Teamstory startup community

Another startup community to check out.

Charles Jo 650.906.2600 Charles@StartupStudyGroup.com www.StartupStudyGroup.com Twitter @charlesjo

Begin forwarded message:

On Tuesday, Jan 6, 2015 at 2:04 PM, Kevin <kevin>, wrote:


HeyCharles Jo!

Kevin from Teamstory here :) Hope you had a great 2014 and off to an awesome start in 2015. I am just checking in to see if everything was going well with you and your projects.

Teamstory has been growing as a unique, supportive community since the last time you checked it out. Founders and startups are sharing some amazing moments, thoughts, and questions to spark conversations. There were also some neat changes and improvements in the product to make Teamstory a great product for entrepreneurs (such as improved thought posts, 1-on-1 chat system etc.)

Would love to see what you and your team’s moments & thoughts on Teamstory soon!
Check it out, you’ll want to use it everyday šŸ˜‰

Check out Teamstory AngelList | Twitter | Facebook

Kevin from Teamstory 6 Jan 2015
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Launching KingForADay v2.0

To check out…

Charles

Launching KingForADay v2.0

Announcing KingForADay v2.0
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KingForADay V2.0 has launched!

Group Chats, Profile Prompts, Refined UI

Eight weeks have passed since we introduced KingForADay. What a response we have had from the community! 57 Kings, 1.5k chats initiated, and 24k messages sent later, we have cultivated a strong, passionate community around social discovery.

We are introducing some great new features with v2.0 including group chat, and profile prompts, all to enhance the experience of interacting with the King and with others. See the press release.

Download Now

Group Conversations

Invite others in to your conversation with the King. Create groups to chat with future Kings.

Discover more than just a bio

Profile prompts allow for a more free-form, easily-consumable method of providing the hook for engagement.

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languagengine – Blog – Deep Learning Won’t Cure The Language Cold

Interesting tech blog from Darryl McAdams’ startup.

Charles Jo 650.906.2600 charlesjo@me.com

http://languagengine.co/blog/deep-learning-wont-cure-the-language-cold/

Deep Learning Won’t Cure the Language Cold

posted by Darryl on 5 Jan 2015

Every once in a while I get asked about what sort of machine learning I used to build Language Engine, and when I say I didn’t use any, the response is something like “But deep learning is so big these days!” While I’m tempted to just pull a Peter Thiel and say this buzzword-y nonsense is just fashion, and suggest you avoid fashions like the plague, I want to explain a bit instead. So in this post, I’m going to elaborate on how deep learning relates to Language Engine, and why we don’t use it, or any other kind of machine learning, and why future versions will only use minimal amounts.

Deep Learning, Roughly

Before jumping into that, however, it’ll be good to discuss deep learning from a birds-eye view. So, what is deep learning, exactly? In a way, deep learning is a way of building a bucket sort program, only the algorithm discovers the buckets for you. Given a bunch of input data, you train a deep learning neural network on the data, and out comes the buckets that work best to group the input data. Later, during the usage of the network, you feed novel data in, and out comes a bucket identifier.

For example, you might train your deep learning neural network on a collection of images of cats and dogs, and it will automatically discover, on its own, that there are two useful buckets it can categorize things into: “cat” and “dog” (or maybe something else, who knows!). Later, you take a picture you’ve never seen before, show it to the network, and it will tell you either “cat” or “dog”, depending on which choice it considers most probable.

Let me repeat the main point for emphasis: deep learning sorts things into buckets that it discovers automatically.

Natural Language

Now, the fundamental problem that Language Engine solves is: how can we extract useful structured representations of meaning from natural language input, so that host applications can use this to respond appropriately via actions, etc. With this in mind, how might we use deep learning? One option would be to use the whole sentence as input, and use deep learning to categorize the sentences based on some kind of “intent”. Maybe it’s a “turn-on-the-lights” intent, or a “send-a-tweet” intent. Regardless, this is a very coarse-grained approach.

How many intents are there? How many meanings of English are there? As many as there are sentences: infinitely many. So if we wanted to use such a coarse-grained approach, the results would be useful only up to a point. Any aspects of the meaning that isn’t as granular as that will be lost. We only have so many buckets. We can keep increasing the number of buckets to get more and more detail, but this becomes increasingly hard to use: eventually we get one intent, one “meaning”, for each sentence, and they’re all different! Infinitely many buckets is just as useless as very few buckets.

