id
int64
1
41.8M
deleted
bool
1 class
type
stringclasses
5 values
by
stringlengths
2
15
time
int64
1.16B
1.73B
text
stringlengths
0
99.1k
dead
bool
1 class
parent
int64
1
41.8M
poll
int64
127k
41.7M
kids
sequencelengths
1
1.32k
url
stringlengths
0
6.6k
score
int64
-1
5.77k
title
stringlengths
0
198
parts
sequencelengths
2
256
descendants
int64
-1
1.59k
3,001
null
comment
python_kiss
1,173,394,883
I would abstain from complicating the user experience, though. In my experience, posting a topic has much more potential in gaining points than writing *thoughtful* comments. A good strategy to rise above that ranks is to post a bunch of interesting links; upon achieving high points, the user can then take a defensive stance by defending his or her opinions through posting comments instead.<p>The point is, from a user's perspective, there is more to gain from posting topics than comments.
null
2,995
null
[ 3003 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,002
null
comment
notabel
1,173,395,014
I'll be honest, I've not been nearly so good about doing my time on the 'new' page. In your experience, are there any strong patterns in good submissions? What I'm getting at is basically: are there any views on the new submissions list that would make finding the under-rated ones substantively simpler?
null
3,000
null
[ 3010, 3008 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,003
null
comment
notabel
1,173,395,230
That is certainly the status quo; I would ask, however, whether it is desirable. I think the system should provide more incentive for thoughtful comments, or at least some sort of disincentive for shotgun-style submissions. It is difficult to build karma by posting lots of comments; you have to put the effort into generating good content to get karma. The same should ideally be true for submissions; the difficulty, of course, is that since the content of submissions is generated by someone other than the submitter, simply posting lots of them /will/ eventually result in a karma-boosting hit.
null
3,001
null
[ 3015 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,004
null
comment
jwecker
1,173,395,271
Good point. On an unrelated note, however, your comment reminded me of another note I want to make: If your post is in response to a comment- please make sure and thread it. Because the site shows comments in the same nested level in different positions (either random or rotating or something, I haven't figured it out yet) each time the comments are loaded it gets real confusing if the comments aren't threaded correctly. There's plenty of horizontal space in the site's design so we shouldn't be reluctant to use it. The alternative, of course, is to quote what we're replying to.
null
2,991
null
[ 3029 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,005
null
comment
python_kiss
1,173,395,346
Copy-paste from my reply to jwecker: "From a user's perspective, there is more to gain from posting topics than comments." Top users are more active in the discussion because they are already high above the ranks. The top user doesn't have to spam the site to gain karma, we already have enough.
null
2,999
null
[ 3009 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,006
null
story
woid
1,173,395,543
null
true
null
null
[ 3028 ]
http://www.linkedin.com/search?search=&sik=1172963031630&keywords=phil+crosby&sortCriteria=4&rd=out&split_page=1
1
Sorry for mistake, I was just playing with new bookmarklet :-(
null
0
3,008
null
comment
python_kiss
1,173,395,764
Cain, if you're looking for up to date startup news, it is better to simply subscribe to rss blogs. Here are a few good ones: TC, Mashable, GigaOm, ReadWriteWeb, OnStartups, PaulGraham, Startup Reviews, The Startup Journey, etc.<p>On YC, it sometimes helps to simply sift through a user's past posts and comments.
null
3,002
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,007
null
story
immad
1,173,395,555
null
null
null
null
[ 3101 ]
http://asack.typepad.com/a_sack_of_seattle/2007/03/advice_for_entr.html
2
Advice for entrepreneurs negotiating venture capital term sheets
null
3
3,011
null
comment
immad
1,173,395,991
I doubt any of the companies were too worried about getting some pre-launch buzz going through techcrunch.
null
2,980
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,009
null
comment
notabel
1,173,395,764
This is an interesting notion; there is an implicit assumption that the low-karma user has something to lose by posting comments. Am I missing something here?<p>I do see your point, though, wrt top users not spamming the site. That's largely why I liked your idea of throttling submission rates based on karma. New users should have to develop karma by being useful, rather than just prolific.
