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python_kiss
1,173,151,766
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http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/yahoo_mixd_closes.php
1
Yahoo Mixd Closes - Peanut Butter Manifesto in Action?
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spez
1,173,151,831
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true
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[ 2512 ]
http://paul.graham.isgay.com
6
Neighborhood in shock as Paul Graham is accused of displaying flagrant homosexuality.
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gustaf
1,173,151,873
After hearing Fred Wilson talk I'd definitely say Union Square Ventures. At least your best east coast option, together with First Round.
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akkartik
1,173,153,004
Zawinski's law didn't really apply to windows either.<p>But it's a good question. Both edges of the feedback loop between search and social network are interesting:<p>a) Social networks where we have to manually link to friends will not last.<p>b) Google's integrating search with notebooks, groups, hosting, email and IM. Perhaps those are primitives for a social network rather than an OS.<p>c) Making search more relevant using a social network is perhaps still a valid approach, in spite of the lack of success so far.
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amichail
1,173,152,823
I have done some work on code search that's different from krugle, google code search, etc.:<p>http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/freeabs_all.jsp?arnumber=972749<p>http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/freeabs_all.jsp?arnumber=1007979<p>http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=776816.776831<p>http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/freeabs_all.jsp?arnumber=1357819<p>
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python_kiss
1,173,151,973
Jeff Bezos once described John Doerr as the center of gravity in the Silicon Valley :)
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mikesabat
1,173,152,222
I am a month past 29 and just got my first "real job" (previously I had started 2 businesses and joined a good friend in his business). A friend I met told me about Saturn's Return (google it) which is a f*cked up period of life that happens between 27.5 and 29.5 so hopefully Im on my way out.<p>BTW the "real job" means the 4th person in at a digital media startup. Older and Wiser.
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jwecker
1,173,154,409
I live on Maui and even though the Maui High Performance Computing Center is here plus the Haleakala Observatory- I've met only 3 or 4 geeks my whole time here, and no tech entrepreneurs. Of course, I can't complain. I mean, I live on Maui.
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python_kiss
1,173,154,147
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http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070306/tc_nm/microsoft_google_copyright_dc
1
Microsoft to blast Google for its copyright policy
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akkartik
1,173,152,400
Absolutely awesome turn-around, thanks!
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akkartik
1,173,155,822
And it's great too. As soon as I can see a list of my own comments it becomes relatively easy to check recent ones for responses, and automatic notification becomes less important. It's interesting how these features interact.
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avibryant
1,173,158,458
Not really, but feel free to drop by Stamps Landing (where Dabble DB and Snipshot have our offices) for a beer some time... email me first to set something up.
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domp
1,173,157,947
I'm 24 and not interested in being an assistant for my whole life. I spent time at some major labels which sounds cool but it really wasn't. It turned out to be a pretty frustrating and disheartening experience, but I learned a lot. After some time in NYC I just decided to come back to Massachusetts and really try and get my own ideas off the ground. My partner is 25 and rotting away at a repetitive flash development job. He's damn good at flash though haha
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Harj
1,173,155,183
this article certainly provides v strong support for your view<p>http://www.imitrust.com/thepit/2007/01/25/sequoia-capital-the-entrepreneurs-entrepreneur/
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ecuzzillo
1,173,155,695
Seems to me that we have a hole. http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=29<p>Speaking of which, I do not entirely understand what a dead link is. I told it to show dead links, and links other than this one that were dead have been reasonable, so I'm confused. Normally, I think of dead links as ones that don't work anymore, but the dead ones here certainly do work.
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kul
1,173,158,675
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[ 2519 ]
http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,16376,1677772,00.html
7
How Steve Jobs prepares for speeches
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jwecker
1,173,158,887
Have two primary objectives with your startups- to get them stable, solve the big/fun problems etc., and secondly to replace yourself. I know we're all irreplaceable, but the truth is a good businessman can find someone almost immediately to train and groom to take over whatever it is you're doing- releasing you to move onto the next thing. You'll have finished most of the creative stuff that needed you. Then you go back every 6 to 18 months when they have an exciting new problem and save their butts.
