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My Rediscovery of Isaac Asimov: I, Asimov

December 29, 2019 By Bobby Voicu

One of the first “modern” SF books I’ve ever read was one in the Foundation series. I don’t remember exactly which one, but I was around 14 and I read all the books written by Isaac Asimov that I could find. Unfortunately, though, you couldn’t find most of them in Romania, where I was born. And you couldn’t find the non-fiction books in particular.

Last week I read I, Asimov: A Memoir, his autobiography. I didn’t read a book that I liked this much in a long time. As I said already, Asimov was part of my youth and I’ve read and re-read the Foundation, Robots and Empire books over and over again over the years. And, through the 600 pages of I, Asimov, I almost turned back in time.

In I, Asimov I’ve discovered a genuine happy person, someone that did what he loved his entire life. I discovered that one of the biggest authors of Science Fiction actually stopped writing fiction novels almost completely for 20 years. I discovered that he enjoyed writing mystery short stories a lot. And this shouldn’t surprise me since most of the books in his SF series are, actually, mysteries. Especially the Robots ones.

His autobiography reads like the archive of a blog, with anecdotes and short stories of the author’s life. It made me smile so often, I didn’t believe it. I was reading in bed and I would read out loud to my fiancée something that made me laugh loudly.

Besides the laughs, I also appreciated the power of Asimov’s convictions. I’m taking example, as well, since sometimes I forget to support my opinions as strongly as I should. And I’m sure my friends might think differently and laugh at the last sentence.

Here, in Asimov’s biography, I found the best reasoning for reading ever. And a refute of watching TV at the cost of reading.

I also pointed out that television yielded so much information that the viewer became a passive receptacle, whereas a book gave so little that the reader had to be an active participant, his imagination supplying all the imagery, sound, and special effects. This participation, I said, gave so much pleasure that television could not serve as a decent substitute.

In short, the age of the pulp magazine was the last in which youngsters, to get their primitive material, were forced to be literate. Now that is gone, and the youngsters have their glazed eyes fixed on the television tube. The result is clear. True literacy is becoming an arcane art, and the nation is steadily “dumbing down.”

I was born in communism and, even if my parents had a big enough library at home, most of the books I read were available from the school library. I still remember how happy I was when I found, in one corner, a new Jules Verne book I could read and share with my class mates. So I understand the value of access to books. And I’ve started The CEO Library because I know you need more than what the school provides.

I received the fundamentals of my education in school, but that was not enough. My real education, the superstructure, the details, the true architecture, I got out of the public library. For an impoverished child whose family could not afford to buy books, the library was the open door to wonder and achievement, and I can never be sufficiently grateful that I had the wit to charge through that door and make the most of it.

I was surprised that Asimov was writing in 1992 that we, as humanity, are destroying the planet. And, 30 years later, he was and is right, unfortunately. And we fight with the results of neglect.

We are now perfectly capable of damaging the planet beyond repair in any reasonable time, and are, in fact, in the process of doing so.

And, again, in 1992, he wrote the perfect explanation of the difference in thinking between “conservatives” and “liberals”. Living in a world where the split is even more obvious and evident, I can’t but wonder at Asimov’s understanding of life.

I have been a liberal all my life. I have had to be. Early in life, I noted that conservatives, who are more or less satisfied with things as they are and even more satisfied with things as they were fifty years ago, are “self-loving.” That is, conservatives tend to like people who resemble themselves and distrust others. In my youth, in the United States the backbone of social, economic, and political power rested with an establishment consisting almost entirely of people of Northwestern European extraction, and the conservatives making up that establishment were contemptuous of others.

If you enjoyed Asimov’s books, you’re gonna love this one.

The Witcher on Netflix. And The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt on Switch

December 20, 2019 By Bobby Voicu

I loved playing Witcher 3 on the PS4. I played it in 2015 and what I remember is this: after about 3 days of playing 10-12 hours a day, my girlfriend asked me if I’m close to the end. And I said something along the lines of “it’s pretty close, maybe 2 more hours”. It took me 2 more days to finish the game. The story continued to keep me stuck in front of the TV.

This is why I didn’t play the game again since. I loved it, but starting to play again for 100 hours seemed too much. Until it appeared on Nintendo Switch, about 2 months ago. I bought it on Black Friday and now I play it in shorter bursts, whenever I want. And it’s as good as I remember. It’s amazing the developers (CD Project Red) managed to use the underpowered console that is the Switch to actually make the game work. And it works amazing, even if it’s not 4K resolution.

