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Connor McCormick Coda
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About Me

Coda Experience

I started working with Coda in 2018 when they first left stealth mode. One of my docs was shown to Coda investor (and apparently smart guy) Reid Hoffman as evidence that people could “get” the Coda product. Here’s the email from 12/13/2018.
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I was honored to say yes! I love them there too :)
I’ve gotten to watch it evolve since then and I’ve played a very small role in providing feedback for the direction of the product, you can see my participation in the community on my accounts:
(personal)
(Lot Spot)
(Supersynchronous)

Some docs I’ve built:
A tool
An exploration of an
An exploration of using
An argument for
Inventory Systems (I’ve built three, but I can only share this schema
)
Customer Relationship Management Docs (Many of them, but can’t share)
Weekly Meeting Doc (Can’t share because of private data, but here’s )
Accounting systems used by multi-million a year companies
Investment performance tracking doc for an investment firm
Many many more.

Read about


Outside Coda

Supersynchronous

I’m a cofounder at . We build internal systems with no code tools (especially Coda!) for companies to run on. We fit in like this:
If you want to minimize upfront cost, buy a SaaS product (like Pipedrive, Salesforce, or Hubspot).
If you want to minimize maintenance cost, have your engineers build internal systems.
If you want to minimize , hire Supersynchronous. We’ll build stuff for your team, while your team builds your company.

Lot Spot

I ran a company in Colorado called that helped open space parks improve visitor parking experience and protect their assets from overuse. We had to shut it down in 2021 :(. Ultimately, the operating costs of running a hardware company became too much. While working there I ran the operations and I wrote software for the devices. Our devices used machine learning based computer vision, were powered with solar panels, and connected over cellular networks.
Our product at Mount Falcon open space

Mountains

I’m an avid rock climber, cyclist, and mountaineer. I’ve been trying to climb all the fourteeners (mountains taller than 14k feet) in Colorado, I’m up to 54 out of 58 (four away!).
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The “Knife’s Edge” on Capitol Peak.
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Standing in the river as the sun sets in the San Juan Wilderness.
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Near Sunlight Peak, before sunlight hit.

Mathematics

I have a hedonic love affair with mathematics. Recent gems include:
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This spiral hidden somewhere in the Mandelbrot Set
The Sleeping Beauty Problem and the assumptions we can make about what we haven’t experienced.
I have a tentative resolution to the Sleeping Beauty Problem which I find satisfying.
It’s more fun for you to go read about the problem yourself and come up with your own conclusions. For me, this has a simple answer that lies outside of the domain of epistemology.
In my limited view, this is a clear example of how “ideally rational epistemic agents” are insufficient. This whole problem has a solution as soon as you add in a cost function for error.
For example, let’s say that if Sleeping Beauty wakes up she loses $100 for each wrong answer she makes. A bummer, but at most she’ll lose $200.
In this case, her best strategy is to try to minimize her expected value of error across multiple games. That tells her to go with the thirder position (if this doesn’t ring a bell you should read the article first).
However, if instead of losing $100 Sleeping Beauty loses her life each time she gets a wrong answer, she now wants to maximize her probability of survival.
In that case, she should go with the halfer position as she’s more likely to survive.
You can confirm this by running a simulation (maybe in Coda!)
My general takeaway from this is that what we want — what is useful and beneficial — informs what is rational. Not the other way around. There are people who argue that our systems, our leaders, citizens are, “too dumb, too irrational, lack critical thinking.” This thought experiment signals that more rationality is insufficient.
What you value is what actually matters.
What matters is where you care.

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