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So I'm building this: https://summaryworld.life

It gives you clean text summaries of YouTube videos. There are obviously other tools that do this, but I wanted something that is aligned with actual principles of learning and retention, not just quick TLDRs.

Also added a feature called Related Videos. It extracts the key themes from a video and recommends the top 3 related videos, essentially creating a small “knowledge web” of sorts around the topic. Similar to youtube recommendations, but you don't watch you click and read.

You can do YouTube search directly inside the product. When you click a video, it generates a summary. So you’re still browsing YouTube, but click turns a video into something you can actually consume. Personally found it better way to consume youtube, quicker for me to get through the content I want to consume than have those 10+ Youtube tabs sitting in my browser forever.

There’s also a public library feature I added where you can make your summary public. It’s kind of fun to see what other people are learning.

Still early, but iterating on it, scratching my own itch.


Searching for what to solve becomes far more important than how to solve it. Which niche you serve, how underserved the problem is, how quickly you build a solution, and how fast you iterate based on user feedback become the real differentiators. As a problem gains popularity, competitors will enter at an increasing pace, and the product’s price will be competed down to the bare minimum. At that point, the only real advantage for a builder is to be a serial builder for deep niches, spotting them faster than others and delivering quality product to users before anyone else.


Excellence in anything is a byproduct of having fun. Fun is a byproduct of understanding. Understanding is a byproduct of going slow. Going slow is a byproduct of curiosity. Curiosity is a byproduct of saying "I don’t know," of shunning beliefs and attending to what is in front, with zero baggage or impositions of your own—shunning the ego in the moment, moment by moment. Excellence comes when each piece is as equal as any other, when preference is shunned, when space is created to allow what is in the moment, without resistance, without insistence.


I don't think understanding leads to fun in most people. It probably is the case for most people here on Hacker News, but I doubt it's universal.


It is probably not universal. Whole point, I guess, is it should be (much as excellence itself, by the way...)


I think it does when the understanding follows couriosity.


This is relatable. Once one gets over the frustration of failing and making mistakes (thousands of times in some cases), it becomes fun and easier to stay curious.


I've seen a lot of people play cricket and soccer all their lives, they had a metric ton of fun, and im sure I will not put them close to the word excellent in any aspect of their lives. Im not sure any of the statements you made are agreeable in fact.


I don't think GP is saying that if something is fun you will become excellent at it. Rather, of you want to excel in anything it is a huge advantage if you enjoy doing it, so try to keep it fun.


This is great. I agree with another poster in that I don't know that it applies to everyone, but I really relate and think it's an amazing reminder.


>Excellence in anything is a byproduct of having fun

absolutely not. fun is a byproduct of excellence.

do people like playing the piano well? yes.

do beginners like taking piano lessons and practicing in between? no.

prodigies can enjoy lessons, that's why we have a word for them, they already excel due to some unusual internal wiring


Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse

This book has stayed with me for years. It's a quiet, deeply reflective journey about self-discovery, the search for meaning. What resonated most was this idea that true understanding can't be taught—it must be lived and experienced.

It’s a short read, but one that invites you to slow down. Each time I return to it, I take away something new depending on where I am in life.


A relative had to pass a "non Western" book for a high school class. She came to me because I was a known reader.

I suggested Siddhartha. Her friend picked War and Peace.

My credibility went waaaay up:)

(Siddhartha is very thin, like the book)


Funny I reread it again recently after reading it in college. Having a kid and rereading it adds a different dimension to the story.


Could you have completed the entire curriculum on your own using ChatGPT without needing Math Academy?


Not at all. ChatGPT can't even reliably do arithmetic.


Location: Bangalore, India

Remote: Open to remote or onsite work

Willing to relocate: Yes

Technologies: JavaScript, Node.js, Express.js, Python, MongoDB, Redis, PostgreSQL, MySQL.

Résumé/CV: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1BFc3aJt5dZ32j7xSc4Kb8BOHCgh...

Email: reach.anurajs[at]gmail.com

I'm a Product Manager turned Coder, I had a strong stint as a PM for 7+ years, at my last company (YC S21) I scaled the DAU from 10k to 250k+ & MAU to 1 million+.

Now I'm looking to get to the fundamentals of building. That's why I have been learning backend development for the past 1 year, you can view my resume for more details on my coding projects and my achievements from 7+ years of PM career.

Can bring a good balance of user centric mindset to feature development. Since I'm sort of rebooting my career here, I'm looking at SD-1 level roles at the moment. Would love to chat about this.


"Who Am I?" by Ramana Maharshi


This has been in my audible wish list forever but I haven't pulled the trigger. Thanks for the nudge, will try it!


Start by questioning every aspect of your life, your actions, your intentions, your thoughts - why are they the way they are? Books and mental models are mere tools that won't get you anywhere, they just add to the conditioning and the "burden" of knowledge. To find your own philosophy of life you have to start by unconditioning your mind so you can become sensitive to the reality as it is and not what the world around you has taught you.


Just finished it last week, it made me revisit the idea of "What it means to have meaning in life?" and how personal that is, and have a wholesome view of my personality without any prejudice.


Discourse on the Method by René Descartes


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