So what’s the right solution? Structured meaning. It’s not enough to know that “John saw Susan” goes in Bucket A, and “Stephen saw Michael” goes in Bucket B. It’s not even enough to know that Bucket A and Bucket B are similar to one another. What you really need, to properly understand what this sentence means, is what the structure of the meaning is: what are the parts of the sentence, their meanings, and how do these meanings combine to form a cohesive whole?

A good analogy for programmers is, well, programs. The parts of a program mean things, and the meaning of the whole program comes from the meanings of the parts and the way they’re put together. You can categorize programs into buckets like “sorting function” or “web server”, but that’s not enough to understand any given program, nor is it enough to run a program. If we want to “run” sentences of natural language as if they’re little programs telling a computer what to do, we need the same structural richness that programs have, hence Language Engine.

But isn’t there some way to…

All of this is not to say that there is no use for machine learning at all. Quite the contrary, there’s plenty of use, especially down the road! Right now, the best application of machine learning, including deep learning, to natural language involves using the bucketing tools to determine most-likely parses. Natural language, you may have heard, has lots of ambiguity. That is to say, there might be many parses for the same string of words, so which is the “right” parse? Work by Socher, Bauer, Manning, and Ng (2013) (here) uses deep learning for precisely this purpose, and perhaps similar techniques can be used on semantic representations to make it even more powerful.

But that’s down the road. Before Socher et al. could bolt deep learning onto context free grammars, someone had to invent the idea of context free grammars, and explain how to use them to represent sentence structures. So before you can apply your deep learning algos to meaning, you have to have a structured meaning to use, and that’s what Language Engine provides.

If you have comments or questions, get it touch. I’m @psygnisfive on Twitter, augur on freenode (in #languagengine and #haskell). Here’s the HN thread if you prefer that mode, and also the Reddit thread.

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Tom Maxwell’s Blog ā€” Reciprocation As A Tool On Twitter

A blog on weaponizing Twitter fav to win over people. Enjoy and provide feedback to the author.

Charles Jo 650.906.2600 charlesjo

http://blog.tommaxwell.me/post/106984979508/reciprocation-as-a-tool-on-twitter#.VKedXtm9Kc3

Reciprocation As A Tool On Twitter

Friday, January 2, 2015

I was browsing through the archive of Semil Shahā€™s blog earlier ā€” one I read regularly ā€” and found myself particularly fascinated by this review of Marc Andreessenā€™s 2014 on Twitter. In it, you see large numbers for pretty much every metric that quantifies activity on the social network ā€” number of tweets, of favorites, of accounts followed, you get the idea. Heā€™s even behind a new user-created ā€œfeatureā€ in the form of the tweetstorm. Marc in 2014 alone tweeted nearly the same amount of times (~41,000) as I have since I signed up 6 years ago, and I consider myself to be a pretty heavy user. To say he took Twitter by storm would be an understatement. But what interests me more most is what Semil has to say about reciprocity:

Heā€™s [Marc] favorited a tweet well over 100,000 times. All of those people who tweeted got a receipt that Marc has read their tweet. Small, but powerful, and reinforces reciprocity, which is a core tenet of building influence over time.

Everyone has their own use for the favorite (or ā€œfavā€) button attached to every tweet, a signal that is nuanced just like real life emotions and the expression of them are, but I think the ā€œread receiptā€ is why I favorite so many tweets. And I think itā€™s safe to say I do in fact favorite a lot of tweets, as I get these kind of messages directed at me often:

Itā€™s a minuscule gesture, but one that notifies the person on the receiving end that they are being heard by someone. It shouldnā€™t come as a surprise to any of us that listening can make people like you more ā€” Dale Carnegie and Abraham Maslow together made that famously clear. Favoriting tweets also of course pushes your name into the notification feeds of others which can of course lead to a bigger network and that increased influence that Semil mentions. If thereā€™s anything Iā€™m going to try and adjust about my Twitter usage this year after seeing Marcā€™s stats itā€™ll be increasing my replies-to-broadcasting ratio; more replies, less broadcasting of my own mumblings. Iā€™m also giving myself some rope to increase my following count. In the past Iā€™ve kept it at the 300 people I trust with pushing smart content into my feed, but I think I can keep up with a little bit more now. šŸ˜‰

(I also want to meet more of the people I engage with regularly on Twitter over the next few weeks while Iā€™m in the SF Bay and have some in-depth conversations. If that sounds cool, DM me.)

