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danw
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http://blogs.guardian.co.uk/organgrinder/2007/02/internet_people_how_to_make_su.html
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How to make a successful start-up
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danw
1,172,803,353
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iaKehq6qsdY
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Interactive multitouch cocktail bar [video]
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farmer
1,172,810,527
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http://skrbl.com
1
skrbl: easy to share online whiteboard
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dawie
1,172,806,159
OR just start a blog....
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[ 1858 ]
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jamiequint
1,172,810,357
um, why the mod-down... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative_feedback
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[ 1865 ]
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farmer
1,172,810,593
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http://www.redherring.com/Article.aspx?a=21475&hed=BitTorrent%e2%80%99s+Big+Play&sector=Industries&subsector=InternetAndServices
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BitTorrent's Big Play
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Elfan
1,172,814,197
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[ 1846 ]
http://www.getrichslowly.org/blog/2006/07/04/ben-franklins-advice-to-a-young-tradesman/
4
Ben Franklin's Advice to a Young Tradesman
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pg
1,172,807,000
These talks are from the first two startup schools, not YC dinners. However, I believe all of them except Wozniak have spoken at YC dinners as well.<p>These are the dinner speakers this (winter) batch: http://ycombinator.com/w7speakers.html
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brett
1,172,817,250
I'm wishing I could successfully internalize #4 right now.
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brett
1,172,816,351
also in the list: 2) NAND drives 3) Ultra-Wideband 4) Hosted hardware 5) Advanced CPU architectures
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Alex3917
1,172,810,002
Here are all the notes from 2006:<p>http://notelab.infogami.com/startupschool2006<p>And here is a zipped file of the 2005 notes:<p>http://www.alexkrupp.com/startup_school_05_notes.zip
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jamiequint
1,172,810,777
one of my favorite pg quotes from "The Power of the Marginal"...<p>"You often hear people say that you shouldn’t major in business in college, but this is actually an instance of a more general rule: don’t learn things from teachers who are bad at them."
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ereldon
1,172,814,269
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http://www.economist.com/printedition/displayStory.cfm?story_id=8781427&fsrc=RSS
1
Hackers in Eastern Europe: so much, yet so little.
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ecuzzillo
1,172,813,946
I've never seen or heard anything about a business plan competition, but they seem like amazingly bankrupt ideas. It sounds to me like they're a bunch of middle-aged employees of big companies or universities who have never started a business telling you what's a good business plan. But I *highly* doubt that the winners of business plan competitions correlate at all with successful businesses (as you yourself are an example). For that reason, it seems like they'd be the exclusive domain of PHBs, or at least the administration of them would be.
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[ 1843 ]
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pg
1,172,806,737
None of her arguments are convincing. In particular, it doesn't matter how many other people are starting startups. It's not as if there's some limit to the total number of startups that can succeed.
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mynameishere
1,172,817,407
"By the way..."<p>Pre-alpha.
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Alex3917
1,172,808,398
P.S. I just threw the business plan and marketing plan online.<p>http://www.alexkrupp.com/biz_plan.pdf<p>http://www.alexkrupp.com/marketing_plan.pdf<p>They actually won a couple of business plan competitions, so they're not completely terrible if you want an example. Plus maybe someone will get a good idea or two. <p>I also have a provisional patent on the above designs plus some new business methods relating to advertising that is going to expire in a few months... *sigh*
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[ 1817 ]
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Alex3917
1,172,807,452
The website is actually down but here was the elevator pitch:<p>"Emoticomm is a digital introduction device. Our stick-of-gum sized device uses Bluetooth to connect people with similar desires. We use proven hardware and open source software.<p>It's a shame how many missed opportunities exist because of difficulty in initial icebreaking.<p>For example, imagine two strangers in an elevator with only 30 seconds to potentially establish a relationship. Our product will discretely alert them to common interests. <p>We're targeting venues such as conferences, trade shows, and cruiseships. Our goal is to create a more efficient social experience.<p>Our product is a digital icebreaker. Digital handshakes will lead to physical ones."<p> You can see two mockups here, one of the product and one of the GUI:<p>http://www.alexkrupp.com/picture_library/3Dmodel.png<p>http://www.alexkrupp.com/picture_library/gui.png<p>(The idea behind the GUI was that info in green boxes would be public, info in yellow boxes would be viewable by friends of friends, and info in red boxes would be viewable by friends only)<p>It was a decent idea but I guess I wasn't clued in enough to realize that I have no where near enough skills to pull off a hardware project. At least I learned a thing or two...