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sly
1,173,158,896
Irrelevant to the rest of the discussion, but just a suggestion: get the domain name octapart.com, too. Lots of people spell octopus wrong. Good luck! Sera
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kul
1,173,158,931
In short: prepare like your life depended on it.
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Harj
1,173,160,423
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[ 2525, 132466, 2541, 2531, 2524, 2527 ]
3
Who is your dream co-founder?
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jwecker
1,173,160,420
I remember for so many years people abhorring javascript. For quite a while though it was the only language being commonly used that had first class functions where you could program in a functional way.<p>"'I thought JavaScript was just super-dumb Java'. Lots of programmers and web developers use Javascript this way, tweaking HTML DOM elements, declaring variables without types, and generally writing like it was BASIC for the web. Now we find that the C-style syntax and Java-like supporting libraries were hiding our friend, the lambda."<p>http://jfkbits.blogspot.com/2006_05_01_archive.html (near the bottom)<p>It's got nothing on Ruby, but you can still do some amazing things with it, IMO:<p>http://parenscript.org/<p>http://chumsley.org/jwacs/<p>Anyway, nice to have people seeing it for what it really is, even if it's no Arc :)
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dfranke
1,173,161,459
Bruce Perens.
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Harj
1,173,160,401
Hmm interesting question. I suppose there is no need to restrict but I would say that as great as Woz is - would he really add more to your startup than an angel investing veteran like Ron Conway? Investing is as much about bringing a list of contacts to the table as it is about anything else.
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Harj
1,173,160,571
I don't want to wear this theme thin but a comment on my dream investor thread made me think about this. If you could start a company with anyone in the world who would it be?<p>As a non-tech person I'd probably pick something who was strongly technical - most likely Steve Wozniak.
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jwecker
1,173,160,549
deVinci
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python_kiss
1,173,162,851
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http://mashable.com/2007/03/05/china-livejournal/
2
China has banned LiveJournal!
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domp
1,173,158,943
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http://www.saveourinternetradio.com/2007/03/04/the-view-from-paradise/
1
RIAA could change the market for internet radio startups
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dfranke
1,173,161,133
It's more about street cred than anything else. I want an investor who will make people think "if he's putting his money into this company, it's worth checking out". A knowledgable VC can bring me to other investors/acquirers. Someone like Woz could bring other investors to me.
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staunch
1,173,164,075
I love this type of startup. It's the definition of doing "one thing well". I think there's room for thousands of "utility features" like this. No single company can possibly do more than a few of them well, which leaves a lot of room for the small development teams to pick one and own it.
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python_kiss
1,173,163,061
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[ 2555, 2556 ]
http://www.process-one.net/en/blogs/article/web_20_shifting_from_get_fast_to_get_massive/
4
Web 2.0: Shifting from "Get Fast" to "Get Massive" this
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staunch
1,173,163,690
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[ 2533 ]
http://addthis.com/
3
AddThis.com -- Saving 100 Million People 20 Minutes Each
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dfranke
1,173,165,878
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[ 2601 ]
http://www.braithwaite-lee.com/weblog/2005/03/are-you-thinking-of-working-for-start.html
6
How to assess a job offer from a startup
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danielha
1,173,168,227
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http://venturebeat.com/2007/03/05/yume-uses-humans-and-machines-for-video-ads/
1
YuMe uses humans and machines for video ads
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danielha
1,173,167,770
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[ 2629 ]
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/mynetscape_20.php
4
My.Netscape Being Re-Born as Web 2.0 Personalized Homepage
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2,540
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staunch
1,173,166,975
Joe Kraus calls vertical search "top down" entrepreneurship:<p>http://www.ikiw.org/2006/09/18/a-conversation-with-joe-kraus-co-founder-and-ceo-of-jotspot/<p>These guys appear to be scratching their own itch, so I think they have a shot at least.
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danielha
1,173,167,212
There's a lot of industry veterans that I would love to work with. <p>But as far as a co-founder goes, I'm happy with my current one. We have a great working relationship and we're good friends -- plus our skills compliment each other.