null
3,005
null
[ 3013, 3022 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,010
null
comment
jwecker
1,173,395,821
That's a tough q. for me- I generally have to just open 3 or 4 of them and make a decision of whether or not to up-mod it then do it again sometime later. Two kind of related thoughts, though, for those who don't spend a lot of time working on the "new" page:<p>If you concentrate on the top of the new page and like a submission and mod it, it will get exposure near the top of the top page and get some real good input usually, so that's the best place to start- just look at the 3 or 4 submissions at the top of the page and spend a few minutes.<p>Nevertheless, there are some amazing submissions that because they don't get a point in their first hour of existence (because everyone is eating lunch or busy submitting their own etc.) end up moving clear down the list without anything. If you want some good karma (the real kind) spend time with the 4 or 5 at the bottom of the list giving belated deserved credit for some posters.
null
3,002
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,012
null
story
herdrick
1,173,396,207
null
null
null
null
null
http://jeremyfain.wordpress.com/2007/02/06/my-call-software-companies-cant-take-off-well-in-financial-centers/
2
Financial centers are bad for software start ups.
null
0
3,013
null
comment
python_kiss
1,173,396,210
Exactly, the user with low-karma is better off posting topics than comments. Comments don't receive nearly as much points as topics do. Even worse, comments require far more thought than blindly submitting links. What is the economic gain the user with low-karma receive from posting comments? Not much.<p>I know I suggested it, but throttling submission rates based on karma might not be fair to the end users. Once a karma-archy is established, the rich will get richer at the expense of the poor.
null
3,009
null
[ 3014, 3019 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,014
null
comment
notabel
1,173,396,478
Well, I certainly hope that news.yc users are a bit more than Ricardo-programmed economic optimization automata. :) <p>One solution to older users having a perpetual advantage would be to implement some sort of aging of karma, or at least of the karma value used to determine throttling. Such a thing would actually be a win in terms of SNR--it doesn't really matter how karmic someone was a year ago, if they have only made low-quality posts/comments in the past month, they should be treated (in the submission system) as a low-karma user.
null
3,013
null
[ 3046 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,015
null
comment
python_kiss
1,173,396,672
We had a similar problem on our social network where users abstained from giving karma to thoughtful comments. Consequently, we coded an algo to add "+0.1 karma" to every user that gave another person "+1 karma". That was enough to take care of the problem.
null
3,003
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,019
null
comment
jwecker
1,173,398,090
Another idea I mentioned elsewhere- if a story gets to the bottom of the new page without any up-marks at all it adversely affects the submitter's karma.
null
3,013
null
[ 3025 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,018
null
comment
danielha
1,173,397,812
What we need is more incentive for active discussion among topics instead of a flurry of ho-hum links. The community built around the "news" is the most compelling part of YC News.<p>Incidently, the project I'm working on relates to this in many ways.
null
2,987
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,017
null
story
r0b
1,173,397,279
null
null
null
null
null
http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2007/03/the_economics_o_3.html
7
Why becoming a publisher isn't worth it (instead, make the publishing tools)
null
0
3,016
null
story
python_kiss
1,173,396,994
null
null
null
null
null
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nf/20070308/tc_nf/50607
2
MySpace Age Verification Bill Proposed!
null
0
3,025
null
comment
danielha
1,173,399,607
I think this should remain neutral. Ignoring a submissions DOES indicate its worthiness to a point, but sometimes things get missed. Only a true down-mod should degrade the submitter's reputation.
