hovers over a certain part of its website, or whether a user’s newsfeed is visible at a given moment on the screen of his or her mobile phone, Facebook analytics chief Ken Rudin said Tuesday during an interview."


Only about 10 minutes of streaming HD video.

Or about 50,000 emails, or 1,000 websites (gzip compressed), or 50 Google searches every single day, or a hi-res photo of your loved ones every morning you wake up, or the confidence of never getting lost again.

I know you're being sarcastic, but for several years I was on a t-mobile plan with 200MB per month limit on my Nexus S, and I used without worry and only went over the limit once.


For the lazy person who wants to cut down on the "crawling", try this listing of Best Paper Awards across pretty much every CS discipline: http://jeffhuang.com/best_paper_awards.html


Consider applying for YC's Summer 2026 batch! Applications are open till May 4

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: