Life-hacker Quotes Digest – T4HWW

The 4-Hour Workweek, Tim Ferris

Quotes are often open to personal interpretations. Nevertheless, I find them quite important as they act as a summary for much broader and lengthier topics. The following post contains quotes from Timothy Ferriss, the author of The 4-Hour Workweek. I’ve read Timothy’s book not long ago and I was quite intrigued as hist personal philosophy is very close in some aspects to mine.

Money is multiplied in practical value depending on the number of W’s you control in your life: what you do, when you do it, where you do it, and with whom you do it.


Alternating periods of activity and rest is necessary to survive, let alone thrive. Capacity, interest, and mental endurance all wax and wane. Plan accordingly.


Doing less meaningless work, so that you can focus on things of greater personal importance, is NOT laziness. This is hard for most people to accept, because our culture [American] tends to reward personal sacrifice instead of personal productivity.


If the potential damage is moderate or in any way reversible, don’t give people the chance to say no. Most people are fast to stop you before you get started but hesitant to get in the way if you’re moving. Get good at being a troublemaker and saying sorry when you really screw up.


In excess, most endeavors and possessions take on the characteristics of their opposite.


“If only I had more money” is the easiest way to postpone the intense self-examination and decision-making necessary to create a life of enjoyment – now and not later.


People who avoid all criticism fail. It’s destructive criticism we need to avoid, not criticism in all forms.


To enjoy life, you don’t need fancy nonsense, but you do need to control your time and realize that most things just aren’t as serious as you make them out to be.


A person’s success in life can usually be measure by the number of uncomfortable conversations he or she is willing to have.


If you are insecure, guess what? The rest of the world is, too. Do not overestimate the competition and underestimate yourself. You are better than you think.


I’ve trained myself to propose solutions instead of ask for them, to elicit responses instead of react, and to be assertive without burning bridges. To have an uncommon lifestyle, you need to develop the uncommon habit of making decisions, both for yourself and for others.


Being busy is most often used as a guise for avoiding the few critically important but uncomfortable actions.


Effectiveness is doing the things that get you closer to your goals. Efficiency is performing a given task (whether important or not) in the most economical manner possible. Being efficient without regard to effectiveness is the default mode of the universe.


Being busy is a form of laziness – lazy thinking and indiscriminate action.


Being overwhelmed is often as unproductive as doing nothing, and is far more unpleasant. Being selective – doing less – is the path of the productive. Focus on the important few and ignore the rest.


Just as modern man consumes both too many calories and calories of no nutritional value, information workers eat data both in excess and from the wrong sources.


It’s amazing how someone’s IQ seems to double as soon as you give them responsibility and indicate that you trust them.


Creating demand is hard. Filling demand is easier. Don’t create a product, then seek someone to sell it to. Find a market – define your customers – then find or develop a product for them.


There are two types of mistakes: mistakes of ambition and mistakes of sloth.

The first is the result of a decision to act – to do something. This type of mistake is made with incomplete information, as it’s impossible to have all the facts beforehand. This is to be encouraged. Fortune favors the bold.

The second is the result of a decision of sloth – to not do something – wherein we refuse to change a bad situation out of fear despite having all the facts. This is how learning experiences become terminal punishments, bad relationships become bad marriages, and poor job choices become lifelong prison sentences.


There are tons of things in your home and life that you don’t use, need, or even particularly want. They just came into your life as impulsive flotsam and jetsam and never found a good exit. Whether you’re aware of it or not, this clutter creates indecision and distractions, consuming attention and making unfettered happiness a real chore. It is impossible to realize how distracting all the crap is – whether porcelain dolls, sports cars, or ragged T-shirts – until you get rid of it.

The source for all of these quotes can be found here.

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Personal Automation

through automation

This is a Saturday morning post so bear with me. I mean to talk about this topic for some time now and today I felt inspired to sit down and actually blog about it.

Anyway, personal automation… I truly believe that human beings are the bottlenecks of their lives. The most self-distractive and time consuming tasks are the repetitive decision making process for unimportant problems, procrastination and the inability to plan thoroughly in advance. It is not that we are incapable to do all that. It is more about the fact that these things are the everyday norm because humans are lazy beings in general.

However, these problems can be solved by removing yourself as the bottleneck. You don’t want to be the driver of the car but you want to give orders where you would like to go, i.e. you want to be the passenger. The only way to do that in a sensible way is by introducing a degree of automation in your lives.

If you find yourself doing something over and over again perhaps it is the time too look for a solution that will automate the problem. If there isn’t a solution, you are probably on verge of a breakthrough idea that could make you significantly richer. Both ways you win but the most importantly, you solve yet another problem in your live which you shouldn’t really worry about and can be completely outsourced and automated.

