Nothing succeeds like success. Risk, security and investing. Brazilian jiu-jitsu

Joined October 2010
1,835 Photos and videos
Rob Terrin retweeted
it brings me no joy to report I spend a year wondering why I was constantly sleepy and had a low sleep score on my whoop that was totally cured by simply stop wearing the whoop.
97
82
7,188
776,892
Blue belt is great because it's the last time you can surprise anyone with your skill level and the first time people start to take you seriously on the mat
Jun 11
I have never read or heard anyone ever say that blue belt is/was their favorite belt phase. No suprise there.
2
81
Rob Terrin retweeted

1
22
120
64,978
I may be the only person in NYC who doesn't care about the Knicks.
1
70
Rob Terrin retweeted
I’ve been fairly loud about this but I have actually never understood the mac/claw phase and I *really* tried to
THE GREAT OPENCLAW MAC MINI SELLOFF HAS STARTED!!
1
1
10
1,253
Rob Terrin retweeted
Cybersecurity is a broken industry. We rely on products that were designed to be sold, not used. And the incentives are completely screwed up. I made this video about all of the ways things are bad, how we accidentally make it worse, and why new technology won't fix it.
44
45
388
55,782
The most pernicious thing about the Bay Area is the superficiality masquerading as authenticity
1
137
NYC and LA have their problems (notoriously superficial), but their saving grace is lack of sanctimony. DC has the same problem as SF, by the way. Just optimized for a different sort of status hierarchy, but ultimately one that is still defined by self deception.
1
123
To pick on NYC a bit, it's a city of people trying to prove that they "made it here" when mostly it wasn't even them that made it, but their parents, grandparents or great-grandparents. It's superficial in a way (rich, cool, interesting) that LA isn't, so New Yorkers think they're better, but they wouldn't pretend it's authentic.
62
I love this scene in the latest Jack Ryan movie: *clickity clickity clack* "an off site server" *tippity tippity tap* types "exploit" and hits enter "cheeky bastard"
60
Rob Terrin retweeted
“ny tech week” is an sf-coded psyop which only other sf folks are falling for nobody here is talking about it, it’s contained in the sf bubble
5
1
42
5,285
Rob Terrin retweeted
Our new podcast with @jayjacobs and @mroytman asks the important quesrtion: Have you tried not having vulnerabilities?
3
1
172
Rob Terrin retweeted
Oh man, back in 2006 it was suddenly like using technology from 2016. Nowadays, logging into the AWS console still feels like using technology from 2016.
1
2
32
2,334
Rob Terrin retweeted
Replying to @futurenomics
Series B was led by SBF
8
25
951
117,121
Rob Terrin retweeted
I fly fish all the time now. If someone built an app that told me exactly which rivers, spots, casting targets, and flies, to catch 30 fish a day, I’d probably never use it. It’s an insult to my soul. This tweet isn’t about fishing.
1
1
4
380
Rob Terrin retweeted
It's surprising how many people who view themselves as ruthlessly cutting through corporate flimflam will also take it completely at face value when an AI consultant gives a completely unsourced anecdote about why it's a good idea to hire an AI consultant.
8
5
72
4,770
Rob Terrin retweeted
At kid’s graduation they quoted Frost’s Poem “The Road Not Taken.” It’s wild that academics have interpreted it to mean something it doesn’t throughout the years. It was meant to mock his friend that would always second guess his choices. Had nothing to with the path choice.
2
1
3
261
1984: One more ISAC will fix telecommunications. 1999: One more ISAC will fix financial services. 2001: One more ISAC will fix information technology. 2003: One more ISAC will fix state & local government. 2010: One more ISAC will fix healthcare & public health. 2015: One more ISAC will fix national defense. 2018: One more ISAC will fix elections infrastructure. 2019: One more ISAC will fix space and satellites. 2026: One more ISAC will fix communications.
New: The U.S. telecom industry has launched a second ISAC to facilitate private discussions among companies about sensitive cybersecurity issues. I talked to the new ISAC's executive director and T-Mobile's CSO about why the industry felt it needed this. cybersecuritydive.com/news/t…
128