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About affronti

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My current setup is to use two-factor auth whenever possible (Microsoft ID, Google, etc.), plus LastPass with two-factor auth and changing the main password monthly. LastPass also has a helpful dupe detection feature that tells you when you’re using the same password for two or more sites. What’s your strategy?

The Evolution of the Password And Why It’s Still Far From Safe

My Combo

Thanks to everyone for taking the time to send such warm birthday wishes my way yesterday!

I have always felt fortunate to have my birthday basically tethered to the start of each new year as it allows me to align my yearly goals with my life ones. And if you know me at all then you know that aligning goals is, like, my second favorite thing.

For this year, I am wishing & resolving to have a great start to my new life and career in NYC, to make new friends, to enjoy being close to my family, and to absolutely stay close to our friends and family in Seattle.

I hope everyone has a great 2014! Thanks again!

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A good article that summarizes key challenges these companies faced in 2013 and the upcoming ones coming in 2014. I was a big GroupOn fan and am still an active Foursquare junkie, so I’m personally interested to see if they will find ways to generate new, consistent revenue and relevance in 2014. 

8 Companies That Beat The Odds In 2013, Learned Lessons For 2014

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Some super productive people don’t waste their time on the small daily decisions that take up much of our brain space. Prerna Gupta, chief product officer of social music app Smule says she’s able to tackle big picture problems by eating the exact same thing for breakfast and lunch every day. She calls it “reducing decision fatigue.”

11 EXPERT TIPS TO HELP YOU BE MORE PRODUCTIVE IN 2014” via FastCompany

I only realized how much I try to “reduce decision fatigue” after a colleague saw my Outlook calendar several years ago and was “blown away” (his words) by the amount of personal appointments and color-coding – think “eat breakfast”, “vacuum house”. I explained that my calendar and ToDo lists help me establish daily routines and get certain things ‘out of my way’ that I know need to happen regardless of what else comes my way.

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But the “no sales people” mantra isn’t what I’m here to take on. It’s the second belief system that is even more engrained and even more wrong. Many young startups are being advised not to have a professional services business and in my opinion this is a big mistake.

One of the Biggest Mistakes Enterprise Startups Make” by Mark Suster.

When I first joined Microsoft ten years ago and started to build software in the Office group, I spent some time learning about how we actually sold the software to enterprise customers. I setup some coffees with “Field Sales Managers”, “Technical Account Managers”, and even got to listen in on a few sales calls with big enterprise customers.

My eyes couldn’t have been opened wider; the complexity of sales channels, SKU’s, and VAR’s made me quickly realize and appreciate the importance of a dedicated sales group. At the same time, I was concerned by how far removed I was as engineer from the actual customer – how do you balance out the complexity of selling to various, complex customers while not slowing down development?

Thankfully Office has a long history of rich and consistent interactions with its big customers. One of my favorite activities was participating in an internal conference each year where some of our biggest enterprise customers came to Microsoft campus for a few days. It was part networking event and part product demo fair, with the goal of getting critical feedback from our customers about what we were building in Office while we were still coding. It was incredibly helpful as an engineer to learn about the unique technology challenges they faced inside their companies (i.e. amazingly complex deployment topologies, geopolitical issues that dictated purchasing policy, governmental regulations, etc.).

I learned quickly that building and selling products to enterprise customers was complex, but more importantly that the best enterprise products are developed via great relationships between the product team and the individuals that will use it.

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…In New York, at least, Craigslist went from being the centralized clearing house for everything to, well, a shitty alternative to other apartment rental and classified goods sites. And where New York goes, the rest of the world usually follows.

http://www.fastcolabs.com/3024211/nine-tech-companies-wed-be-surprised-to-hear-from-in-2014

Back in Seattle we used Craiglists for everything, but I’ve personally had a harder time selling things on it since we’ve moved to NYC. As surprised as I was to see them on this list, it does make me stop and question how they’re going to fare given how many new players are entering the sharing/selling market.

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Having recently switched fully to Android and the Google stack (G-Apps, Gmail, etc.), I’m impressed by helpfulness of some of the recommendations and suggestions coming out of Google Now. Judging by the amount of “prep” work I do for my day (which is, admittedly, a function of how much I enjoy organizing things), I think the PDA space is going to revolutionize individual productivity.

Google Wants To Build The Ultimate Personal Assistant | TechCrunch