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[ 1807, 1863 ]
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Harj
1,172,816,086
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http://gigaom.com/2007/03/01/is-google-a-media-company/
2
Is Google a Media Company?
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brett
1,172,816,277
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[ 1822 ]
http://computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9011969&intsrc=hm_ts_head
3
Computer world lists "The Top Five Technologies You Need to Know About in '07" - rails is first
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horar
1,172,808,495
It takes an extraordinary amount of drive to keep trying in the situation described, but where does that drive come from?<p>Do you have a vision of something that "needs" to be done and you just have to find out how to do it? ... Or are you driven by a need to do something, anything, but you still don't know what?<p>At some point these combined forces overwhelm you, you must risk everything and there will be no going back. Nor does success, however you measure it, bring relief because the goal posts keep moving.
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staunch
1,172,821,790
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[ 1909, 1864, 1876 ]
http://www.wesabe.com/page/talk_to_jason
15
(800) 511-8544 -- Speak with the CEO -- 7 days a week 12:00-4:00PM
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brett
1,172,817,098
Even if her arguments do hold up and now is somehow relatively worse than some time in the past (or future?) for starting startups it's still hard to argue that startups are worse than the alternative. Hopefully no one's arguing that this is an especially good time to take a crap job at a large company.
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dfranke
1,172,809,413
For Digg to sue Conde Nast would be a complete waste of time. There's no obvious cause of action, and even if they managed to find one, the damages are inconsequential.<p>Also, this blogger's English is nearly incomprehensible. And I thought even Micros~1 had figured out that smart tags are a horrible idea.
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Elfan
1,172,813,407
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[ 1816 ]
http://blogs.zdnet.com/microsoft/?p=293
3
Could a startup beat Microsoft and Google to market with cloud OS?
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Elfan
1,172,813,578
I cut and pasted the title and it was displayed as "‘cloud OS’?". <p>On a tangent, I thought it interesting that Google has been hiring up Plan 9 engineers.
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fake0
1,172,826,904
Sorry but that essay _is_ severely disjointed and unfocused. The prompt asked for a specific work experience/decision and you essentially produced a bootleg PG essay. This is coming from a Cornellian who is going the startup route after graduation so I feel ya on the story -- you just failed to play the game. Nonetheless, your professor is an idiot if that quote is indeed verbatim. Somehow, though, after speaking with my housemates who took multiple OB classes, I doubt it was.
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amichail
1,172,840,407
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[ 1895, 1842 ]
1
Startup idea for helping people better understand their printed books
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jwecker
1,172,826,583
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http://headrush.typepad.com/creating_passionate_users/2006/01/death_by_riskav.html
1
Death by Risk Aversion
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precipice
1,172,825,788
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[ 1844 ]
http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2006/03/entrepreneurial_proverbs.html
12
Entrepreneurial Proverbs
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Alex3917
1,172,845,893
Conceptual Age: real or hype?<p>Software startups can run circles around big companies because of their agility and their ability to follow best practices as opposed to standard practices. What are a startup's biggest advantages in the conceptual age?<p>Is sensemaking purely a service industry, or will there be a thriving product market? <p>What is the sustainable competitive advantage in a startup that revolves around sensemaking?
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[ 1854 ]
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amichail
1,172,840,441
Please contact me if you might be interested in pursuing such a startup: [email protected].
