• genmon 5 days ago

    Hi all — Unoffice Hours host here! This has been a wildly successful experiment for me. ~360 calls booked since I made that post, about 300 calls. I’ve reviewed pitch decks, given design feedback, met monks, discussed work and careers with students, and chewed the fat with like minded people who I never would have met otherwise.

    Sorry you can’t find a slot! It’s already booked up for the next 60 days and I use Calendly to keep a rolling availability window. I've just opened a handful of extra times in October and November.

    I highly recommend making this part of your weekly rhythm too — it’s a big part of how I find new ideas, and it helps get me out of my bubble.

    • napolux 4 days ago

      Congrats! I do the same but not every week... I have a bursts of weeks where I do this for a couple of days

      I can't agree more with what you write!

      Keep going!!!

      • consf 5 days ago

        Inspiring to see how many different people and ideas you've encountered

        • genmon 5 days ago

          It has been truly amazing.

          There have been some really unusual moments -- like reviewing the pitch deck of a monk, or being suddenly involved in a design crit for a class of masters students.

          And some are extraordinary. Last week I spoke with a hugely successful children's book author who has just opened a kids' playground that builds familiarity with the fundamentals of computing!

          Sometimes I feel like I'm able to help. By being a second pair of eyes on what the other person sees as ordinary, or even tangled and overwhelming, we can identify a way forward or point of focus for a project or artistic practice.

          But my favourites are the everyday conversations where we find common ground, and I learn something and they learn something too in the exchange.

          I find that when I'm required to explain an opinion or some knowledge that I take for granted, the act of verbalising it illuminates new ideas, and talking to somebody else about it helps me find new perspectives.

          It's the highlight of my week, and has been for 4 years now!

        • gnrlst 5 days ago

          Love the initiative! Booked some time.

        • genmon 5 days ago

          If anyone's thinking of starting their own Unoffice Hours, someone started a webring with a good domain. It's semi dormant right now, but the site accepts pull requests and it would be a good place to start building community

          https://unofficehours.com

          • Normal_gaussian 4 days ago

            I recently had an unoffice hours with Matt Webb.

            I originally had a specific agenda - to get a perspective on a core project with moral considerations. In between booking and having the call the project was written off. I kept the call.

            It gave me the option, as someone currently freelancing and consulting, to talk to someone in a different boat, going to a different place, on the same sea.

            Impactfully he gave me some simple advice that I struggle with - paraphrased "act in the open / people will find you". I've spent a great deal of time since struggling with it - it is a loss of control when being perceived, and flies in the face of a lifetime of believing in internet anonynimity!

            • genmon 4 days ago

              So happy that our chat still sits with you!

            • glutamate 5 days ago

              I have started doing office hours for my FOSS project. Every other week I will live stream to YouTube and people ask comments in the live chat, then I show how to do whatever it is they want to do. In the beginning as people are logging on I talk about what we have been doing for the last two weeks. I alternate between my mornings and my evenings so most uses can join one session no matter where they are.

              Of course the first time I was worried that no one would show up. So for the first session I had a plan for what I would do if no one showed up or there were no questions. Now some people also submit questions in advance so I have a small agenda to get started with until people ask questions.

              So far it's been encouraging. About 10 people join the live sessions and there are enough questions to keep the conversation going and not too many questions so I have to ignore some. But the most surprising is the recorded sessions get many more views afterwards. So it's a good way of generating content that people actually watch.

            • andkenneth 5 days ago

              Not sure if he had this turned off beforehand or if it's because it's on the front page of HN, but there's no slots available. Not that I was personally going to book one!

              I'd love to do something like this though - I've always enjoyed teaching so maybe something where I offer free calls to help newer developers with their project for an hour? Interesting idea!

              • m_kos 5 days ago

                On the one hand, I like your idea and I would love to find someone who would help me improve at things like math, AI/ML, software dev, electronics, and 3D printing. On the other hand, I can't get my own students to sign up for my (virtual) office hours, despite offering them extra credit.