null
3,019
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,027
null
comment
python_kiss
1,173,400,053
lol! Here is a nice dissection of ads I did for another site cluttered with them: <p>http://shuzak.com/img/Temporary/SpammingUsers.jpg (The ads are highlighted in green)<p>An excerpt from an article I wrote on user experience that seems relevant here:<p>"One thing I particularly dislike about Web 2.0 startups is their Web 1.0 approach towards displaying advertisements. It shouldn't take an Einstein to realize where Google ads are appropriate and where they are not...Note that there is nothing wrong with displaying ads as long as it makes sense to do so. If you have no ads on your site, you will not make money off of it. If you have too many ads on your site, nobody is going to click on them.<p>It is unfortunate that nearly every social network spam's their own users with unwanted ads. The users are less likely to notice advertisements as the frequency of ads increases within a site. Even worse, because the users are so used to seeing ads popup, they might ignore them even when they do make sense [6]. Usability should always be prioritized over revenues. When a user chooses to spend 20 minutes of their life on your website, they could be spending that time anywhere else, but they chose your site. Don't reward their loyalty with spam [7]."
null
2,955
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,021
null
comment
python_kiss
1,173,398,723
All business is a niche business. Startups must put a conscious focus on segmenting their market to a small but sustainable size. I have emphasized the significance of this in my earlier articles:<p>http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/6_startup_lessons_2007.php http://m4th.com/Articles/Article.php?Article-Title=Anatomy-of-a-Successful-Social-Network
null
2,974
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,023
null
comment
joshwa
1,173,399,456
not so far as I know... don't know why it got marked dead.
null
2,466
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,020
null
comment
danielha
1,173,398,322
"[...] constant flow of karma [...]"<p>I like how you put it because I've always thought of "karma"-type points in social networks as money -- social currency. We want to stimulate the "economy" by having an active exchange of karma through the community, encouraging more and more discussions and contributions. <p>python_kiss's comment about limiting karma is also an interesting thought. Inflation is something to ponder about in this analogy.
null
2,994
null
[ 3062 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,022
null
comment
danielha
1,173,398,896
I can see where we're heading with this idea. You're right -- to gain noteriety (karma), a user could easily engage in submission abuse. Submit enough links and enough will get upmodded.<p>Points, or karma, could be rewarded based off a ratio of useful contribution to total contributions instead. Such a system would encourage a user to make sure his contributions to the community are good. This would be beneficial implemented in any crowd-generated news site.<p>While not another news aggregator, our project is addressing similar types of issues in other channels. I am loving the applied relevancy to here already.
null
3,009
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,024
null
story
staunch
1,173,399,534
null
null
null
null
null
http://www.shufflebrain.com/etech06.htm
2
Putting the Fun in Functional
null
0
3,033
null
comment
danw
1,173,403,499
Nice, looks like I can relegate my own YC news bookmarklet to the bin since yours works better :)<p>Coming next: A 'YC this!' button to add to your own blog posts! (kidding, unless there's actual demand?)
null
2,929
null
[ 3412 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,026
null
comment
juwo
1,173,399,981
True
null
2,802
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,031
null
story
python_kiss
1,173,400,988
null
null
null
null
null
http://blogs.business2.com/business2blog/2007/03/is_web_advertis.html
1
Is Web Advertising Doomed? (Video)
null
0
3,028
null
comment
jwecker
1,173,400,142
:)
null
3,006
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,030
null
story
python_kiss
1,173,400,939
null
null
null
null
[ 3059 ]
http://gigaom.com/2007/03/08/moores-law-20/
1
Moore's Law 2.0
null
3
3,029
null
comment
danielha
1,173,400,225
I'm not a fan of threaded nature of comments. It's done to faciliate exactly that -- commenting, and does not provide for a proper discussion environment. It's difficult to follow a discussion from start to finish when popular comments are placed at the top.
null
3,004
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,034
null
story
zzee
1,173,404,344
null
null
null
null
null
http://www.tteach.com
1
tteach! School 2.0. Interactive Online Knowledge Sharing (coming soon).
null
0
3,032
null
comment
python_kiss
1,173,402,486
lol! Like you, we rss hoggers don't sleep either :p I think most posts on here are a result of users aggregating through rss feeds to post whatever's hot on the web.<p>Bury should work fine (perhaps it should only be accessible by top users to avoid abuse). Another possible solution is to survey the user's past behavior to create a collaborative filter. The filtered news could then be displayed in a "Recommended" tab. As yc.news grows to a certain critical level, this might just become a necessity.
