From the article: But I understand the confusion, "elder tech" is such a dumb, ambiguous term... "elderly person related tech" would probably be more apt.
From the article:
Initialized is partnered with Roman, a digital erectile dysfunction company prescription platform, and online pharmacy TruePill.
But I understand the confusion, "elder tech" is such a dumb, ambiguous term... "elderly person related tech" would probably be more apt.
AFAIK Aaron Schwartz was pretty much just cofounder in name only so I really don't understand people's borderline worship of him, especially on reddit itself. IIRC he spent 6 months helping...
AFAIK Aaron Schwartz was pretty much just cofounder in name only so I really don't understand people's borderline worship of him, especially on reddit itself. IIRC he spent 6 months helping rewrite the site from LISP to Python after his project, Infogami, was merged with reddit under the banner of "Not a Bug Inc." but after that he had almost nothing to do with the site.
Yeah... don't get me wrong, I admire a lot of what Aaron Schwartz stood for too, think he got incredibly unfairly railroaded on trumped up charges and sadly drove into committing suicide as a...
Yeah... don't get me wrong, I admire a lot of what Aaron Schwartz stood for too, think he got incredibly unfairly railroaded on trumped up charges and sadly drove into committing suicide as a result. I just think the "Aaron would be rolling in his grave!" and "I wish Aaron was still here!" type comments made whenever there is a change to reddit that people disagree with are incredibly melodramatic and ill-informed. Ditto with the Yishan and Ellen Pao hate brigades.
What is "elder tech"?
From the article:
But I understand the confusion, "elder tech" is such a dumb, ambiguous term... "elderly person related tech" would probably be more apt.
AFAIK Aaron Schwartz was pretty much just cofounder in name only so I really don't understand people's borderline worship of him, especially on reddit itself. IIRC he spent 6 months helping rewrite the site from LISP to Python after his project, Infogami, was merged with reddit under the banner of "Not a Bug Inc." but after that he had almost nothing to do with the site.
Yeah... don't get me wrong, I admire a lot of what Aaron Schwartz stood for too, think he got incredibly unfairly railroaded on trumped up charges and sadly drove into committing suicide as a result. I just think the "Aaron would be rolling in his grave!" and "I wish Aaron was still here!" type comments made whenever there is a change to reddit that people disagree with are incredibly melodramatic and ill-informed. Ditto with the Yishan and Ellen Pao hate brigades.