Things I wish I knew that nobody in Missouri introduced me to
Here is the part that took years to understand: the water was never just the place. The water was information, and community, and the plain fact that somewhere out there were thousands of people as strange and curious as you, talking to each other in the open, for free, all day long. Missouri didn't hide these from you out of malice. It just never introduced you. Consider this the introduction.
None of these cost a dime. You can start reading them tonight, from your bedroom, before you buy a single train ticket. In a real sense the transplant begins the moment you open the first one.
Hacker News
news.ycombinator.com is the town square of the whole industry — a plain, ugly, orange-and-white list of links that happens to be where a huge slice of the people building the future argue about it in public. Read it every day for a month and you will absorb, by osmosis, an entire worldview that no one around you has. Read the comments more than the headlines; that is where the actual education is. And when you have built your small thing, this is where you post it.
The single most valuable habit: search "Ask HN: how do I..." for anything you are scared to ask out loud. Someone asked it already. Someone kind answered.
Lobsters
lobste.rs is Hacker News's quieter, nerdier, more technical cousin — invite-only, computing-focused, less noise, more signal. If HN is the town square, Lobsters is the good coffee shop where the deep people actually hang out. Getting an invite is itself a lesson in how this world works: you find someone, you show them you are real, they vouch for you. That is the garden's entire social protocol in miniature.
XKCD
xkcd.com is a stick-figure webcomic about romance, sarcasm, math, and language, and it is also, quietly, one of the great teaching texts of the culture you are joining. It will make you laugh and then make you realize you just learned something about statistics, or physics, or the shape of your own thinking. When someone in the Bay references "the xkcd about that," they are testing whether you are one of them. Now you will be.
Start with the ones everyone knows and drift from there. Hover over each comic; the alt-text is where the second joke lives, which is itself the whole aesthetic of this world: the real thing is one layer deeper than it looks.
And once you have those three, keep pulling the thread
- Paul Graham's essays — paulgraham.com. The closest thing this world has to scripture. Start with "Cities and Ambition," which is literally about how the place you live whispers what to want, and why ambitious people move. He is describing the exact thing this whole website is about, and he wrote it two decades before we did.
- patio11 (Patrick McKenzie) — kalzumeus.com. "Don't Call Yourself A Programmer, And Other Career Advice" and "Salary Negotiation" are worth more than a semester of anything. He will teach a kid with no connections how money and careers actually work — the stuff your family could not teach you because no one taught them.
- MIT OpenCourseWare — ocw.mit.edu. The actual lectures, problem sets, and exams from one of the best universities on earth, given away for free. You can get an MIT education from a camper in Gilroy. Let that sink in.
- arXiv — arxiv.org. Where the scientists post the papers before they are published, for free, forever. The fireworks are being designed in public, and you are allowed in the room.
- Build in the open. Put your projects on the internet under your real name. A public trail of small things you made is worth more than any résumé, and it is the one credential the garden actually reads. The desert asks who your father is. The garden asks what you shipped.
Fill your feed with these
Your recommended videos are a slot machine or a school, and you get to choose which. Subscribe to a few of these and the algorithm slowly turns into the smartest, weirdest engineering hallway you have ever walked down.
- Theo (t3.gg) — opinionated web-dev takes at a thousand words a minute. You will disagree, and learn anyway.
- Low Level — how the computer actually works, one layer beneath wherever you stopped asking.
- ThePrimeagen — a Vim evangelist who makes reading other people's code feel like a contact sport.
- Kai Lentit — deadpan satirical "interviews" that roast every tech archetype you are about to meet. Learn the culture by laughing at it first.
- Wookash Podcast — long, unhurried conversations with the people who build engines, graphics, and low-level magic.
- Linus Tech Tips — the on-ramp to hardware, where "what's inside the machine" stops being a mystery.
- 3Blue1Brown — the most beautiful math on the internet. It will make you actually see linear algebra and calculus.
- Mark Rober — an ex-NASA engineer who makes engineering feel like the best day of school you never got to have.