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[ 1851 ]
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volida
1,172,832,966
define bad, define company, define everybody else<p>being a bad or hard time it doesn't mean you can't do it. creating a company doesn't mean you will produce a new technology or you have thought the next big thing...<p>after all, we all know that 1 out of 10 start-ups succeed...<p>from her speech 1 month later, you can see that they made flickr it for themselves..it was fun etc...<p>http://wiki.ycombinator.com/presentations/apr06/Caterina_Fake.mp3<p>i guess is not about making a company as much as about doing it for you and hopefully, your idea, passion and implementation will produce a success...making a company is one of the steps...<p>from ''Founders At work'', being over-funded may kill your company... so everybody else getting funded means nothing...
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mattculbreth
1,172,835,677
I saw a big momentum improvement in my startup as soon as I got a development server setup with Trac. The wiki on there has definitely given us a place to toss ideas around and to have them recorded. The problem with email is that things get too spread out across different threads. The wiki lets you structure it more permanently.
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jwecker
1,172,826,185
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http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/07_11/b4025405.htm
1
Designing Change
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jwecker
1,172,825,032
let's take a pop over and see:<p>* Pot No Longer Beneficial Only to the Cheez-It Industry<p>* Judge suspends man's sentence after he raped 12-year-old 5x<p>* Box Wine Dispenser For Your Boxed Wine Presumably Comes in a Box<p>I'll stop there, and rest my case. More importantly, I haven't seen a single decent comment over there in many months. I don't come here for the news as much as the peers.
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jmzachary
1,172,845,062
It's great how each generation re-discovers the wisdom of Franklin. Unfortunately, it's sad how they fail to follow it.
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Alex3917
1,172,845,410
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[ 1926, 1889 ]
http://paul.kedrosky.com/archives/2006/06/16/ateams_and_btea.html
8
Can VCs tell an A-Team from a B-Team?
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1,840
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story
sharpshoot
1,172,836,899
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http://www.rashmisinha.com/archives/05_09/tagging-cognitive.html
3
The Cognitive Analysis of Tagging
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danw
1,172,834,149
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[ 1906, 1947 ]
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/attention_economy_overview.php
3
The Attention Economy: An Overview
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SwellJoe
1,172,829,072
What? Do you think they're made of money? Paul, Trevor and Robert only got 50 million out of Yahoo. A table costs...literally hundreds of dollars! (Of course, Paul does cook the dinners himself...but there's been a disturbing trend towards pizza at events and even one of the dinners.)
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mexicali
1,172,824,604
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[ 1828, 1868 ]
http://news.ycombinator.com
6
Is YCombinator News better than Digg?
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1,836
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story
danw
1,172,833,876
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http://www.thinkvitamin.com/features/biz/copyright-know-the-facts
1
Copyright: get to know the facts
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1,848
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Alex3917
1,172,845,619
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[ 1849, 1869 ]
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/13.02/brain.html
6
What are the implications of the Conceptual Age for startups?
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1,852
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awt
1,172,847,338
Did you hear that everyone? It's time to quit and go home. So please. Stop working on your companies. Seriously. You're not good enough. You'll never make it.<p>Oh and if you need a job let me know.
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jwecker
1,172,842,726
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http://webworkerdaily.com/2007/03/01/5-web-based-entrepreneurship-experiments/
1
5 New Jobs of the Web 2.0 Generation
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amichail
1,172,847,415
Yes, I would be interested in reading your essay/book draft. It might provide excellent motivation for this startup idea :)
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Alex3917
1,172,847,091
I'm actually working on a similar problem to this now, not as a startup but as a long essay / short book. I'm taking a literacy class this semester, not because I want to be a teacher but because I'm really fascinated by just how illiterate our country is. 1/3 of Americans never read another book after HS for the rest of their lives. We talk about marketing to the base of the pyramid in Africa, but how about the base of the literacy pyramid in the US. You have this huge market that generally has enough money to buy books, but because of a combination of poor literacy skills and lack of interest there is nothing happening. It's not just lower class people either; my dad doesn't read very many books and he was at Davos last month. Granted he's on email and reading reports all day, but still. <p>I can send you my writing in a couple weeks when I at least have a coherent draft if you want.