Here are a few ideas of what can be automated:

  • Holidays, bookings, general entertainment – planning all of these things suck! they all require a lot of time, worries and thinking. Instead of doing all of this yourself, get a VA (virtual assistant) to sort all of this out for you.
  • Personal finances – paying all the bills yourself is definitely not good for your health. It could be stressful to say at least. The best way to deal with it is to put everything on autopilot. All the money you owe should be taken out automatically on the first day you receive your salary. If the bill comes out every 3-4 months, than just do your average contribution every month. That will save you hustle at the end. Think about it, 30-40% of your salary go to the government anyway but you rarely think about it because because you don’t see all of these money coming in and going out of your bank account
  • Food – food can get boring too, especially if you plan it. Most stores in UK have websites where you can purchase all the food that you need. Often, you can purchase the same ingredients you did last time. You don’t even need to do that. You can just a VA on autopilot to do it for you. On the geek side of things, you can write a script to calculate the basic possible way to use all the ingredients.

Once you do all of these you will see that automation is actually great. It almost feels like you’ve been taken care by your parents again but this time you are in charge of how things should happen. I personally haven’t fully reached such reaches but I am planning to improve in the near future.

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Web2.0 is F**KED

The following is an interview with Andrew Keen, a quite controversial, anti-Web2.0 figure.

Not that I agree with him but it is always good to hear another opinion, especially if it is different.

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World Builder

The following video reminds me of SecondLife, although I am not a big SL fan. Apart from the fact that the video is very futuristic, I do believe that one day we will be able to build virtual worlds like that and perhaps even live in them. I most certainly I will opt out from such an option.

A technology of that magnitude will change everything.

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INK

DoubleEdge Films, the guys who did the SPIN video footage, which by the way was the opening post of this blog, have another one coming titled INK

Obviously, this is something I am quite looking forward to see.

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“New” is a relative Word

Simply put New is a very relative word. New to whom? And how do you prove that something new is new indeed? You cannot. Perhaps you can suggest that something is new as nothing like it has been documented before, but again this is very subjective.

You often see rants about what is new and what is old in the security scene: underground and aboveground. Some people will complain that nothing new has been discovered when a presumably new type of vulnerability/research is released. Others will simply take it as new without even questioning it and essentially start a hype.

Perhaps new should be changed with fashionable. Like in the fashion business new things are often well forgotten old things, i.e. ideas always circulate. And new things are simply not possible without the help of old things because we require access to technology, whether it comes in terms of knowledge or tools, to build them. In that respect nothing new is actually new.

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Learn by Teaching

The best way to learn is by teaching. It seams that when we teach others we actually learn because teaching is way of transmitting information in the most optimal way and in order to do that, our brains engage with the task to simplify the information and to find the most important bits that are necessary to unfold the rest of it that follows, as such, we learn.

As an experiment, do the following: Pick a topic you know nothing about and study it for a short period of time. Make sure that you pick something that is pretty hard for you to comprehend at first. Now, try to teach your wife/colleges/kids of what you have learned. There is a good chance that by the time you finish your first lesson, you will have a better idea of the topic than you had before.

Is it coincidence that most of the best minds of the past century were also teachers and they were constantly involved with public speaking engagements, seminars, etc? I think not! Of course, most of them were related to the world of academia that also contributed to developing their intellect.

Although teaching is a way of learning, not everybody is good at teaching. This is another skill of its own.

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Finding Time

I’ve got so many projects that it will take me a great deal of time to list them all. It is always exciting to start something new if you know what I mean. However, how do you find time to work on all of your projects and still enjoying plenty of other activities? This question has been occupying my thoughts for some time now but I think I pinned a solution.

So how do you find time? It is simple:

  1. Make sure that you have clear goals! You may have pretty big goals. This is good! If they are pretty big, split them up to smaller ones. It is easier to work in smaller steps and it helps you keeping focus.
  2. Dedicate specific day and time for your project. Make sure that you are not overdoing it. By overdoing a project either will get sick of it or you will loose interest. Also, overdoing something does not necessarily means that you are actually productive in any way. In fact, most of the time, you are not. Just find a day of the week in which you can work on a specific project and stick with it.
  3. Rest well. If you book yourself to work on a particular project on Tuesday for example but you are unable to do it, don’t stress. Find time to rest and use your brain instead. The truth is that you can develop the entire project in your head. Once the model is ready, you can dump the whole thing on paper.

Finally, what you really need to answer yourself is whether spending more time on a project is actually worthed. If you think about it, the amount of time spent is totally irrelevant. On the other hand, the amount of focused/productive time spend on a project is quite important. The problem is that the more irrelevant time you spend on a project the further you go from your goal. The more focused time you put into a project the closer you get.

Multitasking or running several projects at once is all about good time management, cutting through the abstract work, resting well and having clear goals.

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Software as an Appliance

One of the beautiful things about virtualization is that we can pretty much stop writing software and start writing glues. We no longer need to care about whether software is cross-platformed. We can choose the platform for which we want to develop our products.

I guess all of this sounds too futuristic but I truly believe that one day we will download and install appliances the way we download and install software. Products such as VMWare, VirtualBox and QEMU will be treated no different than Java, .NET, Flash, Adobe AIR and other development platforms. Effectively, we will start thinking in terms of how many CPUs we can handle rather than how many processes although in reality virtual appliances are processes running in the host system. It will all merge and the permutations will become deep and complicated but at the same time this approach may allow us to build self-sustainable systems.

And this is what it is referred to as Software as an Appliance.

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Information Security Reality

Via XKCD, this is what Information Security is all about.

Security Reality

Welcome to the real world!

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