Thanks HN for 15 years of support and helping me find my life's work

Tomorrow is the 15th anniversary of the first day of the Recurse Center (https://www.recurse.com/)

My cofounders and I did YC all the way back in the Summer of 2010, with the initial idea of building "OkCupid for jobs." That idea quickly fizzled, and we spent the better part of a year pivoting between other ideas that also failed.

Finally, we made something that we wanted ourselves: a self-directed programming retreat, where people built fun projects, contributed to open source, and helped each other become better programmers.

After running two small batches, we launched on HN[1] and got an incredible reception.

That post on HN helped us reach beyond our personal networks and meet programmers from around the world, many of whom have since become friends. HN brought us the majority of people who came to our next few batches, and in the years since, HN has remained our #2 source of applicants (after word of mouth).

Alas, pg's comment[2] on HN when we launched turned out to be prescient: Running free programming retreats isn't a billion-dollar business, but it's still a worthwhile thing to do, and has positively impacted over 3,000 people so far. And 15 years on I still wake up every day excited to keep working on it.

So, thanks HN, for helping make the Recurse Center possible, and for helping me find my life's work.

[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3435183

[2] "This sounds like a crazy plan for a startup, I realize, but this is the right sort of crazy. In fact, the way the Hackruiters think about Hacker School is a lot like the way we initially thought about YC: if it doesn't make money, it will at least have been a benevolent thing to do."

155 points | by nicholasjbs 5 hours ago

10 comments

  • ThePhysicist 7 minutes ago
    Congrats Sonali, Nick, Dave & everyone else! I had an incredible time with you all in NY more than 10 years ago, it was so cool, and I'm still thinking of it very fondly. Spent my days hacking away in the space near Canal Street and the nights and weekends exploring NYC with other Recursers, visiting museums, parks and venturing out to buy cheap dumplings by the dozen. I was quite poor back then but I enjoyed my life so much, had a tiny room at the Kolping house on the Upper East Side which was very run down and tiny but also very cheap, basically just went there for sleeping and spent every other minute in the space and outside. No distractions, no possessions beyond my laptop, no responsibilities, simple but happy times. And then in 2021 I found my dream job at DuckDuckGo through RC, been working there for almost five years now! Thanks for everything and great to see it's still going strong!
  • saulpw 9 minutes ago
    RC is a great community and I will be forever grateful to them for introducing me to several good friends that are still in my life 10 years later.
  • andrew_eu 1 hour ago
    I like the definition of social rules [0]. I also wonder whether the roof rule was written preemptively or retrospectively -- I hope the former.

    I have my own thanks to give to HN. It's connected me to interesting people, online and IRL. It's led to some very strong friendships. It's led me to multiple job opportunities, and usually the better ones. It's changing of course, but I've had a great time in this community so far, and that deserves thanks.

    0: https://www.recurse.com/social-rules

    • ghostly_s 22 minutes ago
      > I also wonder whether the roof rule was written preemptively or retrospectively -- I hope the former.

      Presume you're referring to [1], not the page you linked, and one might be inclined to accuse you of __feigning surprise__ but if not: using the roof is a quite common expectation in mid-rise buildings in big cities like NY, though not usually in a building you don't yourself own/lease in.

      1. https://www.recurse.com/code-of-conduct

    • opem 7 minutes ago
      How did you connect with people from hn and made irl friendships with them?
  • dgellow 1 hour ago
    I had the chance to work with a bunch of Recurse alumni over the past 4 years, they have all been amazing, brilliant engineers and overall great people :)
  • NetOpWibby 19 minutes ago
    I wish something like Recurse existed in Cupertino, I've always admired the program. Congrats on this milestone, most HN alumni don't make it past a decade.
  • joao 13 minutes ago
    Congratulations! From time to time I visit your website and consider applying when between jobs but never did. Might try this year :)
  • kuanbutts 40 minutes ago
    Thanks RC! I went back when it was Hacker School! Grateful that period of my life - grew so much!
  • thierrydamiba 58 minutes ago
    Awesome story, thanks for sharing!
  • shalom1112 10 minutes ago
    [dead]