Nightclubs vs Raves
On a lighter note this week, I wanted to write about how much I started to dislike the classic nightclub…

Systems. Leverage points. The limits of growth and the growth of limits!
Systems thinking is a framework for understanding the underlying mechanisms that rule the interactions of our world and ecosystems.
(Rate of) Change
A fact of life: change is constant. However, the rate of change is what matters more than the change itself.
It's all a relative bilanz. I am obsessed with the ideas & impact of technology on industries, society, and morality.
Nightclubs vs Raves
On a lighter note this week, I wanted to write about how much I started to dislike the classic nightclub…

Systems. Leverage points. The limits of growth and the growth of limits!
Systems thinking is a framework for understanding the underlying mechanisms that rule the interactions of our world and ecosystems.
(Rate of) Change
A fact of life: change is constant. However, the rate of change is what matters more than the change itself.
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
It's all a relative bilanz. I am obsessed with the ideas & impact of technology on industries, society, and morality.
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This post is in pure honor to Union Square Ventures, a venture capital partnership based out of New York City.
I have been reading Fred Wilson’s blog for at least the past six years which you can find here. Fred has been an inspiration and a teacher to me on several levels.
If you are interested in technology, venture capital, and general life advice I recommend reading his posts by looking through his archive. To get you started have a look at this post on ‘Why Trust Matters’.
His partner Albert Wenger is also a polymath who has written a thought-provoking book called ‘World after Capital’ which unpacks his reading on where humanity is headed through the current economic and industrial revolution.
This post is in pure honor to Union Square Ventures, a venture capital partnership based out of New York City.
I have been reading Fred Wilson’s blog for at least the past six years which you can find here. Fred has been an inspiration and a teacher to me on several levels.
If you are interested in technology, venture capital, and general life advice I recommend reading his posts by looking through his archive. To get you started have a look at this post on ‘Why Trust Matters’.
His partner Albert Wenger is also a polymath who has written a thought-provoking book called ‘World after Capital’ which unpacks his reading on where humanity is headed through the current economic and industrial revolution.
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