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jwecker
1,173,165,799
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http://www.jesserasch.com/jesse_rasch/2007/03/unventure_capit.html
1
UnVenture Capital: An Alternative Approach to Startup Investing
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Tron
1,173,165,150
Indeed. Although I'm sure by the time he's through with you, that "co" will be but a distant memory..
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dfranke
1,173,166,149
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http://www.wingedpig.com/archives/2007/03/back_to_the_future_246.html
4
Re: startups as reimplemented UNIX commands -- Mark Fletcher fesses up
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jwecker
1,173,166,018
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http://www.evancarmichael.com/Startup/990/Be-Passionate-and-Stay-Committed.html
1
Be Passionate and Stay Committed
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prashantdesale
1,173,164,253
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http://onista.wordpress.com
1
Just happy to see fake email address in DB
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python_kiss
1,173,161,856
Steve Jobs has the midas touch. I would rather have him as the cofounder.
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staunch
1,173,170,564
Patents offer an illusion of protection -- their only real value is in boosting one's valuation. I think most technical barriers are an illusion too. It's ridiculously hard to create something new that actually works for users, but it's almost always trivial to clone something that exists.<p>Sites with no competitive technical barriers: YouTube/Flickr/MySpace/Digg/Reddit/Blogger/Slashdot/IMDB, etc.<p>Look how quickly video sites sprang up once YouTube showed us how to do it well. And despite the flood of more technically advanced clones, no one is making a dent in YouTube's traffic.
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chris_l
1,173,168,843
My experience is that the lack of something else that holds your attention worsens your "ADD" with the money earning project. By having a hobby project on the side (10-20h), I can effectively work on the money project (50+ h) after it gets a bit tedious.<p>Also, having paying customers improves your discipline quickly...
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danielha
1,173,167,393
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[ 2543 ]
http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/03/05/100-million-valuation-for-geni/
1
$100 Million Valuation For Geni
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Harj
1,173,168,338
we're all happy with our co-founders, this was intended as a more theoretical question. i believe that people are always the best way to find the best people and asking the question who would you most want to work with, is a more perceptive way of seeing which entrepreneurs people respect the most.
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staunch
1,173,163,522
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brad_Fitzpatrick<p>
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theudude2002
1,173,171,699
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[ 2578 ]
http://www.zoliblog.com/blog/_archives/2007/3/5/2783574.html?message=
5
Desktop Software: A Failed Model
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ereldon
1,173,173,877
The overall point is valid -- having a lot of users is the main way that a lot of companies make/want to make money, therefore companies should focus on scaling issues, therefore... "use Erlang."<p>However, conflating Web 1.0 "get fast" with Ruby on Rails "develop fast" is:<p>1) wrong: with extremely limited resources and a long list of priorities, startups need to start with fast, basic tools in order to get a functional site up -- to then discover what people want to use. scaling comes later, if ever.<p>2) self-serving: this guy seems to be intent on getting more companies using what he has to offer<p>Conclusion: mind the hyperbole.
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dfranke
1,173,174,701
Fair enough, but my point remains that the programmers are implementing a spec designed by someone else. When your hackers are completely in control, you can judge them simply by their ability to get things done. If they're implementing someone else's spec, then measurement isn't that simple because their performance will be heavily influenced by the quality of the spec, no matter how much veto power you give them. So, judging by skill at optimizing might well be the next-best alternative.<p>Then again, maybe we're all being ridiculously overanalytical and Gates just meant "improving" when he said "optimizing".
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mattculbreth
1,173,173,247
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http://venturebeat.com/2007/03/05/legalforce-a-marketplace-for-patents/
1
A Marketplace for Patents
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danielha
1,173,167,576
I give this a whirl when they launched. I wasn't too intrigued from the get-go. But I started adding my immediate family tree and, days later, I noticed it grew from my additions -- my dad joined the site (from the email I gave them) and contributed! I felt they had that subtle something when I noticed the broad appeal.
