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Welcome to the Startupy newsletter, a laid back column about very serious ideas. Every week, we curate the hottest links from our universe and share them with you here. As a reminder, Startupy is a community-curated and owned search engine. Our curators organize, index, and interconnect the most meaningful tech, culture, and business insights - we're currently in private beta. If you're feeling the vibe, consider joining the membership to get unrestricted access to our collective intelligence engine.
 

🥸  MOOD
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🪐  HOT LINKS IN OUR UNIVERSE
It's a common misconception that burnouts come from hard work. Burnout comes from a felt loss of control and/or impact. Remember that you can burn out employees (or yourself) with little to no work.
Better technology means higher expectations—and higher expectations create more work… technology made it much easier to clean a house to 1890s standards. But by mid-century, Americans didn’t want that old house. They wanted a modern home—with delicious meals and dustless windowsills and glistening floors—and this delicious and dustless glisten required a 40-to-50-hour workweek, even with the assistance of modern tools.
In the end, what’s most meaningful is creating positive, uplifting outcomes for human experiences and human relationships. Business, like life, is all about how you make people feel. It’s that simple, and it’s that hard.
We think AOL and the local mall are communities. We think that Disney, the corporation, is a story-teller. And, to the extent, we are connected at all, it is largely by mass media like television, which, as Bertrand Russell pointed out, "allows thousands of people to laugh at the same joke and still remain alone."
In so many games, the target isn’t the point. The point is this rich experience along the way. And I think a lot of the mistakes we make with games is we get into these things and we forget about these larger purposes. The fact that they can be fun. The fact that they can be beautiful. We just hyper-obsess and hyper-narrow on the product at the end. And I’m worried that in a lot of other cases, this attention to product over process is poisoning us and making us miss out on possible pleasures.
 

🔥  POPULAR RABBIT HOLES
167 connections → 93 content, 60 companies, 14 related topics
203 connections → 45 content, 145 companies, 13 related topics
140 connections → 61 content, 70 companies, 9 related topics
 
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👆  Use the Startupy randomizer to get inspired ☝️
 

🌱  COMMUNITY HEALTH
Welcoming Danielle Vermeer, Sterling Proffer, Jacob Borgeson, and Kasper Jordaens to our curator community this week and virtual high-fiving Ajinkya Wadhwa, Alex Wittenberg, and Lillian Sheng for their contributions.
210 contributions this week
610 connections this week
518 highlights this week
 

✨  CURATOR SPOTLIGHT
Why is post-individualism interesting? 
The internet made it possible for communities to become something we are not necessarily born into but can choose voluntarily. The idea of post-individualism builds on that evolution and defines our identities as a mix of individual traits and attributes we gain through the communities we’re part of. 
 
This is interesting because web3 allows us to opt-in and out of value systems that contribute to understanding who we are and what is important to us.
 
A podcast worth listening to? 
Yancey Strickler, co-founder of Metalabel, perfectly explains these ideas in episode 36 of the On The Other Side Podcast.
 
Things worth reading and watching?
Much has been written about the loneliness, mental health issues and absurdities of the creator economy, but this video made me especially sad. Chico is fine though and came back 3 weeks later.
 
Jia’s 2019 collection of essays is still a great example of a millennial's reflection on the internet shaping our sense of self. Who’s going to write the 2022 version of this?
 
A glimpse into the technical infrastructure necessary to support the collection of identities navigating the highly varied contexts of web 3.0 such as metaverses, multiplayer games, DAOs and NFTs.
 
Projects worth following?
A modern framework of the “label” where a group of people team up under a shared purpose to create public releases that manifest their point of view.
 
A different answer to the same problem, Channel aims to build tools to help creators join forces.
 
A metalabel (!?) I’m currently excited about. I bought the eggplant hat.
 

 
It's trippy, come see for yourself
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