- Stuff Made Here — a robotics savant building impossible machines in his garage. First-principles thinking as a hobby.
- Michael Reeves — a genuine genius who builds gloriously stupid robots. Proof that "useless" and "brilliant" are not opposites.
- Emily The Engineer — absurd, delightful contraptions, whole messy process shown.
- Engineezy — engineering builds that turn "I wonder if you could…" into a finished thing.
- NileBlue — chemistry done at home with terrifying commitment. The pure joy of going deep for its own sake.
- Vercidium — game-engine performance wizardry. Watch someone make code fast on purpose.
A short shelf
Six books that do more than a semester. You do not need the whole reading list of the internet; you need these.
- The Mom Test — Rob Fitzpatrick. How to ask about your idea so people cannot just be nice to you. The best short book on this list; read it first.
- The Lean Startup — Eric Ries. Build, measure, learn — and why you talk to a customer before you write a line of code.
- The Hard Thing About Hard Things — Ben Horowitz. What running a company actually feels like when it is on fire, from someone who has been in the fire.
- Palo Alto — Malcolm Harris. A sweeping, critical history of the exact place you are moving toward. Know the ground you are about to stand on.
- The 48 Laws of Power — Robert Greene. Read it to recognize the moves being played around you — not to become someone who plays them. Understand it; do not always use it.
- The Laws of Success — Napoleon Hill. Old, earnest, occasionally dated, and still worth mining for the parts that have never stopped being true.
And the shows that somehow get it
Not homework — just the rare stories that render this world honestly. Watch them and the place will feel a little less foreign when you land.
- Silicon Valley (HBO) — the funniest and most accurate thing ever made about startups. It is a comedy, and it is also, quietly, a documentary.
- Mythic Quest (Apple TV+) — a game studio full of misfits who somehow keep shipping. Warmer than it has any right to be, and it will feel familiar fast.
- WeCrashed (Apple TV+) — the WeWork story. A masterclass in exactly how far charisma and cheap money can carry a bad idea before gravity remembers it exists.
- Super Pumped: The Battle for Uber (Showtime) — Travis Kalanick's Uber, dramatized: the raw, thrilling, often ugly anatomy of "growth at all costs" and the founder it eventually ate.
- The Billion Dollar Code (Netflix) — two German outsiders build a precursor to Google Earth, then take Big Tech to court over who really invented it. A gut-punch about ideas, credit, and the people who get quietly written out of the story.
- Unstable (Netflix) — a biotech-founder comedy starring Rob Lowe and his actual son. Lighter than the rest of this list, and it nails the founder-ego thing exactly.
They're just people — do not worship them
One thing nobody warns you about, because it only happens to people who come from where we come from: the first time you are in a room with someone who built a thing you have used a thousand times, it is almost impossible not to see them as a god. Fight that instinct. It is the one habit from back home that will actively hurt you here.
You will hear an enormous amount of bluster and confident opinion in the Bay — some of it brilliant, a lot of it just loud. The people saying it are people. A great many of them are wrong exactly as often as anyone you grew up with; they are simply wrong at a larger scale and under better lighting. The valley, for all its genuine magic, is mostly run by the same frustrating, self-impressed, occasionally-clueless human beings who run everything else everywhere. Do not put a single one of them on a pedestal, and never let someone's confidence overwrite your own judgment. Coming from where we come from, that is hard — these people can look like they descended from the sky. They did not. They took a train.
Here is what makes it worth it anyway: it is the home of the nerds. It is a place where you can genuinely bump into the people who built the tools you love — at a talk, in a coffee line, at one of those events — and find out they are approachable, curious, and just as strange as you are. That is the actual gift. Not gods to worship. Peers to go stand next to. Go for the room, not the idols — and then become one of the people in the room.
The through-line: you were never lacking talent. You were lacking water, and the water was mostly this — the open conversation of people who think like you, which you were simply never shown. Now you have been shown. When you are ready to stand in the field where it is all being built, Getting There has the train and the cheap way to stay.