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staunch
1,173,171,197
I think it's a no-brainer to add Google Analytics to any site. I also have my own set of little analytics instrumentation for monitoring extremely specific behavior in real-time.
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davidw
1,173,172,540
Ok, I don't like DRM either, and agree it's most likely an overall negative, but his whole "post scarcity" thing is kind of BS. When he's being a bit more honest, he admits that you need to follow the scarcity to make money.
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danielha
1,173,169,966
I understood the intent of the question. :)<p>I wasn't making a point of any sort, just making a side-note that I wouldn't want to work with anybody else with my current project. To more relevantly answer the question: there's a lot out there that I respect. As my dream co-founder? I'd have to give that a little more thought.
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bootload
1,173,173,254
'... So, since all Programmers are confined to the straight-jacket given to them by the Designers ...'<p>Not so. At MS, programmers are king. <p>A Program Manager comes up with the spec. It's up to the programmer(s) to implement it. So anything the programmer wants to ditch, goes. <p>Read more at JOS, 'Painless Functional Specifications - Part 3: But... How?' ~ http://tinyurl.com/3asbrp & in this excellent book, 'MICROSOFT SECRETS' (978-0028740485) ~ http://tinyurl.com/2ke4hf
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bootload
1,173,174,083
there are no 'silver bullets'. <p>google has solved the 'get massive' partly in using the 'Map Reduce' [0] algorythm written in cpp. So looking at one particular language [1] alone to solve the problem(s) of parallel processing is bogus.<p>Reference<p>[0] Map Reduce, 'Google MapReduce tool'<p>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mapreduce [Accessed Tuesday, 6 March, 2007]<p> [1] Joel On Software, 'Can Your Programming Language Do This?' <p>http://www.joelonsoftware.com/items/2006/08/01.html [Accessed Tuesday, 6 March, 2007]
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danielha
1,173,176,221
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http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/mostadmired/2007/index.html
1
America's Most Admired Companies
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jwecker
1,173,176,523
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http://www.projectmanagementsource.com/2006/08/lessons_from_pr.html
1
101 Lessons from Project Management
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danielha
1,173,176,239
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http://money.cnn.com/2007/03/05/news/companies/google_salaries/index.htm?postversion=2007030517
1
Google CEO, co-founders stick with $1 salary
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jwecker
1,173,176,692
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http://zenhabits.blogspot.com/2007/02/top-20-motivation-hacks-overview.html
1
Top 20 Motivation Hacks
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mickael
1,173,177,288
Hello,<p>Of course, it is self serving, like 37signals buzz on Ruby was self-serving too. I does not mean that you have to trust me. You can check by yourself and make your own opinion. I really doubt that people will switch to Erlang because I said it is the way to go.<p>They will do so because they have assessed the technology as an alternative. My goal is only to make Erlang known as an alternative for large scale infrastructure, which is not the case now. Nothing more.
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jjwiseman
1,173,176,701
Also see the notes and discussion at http://notelab.infogami.com/startupschool2006
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staunch
1,173,179,206
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1
Successful Companies That Did Without an SQL-based RDBMS?
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aglarond
1,173,180,640
The last line of the article, "If you start with nothing, you’re forced to think about everything.", really sums-up for me one of the real benefits of a startup: you can start from scratch. There are no legacy systems to integrate, no "historical awkwardness" (well, it's that way because it's always been that way...), and no politics. You get a blank slate with a startup - every aspect can be thought about and done right (for all values of "right" that are valid at the moment the thinking is done). Time to innovate...
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staunch
1,173,178,366
'...Gates just meant "improving" when he said "optimizing".'<p>I think that's the case.
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mickael
1,173,177,432
I am not talking about silver bullet. I am talking about alternatives. For now people largely think that ther is only one way to do it. The point of my article is to show that there is more than one way to do it and that it might pay off to think about this before hand if you have to make a living of a web-based service.
