Thinking for yourself is easier said than done. Society is filled with so much noise and so many social pressures that we often succumb to social influence.
Sometimes, you just have to trust your gut and intuition.
In this interview, Connor shares his story on taking big bets and learning about the future, all while being a student. It’s super interesting!
I’m Connor Lin, a rising sophomore at Columbia. I was on the founding team of Riley (YC W17). Before that, I co-founded an app called Flutter, did marketing at Noodle Education, and did marketing consulting for various companies. These days, my focus has been on cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology. I’ve started to get into investing in protocol tokens quite a bit but looking toward the future, I’m more interested in trying to find/create one of the “killer applications” that can bring blockchain mainstream.
Certain classes really refine your writing and communicating skills which I’ve found to be extremely helpful.
I’m not exactly sure yet. I’m thinking about doing Philosophy. Certain classes,although not directly applicable to things I’m working on, really refine your writing and communicating skills which I’ve found to be extremely helpful. In terms of learning in general, the internet and books have been my best friend. The beautiful thing about books is that whenever I pick up a book, I have the specific intent of getting something actionable from it and becoming a better person once I’m done.
Yea, I moved there when I was 17. I immediately fell in love with NYC. In the beginning, I felt a bit young because I was mainly hanging out with kids who were rising seniors in college working in the city but it definitely made me mature. The main thing I learned was that there are so many things in the world that I don’t know. That was a really important realization.
“Memori mento”: Remember you will die
For me personally, one phrase that I say to myself basically every day is “memori mento”: remember you will die, in Latin. It’s a bit gloom but with this idea, it’s like one day you die and none of this really matters so I don’t want to regret not taking any risk because life is short. Another one I really like is the idea that the universe is a simulation. Generally, more interesting things result from more risk so you mind as well try to entertain the simulators.
At the moment, I spend a lot of my time on research for personal investments because I’m pretty optimistic there is going to be a handful of big winners in the space. Other than that, I started an ICO research newsletter and am in talks to join some blockchain-related companies and a crypto hedge fund.
Just start reading. Whitepapers are great. Reddit is great. Bitcointalk is great. It’s just a lot of reading.
https://blockgeeks.com/guides/what-is-blockchain-technology/
https://github.com/ethereum/wiki/wiki/White-Paper
https://www.reddit.com/r/icocrypto/
I think that right now, we’re seeing lots of protocol tokens being built and infrastructure being laid out for “internet 3.0”. I don’t think that the technology is ready for any really huge consumer applications just yet, which is what I’m interested in. It will take some time for the ecosystem to really mature and when it does, entrepreneurs will come and build all sorts of cool things.
Daniel Ahmadizadeh, the CEO of Riley and John Katzman, the CEO of Noodle have both taught me so many things. And there have been so many other people who took the time to help me that I can’t list all of them. I generally find mentors through the work I’m doing, personal connections, or sometimes even cold emails.
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Twitter: twitter.com/c0nn0rlin
LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/connorlin