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[ 1853, 1872, 1861 ]
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Alex3917
1,172,842,408
The serial entrepreneur proverb:<p>If you go to bat enough times you may never hit a home run, but sooner or later you're bound to get hit by a pitch and walked.
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danw
1,172,835,717
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http://gigaom.com/2007/03/02/last-desktop-app-standing-im-client/
2
Last desktop app standing: IM Client
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Alex3917
1,172,842,145
Exactly.
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amichail
1,172,849,303
I certainly believe it is real. It would be nice however if computer science education and research would have more to do with this conceptual age.
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[ 1855 ]
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jwecker
1,172,827,740
Please, if I'm on this site for more than an hour or so a day, please pop up a message that says "Get back to work, slacker!" and don't display the page for the rest of the day. Thank you.
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danw
1,172,850,568
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http://paul.kedrosky.com/archives/2007/03/02/map_of_google_s.html
3
Map of Google Subsidiaries Worldwide, with Some Surprises
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dpapathanasiou
1,172,846,602
It's never a "good time" -- you could always use more capital, more experience, more co-founders, etc.<p>But if you fall into that mindset, you'll wait for "conditions to improve", and never take the first step towards getting started.
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wastedbrains
1,172,852,686
The problem with a blog is the organization. Many times it is date and category based, and you can better sort a wiki. Also I have found the speed in editing and posting to the wiki to be faster and simpler.<p>Another issue unless your running your own blog is most blog services run public, and you probably just want to have the discussion with your co founders and advisers. Most blogs also don't provide revision support which we found to be very useful when multiple people are editing and working on a file, a good safety net. <p>Blogs are great for publishing and archiving those items, but not necessarily the best for continuous brainstorming.
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Elfan
1,172,852,500
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[ 1874 ]
http://steve.yegge.googlepages.com/being-the-averagest
5
Being the Averagest
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Alex3917
1,172,849,601
Agreed. The study of IT traditionally ends at data. Brad Burnham actually has a really amazing post about this:<p>http://www.unionsquareventures.com/2007/01/whats_next.html
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mattculbreth
1,172,852,931
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http://www.mymicroisv.com/?p=226
1
Web First Impressions--and what to do with them
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Sic
1,172,857,198
Hi Alex<p>I'm also interested in your essay. please email it to [email protected] thanks
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danielha
1,172,858,591
I enjoy the reddit-like simplicity of YC News, but I come here mostly for the community of like-minded people, as jwecker noted. The digg community is much more vocal, however, and I'm hoping more lengthy discussions will come out of these links here at YC News.
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dougw
1,172,857,824
Does anyone know of a good FOSS product that emulates the functionality of Lotus Teamroom? I am anal about my organization and much prefer a directory structure for it's ease of organization. I currently use a hacked verstion of Relay (http://www.ecosmear.com/relay) with a custom written XML parsing function to add context to directory and files for my Wiki-/teamroom- like functionality. However, is there a good alternative to this that a reader knows of?
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danw
1,172,854,400
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http://www.hongkiat.com/blog/revealing-methods-of-drawing-web-20-logos/
1
How web 2.0 logos are drawn
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dougw
1,172,857,993
This sounds like a wonderful idea. Not entirely new, but a great way to keep one ear to the ground during the critical phase of business development where you want to get a solid product core out to users. <p>However, this could never scale with growth. I don't think this is a problem as the early adoption gives way to regular customers and viral growth, but they need to plan for proper customer support after directly calling the CEO is no longer viable.
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[ 1875 ]
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ecuzzillo
1,172,857,998
The negative feedback wasn't the problem; it was more the ogmz lozl amazing.
