Quotes & Highlights

Because the far-southern seas are the only waters that flow uninterrupted around the globe, they gather enormous power, with waves building over as much as thirteen thousand miles, accumulating strength as they roll through one ocean after another. When they arrive, at last, at Cape Horn, they are squeezed into a narrowing corridor between the southernmost American headlands and the northernmost part of the Antarctic Peninsula. This funnel, known as the Drake Passage, makes the torrent even more pulverizing. The currents are not only the longest-running on earth but also the strongest, transporting more than four billion cubic feet of water per second, more than six hundred times the discharge of the Amazon River.
— David Grann, The Wager
(When ailing seamen were shielded belowdecks from the adverse elements outside, they were said to be “under the weather.”)
— David Grann, The Wager
To “turn a blind eye” became a popular expression after Vice-Admiral Nelson deliberately placed his telescope against his blind eye to ignore his superior’s signal flag to retreat.
— David Grann, The Wager
To “toe the line” derives from when boys on a ship were forced to stand still for inspection with their toes on a deck seam. To “pipe down” was the boatswain’s whistle for everyone to be quiet at night, and “piping hot” was his call for meals. A “scuttlebutt” was a water cask around which the seamen gossiped while waiting for their rations. A ship was “three sheets to the wind” when the lines to the sails broke and the vessel pitched drunkenly out of control.
— David Grann, The Wager
He had made a fire—that spark of civilization—and they huddled around the flames, trying to warm themselves.
— David Grann, The Wager
“The wind is oblivious to the obstacles though her path would not be the same without them.”
— Pierce Brown, Light Bringer
Stochastic refers to a variable process where the outcome involves some randomness and has some uncertainty. It is a mathematical term and is closely related to “*randomness*” and “*probabilistic*” and can be contrasted to the idea of “*deterministic*.”
— Jason Brownlee, What Does Stochastic Mean in Machine Learning?
At the core, I see three critically important differences between the strongest product companies and the rest: The first is how the company views the role of technology. The second is the role their product leaders play. The third is how the company views the purpose of the product teams—the product managers, product designers, and engineers.
— Marty Cagan and Chris Jones, Empowered
The purpose of strong leadership is to inspire and motivate the organization.
— Marty Cagan and Chris Jones, Empowered
If you want to have truly empowered product teams, then your success depends very directly on these first‐level people managers.
— Marty Cagan and Chris Jones, Empowered