Today I also started to watch The Witcher, the Netflix TV series. And, after 2 episodes, I can say I’m in. Henry Cavill is as close to Geralt of Rivia (the titular character) as much as it can be and the cinematography is really good.

If you want to watch a fantasy series you need to see The Witcher on Netflix. If you heard about the Witcher games or books but you were not too interested in them, the tv series might change your mind.

Best Books of 2019

December 11, 2019 By Bobby Voicu

At the beginning of November 2019 I asked in the newsletter and on Instagram for our community’s favorite books of 2019. After about 2 weeks of adding books to the database, here are the lists. And yes, I was doing other things as well, it didn’t take me 2 weeks to add 50 or so books, ok?

1. Best New Books of 2019

These books are all published in 2019. You liked them and you recommend them.

2. Best Fiction Books of 2019

Though you wouldn’t think so, some of you actually read fiction :D So here are 10-11 fiction books you said it’s worth reading.

3. Best Non-Fiction Books of 2019

Finally, as expected, this is the biggest list. About 80 books you recommended (including the ones of the first list) are here and it should be enough for everyone to have a full 2020 with the books they didn’t read already.

PlayStation’s State of Play games I want to play

December 10, 2019 By Bobby Voicu

I’m writing/updating this as I’m watching the live transmission of State of Play:

Untitled Goose Game: This seems such a stupid game idea, I might actually enjoy playing it, especially during the upcoming Christmas holiday (Dec 17th, 2019)

dreams: more of a game creator, it might be the non-pro game developer’s tool that I can try to use to finally build a game on my own (Feb 2020)

Babylon’s Fall: this a Square Enix game that looks like I might actually enjoy. I don’t know too much about it, I just hope it has a really good story 😁

Ghost of Tsushima: This might actually be the game I’ll play. (2020)

Yeah, that’s it. Nothing truly interesting, unfortunately. For me, that is, YMMV. If you want to see the entire State of Play, you can see it below:

Avicii Tribute Concert

December 10, 2019 By Bobby Voicu

First time I ever heard Avicii was in 2011, when I was listening to Levels and a little bit of Fade into Darkness.

But the moment I became a fan was when I heard “Wake me up“. The song has special meaning for me because it’s the song I connect the most to the US. Both because of the sound and mostly because I was listening to it on my daily commute between San Jose and San Francisco when I was looking for investment for MavenHut.

That’s when I started to listen to everything he was launching. Hey Brother, Addicted to You, The Nights, they were all among my most played songs. I have Heaven, the latest song released, in heavy rotation right now.

I also watched the documentary he released shortly before his death and I liked the guy even more. You could see how dedicated he was to his music, fighting through debilitating pain every day. The film is also a premonition, since at some point in the show this happens:

“He’s a shell of what he used to be,” says a friend in the film, while another describes him as “a ticking timebomb”.

It all builds to the point where, late in the documentary, Avicii flatly says of touring: “It will kill me.”

The Guardian

If you didn’t see Avicii: True Stories, it might be available on Netflix in your country.

On December 5th there was a live tribute for him in Stockholm, in order to raise awareness for mental health. It’s his music and the people he played it with. You can watch/listen to it on YouTube:

I (used to) write at The CEO Library

November 11, 2019 By Bobby Voicu

In September/October I’ve rediscovered my love of writing. OK, maybe love is too strong of a word, but I lack the vocabulary in English to find another, more suited one, so I’ll use that.

You might have noticed it, actually, since I wrote on this blog a lot more than I’ve done it in the entire two years before.

And then I stopped. Or not really. Cristina, my co-founder at The CEO Library, decided to focus more on what she wants to do (and can do) in Romania, so she decided to leave the operational position. She still helps with advice from time to time. If you speak Romanian or can use Google Translate, you can read more here, on her blog. The Google Translate version (here) is quite good, actually.

This meant that I started to write a little bit more. Not only about business and books, but also about the most interesting libraries I’ve visited in the last few years. Yes, I start with Bucharest’s Carturesti Carusel. Because why not?

I also used to write The CEO Library weekly newsletter.

As for the things I’m writing, here’s a short excerpt from the second newsletter I sent, about two weeks ago:

Asking questions is probably one of the most underrated skills in the world. I mean, everybody can ask questions, right? A toddler asks questions. And, oh, my God, they do ask a lot.

As you know, though, it’s not that simple.

I grew up in communist Romania. School was a serious matter and you didn’t ask stupid questions. Or, even better, don’t ask anything. Take everything the teachers give you, learn it by heart and become the perfect little communist. Of course, I’m generalizing, because I was fortunate to have some great teachers, but they weren’t the rule. This continued through college, even if it wasn’t as obvious as it was in the first years of school.