###

My Favorite Apps by Sol Weinreich

Some good apps to add to 2015 productivity.
Follow him on TwitterĀ @SolfromBrooklyn
Charles Jo 650.906.2600Ā charlesjo@me.com

My Favorite Apps by Sol Weinreich

I recently posted this collection to Product HuntĀ https://www.producthunt.com/solfrombrooklyn/collections/my-favorite-apps. Unfortunately Product Hunt automatically ranks the products based on their popularity on Product hunt. I have a different ranking.

Here it is

Mailbox for Mac (Beta): By far my favorite app in both versions whether itā€™s Mac or iPhone this app helps me stay on top of my emails. link:Ā http://www.mailboxapp.com

Twitter for Mac desktop app: Twitter doesn’t show any ads on this product. I dont see promoted Tweets or accounts. I don’t see twitter experiments either. Thats awesome! link:Ā Mac App Storeā€Šā€”ā€ŠTwitterā€Šā€”ā€ŠApple

Swype for iOS: Thank G-d apple decided to allow third party keyboards. If I wouldā€™ve known what I was missing I may have switched to Android ( not really) link:Ā http://www.swype.com

HipChat 2.0: I use HipChat to work with my team. Being remote, communication tools like HipChat are key. link:Ā hipchat.com

Dropbox: Great way to keep files in the cloud and auto backs up my pictures. I also access my files from my Dropbox folder from any computer of mine. link:Ā https://www.dropbox.com

Refresh: This app is amazing. It makes me feel like iā€™m a CIA agent or something. It gives me a lot of insight into most people before we meet. link:Ā http://refresh.io

Yahoo Sports iOS7: Being a sports junkie who has little time this app helps me keep up to date on scores and schedules. Its a great way to keep up to date on scores quickly and easily. link:Ā Yahoo Sports on the App Store on iTunesā€Šā€”ā€ŠApple

WeWork App: To be honest this is more a hat tip to WeWork than it is to the app. The app is great but WeWork is amazing. link:Ā wework.com

Buffer for iOS7: Buffer is a great way to post to social media. They also have great content recommendations. Ive also met the Buffer team theyā€™re awesome. Their blog is a must read as well. link:Ā bufferapp.com

RelateIQ: I just signed up for RelateIQ i wish i wouldā€™ve signed up sooner. Itā€™s a really awesome CRM. link:Ā relateiq.com

Google Hangouts/Skype: These are key in maintaining communications with my team. link:Ā http://www.google.com/hangouts/

Trello: This is a must for any Product manger. Its great for keeping on top of progress and keeping the scope of projects in check. link:Ā https://trello.com

Medium: Well thereā€™s a reason iā€™m writing here ā˜ŗ. link:Ā medium.com

This Week in Startups: @jason podcast is must see TV. Its chock full of insight on everything startup. link:Ā http://thisweekinstartups.com

Lyft: Lyft is huge for me especially in NYC where it can be tough to find Taxis in the evening. link:Ā http://lyft.com

Frontback 2.0: Itā€™s lots of fun to take pictures with this app. You get context with the pictures. link:Ā http://www.frontback.me

X.AI: Amy schedules meetings for you. She lives in your email and comes out to schedule meetings for you when you ask her. Amy is not a real person. AI is taking over? link: x.ai

Sunrise: A really beautiful calendar app. link:Ā https://calendar.sunrise.am

Matter mark: Great research tool to research VCā€™s and startups. plus Mattermark daily: Great daily email for everything startup. link:Ā mattermark.com

Google Analytics for iOS: Keep an eye on your websites analytics anywhere anytime. link:Ā Google Analytics on the App Store on iTunesā€Šā€”ā€ŠApple

Shyp: Easiest way to ship packages. link:Ā http://www.shyp.com

Apple Pay: Contactless payment that actually works. Now if only more stores accepted it.

Hooked: Amazing book by Nir Eyal on how to build habit forming products. Must read. link to the blog:Ā nirandfar.com

The Hard Thing About Hard Things: Another great book by Ben Horowtiz on how to build a startup. link:Ā http://www.amazon.com/The-Hard-Thing-About-Things/dp/0062273205

Cyberdust: Great ephemeral messaging app. Theyā€™re also building a nice little community of people who share interesting content. link:http://www.cyberdust.com

Hyper lapse: Fun little app from Instagram that helps you make high speed videos. link:Ā Hyperlapse from Instagram on the App Store on iTunes

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