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[ 1867 ]
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danielha
1,172,859,080
This is a great article (excerpt, actually) -- thanks.<p>Creativity over competence. This is what separates simple programmers from software engineers.
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[ 1877 ]
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danielha
1,172,863,384
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[ 1879 ]
http://blog.scifi.com/tech/archives/2007/03/01/rfid_staples_te.html
2
RFID staples tell you where you put down that report
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avitzur
1,172,859,273
I started programming on an HP-65 in the 70's. That was before graphing calculators, though.
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danielha
1,172,857,950
I briefly looked through your documents, but there are a few conclusions I can draw from the elevator pitch alone.<p>The aim of your product would be better suited as software for mobile phones. From the pitch, I can see no reason why a consumer would purchase the device if it provided no immediate gains. Getting use out of an Emoticomm would entail purchasing the device and waiting for it to reach mass market adoption.
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dougw
1,172,858,141
Just curious if there is anyone else on news.YC that had their first programming experiences with their first graphing calculator? I started with my TI-83 and z80 Assembly in 6th grade learning at ticalc.org.
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[ 1870 ]
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danielha
1,172,859,535
I'd be interested in reading that essay too. Polish up that draft and post it up here on YC News. :)
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nostrademons
1,172,859,669
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[ 1888, 2134, 2053 ]
http://bnoopy.typepad.com/bnoopy/2005/01/startups_and_th.html
23
Startups and the Stockdale Paradox
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amichail
1,172,861,920
"Yes, there are programming techniques to be learned, and there are tricks to help you keep a large software project on its rails. Unit testing, computational complexity, all these things are very important. But saying that software projects fail for lack of engineering is like saying that the latest Stephen King's novel is boring because he forgot to draw a UML diagram of the book." http://www.daniel-lemire.com/blog/archives/2007/02/04/why-building-software-is-hard/
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jamiequint
1,172,858,287
apologies, but it is amazing
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danielha
1,172,859,406
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http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/15.03/posts.html?pg=3
1
Launch Party 2.0 -- A look into the culture and why it's Web 2.0, not Bubble 2.0
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danielha
1,172,860,530
Interesting piece. How can programming be tested in competition? There's always TopCoder (http://www.topcoder.com/).
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[ 1886 ]
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danielha
1,172,863,651
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http://gizmodo.com/gadgets/pcs/yummy-kitchen-connect-is-web-20-for-the-kitchen-241060.php
1
Yummy Kitchen Connect is Web 2.0 for the Kitchen
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mattculbreth
1,172,866,215
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http://www.joelonsoftware.com/items/2007/03/02.html
7
Joel on Office Space Calculations
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dfranke
1,172,870,845
His criteria for the definition of A teams all seem to revolve around experience rather than talent. Experienced people probably already have some money, which means they have the potential to lose it, which means that they're likely to be more conservative. Being conservative means cutting both your standard deviation and your mean outcome. But VCs shouldn't be encouraging conservatism, because when you're running a fund, the law of large numbers kicks in and standard deviation doesn't really matter. It should be all about the mean.
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cbx
1,172,864,164
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http://communitynext.com/threadless-video-notes
1
Skinnycorp's Jeffrey and Jake talk about "Threadless and other things of Awesomeness" at the CommunityNext conference.
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brett
1,172,870,429
That article is awesome. I've always has trouble articulating my belief in the power of positive thinking without sounding like a hippie.
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[ 2429, 1933 ]
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stumpy124
1,172,865,209
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http://www.userscape.com/blog/index.php/site/comments/what_they_never_told_you_about_handling_b2b_transactions/
2
What They Never Told You About Handling B2B Transactions
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Nate
1,172,861,504
This is just another company offering to "help" you with your credit card debt.<p>Probably, the only reason that you can talk to the CEO is because there aren't any other employees to talk to. It's likely the company doesn't have many customers either.
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Elfan
1,172,865,620
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http://www.infoworld.com/article/07/02/26/HNsun25wherenow_1.html
2
Sun at 25: Where are the founders now?