You can read the entire newsletter I sent here, to get an idea.

Truth is, I don’t know exactly what I’ll do with The CEO Library just yet. The project started one way and it morphed in something a little bit different over the last 2 years. I still need to think about it. But, for the moment, I’m happy to have found a community of like-minded people again. It feels like it’s 2008-2009 again when I was writing my Romanian blog. Of course, the context is different, but I genuinely missed writing.

I will still write on this blog, as well, don’t worry.

I mean, I can’t write on The CEO Library about silicone wheels for the desk chair, right? Or can I?

Ok, ok, but I can’t write about wanting a Christmas tree in October there. Can I? May I?

 

Carturesti Carusel in Bucharest: Great libraries and book stores of the world

November 11, 2019 By Bobby Voicu

I have a weird obsession with libraries and book stores. I really enjoy visiting them, no matter how old or modern they are.

One of the buildings that intrigued me when I was first starting to visit Europe by car was Melk Abbey. You could see it from the highway while driving from Romania to Germany. It took me about 7 or 8 years before I could stop and visit one the oldest libraries in Europe, which is hosted in the Melk Abbey, but I’ve done it! And then, I got crazy by visiting two other abbey libraries around Europe in the same trip: Admont, St. Gallen. I visited one more on that trip, but I can’t really remember which, I need to take a look at the photos.

Of course, since I lived in Ireland for several months, I visited Trinity College’s library and, being in Portugal right now, I’ve seen the “Harry Potter Bookstore”, at Livraria Lello in Porto. This is actually a list of the other places I’m gonna write about in the upcoming weeks. Or months.

After all these old libraries, you would be right to believe that Carturesti Carusel Bookstore is another abbey library. Well, you would be wrong. Carusel is really modern and new, actually. And, even better for me, it’s in Bucharest, the city I lived in for more than 20 years.

When Cristina was still involved with The CEO Library, one of the places where we would often meet was Carusel’s top floor bistro. I mean, what better place to talk about books other than a bookstore or a library, right?

It was a really inspirational and motivational place for us. It also helped that we could sit at a table and have some tea or a Coca-Cola. You could see people walking around the floors, looking at the books, picking them to read, there or at home. We would stay there for hours, just talking and enjoying the atmosphere.

I really like the airy structure of the building as well. It has a huge interior space and the books are all around the walls, with warm colors all around. The big windows and the thought-out lighting makes it a desirable place to stay and spend some hours there.

The history of the building is quite interesting, as well. It used to be a bank since the beginning of last century, then it was confiscated by the communists after the second World War and used as a general store for a long time. It fell into decay at the end of the millennium and it was rehabilitated by 2015 and opened as a bookstore (source: Wikipedia).

Anyway, if you ever get to Bucharest, take the time to visit the Carturesti Carusel. It really is worth it spending an hour or two in the building. You can find a short video of a tour below or, if you prefer, some really good photos.

These photos aren’t mine, I got them from Dreamstime. I’m not a good photographer, so I prefer to use better photos than the ones I take, if possible.

You can see how open and cozy the library is, right? You understand why it was our preferred place of meeting, right? :)

Most underrated skill you never ask about

November 6, 2019 By Bobby Voicu

Asking questions is probably one of the most underrated skills in the world. I mean, everybody can ask questions, right? A toddler asks questions. And, oh, my God, they do ask a lot.

As you know, though, it’s not that simple.

I grew up in communist Romania. School was a serious matter and you didn’t ask stupid questions. Or, even better, don’t ask anything. Take everything the teachers give you, learn it by heart and become the perfect little communist. Of course, I’m generalizing, because I was fortunate to have some great teachers, but they weren’t the rule. This continued through college, even if it wasn’t as obvious as it was in the first years of school.

I was also lucky to have parents that encouraged my curiosity, but that almost bit them in the a$$ when I told people at school that my parents were listening to Voice of America radio, which was banned in Romania. My family was lucky that my third grade teacher heard me and sent me home to talk to my parents. Otherwise, the results could’ve been dire.

Anyway, as I got older, asking questions seemed a sign of weakness. I mean, my first “real” job was in a Government institution, that had its ways. And I was working with a lot older people, that had THEIR ways. And it was “obvious” how I should do things. What, I was hard in the head, couldn’t I see on my own? Where the hell did I grow up?