null
2,984
null
[ 3117 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,037
null
comment
richcollins
1,173,404,592
I disagree.<p>I thought it was one of the best events for networking with other hackers that I have ever been to. Everyone there was knowledgeable as well as driven and energetic. I was up until the wee hours of the morning on both nights talking shop with other entrepreneurs and programmers. I actually met my company's co-founder during the first startup school.
null
2,982
null
[ 3042, 3057 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,036
null
story
zzee
1,173,404,502
null
null
null
null
null
http://www.collanos.com/m1/en/
1
News Workspace Tool
null
0
3,035
null
comment
zach
1,173,404,436
Here's one I ran across earlier today. It's the full monty -- he runs his startup completely on EC2.<p>http://niblets.wordpress.com/2007/02/16/how-i-set-up-my-ec2-instance-for-rails-litespeed/
null
2,918
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,038
null
story
amichail
1,173,404,710
null
null
null
null
[ 3044, 3113, 3041, 3058, 3157, 3039, 3072 ]
2
What would happen if you could patent ideas? Would we see more novel startups?
null
8
3,041
null
comment
zzee
1,173,404,922
I genuinely believe if you could patent ideas...the world would be a dangerous place. With regard to more novelty - not a chance. If the idea is good enough, do what you have to do to make it happen.
null
3,038
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,048
null
comment
lupin_sansei
1,173,408,673
You obviously haven't watched the IT Crowd: http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=it+crowd&search=Search
null
2,860
null
[ 3138, 4659 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,050
null
comment
jamiequint
1,173,410,193
I think what makes the US a good market is that is has a large general market, which is strong because its size produces more opportunities due to bigger niches not due to sheer size and certainly not due to homogeneity.
null
3,040
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,047
null
comment
lupin_sansei
1,173,406,478
Also is there any evidence that Google picked up lots of out of work engineers after the Bubble? On the contrary Google seems to have attracted people away from other companies.
null
2,831
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,051
null
story
marcell
1,173,410,397
null
null
null
null
[ 3099, 3155, 3055, 3070 ]
http://www.mercurynews.com/breakingnews/ci_5388068
8
Web 2.0 companies face a problem: too many users in the wrong countries
null
4
3,046
null
comment
notabel
1,173,406,356
An addendum, stimulated by dinner with dfranke: under certain assumptions about the growth rate of the community, karma ages without any algorithmic intervention: as the community grown, the number of moderators grows, and so the mean and maximum moderation per post increases. As a result, new post are effectively weighted relative to old posts.<p>The problems, of course, are that there is some fixed point, and also that news.yc may not fit the growth model that makes the above true for a community like Reddit--and that may be a good thing.
null
3,014
null
[ 3049 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,040
null
comment
drop19
1,173,404,919
isn't one of the things that makes the US good for startups the fact that we have one large unified market? If you only read this post you might think it would be better to start in a European country. I guess the takeaway would be, you can turn your limitation (relatively small home market) into a strength (use your niche)
null
2,974
null
[ 3050 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,043
null
comment
drop19
1,173,405,115
I would reduce the size of the headlines that are links; I think that's what gives it a lot of the squatting-site feel others have commented on.
null
2,886
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,039
null
comment
amichail
1,173,404,765
One could make the argument that more people would be willing to pursue more novel startups with the protection of an idea patent.
null
3,038
null
[ 3076 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,045
null
comment
lupin_sansei
1,173,405,737
The fact that the Banner market advertising collapsed is beside the point. Little guys could never afford banner advertising in 1999, as Yahoo's minimum cost was something like $10,000.<p>Google offered something which little guys could afford, was more relevant to readers, and attracted higher clickthroughs, so Google's Adsense would have done very well even if it did compete with Doubleclick in 1999.<p>To use a cliche, Adsense gets the "long tail" of advertising.
null
2,831
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,042
null
comment
JMiao
1,173,405,078
I think Startup School is a great opportunity to meet other hackers and, hopefully, form meaningful relationships with like-minded peers.<p>I'm from Los Angeles where the startup community is generally lacking -- the idea of "entrepreneurship" is somewhere along the lines of things like starting an event planning company or making indie films.<p>As a result, I'm really looking forward to Startup School as a chance to meet potential co-founders.