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msgbeepa
1,173,185,970
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http://www.avinio.blogspot.com/2007/02/boost-readership-of-your-blogs.html
1
Boost The Readership Of Your Blogs
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dougw
1,173,188,955
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http://paul.kedrosky.com/archives/2007/03/05/everything_i_kn_3.html
2
Everything I Know About Business I Learned from Mountain-biking
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goodgoblin
1,173,184,593
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http://blogher.org/node/10441
1
Male vs. Female Bootstrappers
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python_kiss
1,173,187,832
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http://blog.outer-court.com/archive/2007-03-06-n24.html
3
Ex-Google Answers Researchers Launch Q&A Site
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0
2,572
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story
juwo
1,173,190,519
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[ 2573, 2597 ]
2
Is news.YCombinator an interesting test bed for software startup philosophies?
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2,573
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comment
juwo
1,173,190,893
Observing this newsgroup, I see at least a few things in this experiment:<p>1) Release Early, Release Often. I am certain the programmer who wrote it is a better, more intelligent, more competent programmer than I. IMHO there are so many irritations with this software because it was released prematurely. Even Paul Graham says it is bare-bones. Yet people keep coming back. In spite of it. It's because of the benefit of chatting at a high quality watering hole for entrepreneur elephants.<p>2) The UI is very different from the traditional newsgroup interface. If you are making people do things differently, then the benefit should be extraordinary (Weinberger?). I am realizing this for myself. (See http://juwo-works.blogspot.com/2007/03/i-need-your-advice-startup-failing.html)<p>3) Did they have to write this from scratch - was it the right strategy. Couldnt they have built on top of some open source newsgroup code?
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[ 2921, 2588 ]
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story
sharpshoot
1,173,194,108
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http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/14577780.htm
4
Q & A with Peter Thiel - Where Web 2.0 will take Silicon Valley
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0
2,576
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story
dawie
1,173,193,228
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http://www.ishopr.com/blog/2007/03/05/ishopr-feature-screencast/
1
iShopr Feature Screencast
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0
2,575
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comment
juwo
1,173,191,400
by skin in the game, I am talking investment or some way they can have pain. To avoid irresponsible advice.
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2,574
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Elfan
1,173,191,040
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http://www.iwillteachyoutoberich.com/blog/conscious-spending-how-my-friend-spends-21000year-on-going-out
1
Conscious spending: How my friend spends $21,000/year on going out
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0
2,578
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comment
mynameishere
1,173,194,140
Webapps are sort of a throwback to the dumb terminal + mainframe model. This has certain advantages, and where those advantages apply, of course you're going to be successful. If you don't mind having less than 100 percent control over your email, and don't mind google's data mining it for [any|all] reasons, then go ahead and use gmail. Large corporations aren't going to do this, if only for legal reasons.
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veritas
1,173,196,031
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[ 2592, 2642 ]
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/6419461.stm
14
Craigslist and why it survived the bubble
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4
2,579
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comment
tyohn
1,173,194,581
I hate to play devils advocate but is dropping out of school a reflection of what is to come when the start up work gets tedious? Please don’t get me wrong I believe you should follow your passion and if that takes dropping out of school or climbing Mt. Everest follow Nike and just do it! Maybe dropping out of school shows the investor that you are serious but are you dropping out because you are serious or because you’re bored and this offers you a way out? Am I way off on this line of thought? By the way if I was facing the same decision I would drop out too.
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[ 7639 ]
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2,586
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story
marciosilva
1,173,199,055
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http://lawsofsimplicity.com/category/laws?order=ASC
6
The Laws of Simplicity - John Maeda
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0
2,580
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story
Elfan
1,173,195,122
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http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/03/technology/03money.html?ex=1330578000&en=d1a306276c357c86&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss
2
Demystifying Salary Information
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0
2,581
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comment
sszhou
1,173,195,473
24th bday coming up this year. A birthday gift in the form of a no-hassle $50,000 investment will be much appreciated :)
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michaeltrincal
1,173,195,643
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http://www.unventurecapital.com
2
Sharing your bed with a VC dominatrix - the venture capitalist as a destructive force.
