Take a photo of a barcode or cover
aaairm 's review for:
Principles: Life and Work
by Ray Dalio
2 stars if it had been 40-50% shorter: as is, it's stupefyingly boring.
There are some useful parts, but it's smothered with stuff one cannot (and perhaps shouldn't - "baseball cards") implement unless they run their own pedal-to-the-metal hedge fund.
The "baseball card" theory is mostly despicable and ripe for abuse: here's an illuminating article.
There are some useful parts, but it's smothered with stuff one cannot (and perhaps shouldn't - "baseball cards") implement unless they run their own pedal-to-the-metal hedge fund.
The "baseball card" theory is mostly despicable and ripe for abuse: here's an illuminating article.
[...] Bridgewater became aware that Co-Chief Investment Officer Greg Jensen, then a co-C.E.O. of the firm, had engaged in a “months-long personal relationship with a female employee who was his junior and in his line of supervision,” [...] Dalio reportedly told people he couldn’t decide whether Jensen or the female employee was telling the truth about their relationship, but noted that Jensen—who had recently been accused of “groping [another female employee]’s buttocks”—had scored particularly high on Bridgewater’s “rating metrics” of “overall believability,” so his side of the story “carried extra credibility over hers.”