                • genmon 5 days ago

                  Could a skill swap work? Like, a website that says something like "I can teach you about linear algebra if you can teach me about CAD software" -- or would the marketplace be too sparse?

                • consf 5 days ago

                  It might also help you connect with interesting people

                • jauntywundrkind 4 days ago

                  Matt Webb (interconnected.org) has persistently been one of my favorite people and it would be a pleasure to sing some praises, mention some of his super interesting thoughtful projects.

                  A long time ago (12+ years) was Little Printer, an internet connected/social little thermal printer, with the Berg group. There's a loving open source effort maintaining the systems ? Which I haven't gotten around to installing on my own off the shelf printer). https://nordprojects.co/projects/littleprinters/

                  Matt's current effort is the Poem/A1 rhyming poetry AI clock. https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/genmon/poem-1-the-ai-po...

                  A submission got popular - Product Innovation is sometimes the Supply - and mentions the excellent very old Machine Supply, a tweeting vending machine selling books and notebooks. https://www.actsnotfacts.com/made/machine-supply https://interconnected.org/home/2024/09/27/distribution https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41709429

                  Matt's blog is extremely longstanding & excellent. His work always finds playfulness & creativity, embodies that rich interesting Splime sci-fi internet that seemed so full of open potential when I was growing up in the 90's & 00's. Thank you Matt Webb for adding so much to my life! I highly recommend adding Matt to your blogrolls, & checking out his deep & prolific archives.

                  • helloplanets 5 days ago

                    Definitely a tangent, but what an amazing example of the fact that you do not need a social media company to facilitate (and often ruin) the stuff that modern connectivity allows us to experience with other people.

                    Instead of complaining about the status quo and going abstinent, this sort of mindset is such a good alternative.

                    • shanusmagnus 4 days ago

                      It's interesting to imagine what a market solution would do to this.

                      On the one hand, the vibe is very much "show up and let's talk like friendly socialized people" and I bet that's a huge amount of the joy in it.

                      On the other hand, perhaps the people who _really_ want to talk to Matt should be able to? And while imperfect, paying for is an unshakeable signal that you _really_ want to.

                      (Note: I started this comment eight hours ago and apparently didn't submit it, so maybe someone has said the same thing in the meantime. I'm too annoyed with myself to check.)

                      • gberger 5 days ago

                        Other people's mouses and text selection is very distracting.

                        • genmon 5 days ago

                          There's a Quiet Mode toggle in the top right

                          Here's a post about the Cursor Party code (it's open):

                          "Every webpage deserves to be a place"

                          https://interconnected.org/home/2024/09/05/cursor-party

                          • andai 4 days ago

                            I remember this! How cool is that!

                            It's always bothered me that there isn't a layer "above" the web that integrates discussion features. I always thought a browser addon would solve that by now, but nothing seems to have caught on.

                            • shanusmagnus 4 days ago

                              Same. Somebody always posts a good discussion about why such things always devolve into hellscapes, and I always read them and say: oh yeah, I get it, that makes sense. And then as time passes I forget the logic and resume thinking that it would be a Really Good Idea.

                          • rpigab 4 days ago

                            Last time I went to interconnected.org, you could type temporary messages that would appear at your cursor location to everyone, it was fun!

                          • keybored 4 days ago

                            I don’t know why but I find this delightful. Just popping in for a chat. Lovely.

                            • fuidani 5 days ago

                              Same here. There are no slots available for the next three months. Nice idea.

                              • darkwater 5 days ago

                                Title should have (2020)

                                • consf 5 days ago

                                  An open space for feedback, collaboration is always good

                                  • unit149 5 days ago

                                    Like a Lebanese mathematician in a heterotopia ascetics dial the Delphic node - on an as-is basis.

                                    • undefined 5 days ago
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