After about 1 year of working there I continued on my entrepreneurial track. And finally, asking questions seemed a lot easier and more accepted. Especially since I was so interested in new technology. This meant that all the people I knew had bits of information they could share so I started asking LOTS of questions. And, for the first time in my life, they didn’t seem like an annoyance to anyone. OK, OK, I had a good friend that ALWAYS made fun of me for asking “stupid and obvious questions”, but I learned a lot from him during those early years.

Now, I ask questions all the time (really, I do). Even if I seem slow or stupid. I want to know things, so I’m ok with that.

Here are the tips to ask good questions:

  1. Don’t worry about being annoying

It’s worse being annoying because you don’t know something and execute badly, rather than being annoying by getting right what you need to do.

  1. Ask specific questions

Don’t ask general questions: how can I make money is a general question. It’s better if you ask “How can I monetize my mobile app?”. But the even better question is the one that asks “What is the biggest issue you had with monetizing your app with subscriptions?”. Of course, based on your relation to the person you ask, you can start with the general ones and get to the more specific questions as time goes by.

  1. Understand time limitations/specific situations

You are at a conference and you want to ask a speaker something. There’s no Q&A session at the end, so you wait for the presentation to finish and you go and talk to the speaker. And you ask one question, then another, then another. You can see the speaker looking around, trying to escape, but you don’t stop. There’s a queue of 10 people behind you waiting to speak to that person, but you ignore them. At this point, you are annoying. VERY annoying. Ask one question, get the answer and, if you have follow-up questions, ask for an email address to ask a little bit more.

  1. Try to find the answers on your own first

You have a phone in your pocket that has most information than most people had access to during our history. Use it. Google things before asking, read Wikipedia articles. If you can’t find your answers, by all means, find someone to ask. The advantage, though: you will ask really specific questions.

There’s more to asking good questions than these 4 tips. Practice will make you better. Ask questions, challenge people. If someone doesn’t like you because of this, maybe you shouldn’t care.

What I’m reading now

I got really interested in American Football lately. I’m a fan of Carolina Panthers, just so you know.

I actually went to Atlanta for Superbowl 53, to see what I thought would be Tom Brady’s last champion ring. I’m fascinated by the business/sports machine that is New England Patriots.

Right now I’m reading two books about New England’s coach, Bill Belichick:

The Education of a Coach – David Halberstam
Belichick – Ian O’Connor

Both are about Bill Belichick’s life and career. The first one is gentler with the coach, because the author had access to him personally. It also has only the first two Superbowls, because it stops in 2003. This means the writer didn’t know about the 2 biggest scandals that involved Belichick: Spygate and Deflategate.

I’m still reading the second book. It’s more agressive and it doesn’t pamper Belichick’s image. It talks about his mistakes more and in a less understanding light. This makes the book a little bit more balanced, but with less insight from the man himself. The writer talks about the scandals involving Belichick at length, as well.

Additional Reading

Here are some things to read from around the web and The CEO Library:

  1. Book talk with Brian Burkhart

Things to take from the interview:

  • the books that dramatically changed his career path
  • how he really improved his presentation skills
  • how you should use “reverse engineering” and do what you love
  • why is gratitude important
  • find out about how to build a brand people authentically love
  1. Why are rich people so mean?

Is meanness necessary to become rich or is it a learned trait, that you gain as you make more money?

  1. Is Amazon unstoppable?

Great write-up on how powerful Amazon and its CEO, Jeff Bezos, are. Really eye opening.

  1. List of Basic Advice

Following my email last week, somebody asked for more examples of Basic Advice. And I made a list.

  1. The Best and Worst Thing About Financial Independence

I have a soft spot for the Financial Independence movement. Maybe because, without knowing it, I looked for this all my life. What I didn’t realize until several years ago when I finally achieved financial independence is that it can make you miserable. This article is better at explaining my feelings.

Business Basic Advice and Personal Basic Advice: Mega List

October 29, 2019 By Bobby Voicu

Last week I sent an email to the email list (you should subscribe, by the way). I was talking about Basic advice and how important it is that, from time to time, someone reminds you how important it is to focus on the basics. My definition of basic advice is this: advice that’s really easy to understand, without too much explanation.

Chris, one of the people on our list, asked for more examples of basic advice.

What a great idea, I thought. Why don’t I make a list, while I’m at it and update it whenever I have more advice?

By the way, you can help. If you have more suggestions, make a comment below and I’ll add it to the list, along with your name. I’ll also add your link, if it’s not what I consider to be a spammy site :D

So, without further ado and in no specific order, here is the

MEGA LIST OF BASIC ADVICE (BUSINESS AND PERSONAL)

Initially, I was gonna do just a business advice list, but I was thinking of more and more personal advice, so I added that to the list as well. This means that the list is split in two: Business and Personal. Scroll down for the “Personal” section.