null
3,037
null
[ 3054 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,044
null
comment
domp
1,173,405,524
I don't like this concept of patenting ideas. Coming up with a great idea is just a small factor of making it successful. It seems that this would result in a crazy amount of patents that would mostly never amount to anything but act as a safety to the idea man.
null
3,038
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,049
null
comment
dfranke
1,173,409,636
This is Y Combinator. We *like* fixed points.
null
3,046
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,054
null
comment
zach
1,173,414,589
Hey JMiao, I'm in LA too. Email me at lalife.com if you want to talk shop some time!
null
3,042
null
[ 3081, 3075 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,060
null
story
lupin_sansei
1,173,415,308
null
null
null
null
null
http://www.heritage.org/research/features/index/countries.cfm
2
Index of Economic Freedom 2007 - Rankings
null
0
3,052
null
comment
dfranke
1,173,412,240
I've never used Digg, but from what I read of them, their burying system is working out rather poorly. Burying a story on Digg requires an O(1) number of votes, so anything controversial gets buried even if 90% of users agree that it's an excellent article. A simple up/down model like Reddit's seems like a better idea, but see the top-level comment that I'll have posted in about two minutes.
null
2,997
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,053
null
comment
dfranke
1,173,412,766
I think there are a couple reasonable assumptions about high-karma users that we can work to our advantage:<p>1. They tend to spend more time reading the "new" queue than average, because they spend enough time on the site to exhaust "top" and want to read more.<p>2. They're more likely than average to be open-minded about controversial stories as well as less tolerant of inane ones. If they spend more time on the site, then it's more to their advantage to promote interesting stuff rather than promote an agenda. It's dumb to piss in your own pond.<p>Here's what I propose: high-karma users get more voting power over *young* stories, to enable them to police the "new" queue and out-muscle spammers and voting rings. After stories are a few hours old, high-karma users no longer get a boost if they haven't voted on them yet. If high-karma users have already voted on a story when it reaches the aging threshold, the boost goes away for upvotes but not for downvotes. That way: <p>1. Bad stories never see the light of day, because high-karma users bury them and they stay buried.<p>2. Controversial stories will make the front page, but they don't stay there long if the rest of the community doesn't like them.<p>3. Good stories make it to the front page slightly faster.
null
2,987
null
[ 3063 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,063
null
comment
pg
1,173,416,074
We have some software for dealing with spammers and voting rings. It's not that visible, but it's there.
null
3,053
null
[ 3066 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,056
null
comment
aseemb
1,173,414,726
I understand most of these points completely. The problem I am having is finding the RIGHT cofounder. I have run with my idea for about 18 months now, and I am now just starting to get serious about it from a business stand point. Now I am frantically looking for cofounders to join me but everybody seems like they are missing a key component. A lot of people are "stoked" about the idea and thought of starting their own company and are great to bounce ideas off of, but when it comes down to it they just don’t do the work. I don’t want to settle just to find a cofounder quickly, but I also feel like investors won’t take me as seriously unless I have a founding team.<p>What do you think? <p>
null
2,841
null
[ 3451 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,057
null
comment
zach
1,173,414,854
That's great! I wish I got in on some of that, but for whatever reason I didn't. I agree the caliber of people was great, which is why it was frustrating not to be able to meet more of them.
null
3,037
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,061
null
comment
lupin_sansei
1,173,415,607
Reminds me of peak oil
null
3,059
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,058
null
comment
Elfan
1,173,414,887
This sounds a lot like a business method patent, which is generally considered a very bad idea.<p>A startup that faces no competition for 14 years isn't going to be a worthwhile one anyway.
null
3,038
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,055
null
comment
Elfan
1,173,414,627
As I recall reddit has over 50% of their traffic from outside the United States.
null
3,051
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,059
null
comment
Elfan
1,173,415,039
Moore's law seems to die and rise from the ashes every 18 months or so.