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danielha
1,172,860,936
I don't think anyone believes this to be their proper customer support line in the short or long term. <p>This is a popular way to become personable to your customers. This is exemplified further in smaller mom-and-pop shops where intimacy is a selling factor. <p>Few people will call, but many will feel good knowing that their calls will be answered by the main man.
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Elfan
1,172,868,610
One idea that has been on my mind recently is the Arts Digita (and other) system where you have small teams that work directly with the customer. If they do well, they will get a bonus, if not, then everyone knows who is at fault and things need to change.
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juwo
1,172,872,024
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[ 1899, 1945, 1900, 1967, 1892, 1902, 1940, 1914, 1896, 1931 ]
http://juwo-works.blogspot.com/2007/03/i-need-your-advice-startup-failing.html
5
I need your advice! Startup Failing. Should I simply release the product?
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1,172,875,894
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[ 1953, 2242, 1898, 1903 ]
http://www.zooppa.com/
11
Zooppa (User-created ads)
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pg
1,172,875,418
If it's divided into layers, you could release the substrate as open source and keep some of the uppermost bits.
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[ 1939 ]
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msgbeepa
1,172,874,738
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http://www.wikio.com/webinfo?id=14012262
2
WordPress 2.1.1 Dangerous, Upgrade Right now to 2.1.2!!!
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socmoth
1,172,870,422
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http://www.juixe.com/techknow/index.php/2007/02/28/rails-performance-link-fest/
10
Information on making rails faster.
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danielha
1,172,863,411
How's that for a startup idea? ;)
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tim
1,172,868,069
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http://mitworld.mit.edu/video/424/
1
Carly Fiorina about Leadership and Tough Choices (Video)
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pg
1,172,877,328
It does in a sense, because it makes it faster to add new features.
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juwo
1,172,876,605
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pg
1,172,875,948
Just a dupe, IIRC.
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juwo
1,172,876,200
It was a failed idea from Radio Shack (?) in 1998 - I still have the stuff they gave away for free when it failed - the scanner shaped like a d****. But if you are interested in this, then why dont you look at my post http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=1890 - Anil
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[ 1908 ]
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run4yourlives
1,172,877,555
Interesting and intriguing idea, horrible English name, and near rip-off Kappa logo (the back to back girls, similar to Kappa's back to back girl and guy).
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[ 1904 ]
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jwecker
1,172,877,905
I went to juwo.com when you first posted here and thought "huh, that's kind of funny that there's nowhere where you can actually use the product..." You're competition is going to have a chance to copy your ideas at some point or another anyway- it's a simple fact of business- even if you do have a patent. And no amount of miraculous outside funding will help that. Take a risk [ http://headrush.typepad.com/creating_passionate_users/2006/01/death_by_riskav.html ].<p>Get the product into as many people's hands as quickly as possible, as massively as possible. If there's a chance that some hacker is willing to do some of the work to make it work with other media formats, then for heaven's sake open source the product (or part of it like pg said). What do you have to lose? You're product is more than just a list of features. Believe it or not, many people will not do a point-by-point comparison of your product with other products- there's the coolness factor, loyalty to you and your company, the subtle touches of your product, the way you support it and it's users, the vision you have of how it can be used to enrich someone's life, how frequently you respond and update it, etc. etc.<p>None of that will matter if no one is using it. Start a following. It may fail either way- that's got to be part of the reason you still have a day job, but it has absolutely no chance of success if no one is using it and spreading the word about it.
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[ 1938 ]
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danielha
1,172,879,505
Right now, your competitors have a product. You have a list of features, as jwecker put it. I do remember reading your posts on juwo here a couple times, and still I am unsure on what exactly it does. <p>You sunk a lot into this and giving it away would yield you 0 return. I understand that. But don't let regret and hindsight turn into future mistakes. Get it out there and get yourself a user base.
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[ 2001, 1998 ]
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