Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas
As for the project itself, the tongue-in-cheek tagline I’ve been using is “Dwarkesh meets Ezra Klein but a girl”: a solo newsletter-podcast on technology, politics, and culture. There are some specific topics I’m especially eager to dive deep on (and even do proper reporting!8), but I want to make space for plans to change in the next month of expl... See more
Jasmine Sun • exit interview

10 key insights from Lenny Rachitsky on building a successful newsletter:
1. What do people ask you about that you don't have a great answer to? Viral essays are hiding inside this question. If people keep asking you the same question and nobody's written the answer, take on the challenge yourself.
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Scott Belsky Talk at South Park Commons Often designs from...
sublime.app
ppl going through career puberty love to start substacks and startups and sigh loudly when you ask what they do
Molly Mielkex.comProduct Lost by @hipcityreg | Reggie James | Substack
hipcityreg.substack.com

“I believe that the best magazine articles have at least two—and better if three—elements to them: access, narrative, and disclosure. That is: on-the-ground reporting; a story arc with a beginning, middle, and end; and revelations that move the scholarship forward. A great magazine article must also always have at its core a measure of conflict. We... See more
hey sari,
i remember the first time i handpicked something for my library. it was ~2 weeks before doors closed for the transition from startupy to sublime. over a decade of being online and i don't think i've ever felt at home on the internet the way i did in that very moment. i was used to finding myself in places where i needed to think, filt
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