null
3,030
null
[ 3127, 3061 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,062
null
comment
dfranke
1,173,415,654
There is no absolute Right supply of either fiat money or karma. If every dollar bill in everyone's wallet magically turned into two, the price of everything would double and nobody would be materially affected. Similarly, doubling everyone's karma and causing the up arrow to give two points rather than one would have no material effect.<p>Inflation matters when you factor in time. Inflation encourages risk. It makes your current savings become less valuable in the future, encouraging you to try to increase your wealth to compensate. Too much inflation encourages too much risk, and you get a bubble.<p>Money is valuable because it can be exchanged for scarce resources. Karma is valuable because it gets you attention, which is a scarce resource. There are two kinds of attention: visibility of articles and visibility on the leader board. Karma is the cause of the latter, but only a byproduct of the former. There are a fixed number of articles on the front page and a fixed number of spots on the leader board, but both become more valuable as the community grows, because more eyeballs means more attention.<p>At this point, the money analogy breaks down. Money is both a unit of accounting and a medium of exchange. Karma is only a unit of accounting. It tells us how wealthy we are, but we can't exchange it for other wealth. Attention doesn't behave like a commodity either. If we give and receive the same amount of attention, that's not the same as simply doing nothing.<p>So, news.yc really doesn't behave anything like a conventional economy. If any analogy can be drawn at all, I'd say that we're in a state of deflation. As long as the community continues to grow, producing articles now is less profitable than producing articles later.
null
3,020
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,065
null
comment
pg
1,173,416,604
We're actively trying to avoid the nastiness that seems to take over so many online discussions. That's why there are fewer down-arrows here, for example. I suspect that down arrows are more often clicked on stupidly than up arrows, that if you don't have down arrows you give people fewer ways to inject stupidity into the system.<p>I'll probably never get around to supporting bold text in comments either, for the same reason. <p>To some extent news.yc is protected by being about a topic only a small number of comparatively smart people care about. With any luck we'll never have the full-blown trolls you find on general news sites. I have some ideas for solutions if trolls do start to appear.
null
2,999
null
[ 3078, 3080, 3347, 3092, 3090 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,066
null
comment
dfranke
1,173,416,801
Dang, already? Sounds like Arc is working out well.<p>Still, though, any statstical approach (which is what I assume you're using) is going to have some lag because you have to wait for a statistically-significant sample. You can catch any given offender after he's caused an O(1) amount of trouble, but if the offenders don't correlate with each other, you can get overwhelmed by a sufficiently large number of them. Spammers certainly do correlate with each other, but it's not obvious that voting rings do.
null
3,063
null
[ 3095 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,064
null
story
dawie
1,173,416,422
null
null
null
null
[ 3123, 3071, 3068, 3332, 3272 ]
http://www.solutionwatch.com/578/a-roundup-for-developers-developers-developers/
15
Awesome tools for creating Web 2.0 sites and services
null
5
3,067
null
comment
pg
1,173,416,949
About 40%. I don't know what we're going to do next year if this keeps up. We'll have to recruit people to help us read the applications.
null
2,849
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,068
null
comment
dawie
1,173,417,247
Do you use any of these tools? I used basecamp before and I would like to add oDesk to the list
null
3,064
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,071
null
comment
bgold
1,173,418,504
ClickTale should be in any new startup's arsenal. Saves the need for expensive, old-school usability testing.
null
3,064
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,070
null
comment
bgold
1,173,418,323
the article's no longer available
null
3,051
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,069
null
story
dawie
1,173,418,075
null
null
null
null
null
http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2007/03/08/best-of-february-2007/
4
List of Interesting Websites
null
0
3,072
null
comment
volida
1,173,418,638
the point of the patent is to protect your work for discovering/implementating a method that is not state-of-art for solving a problem, not patent the problem(idea) it self. Thats why you can have many methods (i.e many patents) solving the same problem...<p>Of course you can patent also business processes and designs...