Business Basic Advice

1. Watch your costs

Most of the business go down because they spend too much.

2. Don’t hire too fast

Hiring creates lots of complexity in the business and it tries to sort a problem by throwing more resources at it. Most of the times it doesn’t work

3. Fire fast

Once you decided to fire someone, do it fast. Don’t postpone it, because it impacts your entire company/team.

4. Get a lawyer as fast as possible

Someone needs to read all those contracts and make sure they’re ok.

5. Get an accountant as fast as possible

The easiest way to break the law is by not paying taxes. Don’t fall into that.

6. Don’t send an email when angry

Write the email as draft. Wait 24 hours. If you feel the same, send it. If not, rephrase it. Anger rarely solves anything.

7. Raise more money than you need

There are lots of potential pitfalls on the way. If you raise money, try to raise at least 20-30% more than you think you need.

8. Raise money before you need to

Raising money takes a long time. Start raising money at least 9-12 months before you estimate you will run out of money. I would start 18 months before, frankly.

9. Read books about your industry

I’m biased here, since The CEO Library is about reading books. Still, I think that long form puts some things into perspective a lot better than articles online. No matter how many articles you read, nothing will make you feel the pain of firing people as much as The Hard Thing about Hard Things will make you feel. If you want to know how to read more, here’s a really good article on our site about it (Cristina, my cofounder at The CEO Library, wrote it).

10. Grind every day

Most businesses just need to survive to be successful. Do your work everyday, even if it’s boring during some days.

11. Don’t break the law

You really can’t run a legitimate business from jail.

12. Follow-up on email after every call or meeting

It took me a little bit of time to get into this habit, but following up on email after every call or meeting you have is the essential. This gives you a “paper trail” of the discussion and lets all people involved remember what you talked about. Also, if someone forgets something, there’s always someone to point that out.

If you have more suggestions for business basic advice, please add it in the comment section below.

 

Personal Basic Advice

13. Wash your hands

Really. You know how many people I see leaving toilets without washing their hands? Now, that I told you, you will never NOT see it.

14. Breathe

Sometimes, that’s all you need to go through the day. One breath at a time.

15. Don’t send a message when angry

Really, don’t. If you are angry with someone and want to clear the air, talk face to face. Or at least on the phone. It will give you some time and it’s a lot more difficult to say stupid things face to face or on the phone.

16. Clean your living place

Really, clean your place. I’m not saying you should be Monica from Friends, a cleaning freak, but don’t keep weeks old food on the sofa.

17. Read books

I feel that long form reading activates parts of your brain you don’t normally use. Especially fiction. I imagine so many things when I read Science Fiction, I dream entire worlds after that.

18. Exercise/Go out and walk

I’m not the best in keeping up with this, but I still walk as much as I can. The best life I’ve lived was when I was working out constantly.

19. Get some sunlight

Really. Go out and take a walk. Get some distance from your life for a bit.

20. Sleep

I’ve been sleeping 7-8 hours a night in the last few months and I’m seeing such a big change in energy and productivity. Cristina wrote a while back about sleep in our newsletter, so give it a read here.

21. Eat well

I need to remind myself this every day. I’ve been eating really bad food lately and I can feel it in the level of energy I have in the 1-2 hours after eating. Eating well improves your well being and productivity.

22. Don’t stop learning

Read new things, find interesting courses, watch videos, go to physical courses. Never stop learning.

23. Do things in moderation

Even the good things can be too much and they can lead to burnout if you overdo them.

If you have more suggestions for personal basic advice, please add it in the comment section below.

Looking to buy websites! Have one?

October 16, 2019 By Bobby Voicu

Buy website

TL;DR: I want to buy some websites. See below for more info.

Years ago, before I started MavenHut, I was building content websites. Mostly blogs about different things. One about cars, another one about motorcycles. I sold all of them to support MavenHut in the early stages.

At the beginning of this year, though, I started to look into investing money in websites. I took a course about it that was an eye opener. I might write about what I learned at some point, who knows.

Any way, the idea is that I’m looking to buy websites. It doesn’t matter if you haven’t updated them in a while or you write daily, it doesn’t matter if it’s making no money, a little bit or a lot, just let me know. Even if I don’t buy them, I know people that might be interested.

Some guidelines of what I’m looking for:

  • English content
  • Need to be at least 2-3 years old

If you have these type of websites, fire an email to websites @ bobbyvoicu.com. If you can put the URLs in the first email, the better. If you want more information, just ask in the email.

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