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0
2,582
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story
msgbeepa
1,173,195,521
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http://www.wikio.com/webinfo?id=14216633
1
Monetize Your Blog With eBay
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0
2,585
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story
akkartik
1,173,198,230
null
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[ 2630, 2595 ]
http://www.economist.com/science/displaystory.cfm?story_id=8769863
6
The rise and fall of corporate R&D
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3
2,588
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volida
1,173,201,007
i think the answer to (3) is that they wanted to test Arc...the web server is written in Arc also, if I am not mistaken...
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[ 2644 ]
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brett
1,173,207,905
I had not read up on this. Good to know. news.ycombinator looks pretty safe with all the random fnids.
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[ 2604 ]
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danielha
1,173,207,078
You answered your questions for 1 and 2. volida is right with number 3 -- they were also looking for something useful to build with Arc.
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[ 2614 ]
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danielha
1,173,206,751
So which employed RDBMS are not SQL-based? I don't many are even offered commercially, and I can't think of a company utilizing something such off-standard.
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juwo
1,173,205,093
It is interesting that the real reason why craigslist succeeds is not mentioned. IMHO, it's because of being like a *local* classifieds, free, and without word limits. Also, the local dating, I suppose. I dont think it was unique either. In 1994, when I was a outsource programmer at a Dallas telco, there was a hugely popular newsgroup on the company intranet where people bought and sold stuff, told each other of local events, and was a kind of meeting ground. I tried to get my bosses at other places where I worked at, to do this - but the fears of legalities always killed it.
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pg
1,173,201,562
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http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/03/06/just-launched-auctionads-ebay-advertising-widget/
1
Just Launched: AuctionAds Ebay Advertising Widget
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0
2,595
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comment
kingkongrevenge
1,173,206,678
Corporate R&D never worked very well in the first place. William Whyte wrote about how relatively unproductive it was way back in 1956 in The Organization Man.
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abstractbill
1,173,199,236
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http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/archives/000807.html
2
Reduce your website's bandwidth usage
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0
2,598
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story
brett
1,173,207,796
null
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null
null
[ 2599 ]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_request_forgery
1
Cross-site request forgery
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2
2,591
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story
smock
1,173,203,039
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http://www.octopart.com/html/blog.html
18
Fan Support
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0
2,593
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story
juwo
1,173,205,858
null
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[ 2594, 2611, 2609 ]
2
small bug in YC application (sorry, dont know where else to post this. Feature Request is for News.YC)
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4
2,594
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comment
juwo
1,173,205,968
If your application has quotes, they are escaped each time one submits. They should be escaped only once. From my application: ------------------------ They can ‘squeeze more juice’ from <p>
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2,590
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notabel
1,173,201,810
This is certainly a great product, and the fact that the founders are in fact "scratching an itch" gives me confidence that they'll continue to do fine on the tech side of things. <p>I do wonder, however, what the business model is here. My hope is that the major parts vendors will recognize that Octopart is a good thing for them, and will play ball--both on the technical/database integration front, and, hopefully in terms of monetizing the product. Because it really is a great product.<p>One technical quibble, though: Octopart could improve its result quality a good bit by incorporating some semantic analysis. An example: a search for "blue led 3mm leaded" returns as its first result an SMD (i.e. non-leaded) part. What's going on here? It's matching the phrase "Leaded Process Compatible: No;" with a bit of not-terribly-deep semantic matching (leveraging the fact that part specs speak a relatively contrived and regularized language) it should be possible to recognize that "Leaded Process Compatible: No" is not a match for leaded.<p>Quibbles aside, I'm looking forward to watching Octopart improve, and, hopefully, succeed. We all know the competition sucks, after all.
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tyohn
1,173,209,429
I’m 39 going on 20. The other two co-founders involved in this start up are 49. They are extremely intelligent and the experience they bring to the table is invaluable. I know there is something to be said about youthful exuberance but experience has to factor in somewhere. "When I was a boy of fourteen, my father was so ignorant I could hardly stand to have the old man around. But when I got to be twenty-one, I was astonished at how much the old man had learned in seven years." -- Mark Twain
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