null
3,038
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,073
null
comment
bgold
1,173,419,547
Careful with the wording. WordPress isn't fully supporting OpenID, and this can be dangerous. They're acting as an identity provider without also acting as a service provider.<p>It's true that WordPress users can use their blogs as OpenIDs to login elsewhere, but users who already have OpenIDs can't use them at WordPress.<p>Unless service providers implement the entire spec and treat all OpenID users as first-class citizens, regardless of identity provider, then there's really no interoperability here. What's the point of an OpenID if you can't use it at other "OpenID-enabled" sites like WordPress?
null
2,693
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,074
null
comment
bgold
1,173,419,786
Is anyone else from Los Angeles interested in something similar? uWink would be a pretty sweet meetup spot.
null
2,757
null
[ 3266 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,075
null
comment
bgold
1,173,419,878
Where in LA are you guys? I'm in Pasadena.
null
3,054
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,078
null
comment
python_kiss
1,173,420,143
^ ah, sounds like communism :p<p>I've joined well over 50 social networks and what I've noitced is that freedom to choose appeals more to people than the right choices already made for them. More features, more niches, more startups, more choice. Users might complain about features, but fundamentally they like choice.<p>The more time a user spends making choices on a network, the more loyal he or she becomes. You don't spend 12 hours of your life customizing your profile if you don't plan on sticking to it.<p>Lastly, too much of anything is bad. The state should have control over medical supplies, education and energy. But beyond that, it should trust the consumer with running the country.
null
3,065
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,077
null
comment
jamiequint
1,173,420,116
have you heard of marketocracy? I know they have been around for a while.
null
2,934
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,081
null
comment
JMiao
1,173,421,956
I actually just moved up to Palo Alto in January, but thanks for the post.
null
3,054
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,079
null
comment
jonmc12
1,173,421,177
I've started a few ventures, 2 solo, 1 w/ partner, 2 w/ partners. For me, its just a matter of knowing my strengths, knowing the goal, and then being resourceful.<p>Having a partner is one solution to a missing set of needs - but it also comes with a lot of baggage in many cases. Getting meaninful perspectives can come from anywhere if you have a good network and leverage it. Massive workloads can be solved with leadership skills, effecient use of capital and human resource management.<p>First time around sure wish I had a partner - I was crazy to be on my own. Now, I feel like a partner has to be a very strong fit to be best alternative.<p>
null
2,841
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,080
null
comment
dfranke
1,173,421,663
I think you're doing the right thing by retaining the down arrow on comments, however. When someone writes a comment you dislike, there are four things you can do with it:<p>1. Ignore it<p>2. Downmod it<p>3. Write a quick reply<p>4. Write a thoughtful reply<p>Option 4 is ideal, of course, if you have the time, but you usually don't. Quick replies are what we want to avoid. That's how flamewars start. Ignoring the post is going to be unsatisfactory for the flamewar-prone. That leaves the down-arrow as a sort of relief valve. So I think its presence can actually reduce nastiness.
null
3,065
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,082
null
comment
dfranke
1,173,422,939
This anecdote doesn't prove much, and the writer doesn't even seem to understand the difference between angels and VCs. There are plenty of absurd valuations out there.
null
2,891
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,076
null
comment
gaz
1,173,420,026
people will pursue novel start up ideas if they feel it would be profitable to do so. you get more innovation by having many companies competing on the same ideas and trying to outdo each other.
null
3,039
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,083
null
story
lupin_sansei
1,173,423,246
null
null
null
null
null
http://www.avinio.blogspot.com/2007/03/truth-that-no-one-telling-you-about-1.html
1
Web 2.0 Media: The Truth That No One Telling You About The 1 Million Digg's Users
null
0
3,084
null
story
python_kiss
1,173,423,488
null
null
null
null
[ 3085 ]
http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/03/08/confirmed-microsoft-building-google-appszoho-competitor/
2
Confirmed: Microsoft Building Google Apps/Zoho Competitor!
null
1
3,086
null
story
RyanGWU82
1,173,425,317
null
null
null
null
[ 3415, 3234, 3298, 3219, 3088, 3225, 3094, 3197, 3483, 3218, 3143, 3251, 3087, 3175, 3145, 3191, 3089, 3184, 3112 ]
5
So, who's going to Startup School?
null
26
3,088
null
comment
danielha
1,173,426,223
I'll be there as well. I'm looking forward to meeting the lot of you. :)<p>We have a meetup discussion going in here: http://news.ycombinator.com/comments?id=2757<p>It'd be great to meet the startup community "after school," so let's decide on a place.
null
3,086
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,089
null
comment
jasonyan
1,173,426,339
Count me in. :)
null
3,086
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,085
null
comment
python_kiss
1,173,423,832
Matthew comments: "It seems that Microsoft is just trying to compete with other companies rather than find out what the consumer wants. They move into so many areas because they can't stand someone else being the market leader in a given sector. Apple dominates the mp3 player so Microsoft brings out the Zune and of course it doesn't sell well because it's not what people want. Apple announces the iPhone, Microsoft criticizes it then announces their phone. Now Google Apps. Man, Microsoft needs to grow up and find out what people want before Google takes them to task with Apps."
null
3,084
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,087
null
comment
RyanGWU82
1,173,425,341
I'll be there. :)<p>-- Ryan Park, Stanford grad student
null
3,086
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,090
null
comment
jwecker
1,173,426,789
I noticed that the other day- no down arrows on replies to your comments. Very nice.
null
3,065
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,091
null
comment
danielha
1,173,426,852
Startup school replies just came in. Let's go ahead and decide that meeting place in Palo Alto.<p>The school ends at 5:30, so we should all meet at 6 and discuss what we've learned.
null
2,757
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,097
null
comment
JMiao
1,173,428,148
As I mentioned in a previous thread, I'd like to organize a Palo Alto meetup amongst Startup School/YC News participants.<p>If you're interested in getting together for dinner and a evening of interesting company, please e-mail:<p>StartupSchool2007 [at] gmail [dot] com<p>I'll gladly put together some form of mailing list detailing meetup details, etc.
null
3,096
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,093
null
comment
comatose_kid
1,173,427,154
python_kiss: I don't really know that inspiration is the main yardstick by which I would judge the value of this video. I like your title better, but I can't retroactively change the title. This video has been referenced by Marc Hedlund (Wesabe founder, previously Oreilly's entrepreneur in residence) as containing valuable suggestions for entrepreneurs:<p>http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2007/03/jedi_build_thei.html
null
2,425
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,092
null
comment
notabel
1,173,427,148
Aha! I'd not had the realization that the the downmod arrow only appears probabilistically. It meshes interestingly with a notion that dfranke and I were discussing earlier tonight, namely the appropriate ratio of up to down mods. By controlling the prevalence of options to downmod, you can exert some control over that ration--very sly. :)
null
3,065
null
null
null
null
null
null
null
3,098
null
story
zaidf
1,173,428,679
null
null
null
null
[ 3125, 3110, 3240, 3408, 3188, 3183, 3227, 3159 ]
http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/03/09/demo-day-y-combinators-spring-chicks/
36
Demo Day: Y Combinator's Spring Chicks
null
19
3,094
null
comment
jamiequint
1,173,427,357
I'll be there, just got my invite, I made a facebook group so we can all chat & talk about meeting up...<p>http://up.facebook.com/event.php?eid=2251607090<p>anyone else coming from out of town? (I'm coming down from Portland, OR)
null
3,086
null
[ 3177 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,096
null
story
JMiao
1,173,427,816
null
null
null
null
[ 3097, 3228 ]
3
Startup School Meetup
null
2
3,095
null
comment
notabel
1,173,427,552
I'm prone to think that pg's algorithm is, to some extent, content based. I have no real evidence to support this, just the evangelism in "A Plan for Spam."
null
3,066
null
[ 3102 ]
null
null
null
null
null
3,100
null
story
pashle
1,173,428,734
null
null
null
null
[ 3104 ]
http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/16866987.htm
3
Web 2.0 companies face a problem: too many users in the wrong countries (Updated Dead Link)
null
1
3,099
null
comment
pashle
1,173,428,700
bgold, here's the updated link to the article - http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/16866987.htm
null
3,051
null
null
null
null
null
null
null